they are based on Christianity..i know that Aslan represents Jesus..i know who peter,edmund,susan,lucy,white witch,lord miraz,mr.tumnus,and the beavers represent..i dont know who prince caspian represetns.i just need to know who all the charaters in the whole series represent or symbolize also what the objeccts symbolize
also in the end of prince caspian while watching the movie is that big water thing that looked like a man was that to symbolize God...or who was that symbolize also?
I have a problem. I watched the "Prince Caspian" movie today with a friend of mine. However, when the movie got to a certain part, we couldn't understand what Edmund said. I can't find a transcript of the movie anywhere, and we had to return the DVD before we could check the subtitles. This is bothering me to no end, and I was wondering if anyone knew what the quote was.
The scene and line is where the White Witch has Peter under her "spell", so to speak, and Edmund stabs her. After the ice crumbles, he says "I know," and something else. But we just can't figure out what he says!
Help would be greatly appreciated.
According to my teacher, aside from all the christian symbolism and bible imagery, CoN has some, um, sexual stuff too? And now I have to write a paper on it.
I'm re-reading the series, and have got nothing. There's some weirdness between Lucy and the GoatDude that I'm going to look into further, but other than that, nothing. An older friend who was in my teacher's class said, "You really got read in between the lines," and she told me something about Edmund being the White Which's slave [not servant, she told me, more like the master/slave dom/sub thing or whatever] and Caspian having a strange past? What the hell?
Am I totally missing something? I can't find any of this stuff, just biblical reference after biblical reference.
I have a book project on the chronicles of narnia due tomorrow, and I have to write a letter from one character to another in the book. I was thinking writing a letter to Aslan from all the kids... but what should I say? I needs to be like a half a page. Thank you SOO much. This is all I have so far... but I really need help thinking of more stuff to say..
Dear Aslan,
How are you doing? I heard that you are the greatest and magnificent king of Narnia. I have a problem, something that happened to my dearest and most beloved brother Edmund. He has been captured by the white witch and I need your help to get him back. We miss him more than anything and we are very worried about him.
im only talking about one book here
the lion, the witch, and the wardrobe
not 2 books combined
Here's some questions i have to answer for a class and i really could use all the help i could get! I'm horrible in History and i know some of you out there are geniuses with it... please help me!
1. During John Quincy Adam’s presidency, the politician who prepared for the next election by relying on his military reputation and portraying himself as losing the presidency in 1824 due to a ‘corrupt bargain’ was (a) Henry Clay (b) William Crawford (c) William Henry Harrison (d) Andrew Jackson
2. The native American nation forced to move from Georgia as a result of Jackson’s policies were the (a) Seminole (b) Cherokee (c) Sac (d) Choctaw
3. The southern politician who justified resistance to the Tariff of 1828 was (a) John Tyler (b) John C Calhoun (c) Andrew Jackson (d) Edmund Randolph
4. The new political coalition which emerged to challenge Democratic control in the 1830s was called the (a) Federalists (b) Republicans (c) Bull Moose (d) Whigs
5. The famous book in which Alex de Tocqueville analyzed American society was (a) AMERICAN COMMONWEALTH (b) DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA (c) LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI (d) HARD TIMES
6. The most significant development in urban population trends from 1820-1860 was (a) stability of large cities (b) emergence of new towns (c) massive immigration from eastern Europe (d) increase in the divorce rate.
7. Joseph Smith was the founder of (a) Shakers (b) Oneidans (c) Smithsonian Institution (d) Mormons
8. The Auburn System was a pioneering experiment in (a) insane Asylums (b) education for the blind (c) prison reform (d) communal living
9. William Lloyd Garrison’s views on slavery might best be described as (a) moderate (b) coldly logical (c) uncompromising (d) reflecting the northern viewpoint
10. The second Great Awakening began as a counteroffensive to overemotional religious revivals (a) true (b) false
11. Before Texas gain independence in 1836, a major conflict between American settlers in Texas and Mexican government was (a) Mexico’s abolition of slavery (b) Mexico’s demand that all Texas residents speak Spanish (c) effect of the Missouri Compromise in Texas (d) the weakness of the Mexican government
12. In 1840, California could best be described as un mistakenly Mexican, with only a handful of American settlers (a) True (b) False
13. President Polk’s plans to defeat Mexico included (a) driving Santa Anna from power (b) invading Texas (c) establishing a naval blockade of Mexican ports (d) taking possession of California and New Mexico
14. The suggestion that slavery should be barred from the territory gained by the Mexican War was made by (a) Lewis Cass (b) David Wilmot (c) Henry Clay (d) Andrew Jackson.
15. The original advocate of organizing territories on the basis of ‘popularity sovereignty was (a) Lewis Cass (b) John C Calhoun (c)Nicholas Trist (d) David Wilmot
16. The major American export in the middle decades of the 19th Century was (a) timber (b) tobacco (c) wheat (d) cotton
17. On the eve of the Civil War about____ of white southern families owned at least one slave (a) 78% (b) 50% (c) 25% (d) 10%
18. Most of the industrial workers in the mid 19th Century lived in crowded squalid slums springing up in major cities (a) true (b) false
19. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel which brought home the evils of slavery to many in the North was (a) Uncle Tom’s Cabin (b) Impending Crisis (c) 12 Years a Slave (d) Below the Mason Dixon Line
20. Lincoln’s position on slavery displayed his (a) unwillingness to compromise (b) compassion toward the slave owner but condemnation of slavery (c) cynical attitude in politics (d) unfaltering hatred of slavery and slave owners.
21. The first and only president of the Confederacy was (a) Robert E Lee (b) Alexander Stephens (c) Jefferson Davis (d) Howell Cobb
22. The Civil War mostly effected women in the North by expanding their ‘proper spheres’ by working as army nurses and replacing male workers. (a) true (b) false
23. The measures restricting former slaves to working in farming and domestic service were the (a) Reconstruction Acts (b) Scalawag codes (c) Redeemer codes (d) Black codes
24. During the bitter days of Reconstruction, most Northerners (a) believed in giving blacks the vote (b) opposed true equality for blacks (c) were not concerned at al about blacks (d) completely supported the radical Republicans .
25. The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution became embroiled in a debate between blacks right and the rights of (a) Native Americans (b) whites (c) women (d) immigrants
26. Id
For my high school English course, we are required to write a 8-10 page senior thesis on a book: basically an extended analytical essay. I am a fairly strong writer, and am looking for books (or epic poems!) of some magnitude.
