Prince Caspian

by

C. S. Lewis

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Faith and Belief Theme Icon
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Faith and Belief Theme Icon

In the Chronicles of Narnia, C.S. Lewis uses allegorical elements to imbue books like Prince Caspian with the beliefs and values of his devout Christian faith. Aslan functions as a Christ figure, a link between the natural and spiritual worlds, both divine and vulnerable to suffering and death. Prince Caspian makes a fairly explicit claim that the world is better when people embrace Christian values. More specifically, Aslan’s slow revelation of himself teaches the oppressed Old Narnians (and Peter, Susan, and Edmund) the true meaning of faith: believing and trusting in something even when a person cannot see it.

When the story opens, it’s been generations since Aslan left Narnia. In his absence, the Telmarines have taken over. They harbor a superstitious fear of Aslan and of the nature spirits, dryads and naiads, that used to flourish in Narnia. But their abuse of the land and its creatures suggests that they do not truly fear Aslan or ever expect his return. Talking beasts, with their long ancestral memories, and some mixed-race Telmarines (like Doctor Cornelius and Caspian’s Nurse) maintain their faith in Aslan. But other magical creatures, like Trumpkin and Nikabrik, have lost theirs, due in part to their belief that he abandoned them. Before Aslan can restore order to Narnia, those who cannot or do not believe in him must learn to. Only when Edmund, then Peter, then finally Susan remember their faith can they once again see Aslan, whom Lucy has been able to see from the start. Trumpkin’s doubt vanishes the instant he sees the lion in the flesh, and a delighted Aslan pounces on the Dwarf and declares that they will be great friends. The Telmarines who embrace him are welcome to stay, and those who don’t are repatriated to the land from which they came. The instant a person believes, their prior disbelief counts for nothing. Aslan never forces himself on anyone, and he doesn’t punish doubters. Instead, his actions argue that faith is a voluntary choice a person must make. Through the voluntary acts of faith of all the Narnians collectively, human, magical creature, and beast, Aslan restores Narnia to its former glory.

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Faith and Belief Quotes in Prince Caspian

Below you will find the important quotes in Prince Caspian related to the theme of Faith and Belief.
 Chapter 2: The Ancient Treasure House Quotes

“Now,” said Peter in quite a different voice, “it’s about time we four started using our brains.”

“What about?” asked Edmund.

“Have none of you guessed where we are?” said Peter.

“Go on, go on,” said Lucy, “I’ve felt for hours that there was some wonderful mystery hanging about this place.”

“Fire ahead, Peter,” said Edmund. “We’re all listening.”

“We are in the ruins of Cair Paravel itself,” said Peter.

“But I say,” replied Edmund. “I mean, how do you make that out? This place has been ruined for ages. Look at all those big trees growing right up to the gates. Look at the very stones. Anybody can see that nobody has lived here for hundreds of years.”

“I know,” said Peter. “That is the difficulty. But let’s leave that out for the moment. I want to take the points one by one.”

Related Characters: Peter (speaker), Lucy (speaker), Edmund (speaker), Caspian, Susan, Aslan
Page Number: 18
Explanation and Analysis:

“Oh, do let’s leave it alone,” said Susan. “We can try it in the morning. If we’ve got to spend the night here, I don’t want an open door at my back and a great big black hole that anything might come out of, besides the draft and the damp. And it’ll soon be dark.”

“Susan! How can you?” said Lucy with a reproachful glance. But both the boys were too much excited to take any notice of Susan’s advice. They worked at the ivy with their hands and with Peter’s pocket-knife till the knife broke. After that they used Edmund’s.

Related Characters: Lucy (speaker), Susan (speaker), Peter, Edmund
Page Number: 21
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: The Dwarf Tells of Prince Caspian Quotes

“Oh, don’t you know?” he said. “Aslan is the great Lion who comes from over the sea.”

“Who has been telling you all this nonsense?” said the King in a voice of thunder. Caspian was frightened and said nothing.

“Your Royal Highness,” said King Miraz, […] “I insist upon being answered. Look me in the face. Who has been telling you this pack of lies?”

