Электронная книга: Aslan «Вэрнос»
В сердце галактики «Белая ночь» многие тысячелетия сосуществовали восемь планет. Но мирным временам пришел конец, когда неизвестный жестокий враг вторгся из ниоткуда, захватывая планеты одну за другой. Кто он и как его остановить, пытаются понять доблестные воины планеты Вэрнос – король Сарос, его младший брат Байон и сестраАдрастея. Им придется многим пожертвовать и через многое пройти, чтобы защитить родную солнечную систему. Издательство: "Издательские решения"
ISBN: 9785449365927 электронная книга Купить за 5.99 руб и скачать на Litres |
Aslan
Infobox Narnia character
caption=Aslan in the 2005 film "", voiced by
name=Aslan
race=Talking Lion / deity
nation=
gender=
major1=The Magician's Nephew
major2=The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
major3=The Horse and His Boy
major4=Prince Caspian
major5=The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
major6=The Silver Chair
major7=The Last Battle
film1=1988-90 BBC miniseries:
film2=2005-08 Disney film series:
Aslan, the "Great
He is a talking lion, King of the Beasts, son of the
"Aslan" is the Turkish word for "lion" and was also used as a title by Seljuk and Ottoman rulers.
Throughout the series, it is stated that Aslan is "not a tame lion", since, despite his gentle and loving nature, he is powerful and can be dangerous. He has many followers, which include vast numbers of Talking Beasts,
Biography
In "The Magician's Nephew"
(This is the first story in the chronology of Narnia, and of its human visitors, but the sixth tale Lewis wrote, and for most readers it is not the first meeting with the character.)
Aslan makes his first appearance at the creation of
While all the characters immediately feel awe for Aslan, Jadis expresses this as fear and hatred, and unsuccessfully assaults Aslan with an iron bar before fleeing. Aslan is unperturbed, and continues calling plants and animals into existence. The power of his song is so great that even the iron bar, dropped on fertile earth, grows into a functioning
Aslan then selects certain species from among the beasts his song has called into existence, and gives them the power of speech and reason. He instructs them to look after the animals. He appoints The Cabby to be King Frank of Narnia, and brings his wife Nellie to Narnia from Earth to be Queen Helen.
Aslan explains that Jadis will pose a great threat to the Narnians, and charges Digory and Polly with a quest to acquire a magic fruit to protect the land. He turns the horse Strawberry into a winged horse. When the quest is complete, he crowns The Cabby and Nellie, and advises Digory on how to care for his sick mother.
At the end of the novel, he takes Digory, Polly and Uncle Andrew back to the
In "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe"
(This is the second Narnia story chronologically, but the first one Lewis wrote, and for many readers was the first appearance of Aslan.)
With Narnia in the hundredth year of the tyrannical rule of the White Witch (Jadis, who had condemned the land to "endless winter"), all the Narnians are eagerly anticipating the return of Aslan.
"Aslan is on the move" is repeated, in fearful secrecy, as a message of hope. The Witch has turned hundreds of Aslan's followers to stone — namely those who refused to be in her pay. The Narnians expect Aslan to bring an end to the White Witch's tyrannical reign.
The four human children (Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy) are given shelter and aid by Mr. and Mrs. Beaver, who intend to lead them to Aslan. But before they set off, Edmund leaves to betray them to the White Witch. The children find Aslan leading a large gathering of Narnians who are preparing for war. Aslan sends some other Narnians to attack the Witch and her small entourage, during which they rescue Edmund. While they are away Aslan makes Peter a knight.
The White Witch reappears and claims from Aslan the right to execute Edmund as a traitor, citing
After the Witch leaves with her army to attack the Narnians, Lucy, Susan, and a number of mice (from whom the mouse hero
Aslan's exact words from chapter 15 do not clearly indicate whether or not it was within the witch's power to see this deeper magic, though they seem to imply that she could not. His language seems to imply that, had Jadis not been ill at ease when she was present at Narnia's creation, she might have understood this deeper magic, an important idea to the Christian metaphors of the series.
Aslan goes to the Witch's palace and breathes on the statues of her petrified enemies, bringing them back to life. He leads them all to aid Peter, Edmund and the Narnian army who are fighting the Witch's army. At the conclusion of the battle, he leaps on top of the witch and kills her.
Aslan crowns the four children as Kings and Queens of Narnia, and then during the celebration he quietly slips away. The children say nothing about it, for Mr. Beaver had warned them, "...one day you'll see him and another you won't."
Mr. Beaver's comments not only appear to contain Christian metaphors, but they also serve as a foreshadowing of Aslan's role in the books to follow.
In "The Horse and his Boy"
Readers are given very few details of Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy's reign in Narnia. There is one story, however, that occurs during that timeframe: "The Horse and His Boy".
"The Horse and His Boy" is about finding one's home. For the talking horses in this story (Bree and Hwin), the home they seek is the land of Narnia, where they were born. However, for the two humans that journey with them — Shasta and Aravis — finding their "home" is more a matter of the heart.