Books I am considering include:
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz
White Teeth by Zadie Smith
The Faerie Queen by Edmund Spenser
Hopefully, you can see what sort of books I am looking for. If you have any suggestions, or merely want to advocate for any of the above books, feel free. Thanks.
My english is not very good. My teacher gave me a open book quiz I don't understand. Maybe you can explain to me what I am suppose to do.
Varying Viewpoints
Colonial America: Communities of Conflict or Consensus?
The earliest historians of colonial society portrayed close-knit, homogeneous, and hierarchical communities. Richard Bushman in From Puritan to Yankee (1967) challenged that traditional view. He described colonial New England as an expanding, open society in which the colonist gradually lost the religious discipline and social structure of the founding generations. Rhys Isaac viewed the Great Awakening in the South as similar evidence of erosion in the social constraints and deference that once held colonial society together.
Some scholars dispute that a loss of common faith and morals undermined colonial communities. Christine Heyrmann in particular argued in Commerce and Culture (1984) that the decline of traditional mores was overstated and that religious beliefs and commercial activities coexisted throughout the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Similarly, colonial historian Jack Greene has suggested that the obsession with the decline of defernce obscures the fact that colonies outside New England, like Virginia and Mary-land, actually experienced a consolidation of religious and social authority throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, becoming more hierarchical and paternalistic, not less.
Since the 1970s, some historians have also attacked the traditional idea that New England was the home of American freedom and that the South spawned hierarchical, aristocratic communities. They argue that not only did the South produce many of the founders -Washington, Jefferson, and Madison - but that republican principles were actually strongest in the Virginia. Some scholars, notably Edmund S. Morgan in American Slavery, American Freedom (1975), consider the willingness of wealthy planters to concede the equally and freedom of all white males a device to ensure racial solidarity and to mute class conflict.
Few historians still argue that the colonies offered boundless opportunites for inhabitants, white or black. Whether one accepts Morgan's aruguments that "Americans bought their independence with slave labor" or those interpretations that point to the rising social conflict between whites as the salient characteristic of colonial society on the eve of the Revolution, the once-common assumption that America was a world of equality and consensus no longer reigns undisputed. Yet because one's life chances were still unquestionably better in America than in Europe, immigrants who viewed America as a land of opportunity continued to pour in.
Which of these 2 fantasy series is better? Please don't reply saying that "Tolkein and Lewis are friends" and all that stuff. We all know they both are friends and shared ideas. But I just want to compare to see what do you guys prefer
And also, who would win a fight between these characters?
Frodo Baggins or Lucy Pevensie? (Heroes who are weak)
Legolas or Susan Pevensie? (Archers)
Gimli or Edmund Pevensie? (Warriors)
Aragorn or Peter Pevensie? (Warriors)
Saruman or The White Witch? (Wicked wizards and witches)
and which battles are better?
The Battle of Helm's Deep (LotR-The 2 Towers) vs The Battle between The Telmarines and Narnians (TCON-Prince Caspian)?
The Battle between Mordor and Gondor (LotR-Return of the King) vs The Battle between The Narnians and The White Witch's Army (TCON-Lion, Witch Wardrobe)?
I had seen the white creature dance through the forest, so I informed the Kings and Queens.
They were more than delighted to be participating in a chase for the rare animal.
And I was more than willing to help in preparations.
As Peter, Susan, and Edmund had others aid them, I was left with my best friend – Queen Lucy.
Gazing at her beautiful hair, and seeing her smile in the sunlight, I knew ... I knew I loved her.
Butterflies had long ago grown in my stomach, and I knew they were fluttering mad in there.
All I could do was stare.
Just tell her, just tell her ...
She looked up at me.
She’s smiling.
Just say it ... say it ...
“Tumnus, you keep staring at me, is something on my face?”
It took a while for me to comprehend what had just come from her mouth. But shaking my head after seconds I replied, “No. Your face is perfect.”
A pink formed across her face, “Oh...thank you.”
I have to let it out, let it out ...
“Lucy, are you ready?”
I turned to see King Edmund on his horse.
“Oh, yes, I’m coming,” Lucy said getting ready to gallop away on another adventure.
While her siblings left the stables before me, I knew I had to say it ... it was now or never.
“Lucy ...”
She glanced back.
“I...I...lo...love you.”
She smiled. This was it!
“Oh Mr. Tumnus, I know today is April Fools. I’ll get you back for that.”
All hope had just vanished.
She thought I was joking!
I vowed I would tell her the truth when she returned.
Little did I know I would never get that chance.
The little Queen and her siblings had never returned.
And I was left with the regret of never telling her it was the truth.
I was left alone, with a broken heart, and three lifeless words.
So I'm in history this year but it's really hard. This is my junior year and my teacher said the text books are like freshman in college level. I need help putting these events in order from first to last
New England confederation achieves a notable military sucess
english separatists migrate from holland to america
swedish colony on delaware river is conquered bu dutch neighbor
manhattan island is acquired by non-english settlers
protestant reformation begins in europe and england
quaker son of an english admiral obtains a royal charter for a colony
puritans bring a thousand immigrants and a charter to america
england conquers a colony on the hudson river
convicted massachusetts bay heretic found a colony as a haven for dissenters
James II is overthrown in england and edmund andros is overthrown in america
This is another one that was on the back of the worksheet
legal lynching of twenty accused of witches occurs
royal slave trade monopoly ends
first colonial college is founded
landless whites in virginia lose the right to vote
major rebellion by african americans occurrs in one of the middle colonies
southern slaves in revolt try but fail to march to spanish florida
partial church membership is opened to the unconverted
african slaves begin to replace white indentured labor on southern plantations
poor virginia white revolt against govenor and rich planters
first african arrive in virginia
Thank you so much if you can help me
The treat is a piece of jelly and has white powder covering it. I think it can be an English treat but im not totally sure, maybe Swedish. Also, from the movie Narnia (the first one) the evil queen gives Edmund this treat.
First answer gets 10 pts. I cant firgure it out, its driving me mad.
ok so do i just wait a while until the "Choose As Best Answer" button shows up? or is there a quicker way?
im stuck on one level in the Prince Caspian Wii game!!! Its' the part when Peter and Edmund trying to save Caspian from getting to the white witch...and you have to defeat those two others....how do u do that????
is there any special techniques??? HELP!!!!!!
