How old is lucy pevensie in the dawn treader




















So, how old are they? Thanks in advance. Namaste Guest. There's another thread where people ask that question and I cited the answer according to a book I have here. It says that Peter is 13, Susan is 12, Edmund is 10, and Lucy is 8.

Thanks for replying. Those were the ages I originally had in my head as well; although for the life of me I could not remember where I found them. Are they in LWW? I suppose my eyes could have glossed over it when I re-read the book last week. I don't think they are listed, but I have a Narnia trivia book that was translated into German, and that's where I found the information. Lenny New member. Namaste said:.

Click to expand Meshell07 New member. Yeah they are different from the book and the movie. Perhaps Lewis' lack of information on this subject is on purpose.

Perhaps he wants us to decide for ourselves how old the Pevensie kids are so it's believable to each of us who reads the book. When I was younger I was sure Peter and Susan couldn't have been any older than maybe 11 or 12, and Lucy couldn't be any older than 7, and Edmund was somewhere in between. But that was with my own child eyes. Now as an adult I feel Peter can't be any younger than 15 and Susan no younger than 13, and Lucy no younger than 8, once again leaving Edmund somewhere in between my guess is 10 or 11 because now as an adult I feel these ages are appropriate for the things they do.

So, perhaps Lewis wanted to be vague so that people wouldn't have preconceived notions on what kids of a certain age are capable of, and that way the entire story would be more believable to us.

I dunno, just a theory. I understand what you mean. They meet with their brothers at the end of the battle. At Cair Paravel, she is crowned as Her Majesty Queen Lucy by Aslan to the throne as co-ruler of Narnia, this marking the fulfilling of the ancient prophecy and the end of the White Witch's reign.

During her reign, the people name her Queen Lucy the Valiant. She and her siblings make a Golden Age in Narnia. Late in the Golden Age, while hunting the white stag through Lantern Waste, she notices the lantern where she met Mr. She stops her siblings and they look and wonder what it is. Lucy, in a dreamy voice, says Spare Oom, Mr.

Tumnus's phrase for the land from which they came 15 years earlier, and the children run through the wardrobe into England, where no time has passed and they are children again.

The events in The Horse and His Boy take place after the siblings are crowned, and before they return to England, in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe , and Queen Lucy is a young woman who rides to the aid of Archenland.

She is described by Prince Corin as being more like a tomboy, unlike her sister, Queen Susan, who is a "proper lady". Lucy who is now 9 travels to Narnia again with her three siblings in Prince Caspian. In that book, Lucy is the only one to see Aslan at first, and she has a terrible time convincing her brothers and sister as well as Trumpkin the dwarf that he had returned, echoing her trials early in the first book. However, Edmund believes her and backs her up, due to her being right about Narnia itself existing.

Aslan tells her to try again, and says that she must follow him alone if they refuse to come with her. Lucy comments that Aslan has grown larger, but really she is the one that has grown. While Susan travels with Mr. This is very much Lucy's book, written largely from her point of view. However, at the end Aslan firmly tells her and Edmund that they have become, like Susan and Peter, too old to further experience the wonders of Narnia. There, she witnesses the destruction of Narnia and lives in the new Narnia created by Aslan.

In the new Narnia, all the people and animals who lived in the previous Narnia during its existence return and join together. Lucy also meets her old friend Mr. Tumnus the Faun again, and Aslan tells her about a railway accident that occurs in England in which she, her brothers, her parents, Polly, Digory, Eustace and Jill die.

Lucy - along with Edmund, Peter, Digory, and Polly - are instantly transported to a great green field with fruit trees and a door that leads to nowhere, clothed in Narnian garb. Several people come in or out of the door, but most seem unable to see the fields or Lucy and her companions. After some time, Eustace, and then Jill, walk through the door, explaining that they had been to Narnia on the other side of it.

Once everything in Narnia has been straightened out and many other Narnians had join them, the Friends of Narnia stand by as Aslan brings about the end of Old Narnia. Then Aslan gave a great roar and began to lead all the remaining Narnians. All run after him up the field, realizing that this is not Narnia, but that the real Narnia and the afterlife of the world they had known.

