The Lion, The Witch and The WardrobeWrittenin1950C.S.Lewis P3

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Please do not copy these chapters to any other website, this is a private book for reference to those who write and read and are unfamiliar with the stories since they may not have had access to them. I have no intentions of publishing this publicly at all if you see someone doing that they violate copyright law, you must report them immediately. This is a second edition book in which the stories were reprinted and not the exact original copy from all book set of three books containing every book in the Narnia Series in Chronological order and they made up three big book boxset and I own this set. This is just for me as a reference and private Wattpad only book so that others unfamiliar with these stories may be able to read and catch up even if they do not own the book, do not have access to a computer or wifi for that matter. C. S. Lewis was and is to this day one of my favorite authors. He served in the World Wars and when he got too old to do that he rescued four real children of which Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy are inspired from. So these characters aren't just characters they're more real than any other characters I know. And since I've put up one Christmas story it is only right I should do an even more beloved version. And the way I update this will be out of chronological order this story and the stories that follow will become huge points of cultural learning about Earth and how it works giving young Fairies a big shock in The Problems of Negativix. I will also continue my reference notes and opinions in my special () so that is not just the story, my dear Skylights. -Lumna10.

A comparison of the Disney movie "The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe," based on C

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A comparison of the Disney movie "The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe," based on C. S. Lewis book is pretty close, but when it comes to the Narnia side of the story they seem to be skipping over every other couple of days to save runtime. I am proud though that the movie took the obligation to remind us the children were sent out from a city under  siege in the most unusual way and gives us high stakes for the Mother they are sent away without knowing whether or not they'll see her ever again. I will also be giving serious critique onto reviews from two websites that have stated wrong things. Chapters 5 & 6 which total up to 17 pages.

Chapter 5: Back on this side of the door

Because the game of hide-and-seek was still going on, it took Edmund and Lucy some time to find the others. But when at last they were all together (which happened in the long room, where the suit of armour was) Lucy burst out:
"Peter! Susan! It's all true. Edmund has seen it too. There is a country you can get to through the wardrobe. Edmund and I both got in. We met one another in there, in the wood. Go on, Edmund; tell them all about it."
"What's all this about, Ed?" said Peter.
And now we come to one of the nastiest things in this story. Up to that Edmund had Edmund had been feeling sick, and sulky, and annoyed with Lucy for being right, but he hadn't made up his mind what to do. When Peter suddenly asked him the question he decided all at once to do the meanest and most spiteful thing he could think of. He decided to let Lucy down.
"Tell us, Ed," said Susan.
And Edmund gave a very superior look as if he were far older than Lucy (there was really only a year's difference) and then a little snigger and said, "Oh, yes, Lucy and I have been playing – pretending that all her story about a country in a wardrobe is true. Just for fun, of course. There's nothing there really." (The football in the bathroom cupboards was a jest to make you think Edmund could be reasonable in the Disney movie but he's really our prequel character to Eustace in Book 4. He is willing to outright blatantly lie to just anyone if his little sister.-Lumna10)
Poor Lucy gave Edmund one look and rushed out of the room.
Edmund, who was becoming a nastier person every minute, thought he had scored a great success, and went on at once to say, "There she goes again. What's the matter with her? That's the worst of young kids, they always—" (To be honest I wonder how much my siblings think of me this way still today. My oldest sister can be quite as nasty as Edmund with other members of the family. She has advised me to do so many wrong things in text messages when I rant that I just stop texting her because she has nothing good to give advice wise. Thankfully, I don't have to deal with her rudeness she lives quite aways away in Florida.-Lumna10)
"Look here,"'said Peter, turning on him savagely, "shut up! You've been perfectly beastly to Lu ever since she started this nonsense about the wardrobe, and now you go playing games with her about it and setting her off again, I believe you did it simply out of spite." (Peter knows his brother better than we do.-Lumna10)
"But it's all nonsense," said Edmund, very taken aback.
"Of course it's all nonsense," said Peter, "that's just the point. Lu was perfectly all right when we left home, but since we've been down here she seems to be either going queer in the head or else turning into a most frightful liar. But whichever it is, what good do you think you'll do by jeering and nagging at her one day and encouraging her the next?"
"I thought – I thought," said Edmund; but he couldn't think of anything to say.
"You didn't think anything at all," said Peter; "it's just spite. You've always liked being beastly to anyone smaller than yourself; we've seen that at school before now."
(Your confirmation here in this book Edmund was no better than Eustace and was in fact known to be a bully in his own school to other children the terror in Narnia he faced would flip his reality upside down and nearly cook it like a tortoise, cousins to our turtles, abandoned on its back doom to suffer heat exhaustion from the sunshine. Encountering Terror is what really melts his stone heart again.-Lumna10)
"Do stop it," said Susan; "it won't make things any better having a row between you two. Let's go and find Lucy."

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