As they grew their roles as kings and queens became more familiar to them than their memories of England. Memory faded in the way that dreams do in the morning; occasional bursts of niggling remembrance, but full recollection just out of reach.
Lucy was the beloved one, the one who always supported her people, the one they could reach out and touch. Edmund was the lawgiver, surprising everyone with how quickly he learned the intricacies of the legal system. He was not afraid to speak out when he felt his it necessary. Susan was the politician, arranging alliances with visiting dignitaries and charming them with her wit and diplomatic skill, her elegant proficiency at being hostess mellowing even the most aggressive ambassador. Peter was High King, the leader of his armies, the one to whom all the others turned when they were unsure.
They held banquets for the smallest occasion, opening their doors to their populace, keen to demonstrate fondness for even the smallest of their subjects. And yet, Peter found, it was hard to pursue conversations when everyone was so eager to tell you how much they appreciated you. The courtiers learned that they did not need to bow each time he passed, but he could not convince them to give up the slight nod of deference. Then he stopped trying, and became used to it.
It wasn’t that any of the children were lonely as they danced towards adulthood. Lucy was still accepted by her people, still went for tea with the Beavers, and they were all surrounded by the crowds of the court. But they, all four, remained closest to each other. It was to Susan that Lucy went after attending the funeral of a centaur of whom she had been particularly fond. It was from Peter that Edmund sought advice when he believed one of the courtiers was a Calormene spy. And it was to Peter that Susan went each time she gently let down another suitor and deflected another marriage proposal.
It wasn’t that she couldn’t have married them, she supposed, as she tried to negotiate an advantageous alliance that didn’t involve tying either herself or Lucy to some distant prince, but that in doing so the group would split. And they were Queens of Narnia in their own right, were they not?
Peter asked her about it one evening when she stood on the balcony overlooking the sea, salty tears drying on her face. Why had she rejected the nobleman’s son, he wanted to know, when she was so obviously fond of him?
“I didn’t love him, he was just a nice man,” she replied softly. “It wasn’t his fault that half my heart belongs already to Narnia.”
Peter rested a knowing hand on her shoulder, giving her silent support. When she turned into his embrace, burying her face against his broadening chest, it was no different than any other time he had comforted her. He stroked her hair, made soothing noises, and she tilted her face up for kiss like she had when they were children. It was instinct that turned the kiss from a chaste press of lips to something more; neither of them had kissed that way before but it seemed natural to tip their heads and open their mouths. After all, they loved each other as they loved Narnia. They were Narnia.
There was no conscious realisation of what they were doing; all was a continuation of that first, true kiss. Peter settled on the embroidered couch, Susan in his lap, and they murmured gentle words to each other between kisses, touching each other’s shoulders and arms and waists. Peter’s hands on Susan’s breasts were soothing, almost unintentional, stroking her the way he calmed his horse. When Susan shifted her weight and felt Peter’s erection pressing up against her, it was impossible not to press back.
Even when their breathing became more laboured, their kisses never grew more urgent, still gentle encouraging licks and presses, their fingers white with clutching one another, the clothes between them hot and damp, their movements clumsy and beautiful.
When Peter came it was a constricted pulse against Susan’s petticoats, and he tipped his head back and gulped the air as Susan squeezed her thighs around him, shuddering with her enlightening release.
Even then, sweaty and entangled, as they shared a deep, exploratory kiss; even then, when they realised something between them had changed irreversibly, they never considered any alternative to accepting it.
It became a badly kept secret that King Peter rarely slept in his own bedchamber, though no comment was passed. And although Edmund frowned when he found out, he couldn’t quite fathom why the thought brought him displeasure. Peter and Susan were radiant and he could think of no reason to deny them their pleasure.
When Queen Susan’s stomach began to swell, and her gowns had to be let out, there was never any doubt that the child was the High King’s. The people of Narnia rejoiced that they would have an heir and the Golden Age was complete.
The baby was born in the spring, just as the flowers began to bloom. They called their daughter Arian, and no child was more loved. Queen Lucy was in attendance throughout the birth and was the first to lift the child into her arms. It was from King Edmund’s knees that the little princess took her first step. Each year her birthday was celebrated with the grandest feast of the year, the creatures of the country coming to attend her and lavish her with their affection. The little princess learned the ways of her land and was as fond of the woods as the palace, often spending the whole day with her animal friends.
It was on such a day as this, shortly before Arian’s eleventh birthday, when she was happily sharing tea with Mr Tumnus, that the four kings and queens stumbled back into Spare Oom.
It took only moments for the combined weight of their memories to send them sinking to the floor. Susan looked up into Peter’s childishly round face and her eyes filled with tears. Edmund bit his lip and avoided looking at them.
When Susan sobbed herself to sleep there was nothing little Lucy, sitting with her arms around her sister, could do. There was no way back through the wardrobe, the professor said. Susan’s daughter was gone.
She tried to talk of Arian to Peter once, in the days after their return. He gripped her hand until his nails made her bleed, but he never spoke a word.
The shared memory of another life was oppressive and the children drifted apart, unable to speak of what had happened, unable to maintain that closeness with those who reminded them of their other lives. But it was still there.
Sometimes Susan forgot and took Peter’s hand, kissed his lips instead of his cheek. Once she bought a little handkerchief embroidered with the monogram AP, and then realised none of her siblings had those initials. One day late in March, when he was fifteen, Peter returned home with a small package, and Lucy asked if they might have a little party, and Susan burst into tears. Their mother, confused, saved the iced buns for another time.
When Susan brought home her beau, a tall American sailor, Peter couldn’t eat his dinner and hardly spoke a word all evening. When Susan lost her virginity for the second time she returned home and sought out her brother, curling silently in his bed, pressed against his warm body.
It was only then that they consciously stepped over the line, just once, to let themselves memorize every touch and every breath, so that, when they had to return to being brother and sister, when they could no longer be King and Queen, they had a way to remember Narnia.
It wasn’t that they ever intended to do anything wrong. There had been no conscious decision, no moment when one or other chose to step across a boundary. It had been a gradual shift, a process of forgetting who they were in that other world. After all, London was a very different place, and the memory of rationed food was hard to retain when you could have anything you wanted.
