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      THE SILVER CHAIR

      C. S. LEWIS

       Illustrated by Pauline Baynes

      To Nicholas Hardie

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

      The Silver Chair

       Chapter One - Behind the Gym

       Chapter Two - Jill is Given a Task

       Chapter Three - The Sailing of the King

       Chapter Four - A Parliament of Owls

       Chapter Five - Puddleglum

       Chapter Six - The Wild Wastelands of the North

       Chapter Seven - The Hill of the Strange Trenches

       Chapter Eight - The House of Harfang

       Chapter Nine - How They Discovered Something Worth Knowing

       Chapter Ten - Travels without the Sun

       Chapter Eleven - In the Dark Castle

       Chapter Twelve - The Queen of Underland

       Chapter Thirteen - Underland without the Queen

       Chapter Fourteen - The Bottom of the World

       Chapter Fifteen - The Disappearance of Jill

       Chapter Sixteen - The Healing of Harms

       The Last Battle

       Keep Reading

      About the Author

      Also by Author

      Copyright

       About the Publisher

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      THE SILVER CHAIR

       Deep underground, a web of evil magic holds a prince in captivity.

      NARNIA . . . where owls speak, where evil weaves a spell . . . where sorcery enslaves the land.

      Narnia is in peril, and only Eustace and Jill can help. Along with Puddleglum, a gloomy but valiant Marsh-wiggle, they are sent by the mighty lion, Aslan, to find Prince Rilian, heir to the throne. Their quest leads them past hungry people-eating giants and deep into the dark underground. But the true test for this noble band of friends comes when they face an evil Witch and her deadly enchantments.

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      It was a dull autumn day and Jill Pole was crying behind the gym.

      She was crying because they had been bullying her. This is not going to be a school story, so I shall say as little as possible about Jill’s school, which is not a pleasant subject. It was Coeducational, a school for both boys and girls, what used to be called a “mixed” school; some said it was not nearly so mixed as the minds of the people who ran it. These people had the idea that boys and girls should be allowed to do what they liked. And unfortunately what ten or fifteen of the biggest boys and girls liked best was bullying the others. All sorts of things, horrid things, went on which at an ordinary school would have been found out and stopped in half a term; but at this school they weren’t. Or even if they were, the people who did them were not expelled or punished. The Head said they were interesting psychological cases and sent for them and talked to them for hours. And if you knew the right sort of things to say to the Head, the main result was that you became rather a favourite than otherwise.

      That was why Jill Pole was crying on that dull autumn day on the damp little path which runs between the back of the gym and the shrubbery. And she hadn’t nearly finished her cry when a boy came round the corner of the gym whistling, with his hands in his pockets. He nearly ran into her.

      “Can’t you look where you’re going?” said Jill Pole.

      “All right,” said the boy, “you needn’t start—” and then he noticed her face. “I say, Pole,” he said, “what’s up?”

      Jill only made faces, the sort you make when you’re trying to say something but find that if you speak you’ll start crying again.

      “It’s Them, I suppose – as usual,” said the boy grimly, digging his hands further into his pockets.

      Jill nodded. There was no need for her to say any-thing, even if she could have said it. They both knew.

      “Now, look here,” said the boy, “there’s no good us all—”

      He meant well, but he did talk rather like someone beginning a lecture. Jill suddenly flew into a temper (which is quite a likely thing to happen if you have been interrupted in a cry).

      “Oh, go away and mind your own business,” she said. “Nobody asked you to come barging in, did they? And you’re a nice person to start telling us what we all ought to do, aren’t you? I suppose you mean we ought to spend all our time sucking up to Them, and currying favour, and dancing attendance on Them like you do.”

      “Oh, Lor!” said the boy, sitting down on the grassy bank at the edge of the shrubbery and very quickly getting up again because the grass was soaking wet. His name unfortunately was Eustace Scrubb, but he wasn’t a bad sort.

      “Pole!” he said. “Is that fair? Have I been doing anything of the sort this term? Didn’t I stand up to Carter about the rabbit? And didn’t I keep the secret about Spivvins – under torture too? And didn’t I—”

      “I d-don’t know and I don’t care,” sobbed Jill. Scrubb saw that she wasn’t quite herself yet and very sensibly offered her a peppermint. He had one too. Presently Jill began to see things in a clearer light.

      “I’m sorry, Scrubb,” she said presently. “I wasn’t fair. You have done all that – this term.”

      “Then wash out last term if you can,” said Eustace. “I was a different chap then. I was – gosh! What

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