The Ocean at the End of the Lane

by Neil Gaiman
Lettie is an 11-year-old girl who lives down the lane from the narrator. She’s the narrator’s first friend, Ginnie’s daughter, and Old Mrs. Hempstock’s granddaughter. Since she’s four years older than the narrator, she looks extremely mature (and therefore trustworthy and knowledgeable), but she’s also not as intimidating as an adult. Lettie’s demeanor is generally quiet, thoughtful, and caring. Though she tells the narrator some things about what’s going on as supernatural occurrences begin happening to him, she’s more likely to smile or respond with a cryptic “yes” than she is to actually give him a straight answer. He also finds Lettie confusing because she refers to the pond behind the barns as her “ocean,” which makes no sense to the narrator. This all leads the narrator to believe that Lettie may be 11, but she’s likely been 11 for a very long time—it seems that Lettie and her mother and grandmother are supernatural beings themselves. Over the course of her friendship with the narrator, Lettie dispenses lots of advice that the narrator carries with him after their adventure is over. She suggests to him that monsters like Ursula are only monsters because they’re afraid—which helps the narrator see that monsters aren’t all that scary. She also tells him that all adults are actually children on the inside, and that it’s important to not know everything if one wants to truly experience life. Knowing everything, she suggests, is no fun. Lettie is the only Hempstock who leaves the property, which means that she takes the lead on banishing Ursula. Regardless of the fact that she’s been 11 for a long time, Lettie is still a child—and so her final (and successful) method of doing away with Ursula isn’t well thought out and causes more problems than it solves. Because of her friendship with the narrator, Lettie chooses to sacrifice herself to the hunger birds so that the narrator can go on and live a long life. Her mother, Ginnie, gives Lettie to the ocean so that she can heal. This is where Lettie has remained for decades, and the novel implies that from the ocean, Lettie calls the narrator back to her every so often so she can see how he’s doing—and see whether her sacrifice was worthwhile.

Lettie Hempstock Quotes in The Ocean at the End of the Lane

The The Ocean at the End of the Lane quotes below are all either spoken by Lettie Hempstock or refer to Lettie Hempstock. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
).

Prologue Quotes

If you’d asked me an hour before, I would have said no, I did not remember the way. I do not even think I would have remembered Lettie Hempstock’s name. But standing in that hallway, it was all coming back to me. Memories were waiting at the edges of things, beckoning to me. Had you told me that I was seven again, I might have half-believed you, for a moment.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), Lettie Hempstock, Old Mrs. Hempstock
Related Symbols: The Ocean
Page Number and Citation: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

Adults follow paths. Children explore. Adults are content to walk the same way, hundreds of times, or thousands; perhaps it never occurs to adults to step off the paths, to creep beneath rhododendrons, to find the spaces between fences. I was a child, which meant that I knew a dozen different ways of getting out of our property and into the lane, ways that would not involve walking down our drive.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), Lettie Hempstock, Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep
Page Number and Citation: 74
Explanation and Analysis:

“I’ve been inside you,” she said. “So a word to the wise. If you tell anybody anything, they won’t believe you. And, because I’ve been inside you, I’ll know. And I can make it so you never say anything I don’t want you to say to anybody, not ever again.”

Related Characters: Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep (speaker), Lettie Hempstock, The Narrator
Page Number and Citation: 77
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

Ursula Monkton smiled, and the lightnings wreathed and writhed around her. She was power incarnate, standing in the crackling air. She was the storm, she was the lightning, she was the adult world with all its power and all its secrets and all its foolish casual cruelty. She winked at me.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep, Lettie Hempstock
Page Number and Citation: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

Lettie Hempstock’s hand in my hand made me braver. But Lettie was just a girl, even if she was a big girl, even if she was eleven, even if she had been eleven for a very long time. Ursula Monkton was an adult. It did not matter, at that moment, that she was every monster, every witch, every nightmare made flesh. She was also an adult, and when adults fight children, adults always win.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), Lettie Hempstock, Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep
Page Number and Citation: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 10 Quotes

“Sometimes monsters are things people should be scared of, but they aren’t.”

I said, “People should be scared of Ursula Monkton.”

“P’raps. What do you think Ursula Monkton is scared of?”

“Dunno. Why do you think she’s scared of anything? She’s a grown-up, isn’t she? Grown-ups and monsters aren’t scared of things.”