Sometimes Susan remembered. Sometimes she woke in the night with a heavy but unclear feeling of dread, fear of death, fear for her siblings. There had been a time when Lucy had often crept to her sister’s bed in tears, crying for their mother, for Aslan, or just from dreams that terrify the young. But as they grew this became less frequent, and Susan, as the elder, could not turn to Lucy for comfort.
There was only Peter to turn to and not lose face. And he spoke to her gently, with kind eyes and sweet promises and sometimes, in the morning, she’d find a blanket on the couch in her dressing room, but he would never admit that he had slept there.
As they grew their roles as kings and queens became more familiar to them than their memories of England. Memory faded in the way that dreams do in the morning; occasional bursts of niggling remembrance, but full recollection just out of reach.
Lucy was the beloved one, the one who always supported her people, the one they could reach out and touch. Edmund was the lawgiver, surprising everyone with how quickly he learned the intricacies of the legal system. He was not afraid to speak out when he felt his it necessary. Susan was the politician, arranging alliances with visiting dignitaries and charming them with her wit and diplomatic skill, her elegant proficiency at being hostess mellowing even the most aggressive ambassador. Peter was High King, the leader of his armies, the one to whom all the others turned when they were unsure.
They held banquets for the smallest occasion, opening their doors to their populace, keen to demonstrate fondness for even the smallest of their subjects. And yet, Peter found, it was hard to pursue conversations when everyone was so eager to tell you how much they appreciated you. The courtiers learned that they did not need to bow each time he passed, but he could not convince them to give up the slight nod of deference. Then he stopped trying, and became used to it.
It wasn’t that any of the children were lonely as they danced towards adulthood. Lucy was still accepted by her people, still went for tea with the Beavers, and they were all surrounded by the crowds of the court. But they, all four, remained closest to each other. It was to Susan that Lucy went after attending the funeral of a centaur of whom she had been particularly fond. It was from Peter that Edmund sought advice when he believed one of the courtiers was a Calormene spy. And it was to Peter that Susan went each time she gently let down another suitor and deflected another marriage proposal.
It wasn’t that she couldn’t have married them, she supposed, as she tried to negotiate an advantageous alliance that didn’t involve tying either herself or Lucy to some distant prince, but that in doing so the group would split. And they were Queens of Narnia in their own right, were they not?
Peter asked her about it one evening when she stood on the balcony overlooking the sea, salty tears drying on her face. Why had she rejected the nobleman’s son, he wanted to know, when she was so obviously fond of him?
“I didn’t love him, he was just a nice man,” she replied softly. “It wasn’t his fault that half my heart belongs already to Narnia.”
Peter rested a knowing hand on her shoulder, giving her silent support. When she turned into his embrace, burying her face against his broadening chest, it was no different than any other time he had comforted her. He stroked her hair, made soothing noises, and she tilted her face up for kiss like she had when they were children. It was instinct that turned the kiss from a chaste press of lips to something more; neither of them had kissed that way before but it seemed natural to tip their heads and open their mouths. After all, they loved each other as they loved Narnia. They were Narnia.
There was no conscious realisation of what they were doing; all was a continuation of that first, true kiss. Peter settled on the embroidered couch, Susan in his lap, and they murmured gentle words to each other between kisses, touching each other’s shoulders and arms and waists. Peter’s hands on Susan’s breasts were soothing, almost unintentional, stroking her the way he calmed his horse. When Susan shifted her weight and felt Peter’s erection pressing up against her, it was impossible not to press back.
Even when their breathing became more laboured, their kisses never grew more urgent, still gentle encouraging licks and presses, their fingers white with clutching one another, the clothes between them hot and damp, their movements clumsy and beautiful.
When Peter came it was a constricted pulse against Susan’s petticoats, and he tipped his head back and gulped the air as Susan squeezed her thighs around him, shuddering with her enlightening release.
Even then, sweaty and entangled, as they shared a deep, exploratory kiss; even then, when they realised something between them had changed irreversibly, they never considered any alternative to accepting it.
It became a badly kept secret that King Peter rarely slept in his own bedchamber, though no comment was passed. And although Edmund frowned when he found out, he couldn’t quite fathom why the thought brought him displeasure. Peter and Susan were radiant and he could think of no reason to deny them their pleasure.
When Queen Susan’s stomach began to swell, and her gowns had to be let out, there was never any doubt that the child was the High King’s. The people of Narnia rejoiced that they would have an heir and the Golden Age was complete.
The baby was born in the spring, just as the flowers began to bloom. They called their daughter Arian, and no child was more loved. Queen Lucy was in attendance throughout the birth and was the first to lift the child into her arms. It was from King Edmund’s knees that the little princess took her first step. Each year her birthday was celebrated with the grandest feast of the year, the creatures of the country coming to attend her and lavish her with their affection. The little princess learned the ways of her land and was as fond of the woods as the palace, often spending the whole day with her animal friends.
It was on such a day as this, shortly before Arian’s eleventh birthday, when she was happily sharing tea with Mr Tumnus, that the four kings and queens stumbled back into Spare Oom.
It took only moments for the combined weight of their memories to send them sinking to the floor. Susan looked up into Peter’s childishly round face and her eyes filled with tears. Edmund bit his lip and avoided looking at them.
When Susan sobbed herself to sleep there was nothing little Lucy, sitting with her arms around her sister, could do. There was no way back through the wardrobe, the professor said. Susan’s daughter was gone.
She tried to talk of Arian to Peter once, in the days after their return. He gripped her hand until his nails made her bleed, but he never spoke a word.
The shared memory of another life was oppressive and the children drifted apart, unable to speak of what had happened, unable to maintain that closeness with those who reminded them of their other lives. But it was still there.
Sometimes Susan forgot and took Peter’s hand, kissed his lips instead of his cheek. Once she bought a little handkerchief embroidered with the monogram AP, and then realised none of her siblings had those initials. One day late in March, when he was fifteen, Peter returned home with a small package, and Lucy asked if they might have a little party, and Susan burst into tears. Their mother, confused, saved the iced buns for another time.
When Susan brought home her beau, a tall American sailor, Peter couldn’t eat his dinner and hardly spoke a word all evening. When Susan lost her virginity for the second time she returned home and sought out her brother, curling silently in his bed, pressed against his warm body.