They all run until they reach Cair Paravel, and meet all of their old friends from all of their adventures in the Shadowlands. Lucy is not quite so happy in the New Narnia as Aslan meant her to be, however.

She explains that she is dissatisfied because they the English Narnians are so afraid of being sent home. Aslan explains that there had been a train accident back in England, and that in their world, the children are all dead.

He explains further that the Real Narnia is his country, and a Narnian equivalent of heaven. Lucy is permitted to live forever with her siblings in the Real Narnia. They discovered that anything that touched the water in the pool was instantly turned to gold. Caspian, Edmund, and Lucy began to quarrel until they all spotted Aslan on a nearby hill. Realizing the island was heavily enchanted, they all returned to the ship. The next island that the Dawn Treader came to was surprisingly modern.

As the others headed inland along the path, Lucy stayed behind a moment and heard a strange thumping sound. Soon voices were talking, which Lucy realized belonged to invisible people planning to kidnap the Narnians while they were away from their ship. Lucy hurried to find Edmund and Caspian and told her story. Deciding to go back down to the boat, they found that these ' Dufflepuds ' were not only un-intelligent but also lacking in courage.

They requested that Lucy would perform a spell to make them visible, going into the house of magician they regarded as evil and refused to enter themselves.

Lucy agreed if only to save her friends' lives. Lucy did as the Duffers had instructed her, and found the magician 's Book of Incantations. Leafing through it, she came upon a spell that was said to make her beautiful beyond a lot of mortals. About to utter it out of jealousy, and vanity, she was stopped when she looked back at the opening words of the spell and saw Aslan's face staring into hers.

After passing over many more spells, she found the correct one and spoke it. Both Aslan and the magician, whom the Dufflepuds so feared, entered and greeted her.

After meeting the magician, who was, in fact, a follower of Aslan, and spending some time on the island, the Dawn Treader again sailed east. Twelve days passed by, until a mist appeared in the distance, growing into darkness hovering over the water.

Although all were apprehensive, they rowed on until a man appeared in the water, and was quickly hauled on board. The stranger warned them to escape as quickly as they could, for the darkness harbored the island where dreams and nightmares came true.

Instantly they began to frantically row their way back out, but after a while, they began to think that they were caught and would never escape.

Lucy, who was positioned in the fighting-top, with a bow at the ready, whispered to Aslan, begging for his help, and a beam of light appeared in the dark. A bird came out of the beam, an albatross , which spoke to Lucy with Aslan's voice, and led them out of the dark.

In the following days, another island came into sight. On the island was set a long table prepared with a banquet such had never been seen. Three of the chairs at the table were filled, and in them sat three lords, all under an enchanted sleep. Lucy, Caspian, Edmund, Eustace, and Reepicheep sat at the table to spend the night. Early in the morning, they awoke to find a lady coming to the table. She told them of the three lords, and that the island was the beginning of the end of the world.

Her father, the star Ramandu , told Caspian that to break the enchantment that held the lords asleep, he must sail to the end of the world and leave one person behind. There were sad goodbyes, and then they did as they were told. When they came to a shore, Reepicheep took his boat on into Aslan's Country, while Lucy and the others made their way ashore. There was a lamb there, and as it spoke to them it changed to become the Lion himself, who told Lucy that she and Edmund would never come back to Narnia.

Then Aslan kissed their foreheads, and they were back in Lucy's room in Eustace's house. Afterward, Lucy grew up fairly normally, eventually becoming one of the self-titled Seven Friends of Narnia , those who had been to the world of Narnia by magic.

The figure did not speak, even when Peter demanded as High King that it do so. After the specter disappeared again, they all felt sure that something was dreadfully wrong in their beloved country, and they needed to find a way to get there on their own. Remembering the Magic Rings that were capable of carrying humans from one world to another, the seven set up a plan to get young Jill and Eustace to Narnia.