“Oh, monsters are scared,” said Lettie. “That’s why they’re monsters.”

Related Characters: Lettie Hempstock (speaker), The Narrator (speaker), Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep
Related Symbols: The Ocean
Page Number and Citation: 149
Explanation and Analysis:

“I’m going to tell you something important. Grown-ups don’t look like grown-ups on the inside either. Outside, they’re big and thoughtless and they always know what they’re doing. Inside, they look just like they always have. Like they did when they were your age. The truth is, there aren’t any grown-ups. Not one, in the whole wide world.”

Related Characters: Lettie Hempstock (speaker), The Narrator, Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep
Page Number and Citation: 146
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 11 Quotes

She had started to cry, and I felt uncomfortable. I did not know what to do when adults cried. [...] Adults should not weep, I knew. They did not have mothers who would comfort them.

I wondered if Ursula Monkton had ever had a mother.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Hunger Birds, Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep, Lettie Hempstock
Page Number and Citation: 163-65
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 12 Quotes

“They need to finish this up. It’s what they do: they’re the carrion kind, the vultures of the void. Their job. Clean up the last remnants of the mess. Nice and neat. Pull you from the world and it will be as if you never existed. Just go with it. It won’t hurt.”

I stared at him. Adults only ever said that when it, whatever it happened to be, was going to hurt so much.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Opal Miner (speaker), The Hunger Birds, Lettie Hempstock
Page Number and Citation: 175
Explanation and Analysis:

I had stood up to worse things than him in the last few hours. And suddenly, I didn’t care anymore. I looked up at the dark shape behind and above the torch beam, and I said, “Does it make you feel big to make a little boy cry?” and I knew as I said it that it was the thing I should never have said.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), The Hunger Birds, The Narrator’s Father, Lettie Hempstock
Page Number and Citation: 181-82
Explanation and Analysis:

There was silence. The shadows seemed to have become part of the night once again. I thought over what I’d said, and I knew it was true. At that moment, for once in my childhood, I was not scared of the dark, and I was perfectly willing to die (as willing as any seven-year-old, certain of his immortality, can be) if I died waiting for Lettie. Because she was my friend.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), Lettie Hempstock, The Hunger Birds
Page Number and Citation: 186
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 13 Quotes

Lettie Hempstock looked like pale silk and candle flames. I wondered how I looked to her, in that place, and knew that even in a place that was nothing but knowledge that was the one thing I could not know. That if I looked inward I would see only infinite mirrors, staring into myself for eternity.

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), Lettie Hempstock
Related Symbols: The Ocean
Page Number and Citation: 192
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 14 Quotes

I said, “Will she be the same?”

The old woman guffawed, as if I had said the funniest thing in the universe. “Nothing’s ever the same,” she said. “Be it a second later or a hundred years. It’s always churning and roiling. And people change as much as oceans.”

Related Characters: The Narrator (speaker), Old Mrs. Hempstock (speaker), Lettie Hempstock, Mrs. Ginnie Hempstock
Related Symbols: The Ocean
Page Number and Citation: 218
Explanation and Analysis:

Epilogue Quotes

Old Mrs. Hempstock shrugged. “What you remembered? Probably. More or less. Different people remember things differently, and you’ll not get any two people to remember anything the same, whether they were there or not. You stand two of you lot next to each other, and you could be continents away for all it means anything.”

Related Characters: Old Mrs. Hempstock (speaker), Ursula Monkton / Skarthatch of the Keep, Lettie Hempstock, The Narrator, The Narrator’s Father
Related Symbols: The Ocean
Page Number and Citation: 229
Explanation and Analysis:
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Lettie Hempstock Character Timeline in The Ocean at the End of the Lane