It was only then that they consciously stepped over the line, just once, to let themselves memorize every touch and every breath, so that, when they had to return to being brother and sister, when they could no longer be King and Queen, they had a way to remember Narnia.
The witch staked a claim to Edmund's blood as he was a traitor, saying that if she did not have blood all Narnia would perish in fire and water. But is there anything to indicate whether this was merely a *right* or in fact an *obligation* to the Emperor on her part? In other words, if the witch had simply not demanded Edmund's blood, would everything have been okay?
so u know how the four pevensies (peter susan edmund lucy) all sybolize things from christian teachings? for example: susan is the one who lost faith and (as far as we know) wont go to Heaven, edmund is the tratior who was forgiven, and lucy is the only on who, i guess you could say, truly believes (in Prince Caspian she was the only one who could see Aslan for awhile). Is peter just "the leader" or does he have a deeper meaning?
also if you know any other symbols u can say those too, just not the obvious ones like Aslan is Jesus and the white witch is the devil.
greenday: yes thats one of the things im asking, what does peter represtent and what do other characters represent in christian teachings?
ya, duh, i guess i should have connected PETER to st. PETER. i wasnt thinking about the apostles
I have a story can you please put the Setting
Theme
Characterization
Style
Personal View
It's about the four Pevensies children, Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy who took refuge to a countryside manor during WWII. There they found a way into an enchanted world called Narnia through an old wardrobe -made of wood of a tree which seed was brought back from that magical realm by the old owner of the mansion where the wardrobe's belonged to.When they got there Narnia was under some eternal winter spell castled by a witch who called herself the Queen of Narnia, or simply known as the White Witch by the whole good creatures of Narnia. The kids helped the Narnians to defeat the witch and return the Spring to the land. Through the process they became acquaintance with the true lord of Narnia, a gigantic gold-manned lion called Aslan. Upon their victory, the lion blessed them with kingship over the land which they ruled way through their adulthood. But when they discovered their way back
to 1940s England through the spoken wardrobe, it turned that their adventure was nothing but a wink in our world time continuum.
So what I need from you, I have made th summaary but I need from you to put the splot etc. Please
For 10 points and 5 stars
The story is the lion the witch and the wardrobe
I have a story can you please put the Setting
Theme
Characterization
Style
Personal View
It's about the four Pevensies children, Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy who took refuge to a countryside manor during WWII. There they found a way into an enchanted world called Narnia through an old wardrobe -made of wood of a tree which seed was brought back from that magical realm by the old owner of the mansion where the wardrobe's belonged to.When they got there Narnia was under some eternal winter spell castled by a witch who called herself the Queen of Narnia, or simply known as the White Witch by the whole good creatures of Narnia. The kids helped the Narnians to defeat the witch and return the Spring to the land. Through the process they became acquaintance with the true lord of Narnia, a gigantic gold-manned lion called Aslan. Upon their victory, the lion blessed them with kingship over the land which they ruled way through their adulthood. But when they discovered their way back
to 1940s England through the spoken wardrobe, it turned that their adventure was nothing but a wink in our world time continuum.
So what I need from you, I have made th summaary but I need from you to put the splot etc. Please
For 10 points and 5 stars
It'a the lion, withch and the wardrobe
I have a story can you please put the Setting
Theme
Characterization
Style
Personal View
It's about the four Pevensies children, Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy who took refuge to a countryside manor during WWII. There they found a way into an enchanted world called Narnia through an old wardrobe -made of wood of a tree which seed was brought back from that magical realm by the old owner of the mansion where the wardrobe's belonged to.When they got there Narnia was under some eternal winter spell castled by a witch who called herself the Queen of Narnia, or simply known as the White Witch by the whole good creatures of Narnia. The kids helped the Narnians to defeat the witch and return the Spring to the land. Through the process they became acquaintance with the true lord of Narnia, a gigantic gold-manned lion called Aslan. Upon their victory, the lion blessed them with kingship over the land which they ruled way through their adulthood. But when they discovered their way back
to 1940s England through the spoken wardrobe, it turned that their adventure was nothing but a wink in our world time continuum.
I have a story can you please put the Setting
Theme
Characterization
Style
Personal View
It's about the four Pevensies children, Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy who took refuge to a countryside manor during WWII. There they found a way into an enchanted world called Narnia through an old wardrobe -made of wood of a tree which seed was brought back from that magical realm by the old owner of the mansion where the wardrobe's belonged to.When they got there Narnia was under some eternal winter spell castled by a witch who called herself the Queen of Narnia, or simply known as the White Witch by the whole good creatures of Narnia. The kids helped the Narnians to defeat the witch and return the Spring to the land. Through the process they became acquaintance with the true lord of Narnia, a gigantic gold-manned lion called Aslan. Upon their victory, the lion blessed them with kingship over the land which they ruled way through their adulthood. But when they discovered their way back
to 1940s England through the spoken wardrobe, it turned that their adventure was nothing but a wink in our world time continuum.
i'm so frustrated coz i dont know what is 'turkish delight'.....
been reading books and watching movies of the chronicles of Narnia.... came across this,Edmund asked for Turkish delight when the white witch asked what food does he want....
all the questions and expanded them best i can i really need help this is my last resort so please please please help me the wuestions are:
How does Aslan relate to Jesus?
White Witch to Satan?
Edmund to Judas?
Stone table to the Cross?
thanks i know who im giving the best answer to ;) lol
i have about 2 pages done but it has 2 be 3 i have all the information i can find there is only 4 qestions
1. How does Aslan relate to Jesus?
2.White Witch to Satan?
3.Edmund to Judas?
4.The Stone Table to The Cross?
stfub gd i already typed 2 effin pages and i dont know what else to type so i came here as a last resort so if u not gonna then stfu asnd dont ansswer
dffhfhkdshackjsdahukc
ok so i need help i will choose best answer and everything just need help this is what i have to do:
3 Page Paper
12 font
Double Spaced
Times New Roman
QUESTIONS:
How does Aslan relate to Jesus?
The White Witch to Satan?
Edmund to Judas?
The Stone Table to The Cross?
Please help me i reallly need it THANKS!!!
i feel like the second movie lacked a lot from the first !!
the bond between the kids :Susan and Edmund,
Edmund, has lil dialog and not much part
the white witch apperance (kind of lame)
less of the magical talking animals and more to the Troy type of fighting
Aslan came at the very end
Don't report me
i'm just saying ..my opinion !!