While the rings were retrieved, Lucy and the others got on a train to take Eustace and Jill to school, intending to use the rings on the way. They never made it, though, as their train had crashed on the way, killing at least nine people.

Lucy was among the casualties, having died instantly as a result of the crash. Aslan had transported Lucy, along with Edmund, Peter, Digory, and Polly, to a great green field with fruit trees, and a door that led to nowhere, clothed in Narnian garb.

Several people came in or out of the door, but most seemed unable to see the fields or Lucy and her companions. After some time, Eustace, and then Jill, came through the door, explaining that they had been to Narnia on the other side of the door.

Once everything in Narnia had been straightened out, and many other Narnians had joined them, the Friends of Narnia stood by, as Aslan brought about the end of Old Narnia.

Aslan then gave a great roar and began to lead all the remaining Narnians. All ran after him in the field, realizing that this was not Narnia, but the real Narnia, and the afterlife of the world they had known. They all ran until they reached not Cair Paravel, but a bigger and better Cair Paravel, and met all of their old friends from all of their adventures in the Shadowlands, alive and better than ever before, as well as many people of whom they had only heard.

But Lucy was, as Aslan said, not quite so happy as he meant her to be. She explained that it was because they the English Narnians were so afraid of being sent back home again.

It was then that Aslan explained that there had been a train accident back in England and that in their world, the children were all dead. Lucy was not going to be sent back but was permitted to live forever in the real Narnia.

Lucy was the most faithful and devout out of the four Pevensie siblings, which was the reason for her being capable of seeing Aslan when her siblings were unable to, and why she never stopped believing in Narnia. She is also a lover of animals, and therefore could easily become good friends with the many creatures of Narnia.

Lucy could be as brave and adventurous as her oldest brother, Peter , as evidenced by her once saying to Father Christmas that she believed she was brave enough to participate in battles.

One of her most commendable virtues was her intense desire to help those in need, which explains the gift she received from Father Christmas: the magical cordial with which she uses to heal anyone that is either sick or injured. Another praiseworthy virtue of hers would be her kind and loving heart, which enabled her to forgive anyone who is truly repentant: though she was often teased by her older brother, Edmund , and was called "a liar" more than once by her siblings, she came to forgive them after they sincerely apologized for their errors.

However, as idealistic and childlike as Lucy is, she could be witty and even sarcastic at times. For instance, in Prince Caspian , she once said that girls "never keep a map in their head" "because our heads have something inside them".

As she inevitably matured, she could also be insecure about her looks, as seen in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader , when she was tempted to use a spell to become more beautiful than her older sister, Susan , and only came back to her senses through Aslan's intervention. Lucy was afraid of insects. She preferred going barefoot over wearing shoes: when she and her siblings first appeared in Narnia during the War of Deliverance , she was the first to take off her shoes and later, she was reluctant to put them back on , and when she sailed with Caspian to the end of the world, she contentedly went barefoot both on board ship and walking across the island of Felimath.

Lucy does tend to be overly compassionate, even toward evil ones, regardless of their vile deeds. For instance, while discussing what to do with the captive Rabadash, she regarded him simply as "foolish Rabadash", rather than the ruthless man he was - who sought to take her sister by force and ignited a war without provocation. She suggested to let him go free on the promise of fair dealing in the future. In The Last Battle , she felt sorry for the treacherous dwarves who maliciously killed the talking horses, and chided Eustace for calling them "swines".

She never bothered to ask Eustace why he loathed them and even begged Aslan tearfully to do something for "those poor dwarfs" - which they were not. When she matured into adulthood as a Queen of Narnia, she always looked merry, her hair was as golden as ever, and she was so beautiful that many Princes desired her to be their Queen.

However, when she returned to Narnia a year later, the dagger was lost. Lucy's Cordial : During the Winter Rebellion, Father Christmas gave Lucy a diamond bottle filled with the juice of the fire flower, which can heal any injury.

She had this with her throughout the whole series. The article was written and presented so well that it has been featured on the front page. The Chronicles of Narnia Wiki Explore. Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? Lucy Pevensie. View source.



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