steepholm: (Default)
steepholm ([personal profile] steepholm) wrote2011-11-21 09:10 am
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What do they Teach Them in These Schools?

It had to happen one day...

ext_6322: (Queen)

[identity profile] kalypso-v.livejournal.com 2011-11-21 10:14 am (UTC)(link)
I love the way we all homed in on that line!

[identity profile] davesmusictank.livejournal.com 2011-11-21 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Sounds a particularly interesting take on a CS Lewis classic
gillo: (Animated tardis)

[personal profile] gillo 2011-11-21 02:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Always winter and never Christmas. And the Tardis is a wardrobe!

And, yes, that line made me laugh out loud.

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2011-11-21 03:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Of course, Lewis anticipated the bigger-on-the-inside trope in The Last Battle: "In our world, too, a stable once had something in it that was bigger than our whole world."

(Anonymous) 2011-11-22 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Lewis anticipated the Tardis with his Stable but George MacDonald, Lewis's acknowledged "master", had anticipated him by about 85 years, in At the Back of The North Wind in the chapter called Nanny's Dream: Nanny visits the man in the moon, going through the door of a very little spherical house and finding it huge and expansive inside:

"He took my hand and led me down the stair again, and through a narrow passage, and through another, and another, and another. I don't know how there could be room for so many passages in such a little house. The heart of it must be ever so much further from the sides than they are from each other. How could it have an inside that was so independent of its outside? There's the point. It was funny - wasn't it, Diamond?"

"No," said Diamond. He was going to say that that was very much tehs osrt of thing at the back of the north wind; but he checked himself and only added, "All right. I don't see it. I don't see why the inside should depend on the outside..."


Colyngbourne
http://palimpsest.org.uk

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2011-11-22 04:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you - that's a wonderful reference!

I'd love to see "Doctor Who meets Phantastes"...