The timeline below shows where the character Lettie Hempstock appears in The Ocean at the End of the Lane. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Prologue
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The narrator says that “it” was just a small duck pond. But according to Lettie Hempstock, it’s an ocean and they came across the ocean from the old country. Lettie’s... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Mrs. Hempstock asks if the narrator is here to see Lettie and notes that Lettie isn’t here. She offers the narrator tea, but he asks if... (full context)
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...narrator sits on the bench, tosses nuts into the pond, and tries to remember what Lettie used to call this body of water. He remembers that Lettie was 11 years old,... (full context)
Chapter 1
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...the damage. Presently, as the narrator recalls everything while sitting next to the pond that Lettie convinced him was an ocean, he knows that he won’t remember this for long. (full context)
Chapter 2
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...girl should take the narrator to the kitchen for breakfast. The girl introduces herself as Lettie Hempstock, leads the narrator into the kitchen, and gives him porridge with jam. The narrator... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...enters the kitchen and announces that there will be five officers for tea soon. When Lettie hesitates at the cupboard, the woman confirms that they will indeed need six mugs—the doctor... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The woman turns to the narrator and introduces herself as Mrs. Hempstock, Lettie’s mother. The woman in the barn is Old Mrs. Hempstock, and this is Hempstock Farm.... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
Lettie fetches a net and pulls the fish out as the narrator tries to argue with... (full context)
Chapter 3
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...throwing coins at her from the bushes. The narrator heads down the drive and sees Lettie Hempstock. She asks if the narrator was having a nightmare and listens to what happened.... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
When the narrator asks why he found a shilling in his throat, Lettie says that the opal miner just wanted people to have money—but it’s complicated. His death... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The narrator asks if all of this is really about money—but Lettie admits, in a way that makes her seem frighteningly grown-up, that she’s not sure. She... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...the moon was made. The narrator asks if a ghost is haunting them, which makes Lettie and her grandmother laugh. Lettie explains that ghosts can’t make or move things and runs... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Mrs. Hempstock tells Lettie to take a hazel wand and the narrator to find “her,” but Old Mrs. Hempstock... (full context)
Chapter 4
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
At the hazel thicket beside the lane, Lettie breaks off a small branch, strips it of bark, and splits it so it looks... (full context)
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
Lettie grins as the wind blows and something rumbles in the dark clouds. She pulls the... (full context)
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
When the narrator says he’s afraid, Lettie explains that they’re farther out than she expected and that she’s not sure what’s out... (full context)
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...to her and said that she could make things happy if she gave them money. Lettie says that the creature needs to “let them be,” which makes the creature flap around... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The narrator recognizes Lettie’s song as “the language of shaping” and explains that in the years after this, he... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
The narrator tells Lettie about his kitten, Fluffy’s, death, and Lettie laments that living things don’t last very long... (full context)
Chapter 6
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...friend. The narrator is certain that Ursula isn’t friends with anyone and wants to tell Lettie this, but he’s not sure what to say. He’s sure that Ursula is his fault:... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...supply of chocolate and knows that he brought Ursula here when he let go of Lettie’s hand and the worm entered his foot. He also knows that Ursula is just a... (full context)
Chapter 8
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...he is. Thunderclouds roll in, and he imagines wolves and ghosts. The narrator shouts for Lettie as lightning flickers oddly above. It illuminates the field, and the narrator can see that... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...with Ursula. Ursula points out that she’s an adult, while the narrator is a child. Lettie, unafraid, walks up behind the narrator and tells Ursula to get off her land. She... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The narrator holds Lettie’s hand and strokes the kitten. Ursula taunts Lettie and asks what Lettie is going to... (full context)
Chapter 9
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...up and then some soap. She sits in a rocker as the narrator scrubs himself. Lettie returns with a huge white garment, and when the narrator realizes it’s a nightgown like... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The narrator asks if there are any Hempstock men, but Old Mrs. Hempstock just laughs. Lettie and Mrs. Hempstock explain that men come sometimes, but the male Hempstocks all left to... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...to stay the night. She begins to cut as Ginnie rises to answer the door. Lettie assures the narrator he’ll be fine. The narrator’s mother and father enter the kitchen and... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...but he holds out the narrator’s toothbrush. The narrator’s mother fusses over him and greets Lettie, and Ginnie promises to bring the narrator back in the morning. She sends the narrator’s... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...and the narrator tells her that Ursula came here in his foot. He apologizes to Lettie for letting go of her hand. Old Mrs. Hempstock inspects the hole and says that... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...cackles and says that this wasn’t very clever as Ginnie pulls out a jam jar. Lettie, fascinated, inspects the hole that’s now captured in the jar. The narrator apologizes for letting... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Lettie shows the narrator his room, points to clothes for the morning, and says she’ll be... (full context)