Aslan's influence throughout "The Horse and his Boy" is primarily hidden. Secretly, he delivered the infant Prince Cor of
Eventually, Aslan shows himself directly to the travellers, addressing their fears, or their self-pity, or their condescension towards others, or their pomposity. In one case, however, he affirms a purity of heart. Aslan reveals himself to Rabadash, the leader of the Calormen attackers in an effort to free him of his arrogant and violent ways. When kind words and forgiveness fail to soften Rabadash, Aslan resorts to an act of severe kindness: he turns Rabadash into a donkey. He leaves Rabadash with a cure for his "condition", requiring that he humble himself before all of his Calormen people: Rabadash must go to the temple of the Calormen god, Tash (since Rabadash had insulted Aslan in Tash's name). There, he would be turned back into a human. Were he to journey too far from the temple, however, he would turn, forever, back into a donkey.
In "Prince Caspian"
1,300 Narnian years after the events in "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe", both Aslan and the Pevensie children have become near-forgotten myths. Now, the Telmarine humans who have traveled and settled down in Narnia, rule the land and try to kill and hunt down all Narnians, as they see talking animals and magic as a threat. Later it is revealed that King Miraz crowned himself after he killed his older brother and father of the rightful heir, Prince Caspian. To ensure his throne, King Miraz tries to kill Caspian, but Caspian escapes into the forest, where Narnians offer him help and shelter. The children, newly returned to Narnia, are led the right way to their destination by Aslan, and find their faith tested as Aslan does not appear to them until they really try to see him.
When the
In "Voyage of the Dawn Treader"
While the newly-crowned King Caspian (the Prince of the previous book) is seeking seven lost mariners, the mouse
On many of the islands where they stop, a brief glimpse of Aslan, or his image, is enough to guide Caspian and his crew away from dangerous folly. When the Eustace is turned into a green
Eventually, Edmund, Lucy, Eustace and Reepicheep reach the world's end, where Aslan appears as a lamb. He shows Reepicheep the way to his country while helping the children return home. He also finally tells Edmund and Lucy that they are too old to return to Narnia, as he had told Peter and Susan in "Prince Caspian," and that they must instead come to know him in their world, a relatively direct reference to the Christian themes of the series.
In "The Silver Chair"
The story begins with Eustace Scrubb, who was introduced in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and his classmate Jill Pole, who are unhappy at their school, Experiment House, where bullying is left uncorrected. At Eustace's suggestion, they ask for Aslan's help while trying to escape from the bullies, and then blunder through a temporary interdimensional gate into Aslan's Country. Jill shows off, by moving too close to a high cliff, and Eustace, while trying to pull her back, falls off. Aslan appears and saves Eustace, by "blowing him" to Narnia. Aslan then explains to Jill that she and Eustace are charged with the quest to find the Narnian Prince Rilian, who had disappeared some years prior. He tells her that her task will be more difficult because of what she did. He then gives Jill four "Signs", to guide her and Eustace on their quest: of these Signs, the fourth and final is that at a key moment they will be asked to do something in Aslan's name. Aslan then blows Jill into Narnia, where she arrives a few moments after Eustace. Aslan instructs Jill and Eustace to rescue
Aslan makes no further appearance until the end of the story, but his signs are central to the story, and belief in Aslan plays a crucial part in defeating the
In the end, he sends Jill and Eustace back to our world magically, also helping them repay the school bullies and make a better school in the process. Here they were also helped by Caspian who had always wanted to see a glimpse of their world, but only for five minutes of our time.
In "The Last Battle"
The ape Shift disguises the reluctant donkey Puzzle as Aslan and fools the Narnians into thinking Aslan has returned, while issuing commands in his name.
The encroaching Calormenes and browbeaten Narnians are encouraged by
King Tirian, the remaining loyal Narnians, and Jill and Eustace battle the Calormenes and their allies, but are forced through the stable door along with several dwarves who have lost faith in Narnia. They find themselves not in a stable, but in a
Aslan then commands Peter to shut the door on Narnia, and leads them through his country, which is a
Influences
The theory that the figure of Aslan may have been inspired by a mysterious lion which appears and disappears suddenly at key moments in the novel "
Christian interpretation
Although Aslan can be read as an original character, there are parallels with the character and story of
According to the author, Aslan is not an
Portrayals
* In the animated adaptation of "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" distributed by the Children's Television Workshop (now
* Thorne also makes appearances as the Great Lion in the adaptations made in the mid-1990s by
* In all three of the
* In the
* In the 2005 film, ', the CGI Aslan is voiced by * In " * In the animated comedy series " * Aslan appears in the " References External links * [http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/lion/section10.rhtml SparkNotes reference to the meaning of Aslan's death] Источник: Aslan
* [http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2001/010/22.32.html "Aslan is still on the move"] "Christianity Today" editorial,
* [http://www.anamcharabooks.com/ "Following Aslan"] children's explanation of Aslan's parallels with Jesus
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Aslan | Вэрнос | В сердце галактики «Белая ночь» многие тысячелетия сосуществовали восемь планет. Но мирным временам пришел… — Издательские решения, электронная книга Подробнее... | 5.99 | электронная книга |
См. также в других словарях:
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