The Horse and His Boy

by C. S. Lewis

The Horse and His Boy: Chapter 2  Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Shasta wakes up the next morning around noon, feeling stiff after riding Bree so much (and sometimes falling off) the previous night. Shasta is hungry and finds that Anradin left some food and money in the saddle bags. They get going and head north toward the city of Tashbaan, which will be followed by a desert. The road to Tashbaan is relatively barren, and Shasta soon gets used to riding Bree.
Although Shasta’s stiffness as a rider shows his continued resistance to leaving home, he begins to see the positive side of journeying as well. The food that he and Bree find in the saddle bags is a stroke of good luck, but it also hints again at the novel’s Christian themes—that God will provide for the faithful in unexpected ways.
Active Themes
Christianity Theme Icon
As Shasta and Bree are traveling the deserted road, Bree thinks he hears lions and crosses a stream to cover up their scent. But on the other side, Bree still hears lions. Bree also thinks he hears the sound of a Tarkaan on horseback nearby. But as the other rider gets closer, Shasta notices that this rider has no beard. He is surprised to hear two voices: The rider also has a Talking Horse.
Lions are dangerous but also a majestic example of the power of nature. Although the lions seem to be an obstacle, they end up leading Shasta to meet the other rider. This once again seems to connect to the Christian idea that God works in mysterious ways, with the lions (as part of nature) representing God’s power.
Active Themes
Bravery vs. Recklessness Theme Icon
Christianity Theme Icon
Quotes
Bree calls out to the other talking horse, who turns out to be a mare named Hwin. The rider is not a Tarkaan but a Tarkheena: a girl named Aravis. Aravis doesn’t like Shasta calling her “only a girl” and she accuses him of being an enslaved boy who ran off with his master’s horse. But Bree tries to calm Aravis’s anger, and she admits that she and Hwin are also running away.
Active Themes
Gender Roles Theme Icon
Quotes
Shasta and Aravis would like to each get on their way, but the horses Bree and Hwin think it would be best for all of them to travel together. The two humans agree to go together. The horses talk about all the places in Narnia they remember, while the humans continue to distrust each other. At last, Bree asks Aravis to tell him her life story, which she agrees to do because storytelling is an important part of education in Calormen.
Active Themes
Freedom and Justice Theme Icon
Christianity Theme Icon
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