Chapter 10
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...the way to the kitchen. Ginnie directs the narrator to his breakfast and says that Lettie is out gathering supplies to send Ursula home. (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...“dangerous to be a door.” She heads out and the narrator turns to his porridge. Lettie arrives a bit later with a shopping basket, dirty, scratched, and miserable. The narrator looks... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
The narrator asks if she’s a monster like Ursula, but Lettie doesn’t think so. She says that monsters look like all sorts of things. When the... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
The narrator collects his pajamas and toothbrush in a bag. Lettie promises that Ursula won’t get him and they head up the lane. They take a... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Lettie and the narrator enter the house. The narrator’s sister stops practicing piano and asks what’s... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Ursula scolds Lettie for trying to bind her without knowing her name, but Lettie holds out the jam... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
As Lettie says that she found Ursula’s real name this morning, Ursula runs away, terrified. Lettie pulls... (full context)
Chapter 11
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
Lettie and the narrator find Ursula on the lawn. She looks frantically at the sky and... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...is inside the narrator. He’s certain he’ll die, so he shouts for his parents and Lettie. Calmly, Lettie says they can still send Skarthatch home with the tunnel inside the narrator,... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Ursula laughs and screams, and then she crumples to the ground. The narrator falls, but Lettie pulls him up. The hunger birds land on the writhing, wormy cloth and eat as... (full context)
Chapter 12
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
Lettie steps out of the rhododendrons. She says that Old Mrs. Hempstock fixed everything, and she... (full context)
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...narrator says that it might happen like that, but he’s still going to wait for Lettie. He knows she’s coming back, and he’d rather die waiting for her than at the... (full context)
Chapter 13
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
Lettie steps into the fairy ring carrying a heavy bucket of water. She apologizes for the... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...opens his eyes and sees that he’s hanging deep underwater. He turns to look at Lettie and barely understands what he sees. Lettie is made up of silk, ice-colored sheets and... (full context)
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...in a bucket if Old Mrs. Hempstock helps. He wonders what he looks like to Lettie but also recognizes that this is the one thing he can’t know, even in this... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The narrator coughs, and for another moment, he still knows everything. Lettie pulls the narrator out of the pond, and he discovers that his clothes are dry.... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Lettie asks the narrator if he’s hungry and suddenly, he is. In the kitchen, there’s a... (full context)
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...firmly that no one is going to die. She changes into boots and a coat. Lettie seems less sure, but the narrator reminds himself that Lettie is just a kid. Regardless,... (full context)
Chapter 14
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...through the back door, the moon was full, and it felt like summer. When he, Lettie, and Ginnie leave through the front door, the moon is a sliver and the night... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...They ask for the narrator, but Ginnie insults them and tells them again to go. Lettie reminds the hunger birds that the narrator is safe on their land—and one step onto... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...the “void” that exists underneath reality. The hunger birds devour a tree and a fox. Lettie insists that they should wake up Old Mrs. Hempstock, but Ginnie doesn’t know how. The... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...his heart and ate it, but the memory “snips and rips, neatly.” The narrator hears Lettie tell him not to move. Suddenly, she’s on top of him, and the narrator feels... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Ginnie gathers Lettie and the narrator in her arms. The hunger birds apologize as Ginnie cries. The narrator... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...that the hunger birds won’t come back to this world again. Old Mrs. Hempstock touches Lettie’s forehead, and the narrator finally realizes that Lettie sacrificed herself for him. He feels unspeakably... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Waves rise up out of the pond and the narrator whispers an apology to Lettie. He can no longer see the other side of the pond—it’s a vast ocean. The... (full context)
Chapter 15
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...then she admits that it’s impossible to know everything. The narrator says he that believes Lettie is dead, but Ginnie retorts that Lettie is just badly hurt. The ocean might not... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
...opens the door, and Ginnie tells her that the narrator had a great time at Lettie’s going-away party. The narrator thanks Ginnie for having him, and Ginnie explains that Lettie is... (full context)
Epilogue
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
This confuses the narrator; he hasn’t been here since Lettie went to Australia, which he understands never happened. Old Mrs. Hempstock says that the narrator... (full context)
Childhood vs. Adulthood Theme Icon
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
The narrator asks if he can speak to Lettie, but Ginnie says that she’s sleeping and healing. The narrator realizes that Lettie has been... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
Fear, Bravery, and Friendship Theme Icon
Then, the narrator steps to the edge of the pond and thanks Lettie for saving his life. Old Mrs. Hempstock sniffs that Lettie shouldn’t have taken the narrator... (full context)
Memory, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Knowledge and Identity Theme Icon
...thanks the old woman for letting him sit and asks her to say hi to Lettie next time she writes from Australia. The narrator heads back up the lane, and in... (full context)