The White Witch in the The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe or Queen Empress Jadis of Charn in The Magician's Nephew CS Lewis Chronicles of Narnia series the same person as die live Queen of Underland Lady of the Green Kirtle Medusa Prince Rilian Aslan The Silver Chair Jill Eustace Lucy Edmund Peter Susan Winter Ruined City Giants Underworld Overworld Witch
Can anyone tell me what it was that Edmund said to Peter after he stabs the white witch? I couldn't understand it and I'd really like to know. He said "I know"...and then something else I didn't catch.
1. Nixon ordered Kissinger to install wiretaps on the phones of
(1 point)
The New York Times.
his staff.
the National Security Council.
the FBI.
2. The trial and sentencing of the Watergate burglars led to (1 point)
testimony to a Senate committee about White House involvement.
the firing of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein.
an attempt by Judge John J. Sirica to release the defendants.
Gerald Ford's pardon of President Nixon.
3. In response to the publication of the Pentagon Papers, Nixon approved (1 point)
an investigation of the Pentagon.
Kissinger's apology to the Soviet Union.
the hiring of Daniel Ellsberg.
a plan to organize the Plumbers.
4. The Watergate burglars were caught attempting to (1 point)
remove "hush money" from a safe.
steal files from a psychiatrist.
wiretap Democrats' phones.
play "dirty tricks" on Edmund Muskie.
5. Nixon had the special prosecutor fired when he asked the President to (1 point)
release secret audiotapes.
pay "hush money" to E. Howard Hunt.
call the FBI for help.
apologize to the Democratic National Committee.
1. Nixon ordered Kissinger to install wiretaps on the phones of
The New York Times.
his staff.
the National Security Council. -----------
the FBI.
2. The trial and sentencing of the Watergate burglars led to (1 point)
testimony to a Senate committee about White House involvement. --------------
the firing of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein.
an attempt by Judge John J. Sirica to release the defendants.
Gerald Ford's pardon of President Nixon.
3. In response to the publication of the Pentagon Papers, Nixon approved (1 point)
an investigation of the Pentagon.
Kissinger's apology to the Soviet Union.
the hiring of Daniel Ellsberg.
a plan to organize the Plumbers.------------
4. The Watergate burglars were caught attempting to (1 point)
remove "hush money" from a safe. --------------
steal files from a psychiatrist.
wiretap Democrats' phones.
play "dirty tricks" on Edmund Muskie.
5. Nixon had the special prosecutor fired when he asked the President to (1 point)
release secret audiotapes.
pay "hush money" to E. Howard Hunt.
call the FBI for help. -----------
apologize to the Democratic National Committee
the part when edmund was sitting with the white witch early in the movie, edmund said he was hungry, then the witch got him food
what was it?
it was powdery and red, like jelly, but nit
1. Nixon ordered Kissinger to install wiretaps on the phones of
(1 point)
The New York Times.
his staff.
the National Security Council.
the FBI.
2. The trial and sentencing of the Watergate burglars led to (1 point)
testimony to a Senate committee about White House involvement.
the firing of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein.
an attempt by Judge John J. Sirica to release the defendants.
Gerald Ford's pardon of President Nixon.
3. In response to the publication of the Pentagon Papers, Nixon approved (1 point)
an investigation of the Pentagon.
Kissinger's apology to the Soviet Union.
the hiring of Daniel Ellsberg.
a plan to organize the Plumbers.
4. The Watergate burglars were caught attempting to (1 point)
remove "hush money" from a safe.
steal files from a psychiatrist.
wiretap Democrats' phones.
play "dirty tricks" on Edmund Muskie.
5. Nixon had the special prosecutor fired when he asked the President to (1 point)
release secret audiotapes.
pay "hush money" to E. Howard Hunt.
call the FBI for help.
apologize to the Democratic National Committee
Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus. It is hardback, all white, w/ a small picture of a purple hand covering a town. It also has 5 purple parallel lines down the left side and the book is in a purple box. Inside of the book it says: By Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Printed with an introduction by Edmund Lester Pearson and Illustrations by Everett Henry For the Heritage Press, New York
Then on the 2nd page it says at the bottom, The special contents of this edition are copyright 1934 by The Limited Editions Club for The George Macy Companies, Inc.
I have another book that is in a faded red box. It is Great Expectations by Dickens. The cover is white with designs, and a fancy CD. Inside it has a colored picture of Pip and a stranger in a graveyard. Then on the next page it says illustrated by Edward Ardizzone. The Heritage Press, NY.
Next page: Manufactured in the United States of America. The special contents of this edition are copyright 1939 by the Heritage Press
Thank you!!!
...before they finally pull their heads out of the sand and admit you can't believe one thing that comes out of Hillary's mouth?
Here’s her scorecard:
ADMITTED LIES:
• Chelsea was jogging around the Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. (She was in bed watching it on TV.)
• Hillary was named after Sir Edmund Hillary. (She admitted she was wrong. He climbed Mt. Everest five years after her birth.)
• She was under sniper fire in Bosnia. (A girl presented her with flowers at the foot of the ramp.)
• She learned in The Wall Street Journal how to make a killing in the futures market. (It didn’t cover the market back then.)
WHOPPERS SHE WON'T CONFESS TO:
• She didn’t know about the FALN pardons.
• She didn’t know that her brothers were being paid to get pardons that Clinton granted.
• Taking the White House gifts was a clerical error.
• She didn’t know that her staff would fire the travel office staff after she told them to do so.
• She didn’t know that the Peter Paul fundraiser in Hollywood in 2000 cost $700,000 more than she reported it had.
• She opposed NAFTA at the time.
• She was instrumental in the Irish peace process.
• She urged Bill to intervene in Rwanda.
• She played a role in the ’90s economic recovery.
• The billing records showed up on their own.
• She thought Bill was innocent when the Monica scandal broke.
• She was always a Yankees fan.
• She had nothing to do with the New Square Hasidic pardons (after they voted for her 1,400-12 and she attended a meeting at the White House about the pardons).
• She negotiated for the release of refugees in Macedonia (who were released the day before she got there).
With a record like that, is it any wonder that we suspect her of being less than honest and straightforward?
