Table of Contents
What happens to the children in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe?
Aslan takes the girls to the Witch’s castle and revives the Narnians that the Witch had turned to stone. They join the Narnian forces battling the Witch’s army. The Narnian army prevails, and Aslan kills the Witch. The Pevensie children are then crowned kings and queens of Narnia at Cair Paravel.
What happens in chapter 15 in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe?
Summary. Immediately following Aslan murder, the Witch’s forces leave to prepare for battle. Aslan’s dead body remains on the Stone Table. Susan and Lucy manage to remove the muzzle from Aslan, but they are unable to untie the cords around his body.
What happens in Chapter 14 of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe?
The Witch’s servants torture, humiliate and mock Aslan, yet Aslan’s patience endures. The chapter concludes with hopelessness and sadness. The death of Aslan seems final. Once Aslan is dead, there will be no one to stop the Witch from attaining power and committing atrocities.
What happens in Chapter 17 of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe?
In Chapter 17 of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, the four children learn what it is like to grow up to be Kings and Queens of Narnia. After victory is won for Aslan and the children, Narnia is back in their hands. They spend years helping to restore goodness to Narnia.
How was Aslan resurrected?
Aslan’s sacrifice at the Stone Table. Aslan greeted Peter, Susan and Lucy Pevensie upon their arrival at his campsite, near the Stone Table. In order to save him, Aslan agreed to be sacrificed in his stead. However, according to the laws of the Deeper Magic, Aslan, as an innocent victim, was resurrected.
Why couldn’t Susan and Lucy untie the ropes on Aslan body?
Why couldn’t Susan and Lucy untie the ropes on Aslan’s body? Because they had been tied to unmercifully tightly. The Stone Table was broken in two, and then Aslan was alive.
Do you think Edmund really believed that the stone lion was Aslan Why or why not?
Edmund left the Beavers’ house after the children had already devised the plan to meet Aslan at the Stone Table. The first one he sees is a lion, which he believes to be Aslan. He assumes that the Witch has already triumphed over Aslan and turned him to stone.
How is Edmund’s experience different than what he had expected?
Q. How is Edmund’s experience different than what he had expected? Edmund expected the witch to give him everything she promised, so when she didn’t he was disappointed. Edmund expected to see all of the creatures of Narnia captured by the White Witch.