Clive Staples Lewis

The Chronicles of Narnia 3. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

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  • G I N A :3has quoted7 years ago
    “I had to apologize or the dangerous little brute would have been at me with his sword.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quoted3 years ago
    Day after day from all those miles and leagues of flowers there rose a smell which Lucy found it very hard to describe; sweet—yes, but not at all sleepy or overpowering, a fresh, wild, lonely smell that seemed to get into your brain and make you feel that you could go up mountains at a run or wrestle with an elephant. She and Caspian said to one another, “I feel that I can't stand much more of this, yet I don't want it to stop.”
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quoted3 years ago
    “But look—here,” said Eustace, “this is all rot. The world's round—I mean, round like a ball, not like a table.” “Our world is,” said Edmund. “But is this?” “Do you mean to say,” asked Caspian, “that you three come from a round world (round like a ball) and you've never told me! It's really too bad of you. Because we have fairy-tales in which there are round worlds and I always loved them. I never believed there were any real ones. But I've always wished there were and I've always longed to live in one. Oh, I'd give anything—I wonder why you can get into our world and we never get into yours? If only I had the chance! It must be exciting to live on a thing like a ball. Have you ever been to the parts where people walk about upside-down?” Edmund shook his head. “And it isn't like that,” he added. “There's nothing particularly exciting about a round world when you're there.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quoted3 years ago
    All the others pretend to take no notice of this, either from swank or because Harold says one of the most cowardly things ordinary people do is to shut their eyes to Facts.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quoted3 years ago
    “The question is,” said Edmund, “whether it doesn't make things worse, looking at a Narnian ship when you can't get there.” “Even looking is better than nothing,” said Lucy. “And she is such a very Narnian ship.” “Still playing your old game?” said Eustace Clarence, who had been listening outside the door and now came grinning into the room. Last year, when he had been staying with the Pevensies, he had managed to hear them all talking of Narnia and he loved teasing them about it. He thought of course that they were making it all up; and as he was far too stupid to make anything up himself, he did not approve of that.
  • Vanja Gorčevhas quoted3 years ago
    The story begins on an afternoon when Edmund and Lucy were stealing a few precious minutes alone together. And of course they were talking about Narnia, which was the name of their own private and secret country. Most of us, I suppose, have a secret country but for most of us it is only an imaginary country. Edmund and Lucy were luckier than other people in that respect. Their secret country was real.
  • frehas quoted5 years ago
    And of course, as it always does in a perfectly flat place without trees, it looked as if the sky came down to meet the grass in front of them. But as they went on they got the strangest impression that here at last the sky did really come down and join the earth - a blue wall, very bright, but real and solid: more like glass than anything else.
  • frehas quoted5 years ago
    But now they could look at the rising sun and see it clearly and see things beyond it. What they saw - eastward, beyond the sun - was a range of mountains. It was so high that either they never saw the top of it or they forgot it.
  • frehas quoted5 years ago
    The light, the silence, the tingling smell of the Silver Sea, even (in some odd way) the loneliness itself, were too exciting.
  • frehas quoted5 years ago
    “I feel that I can’t stand much more of this, yet I don’t want it to stop.”
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