“N—Nurse,” faltered Caspian, and burst into tears.

“Stop that noise,” said his uncle, taking Caspian by the shoulders and giving him a shake. “Stop it. And never let me catch you talking—or thinking either—about all those silly stories again. There never were those Kings and Queens. How could there be two Kings at the same time? And there’s no such person as Aslan. And there are no such things as lions. And there never was a time when animals could talk. Do you hear?”

Related Characters: Caspian (speaker), Miraz (speaker), Aslan, Doctor Cornelius, Nurse
Page Number: 43-44
Explanation and Analysis:

“Listen,” said the Doctor. “All you have heard about Old Narnia is true. It is not the land of Men. It is the country of Aslan, the country of the Walking Trees and Visible Naiads, of Fauns and Satyrs, of Dwarfs and Giants, of the gods and the Centaurs, of Talking Beasts. It was against these that the first Caspian fought. It is you Telmarines who silenced the beasts and the trees and the fountains, and who killed and drove away the Dwarfs and the Fauns, and are now trying to cover up even the memory of them. The king does not allow them to be spoke of.”

“Oh, I do wish we hadn’t,” said Caspian. “And I am glad it was all true, even if it is all over.”

“Many of your race wish that in secret,” said Doctor Cornelius.

Related Characters: Caspian (speaker), Doctor Cornelius (speaker), Aslan, Miraz
Page Number: 52
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5: Caspian’s Adventure in the Mountains Quotes

He also learned a great deal by using his own eyes and ears. As a little boy he had often wondered why he disliked his aunt, Queen Prunaprismia; he now saw that it was because she disliked him. He also began to see that Narnia was an unhappy country. The taxes were high and the laws were stern and Miraz was a cruel man.

Related Characters: Caspian, Doctor Cornelius, Miraz, Prunaprismia
Page Number: 58
Explanation and Analysis:

“Whistles and whirligigs! Trufflehunter,” said Trumpkin, “You don’t mean you want to give the country to Humans?”

“I said nothing about that,” answered the Badger. “It’s not Men’s country (who should know that better than me?) But it’s a country for a man to be King of. We badgers have long enough memories to know that. Why, bless us all, wasn’t the High King Peter a Man?”

“Do you believe all those old stories?” asked Trumpkin.

“I tell you, we don’t change, we beasts,” said Trufflehunter. “We don’t forget. I believe in the High King Peter and the rest that reigned at Cair Paravel, as firmly as I believe in Aslan himself.”

“As firmly as that, I daresay,” said Trumpkin. “But who believes in Aslan nowadays?”

“I do,” said Caspian, “And if I hadn’t believed in him before, I would now.”

Related Characters: Caspian (speaker), Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F. (speaker), Trufflehunter (speaker), Peter, Aslan, Nikabrik
Page Number: 71-72
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8: How They Left the Island Quotes

Then he swung his arm and raised it and tried the muscles, and finally jumped to his feet crying, “Giants and junipers! It’s cured! It’s as good as new!” After that he burst into a great laugh and said, “Well, I’ve made as big a fool of myself as ever a Dwarf did. No offense, I hope? My humble duty to your Majesties all—humble duty. And thanks for my life, my cure, my breakfast—and my lesson.”

The children said it was quite all right and not to mention it.

“And now,” said Peter, “if you’ve really decided to believe in us—”

“I have,” said the Dwarf.

“It’s quite clear what we have to do. We must join King Caspian at once.”

Related Characters: Peter (speaker), Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F. (speaker), Caspian, Lucy, Edmund, Susan, Aslan
Page Number: 113-114
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9: What Lucy Saw Quotes

When they had sat down, she said: “Such a horrible idea has come into my head, Su.”

“What’s that?”

“Wouldn’t it be dreadful if some day in our own world, at home, men started going wild inside, like the animals here, and still looked like men, so that you’d never be able to know which were which?”

“We’ve got enough to bother about here and now in Narnia,” said the practical Susan, “without imagining things like that.”

