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Copywork
About This Passage
The awakening of the trees is Lewis's most spectacular image of restoration — the land itself rising against its oppressors, demonstrating that Aslan's power extends beyond creatures to the very fabric of the natural world
Read Chapter 11 of Prince Caspian with your family. Find the passage where Aslan roars and the trees begin to wake up — their branches moving, their roots pulling from the ground, the whole forest sti...
Full copywork activity with handwriting lines available in the complete study guide.
Discussion Questions
Narration Prompt
In your own words, tell the story of this chapter. What were the most important moments? What made them important — and how do you know?
Discussion Questions
- Aslan wakes the trees, and they begin to march against the Telmarines. The Telmarines always feared the forests. Now that fear has come true. Is there a difference between a fear that was irrational and one that was accurate all along? What does the chapter suggest about why the Telmarines feared the woods?
- Aslan sends Peter and Edmund to fight the battle while keeping Lucy and Susan with him for his wild procession through Narnia. Why does Lewis assign these different roles? What does each task require of the people chosen for it?
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Vocabulary Builder
Item 1
A period of wild, violent, or uncontrolled behavior
Item 2
To grow strong and healthy; to thrive with energy
Item 3
To set someone or something free from control
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Critical Thinking
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