Hillary's List of Lies
By Dick Morris
The USA Today/Gallup survey clearly explains why Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) is losing. Asked whether the candidates were "honest and trustworthy," Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) won with 67 percent, with Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) right behind him at 63. Hillary scored only 44 percent, the lowest rating for any candidate for any attribute in the poll.
Hillary simply cannot tell the truth. Here's her scorecard:
Admitted Lies
• Chelsea was jogging around the Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. (She was in bed watching it on TV.)
• Hillary was named after Sir Edmund Hillary. (She admitted she was wrong. He climbed Mt. Everest five years after her birth.)
• She was under sniper fire in Bosnia. (A girl presented her with flowers at the foot of the ramp.)
• She learned in The Wall Street Journal how to make a killing in the futures market. (It didn't cover the market back then.)
Whoppers She Won't Confess To
• She didn't know about the FALN pardons.
• She didn't know that her brothers were being paid to get pardons that Clinton granted.
• Taking the White House gifts was a clerical error.
• She didn't know that her staff would fire the travel office staff after she told them to do so.
• She didn't know that the Peter Paul fundraiser in Hollywood in 2000 cost $700,000 more than she reported it had.
• She opposed NAFTA at the time.
• She was instrumental in the Irish peace process.
• She urged Bill to intervene in Rwanda.
• She played a role in the '90s economic recovery.
• The billing records showed up on their own.
• She thought Bill was innocent when the Monica scandal broke.
• She was always a Yankees fan.
• She had nothing to do with the New Square Hasidic pardons (after they voted for her 1,400-12 and she attended a meeting at the White House about the pardons).
• She negotiated for the release of refugees in Macedonia (who were released the day before she got there).
With a record like that, is it any wonder that we suspect her of being less than honest and straightforward?
Why has McCain jumped out to a nine-point lead over Obama and a seven-point lead over Hillary in the latest Rasmussen poll? OK, Obama has had the Rev. Wright mess on his hands. And Hillary has come in for her share of negatives, like the Richardson endorsement of Obama and the denouement of her latest lie -- that she endured sniper fire during a trip to Bosnia. But why has McCain gained so much in so short a period of time? Most polls had the general election tied two weeks ago.
McCain's virtues require a contrast in order to stand out. His strength, integrity, solidity and dependability all are essentially passive virtues, which shine only by contrast with others. Now that Obama and Hillary are offering images that are much weaker, less honest, and less solid and dependable, good old John McCain looks that much better as he tours Iraq and Israel while the Democrats rip one another apart.
It took Nixon for us to appreciate Jimmy Carter's simple honesty. It took Clinton and Monica for us to value George W. Bush's personal character. And it takes the unseemly battle among the Democrats for us to give John McCain his due.
When Obama faces McCain in the general election (not if but when) the legacy of the Wright scandal will not be to question Obama's patriotism or love of America. It will be to ask if he has the right stuff (pardon the pun).
The largest gap between McCain and Obama in the most recent USA Today/Gallup Poll was on the trait of leadership. Asked if each man was a "strong, decisive leader," 69 percent felt that the description fit McCain while only 56 percent thought it would apply to Obama. (61 percent said it of Hillary.) Obama has looked weak handling the Rev. Wright controversy. His labored explanation of why he attacks the sin but loves the sinner comes across as elegant but, at the same time, feeble. Obama's reluctance to trade punches with his opponents makes us wonder if he could trade them with bin Laden or Ahmadinejad. We have no doubt that McCain would gladly come to blows and would represent us well, but about Obama we are not so sure.
Morris, a former political adviser to Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) and President Bill Clinton, is the author of “Outrage.” To get all of Dick Morris’s and Eileen McGann’s columns for free by email, go to www.dickmorris.com.
Claim: Hillary was named after the famed mountain climber Sir Edmund Hillary. [Hillary told this falsehood for a number of years.]
She was under sniper fire in Bosnia
She learned in The Wall Street Journal how to make a killing in the futures market. (It didn't cover the futures market back then.)
She didn’t know that her staff would fire the travel office staff after she told them to do so.
She opposed NAFTA during her husband’s administation
She was instrumental in the Irish peace process.
She urged Bill to intervene in Rwanda. [Note: if this is the truth, it tells buckets on her lack of negotiating skills in that 800,000 people were murdered during this genocide. Most Americans wives could have done a better job of convincing their husbands on such an issue if they wanted it stopped.]
She had nothing to do with the New Square Hasidic pardons (after they voted for her 1,400-12 and she attended a meeting at the White House about the pardons.)
She negotiated for the release of refugees inMacedonia (who were released the day before she got there.)
Her “shame on you” lie accusing Obama’s or does it touch on other dishonest strcampaign of lying about her in a brochure that they distributed that actually told the truth about her support of NAFTA during the Clinton Administration.
Her Canadian NAFTA smear on Obama. It was someone from Hillary’s campaign who told the Canadians to take it with a grain of salt. Either she knew about it, or she passed along an unfounded rumor to the people of Ohio.
Now, with all her lies about NAFTA, she will likely be expecting the American people to believe that Mark Penn, a fellow that her campaign has already paid over $10,000,000 was not also representing her when he went to South America to promote the Columbian trade agreement? Most likely on another “take it with a grain of salt mission for Hillary.
This list doesn’t even touch her unspoken lies such as “as far as I know.”
http://www.democrats.org/page/community/post/elizabethberry/CWjk
http://www.democrats.org/page/community/post/elizabethberry/CWjk
1. Why do you think Edmund lied about only pretending that Lucy's story about the country beyond the wardrobe was true?
2. How would the story be different if Lucy had been the one to meet the White Witch?
3. Why did the children go to the Professor?
4. How did the Professor explain the problem?
5. What were the three possibilities that the professor could see for the strange story about the country beyond the wardrobe?
6. What advice would you give Peter and Susan if they came to you?
7. What forced the children to all go into the wardrobe?
Prediction- What will happen? Will the White Witch capture all the children?
please help! I need help with this homework.
Everytime I translate this, my teacher says I'm doing it wrong but won't tell me with what specifically D: Anyone care to translate?
Lucy and Edmund both have had to make decisions. Lucy had to decide whether she'd tell her brothers and sister about Narnia. Also, Edmund had to decide if he was going to trust the White Witch. Lucy solved her problem by showing the children Narnia; this turned out well because now the sons of Adam and daughters of Eve are in the place where they are needed most. Edmund's decision had the consequence of telling the White Witch that she had enemies in Narnia; also, he became entranced and told everything because of the Turkish Delight. The importance of these decisions is that they brought all the children to Narnia and also informed the White Witch of her opposition.