Related Characters: Lucy (speaker), Susan (speaker), Peter, Edmund, Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F.
Page Number: 127-128
Explanation and Analysis:

“Look! Look! Look!” cried Lucy.

“Where? What?” asked everyone.

“The Lion,” said Lucy. “Aslan himself. Didn’t you see?” […]

“Do you really mean—?” began Peter.

“Where do you think you saw him?” asked Susan.

“Don’t talk like a grown-up,” said Lucy, stamping her foot. “I didn’t think I saw him. I saw him.”

“Where, Lu?” asked Peter.

“Right up there […] Just the opposite of the way you want to go. And he wanted us to go where he was—up there.”

[…]

“Her Majesty may well have seen a lion,” put in Trumpkin. “There are lions in these woods, I’ve been told. But it needn’t have been a friendly and talking lion any more than the bear was a friendly and talking bear.”

“Oh, don’t be so stupid,” said Lucy. “Do you think I don’t know Aslan when I see him?”

Related Characters: Peter (speaker), Lucy (speaker), Susan (speaker), Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F. (speaker), Edmund, Aslan
Page Number: 131-132
Explanation and Analysis:

“What do you say, Susan?”

“Don’t be angry, Lu,” said Susan, “but I do think we should go down […] none of us except you saw anything.”

“Edmund?” said Peter.

“Well, there’s just this,” said Edmund […] “When we first discovered Narnia a year ago […] none of us would believe [Lucy…] Yet she was right after all. Wouldn’t it be fair to believe her this time? I vote for going up.”

[…]

“And now it’s your turn, Peter,” said Susan, “and I do hope—”

“Oh, shut up, shut up and let a chap think,” interrupted Peter. “I’d much rather not have to vote.”

“You’re the High King,” said Trumpkin sternly.

“Down,” said Peter after a long pause. “I know Lucy may be right after all, but I can’t help it. We must do one or the other.”

So they set off to their right along the edge, downstream.

Related Characters: Peter (speaker), Edmund (speaker), Susan (speaker), Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F. (speaker), Lucy, Aslan
Page Number: 133-134
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10: The Return of the Lion Quotes

The first tree she looked at seemed […to be] a huge man with a shaggy beard and great bushes of hair. She was not frightened: she had seen such things before. But when she looked again he was only a tree, though he was still moving. You couldn’t see whether he had trees or roots, of course, because when trees move they don’t walk on the surface of the earth; the wade in it as we do in water. The same thing happened with every tree she looked at. At one moment they seemed to be the friendly, lovely giant and giantess forms which the tree-people put on when some good magic had called them into full life: next moment they all looked like trees again. But when they looked like trees, it was like strangely human trees, and when they looked like people, it was like strangely branchy and leafy people […]

Related Characters: Caspian, Peter, Lucy, Edmund, Susan, Aslan, Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F., Nikabrik
Page Number: 145-146
Explanation and Analysis:

“Yes, wasn’t it a shame?” said Lucy. “I saw you all right. They wouldn’t believe me. They’re all so—”

From somewhere deep inside Aslan’s body there came the faintest suggestion of a growl.

“I’m sorry,” said Lucy, who understood some of his moods. “I didn’t mean to start slanging the others. But it wasn’t my fault anyway, was it?”

The Lion looked straight into her eyes.

“Oh, Aslan,” said Lucy. “You don’t mean it was? How could I—I couldn’t have left the others and come up to you alone, how could I? Don’t look at me like that…oh well, I suppose I could. Yes, and it wouldn’t have been alone, I know, not if I was with you. But what would have been the good?”

Aslan said nothing.

“You mean,” said Lucy rather faintly, “that it would have turned out all right—somehow?”

Related Characters: Lucy (speaker), Peter, Edmund, Susan, Aslan, Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F.
Page Number: 148-149
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11: The Lion Roars Quotes

“Lucy,” said Susan in a very small voice.

“Yes?” said Lucy.

“I see him now. I’m sorry.”

“That’s all right.”

