WHAT LUCY SAW:
SUSAN and the two boys were bitterly tired with rowing before they rounded
the last headland and began the final pull up Glasswater itself, and Lucy's head
ached from the long hours of sun and the glare on the water. Even Trumpkin
longed for the voyage to be over. The seat on which he sat to steer had been
made for men, not Dwarfs, and his feet did not reach the floor-boards; and
everyone knows how uncomfortable that is even for ten minutes. And as they all
grew more tired, their spirits fell. Up till now the children had only been
thinking of how to get to Caspian. Now they wondered what they would do when
they found him, and how a handful of Dwarfs and woodland creatures could defeat
an army of grown-up Humans.
Twilight was coming on as they rowed slowly up the windings of Glasswater Creek
- a twilight which deepened as the banks drew closer together and the
overhanging trees began almost to meet overhead. It was very quiet in here as
the sound of the sea died away behind them; they could even hear the trickle of
the little streams that poured down from the forest into Glasswater.
They went ashore at last, far too tired to attempt lighting a fire; and even a
supper of apples (though most of them felt that they never wanted to see an
apple again) seemed better than trying to catch or shoot anything. After a
little silent munching they all huddled down together in the moss and dead
leaves between four large beech trees.
Everyone except Lucy went to sleep at once. Lucy, being far less tired, found it
hard to get comfortable. Also, she had forgotten till now that all Dwarfs snore.
She knew that one of the best ways of getting to sleep is to stop trying, so she
opened her eyes.
Through a gap in the bracken and branches she could just see a patch of water in
the Creek and the sky above it. Then, with a thrill of memory, she saw again,
after all those years, the bright Narnian stars. She had once known them better
than the stars of our own world, because as a Queen in Narnia she had gone to
bed much later than as a child in England. And there they were - at least, three
of the summer constellations could be seen from where she lay: the Ship, the
Hammer, and the Leopard. "Dear old Leopard," she murmured happily to herself.
Instead of getting drowsier she was getting more awake - with an odd,
night-time, dreamish kind of wakefulness. The Creek was growing brighter. She
knew now that then moon was on it, though she couldn't see the moon. And now she
began to feel that the whole forest was coming awake like herself. Hardly
knowing why she did it, she got up quickly and walked a little distance away
from their bivouac.
"This is lovely," said Lucy to herself. It was cool and fresh, delicious smells
were floating everywhere.
Somewhere close by she heard the twitter of a nightingale beginning to sing,
then stopping, then beginning again. It was a little lighter ahead. She went
towards the light and came to a place where there were fewer trees, and whole
patches or pools of moonlight, but the moonlight and the shadows so mixed that
you could hardly be sure where anything was or what it was. At the same moment
the nightingale, satisfied at last with his tuning up, burst into full song.
Lucy's eyes began to grow accustomed to the light, and she saw the trees that
were nearest her more distinctly. A great longing for the old days when the
trees could talk in Narnia came over her. She knew exactly how each of these
trees would talk if only she could wake them, and what sort of human form it
would put on. She looked at a silver birch: it would have a soft, showery voice
and would look like a slender girl, with hair blown all about her face, and fond
of dancing. She looked at the oak: he would be a wizened, but hearty old man
with a frizzled beard and warts on his face and hands, and hair growing out of
the warts. She looked at the beech under which she was standing. Ah! she would
be the best of all. She would be a gracious goddess, smooth and stately, the
lady of the wood.
"Oh, Trees, Trees, Trees," said Lucy (though she had not been intending to speak
at all). "Oh, Trees, wake, wake, wake. Don't you remember it? Don't you remember
me? Dryads and Hamadryads, come out, come to me."
Though there was not a breath of wind they all stirred about her. The rustling
noise of the leaves was almost like words. The nightingale stopped singing as if
to listen to it.
Lucy felt that at any moment she would begin to understand what the trees were
trying to say. But the moment did not come. The rustling died away. The
nightingale resumed its song. Even in the moonlight the wood looked more
ordinary again. Yet Lucy had the feeling (as you sometimes have when you are
trying to remember a name or a date and almost get it, but it vanishes before
you really do) that she had just missed something: as if she had spoken to the
trees a split second too soon or a split second too late, or used all the right
words except one, or put in one word that was just wrong.
Quite suddenly she began to feel tired. She went back to the bivouac, snuggled
down between Susan and Peter, and was asleep in a few minutes.
It was a cold and cheerless waking for them all next morning, with a grey
twilight in the wood (for the sun had not yet risen) and everything damp and
dirty.
"Apples, heigh-ho," said Trumpkin with a rueful grin. "I must say you ancient
kings and queens don't overfeed your courtiers!"
They stood up and shook themselves and looked about. The trees were thick and
they could see no more than a few yards in any direction.
"I suppose your Majesties know the way all right?" said the Dwarf.
"I don't," said Susan. "I've never seen these woods in my life before. In fact I
thought all along that we ought to have gone by the river."
"Then I think you might have said so at the time," answered Peter, with
pardonable sharpness.
"Oh, don't take any notice of her," said Edmund. "She always is a wet blanket.
You've got that pocket compass of yours, Peter, haven't you? Well, then, we're
as right as rain. We've only got to keep on going north-west - cross that little
river, the what-do-you-call-it? - the Rush -"
"I know," said Peter. "The one that joins the big river at the Fords of Beruna,
or Beruna's Bridge, as the D.L.F. calls it."
"That's right. Cross it and strike uphill, and we'll be at the Stone Table (Aslan's
How, I mean) by eight or nine o'clock. I hope King Caspian will give us a good
breakfast!"
"I hope you're right," said Susan. "I can't remember all that at all."
"That's the worst of girls," said Edmund to Peter and the Dwarf. "They never
carry a map in their heads."
"That's because our heads have something inside them," said Lucy.
At first things seemed to be going pretty well. They even -thought they had
struck an old path; but if you know anything about woods, you will know that one
is always finding imaginary paths. They disappear after about five minutes and
then you think you have found another (and hope it is not another but more of
the same one) and it also disappears, and after you have been well lured out of
your right direction you realize that none of them were pats at all. The boys
and the Dwarf, however, were used to woods and were not taken in for more than a
few seconds.
They had plodded on for about half an hour (three of them very stiff from
yesterday's rowing) when Trumpkin suddenly whispered, "Stop." They all stopped.
"There's something following us," he said in a low voice. "Or rather, something
keeping up with us: over there on the left." They all stood still, listening and
staring till their ears and eyes ached. "You and I'd better each have an arrow
on the string," said Susan to Trumpkin. The Dwarf nodded, and when both bows
were ready for action the party went on again.
They went a few dozen yards through fairly open woodland, keeping a sharp
look-out. Then they came to a place where the undergrowth thickened and they had
to pass nearer to it. Just as they were passing the place, there came a sudden
something that snarled and flashed, rising out from the breaking twigs like a
thunderbolt. Lucy was knocked down and winded, hearing the twang of a bowstring
as she fell. When she was able to take notice of things again, she saw a great
grim-looking grey bear lying dead with Trumpkin's arrow in its side.
"The D.L.F. beat you in that shooting match, Su," said #Peter, with a slightly
forced smile. Even he had been shaken by this adventure.
"I - I left it too late," said Susan, in an embarrassed voice. "I was so afraid
it might be, you know - one of our kind of bears, a talking bear." She hated
killing things.
"That's the trouble of it," said Trumpkin, "when most of the beasts have gone
enemy and gone dumb, but there are still some of the other kind left. You never
know, and you daren't wait to see."
"Poor old Bruin," said Susan. "You don't think he was?"
"Not he," said the Dwarf. "I saw the face and I heard the snarl. He only wanted
Little Girl for his breakfast. And talking of breakfast, I didn't want to
discourage your Majesties when you said you hoped King Caspian would give you a
good one: but meat's precious scarce in camp. And there's good eating on a bear.
It would be a shame to leave the carcass without taking a bit, and it won't
delay us more than half an hour. I dare say you two youngsters - Kings, I should
say - know how to skin a bear?"
"Let's go and sit down a fair way off," said Susan to Lucy. "I know what a
horrid messy business that will be." Lucy shuddered and nodded. 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 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."
When they rejoined the boys and the Dwarf, as much as they thought they could
carry of the best meat had been cut off. Raw meat is not a nice thing to fill
one's pockets with, but they folded it up in fresh leaves and made the best of
it. They were all experienced enough to know that they would feel quite
differently about these squashy and unpleasant parcels when they had walked long
enough to be really hungry.
On they trudged again (stopping to wash three pairs of hands that needed it in
the first stream they passed) until the sun rose and the birds began to sing,
and more flies than they wanted were buzzing in the bracken. The stiffness from
yesterday's rowing began to wear off. Everybody's spirits rose. The sun grew
warmer and they took their helmets off and carried them.
"I suppose we are going right?" said Edmund about an hour later.
"I don't see how we can go wrong as long as we don't bear too much to the left,"
said Peter. "If we bear too much to the right, the worst that can happen is
wasting a little time by striking the great River too soon and not cutting off
the corner."
And again they trudged on with no sound except the thud of their feet and the
jingle of their chain shirts.
"Where's this bally Rush got to?" said Edmund a good deal later.
"I certainly thought we'd have struck it by now," said Peter. "But there's
nothing to do but keep on." They both knew that the Dwarf was looking anxiously
at them, but he said nothing.
And still they trudged on and their mail shirts began to feel very hot and
heavy.
"What on earth?" said Peter suddenly.
They had come, without seeing it, almost to the edge of a small precipice from
which they looked down into a gorge with a river at the bottom. On the far side
the cliffs rose much higher. None of the party except Edmund (and perhaps
Trumpkin) was a rock climber.
"I'm sorry," said Peter. "It's my fault for coming this way. We're lost. I've
never seen this place in my life before."
The Dwarf gave a low whistle between his teeth.
"Oh, do let's go back and go the other way," said Susan. "I knew all along we'd
get lost in these woods."
"Susan!" said Lucy, reproachfully, "don't nag at Peter like that. It's so
rotten, and he's doing all he can."
"And don't you snap at Su like that, either," said Edmund. "I think she's quite
right."
"Tubs and tortoiseshells!" exclaimed Trumpkin. "If we've got lost coming, what
chance have we of finding our way back? And if we're to go back to the Island
and begin all over again - even supposing we could - we might as well give the
whole thing up. Miraz will have finished with Caspian before we get there at
that rate."
"You think we ought to go on?" said Lucy.
"I'm not sure the High King is lost," said Trumpkin. "What's to hinder this
river being the Rush?"
"Because the Rush is not in a gorge," said Peter, keeping his temper with some
difficulty.
"Your Majesty says is," replied the Dwarf, "but oughtn't you to say was? You
knew this country hundreds - it may be a thousand - years ago. Mayn't it have
changed? A landslide might have pulled off half the side of that hill, leaving
bare rock, and there are your precipices beyond the gorge. Then the Rush might
go on deepening its course year after year till you get the little precipices
this side. Or there might have been an earthquake, or anything."
"I never thought of that," said Peter.
"And anyway," continued Trumpkin, "even if this is not the Rush, it's flowing
roughly north and so it must fall into the Great River anyway. I think I passed
something that might have been it, on my way down. So if we go downstream, to
our right, we'll hit the Great River. Perhaps not so high as we'd hoped, but at
least we'll be no worse off than if you'd come my way."
"Trumpkin, you're a brick," said Peter. "Come on, then. Down this side of the
gorge."
"Look! Look! Look!" cried Lucy.
"Where? What?" said everyone.
"The Lion," said Lucy. "Aslan himself. Didn't you see?" Her face had changed
completely and her eyes shone.
"Do you really mean -?" began Peter.
"Where did 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 between those mountain ashes. No, this side of the gorge. And
up, not down. Just the opposite of the way you want to go. And he wanted us to
go where he was - up there."
"How do you know that was what he wanted?" asked Edmund.
"He - I - I just know," said Lucy, "by his face."
The others all looked at each other in puzzled silence.
"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?"
"He'd be a pretty elderly lion by now," said Trumpkin, "if he's one you knew
when you were here before! And if it could be the same one, what's to prevent
him having gone wild and witless like so many others?"
Lucy turned crimson and I think she would have flown at Trumpkin, if Peter had
not laid his hand on her arm. "The D.L.F. doesn't understand. How could he? You
must just take it, Trumpkin, that we do really know about Aslan; a little bit
about him, I mean. And you mustn't talk about him like that again. It isn't
lucky for one thing: and it's all nonsense for another. The only question is
whether Aslan was really there."
"But I know he was," said Lucy, her eyes filling with tears.
"Yes, Lu, but we don't, you see," said Peter.
"There's nothing for it but a vote," said Edmund.
"All right," replied Peter. "You're the eldest, D.L.F. What do you vote for? Up
or down?"
"Down," said the Dwarf. "I know nothing about Aslan. But I do know that if we
turn left and follow the gorge up, it might lead us all day before we found a
place where we could cross it. Whereas if we turn right and go down, we're bound
to reach the Great River in about a couple of hours. And if there are any real
lions about, we want to go away from them, not towards them."
"What do you say, Susan?"
"Don't be angry, Lu," said Susan, "but I do think we should go down. I'm dead
tired. Do let's get out of this wretched wood into the open as quick as we can.
And none of us except you saw anything."
"Edmund?" said Peter.
"Well, there's just this," said Edmund, speaking quickly and turning a little
red. "When we first discovered Narnia a year ago - or a thousand years ago,
whichever it is - it was Lucy who discovered it first and none of us would
believe her. I was the worst of the lot, I know. Yet she was right after all.
Wouldn't it be fair to believe her this time? I vote for going up."
"Oh, Ed!" said Lucy and seized his hand.
"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. And Lucy came last of
the party, crying bitterly.