Title:
The Horse and His Boy (The Chronicle of Narnia, #3)
Author:
C.S. Lewis
Publisher:
Harper Collins
Published:
September 1st, 2009
Pages:
239p
ISBN13:
9780007323081
The first and second book of the
series told about Narnia from the very beginning of the land to the reign of
White Witch and fulfillment of the prophecy where two sons of Adam and two
daughters of Eve came to Narnia and released the land from the power of the witch. As a
reader, I have been told that Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy came to Narnia
through an old wardrobe, and I thought there was only Narnia at the other side
of the wardrobe, but when I opened the third book, I looked at a map and
learned that Narnia wasn’t the only land in the story, there were another places called the Archenland, Mt. Pire, the Calormene and Tashbaan
along with the desert and the mountain.
Thou the characters from the previous
books also appeared in this story, the main character were two children and two
talking horses. The story began when a boy named Shasta who live in the
Calormene as a son of fisherman discovered that his father whom he believe not his
biological father was about to sell him to a nobleman who came to their house. Then
suddenly, when he stood alone outside the house, the nobleman’s horse, Bree,
talked to him about running away north into Narnia. The beginning of the journey
was pretty easy for them and they even met companion along the way, Aravis, a
girl who also escape from her father with another talking horse, Hwim. Together
they got into the capital city of Calormene, Tashbaan, where something happened
to each of them which brought great danger not only to themselves but also to
Archenland and Narnia.
I felt like Lewis told the story
directly to me, I love the way he did it using the third person point of view. But
compare to the previous book, it is the least complex and toneless. The story
took place in the golden age of Narnia where the four children of Adam and Eve
sit at Cair Paravel as King and Queen of Narnia. Through this story, the reader
will also learnt that another human, other than the four children were living
outside Narnia, in Archenland and Calormene. If the Lion the Witch and the
Wardrobe was an allegory of the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ, I guess
this one was pretty much similar to the journey of Moses and Israelites through
the desert and wilderness where God (Aslan) was with them all the time and helped
them with everything their need. When Lewis spoke through Aslan, it was saintly,
beautiful and divine.
“I was the lion who forced you to join with
Aravis. I was the cat who comforted you among the houses of the dead. I was the
lion who drove the jackals from you while you slept. I was the lion who gave
the Horses the new strength of fear for the last mile so that you should reach
King Lune in time. And I was the lion you do not remember who pushed the boat
in which you lay, a child near death, so that it came to shore where a man sat,
wakeful at midnight, to receive you” – p.130
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