Narnia 6 - Chap 9
What does Polly notice about the Lion’s song in Chap. 9?
Polly was finding the song more and more interesting because she thought she was beginning to see the connection between the music and the things that were happening.
What does she think is going on? How effective is the Witch’s attack on the Lion?
She thought that all the things were coming out of the Lion’s head. The lion was making up things through his song.
It’s doing nothing. when the bar struck the lion between the eyes, it just glanced and the bar fell with a thud in the grass.
How does the Lion respond? How do Jadis and Andrew respond to the Lion?
The Lion didn’t mind the iron bar much and it was keep going on. The bar didn’t affect it and its walk was neither slower nor faster.
The Witch shrieked and ran: in a few moments she was out of sight among the trees. Uncle Andrew turned to do likewise, tripped over a root, and fell flat on his face in a little brook that ran down to join the river.
What makes Uncle Andrew so excited about "commercial possibilities"?
The bar was alive. The bar that the Witch tore off the lamp-post from their world. And now it could grows up. This made Uncle Andrew excited. That he could bring a few old bits of scrap iron from their real word to here, and buried them. This unbounded world could make it alive and come up more things. and he thought to sell these at full prices in England. He would be a millionaire.
What did he discover?
He felt years younger already. He also thought this place was land of youth. He may never grew a day older in this world.
What does the Lion to all the creatures just before He wakes them up?
The Lion changed the song , maybe the tune. It was far wilder. The song made the grassy land bubbling like water in a pot. The grassy land was swelling into humps with different sizes. Then the humps moved and swelled till they burst. From each hump there came out an animal.
Can you think of anything like that which happens in the Bible?
I think it’s making a new world.
What does the Lion say to the Beasts?
Narnia, Narnia, Narnia, awake. Love. Think. Speak. Be walking trees. Be talking beasts. Be divine waters."