![]() ![]() Lewis explains at the end of the book, "You'd never know for the same boy." Eustace endured this experience in order to prepare himself for his return to Narnia, where Aslan would give him a very special mission. The water cleansed Eustace's body.Īuthor C.S. ![]() Aslan led him to a well, peeled the dragon scales off him and threw him into the well. Late one night when Eustace was regretting all that had happened, Aslan-the lion, came to him. So, he sinks into a sense of hopelessness. Worst of all nobody knows how to help him. However, he finds he is more in the way than helpful. He helps build the camps and defend the ship. He tries doing things to make up for his sins-the bad things he does and thinks. When Eustace wakes as a dragon, he becomes afraid and discouraged. ![]() His actions eventually lead him down a path of self-destruction and turn him into a dragon. He skips out on work in order to play, and he steals. When he visits the land of Narnia with Edmund and Lucy, he immediately causes trouble aboard the ship. Lewis' Voyage of the Dawn Treader is a story about a troublesome child, Eustace.Įustace is consumed by laziness, greed, and selfishness. ![]()
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