“But I’ve been far worse than you know. I really believed it was him—he, I mean—yesterday. When he warned us not to go down to the fir wood. And I really believed it was him tonight, when you woke us up. I mean, deep down inside. Or I could have, if I’d let myself. But I just wanted to get out of the woods and—and—oh, I don’t know. And what ever am I to say to him?”

“Perhaps you won’t need to say much,” suggested Lucy.

Related Characters: Lucy (speaker), Susan (speaker), Peter, Edmund, Aslan, Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F.
Page Number: 161
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12: Sorcery and Sudden Vengeance Quotes

“I blew it when first I had a breathing space,” [said Caspian].

“I’m not likely to forget it,” came the angry voice, “when my Dwarfs bore the brunt of the attack and one in five of them fell,” [said Nikabrik].

“For shame, Dwarf,” came [Trufflehunter’s] thick voice […]. “We all did as much as the Dwarfs and none more than the King.”

“Tell that tale your own way for all I care,” answered Nikabrik. “But whether it was that the Horn was blown too late, or whether there was no magic in it, no help has come. You, you great clerk, you master magician, you know-all; are you still asking us to hang our hopes on Aslan and King Peter and all the rest of it?”

“I must confess—I cannot deny it—that I am deeply disappointed with the results of the operation,” came the answer [from Doctor Cornelius].

Related Characters: Caspian (speaker), Nikabrik (speaker), Trufflehunter (speaker), Doctor Cornelius (speaker), Peter, Edmund, Susan, Aslan, Trumpkin/the Dwarf/D.L.F.
Related Symbols: Horn
Page Number: 173-174
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14: How All Were Very Busy Quotes

[They] came to another school, where a tired-looking girl was teaching arithmetic to a number of boys who looked very much like pigs. She looked out of the window and saw the divine revelers singing up the street and a stab of joy went through her heart. Aslan stopped right under her window and looked up at her.

“Oh, don’t, don’t” she said. “I’d love to. But I mustn’t. I must stick to my work. And the children would be frightened if they saw you.”

“Frightened?” said the most pig-like of the boys […] and they all came crowding to the window. But as soon as their mean little faces looked out, […they] began howling with fright and trampling one another down to get out of the door and jumping out of the windows. […]

“Now, Dear Heart,” said Aslan to the Mistress: and she jumped down and joined them.

Related Characters: Aslan (speaker), Peter, Lucy, Susan, Miraz, Bacchus, Silenus
Page Number: 215-216
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15: Aslan Makes a Door in the Air Quotes

You may imagine that this caused plenty of head-scratching among the Telmarines. Some of them, chiefly the young ones, had, like Caspian, heard stories of the Old Days and were delighted that they had come back. They were already making friends with the creatures. These all decided to stay in Narnia. But most of the older men, especially those who had been important under Miraz, were sulky and had no wish to live in a country where they could not rule the roost. “Live he were a lot of blooming performing animals! No fear,” they said. “And ghosts too,” some added with a shudder. “That’s what those there Dryads are. It’s not canny.” They were also suspicious. “I don’t trust ’em,” they said. “Not with that awful Lion and all. He won’t keep his claws off us long, you’ll see.”

Related Characters: Caspian, Aslan, Miraz
Page Number: 229
Explanation and Analysis:

Many years ago in that world […] a shipload of pirates was driven by storm on an island. And there they did as pirates would: killed the natives and took the native women for wives, and made palm wine, and drank and were drunk, and lay in the shade of palm trees, and woke up and quarreled, and sometimes killed one another. And in one of these frays six were put to flight […] and fled with their women into […] a cave to hide. But it was one of the magical places of that world […]. And so they fell, or rose, or blundered, or dropped right through and found themselves in […] Telmar which was then unpeopled […]. And in Telmar their descendants lived and became a fierce and proud people; and after many generations […] they invaded Narnia, which was then in some disorder […] and conquered it and ruled it.

Related Characters: Aslan (speaker), Caspian, Miraz, Glozelle, Sopespian
Page Number: 231-232
Explanation and Analysis: