< The Horse and His Boy
The Horse and His Boy/Awesome
- Shasta /Cor Jumping off Bree's back (who's at a fear-maddened full gallop) to face down a freakin' lion who's actually Aslan, (the god of all creation in Narna!) chasing Aravis and Hwin. Don't get me wrong, it's a stupid idea, But it proves Shasta's devotion to his friends, as well as having balls of dwarf-forged steel.
- And please note that he's about ten-years old and completely unarmed, so that the best thing he can do is yell at it. Pure Awesome.
- Aslan gives Rabadash a chance to escape the Humiliation Conga he's setting himself up for: "Have a care, Rabadash. The doom is nearer now. It is at the door, it has lifted the latch..." (Performed to marvelous effect by Anthony Quayle in one of the audiobook readings.)
- Prior to that, Rabadash jumped from the top of the wall of a castle... but he gets his chainmail shirt caught on a hook, and hangs there, stuck. Later, while a captive, Rabadash again threatens the heroes by saying "The bolt of Tash falls from above!" Whereupon Prince Corin retorts, "Did the bolt of Tash ever get caught on a hook halfway?"
- Whereupon Corin's father, the King of Archenland, says, "Shame, Corin. Never taunt a man save when he is stronger than you; then, as you please."
- How about when Shasta goes back to help Aravis when she's being attacked by a lion, when the war horse Bree, who's been through a thousand battles, is too scared out of his mind to do anything but run?
- How about Shasta running non-stop, after having been through almost a whole book's worth of shit -- most recently a potential suicide mission through a desert -- to warn King Lune about the impending invasion?
- Corin Thunder-Fist versus the Lapsed Bear of Stormness, a talking bear who went feral and lost the ability to speak. Note that, as the epithet implies, Corin is a boxer. Too bad we don't actually get to see it.
- Likewise Peter, who is absent the whole book because he's off beating the hell out of a bunch of giants.
- Edmund gets a great one as Rabadash is hanging on the wall. Rabadash demands to be let down and given a fair shot at killing Edmund. Edmund's response is basically, "'Kay." (Sadly, King Lune prevents what would have been an epic beatdown.)
- Rabadash seems to be the butt of a lot of these. Makes sense since the Evil Chancellor slipped the Idiot Ball to him to try and get him killed.
- When the Narnians realize that Rabadash won't let them leave the city unless Susan marries him, their first idea is to barricade the door and fight the entire empire with a total force of maybe ten guys, including a faun, a raven, and a ten-year-old.
- And the only thing that puts them off the Last Stand is the prospect of the enemy burning the house down.
This article is issued from Allthetropes. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.