![]() ![]() The Fox simply states, “We must learn, child, not to fear anything that nature brings” (Lewis, 14) and what I get from this quote is that the Fox is trying to pass off his noble ways to Orual to gain her admiration. With the introduction of the Fox into the novel, Orual is accompanied by a significant rational influence that aids her thoughts as well. Her perception proceeded to be clouded because her romantic longing for Psyche would inhibit her from living her own life. Her fault comes about when she states, “She made beauty all round her” (Lewis, Till We Have Faces, 22) meaning that Psyche had no flaws and everything she graced would instantly turn beautiful. ![]() ![]() I believe this is where fault originates for Orual. Ever since they were children, Psyche wished to live upon the mountain that overlooked Glome to encounter a world that was so different from her own. In Till We Have Faces, we learn of Orual’s romantic longing for her sister Psyche which is central to the novel. ![]()
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