There are 2 black and white movies that I would like to get that have never been released on video or dvd. One is "This side of the law" starring Kent Smith (1950), the other is "The 3rd voice" starring Edmund O"Brien (1960). I did purchase a copy of The 3rd voice from"Bobs Movies" but it was a terrible recording and unplayable.
"...something happened back here in Selma, Alabama. Something happened in Birmingham that sent out what Bobby Kennedy called, "ripples of hope all around the world." Something happened when a bunch of women decided they were going to walk instead of ride the bus after a long day of doing somebody else's laundry, looking after somebody else's children.
"When (black) men who had PhD's decided 'that's enough' and 'we're going to stand up for our dignity,' that sent a shout across oceans so that my grandfather began to imagine something different for his son. His son, who grew up herding goats in a small village in Africa could suddenly set his sights a little higher and believe that maybe a black man in this world had a chance.
"So the Kennedy's decided we're going to do an airlift. We're going to go to Africa and start bringing young Africans over to this country and give them scholarships to study so they can learn what a wonderful country America is.
"This young man named Barack Obama got one of those tickets and came over to this country. He met this woman whose great great-great-great- grandfather had owned slaves; but she had a good idea there was some craziness going on because they looked at each other and they decided that we know that, (in) the world as it has been, it might not be possible for us to get together and have a child. There was something stirring across the country because of what happened in Selma, Alabama, because some folks are willing to march across a bridge. So they got together and Barack Obama Jr. Was born. So don't tell me I don't have a claim on Selma , Alabama. Don't tell me I'm not coming home to Selma, Alabama."
Okay, so what's wrong with that? It all sounds good. But is it?
Obama told his audience that, because some folks had the courage to "march across a bridge" in Selma, Alabama, his mother, a white woman from Kansas, and his father, a black Muslim from Africa, took heart. It gave them the courage to get married and have a child. The problem with that characterization is that Barrack Obama, Jr., was born on August 4, 1961, while the first of three marches across that bridge in Selma didn't occur until March 7, 1965, at least five years after Obama's parents met.
Obama went on to tell his audience that the Kennedys, Jack and Bobby, decided to do an airlift. They would bring some young Africans over so that they could be educated and learn all about America. His grandfather heard that call and sent his son, Barrack Obama, Sr., to America.
The problem with that scenario is that, having been born in August 1961, the future senator was not conceived until sometime in November 1960. So if this African grandfather heard words that ''sent a shout across oceans,'' inspiring him to send his goat-herder son to America, it was not a Democrat Jack Kennedy he heard, nor his brother Bobby, it was a Republican President, Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Obama's speech is reminiscent of Al Gore's claim of having invented the Internet, Hillary Clinton's claim of having been named after the first man to climb Mt. Everest, even though she was born five years and seven months before Sir Edmund climbed the mountain, and John Kerry's imaginary trip to Cambodia.
I asked a question. If you'd read before responding, Diamond J, you would have known that.
Take a look at Woodrow Wilson's wife and her routines as First Lady: Can Obama or McCain include this kind of experience in their resume?
http://www.firstladies.org/biographies/firstladies.aspx?biography=29
From the onset of her marriage to the President, Edith Wilson's primary role as First Lady was as his companion, filter and later guardian. Since most of her tenure occurred during either a presidential campaign - when the couple was not living in the White House- a world war and then during the president's illness, Edith Wilson hosted none of the entertaining at dinners and concerts held during the traditional social seasons in the fall and winter-early spring. That he largely conducted his work from a private office in the family quarters permitted Edith Wilson to remain steadfastly at his side; he soon gave her access to his private drawer and would eventually share a secret wartime code with her. When he worked from the Oval Office, however, she would often sit there listening silently as he conducted meetings with political leaders and foreign representatives. As pressures mounted on the President in the months leading up to U.S. entry in World War I, she began to screen his mail and limit his callers, soon alienating his most trusted advisor Edmund House and his loyal press secretary Joseph Tumulty. She was successful in eventually breaking the long friendship between Wilson and House, in November 1919.
After U.S. entry into the war in April 1917, Edith Wilson was made privy to classified information
michael...what did Hillary do? in the words of the obama supporters "go to her website"
or you can click on the same link posted above and click on Hillary's bio.
She can never remember any thing that she did wrong and the things that she thinks she can remember never happened. Like being named after Sir Edmund Hillary while she was born 4 years after he climbed Everest. When she was born, he was an unknown. Or when she says that Chelsea was jogging close to the WTC on 9/11 while Chelsea said that she was still in her apartment on the other side of town and watched it on TV like everybody else. Or when she says that when she was a teen-ager she and her church group babysat young poor immigrant children so that the older children could go to work on the week-ends. Poor immigrants did not live anywhere near her neighborhood or go to her church, she lived and went to church in a very affluent all white area.
PIP, that is just silly. If I don't remember something I don't just make up another story about it. Besides Hillary made up the story about Chelsea on the same day it happened. How can you make a mistake about babysitting immigrant kids every week-end when it never happened. It is not a matter of her having slight memory lapses, it is a matter of her making up totally false stories.
Jebul, 2 cases of Alzheimer in my family and could happen to me but in life you have to be able to laugh at your miseries.
1. Crowds of angry whites stoned King as he led a march through what section of Chicago
2. City where King &hundreds of protesters were attacked by tear gas, cattle prods & whips as they marched in protest over the Edmund Pettus Bridge in March 1965
3. King went to Memphis in 1968 to supprt a strike by what group of black laborers
4. In February 1957 King was recognized as Man of The Year on the cover of what popular magazine
5. The first lunch counter sit-in to desegregate earting facitlities was held where
6. What group did King co-found in 1957 to expand the struggle for civil rights
7. President who got the voting right acts passed in 1965 in response to King's campaign for black voting rights in the South
8. Name the only other individual besides King who is honored w/ a National Holiday
9. To what US gov't action did King announce his complete opposition on April 4, 1967
10. What Indian Leader who's philosophy King adopted as a guiding principle in his activism
What is Turkish Delight? I am reading the Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis right now. I just started it and am at the part where the white witch gives Edmund Turkish Delight and I have nooooooo idea what it is!!!!!!!