The garden, with the "forbidden apple tree" (unless given permission to pluck a piece of magic fruit for the benefit of someone else) is like the biblical garden of eve in the book of Genesis. I think even a child might grasp that similarity. Then, the temptation from the witch ("Queen Jadis", the newly awakened evil already seeking a victim of her wiles by lying, tempting, using manipulative con-games about Digory's sick mother)... The gate with the warning, the bird watching but not being heeded, all seem so clearly written to represent the garden of eden in the Bible, already with evil having creeped in uninvited but this time Digory resisted the temptation to pluck an apple for his mother. He literally flees with Polly and Fledge and to Aslan. And for that Aslan rewards him.
Thom O'Connor has written: 'Wizards & cabalists & mystics & magicians'
Michael Nephew has written: 'U. S. treaty with the Senaca Indians, 1842 (programmed text)'
Gary R. Frank has written: 'Carter the Great' -- subject(s): Magicians 'The collector's scrapbook' -- subject(s): Magic tricks, History, Magicians, Biography
Roger Boutet de Monvel has written: 'Cervantes and the magicians'
To cite a chapter in a book in a research paper, you need to include the author of the chapter, the title of the chapter, the editor of the book, the title of the book, the page range of the chapter, the publication year, and the publisher. The citation format typically follows the author-date style, such as (Author, Year).
Leo Houdeen has written: 'Coming, a vaudeville sensation' -- subject(s): Vaudeville, Magicians
In Chapter 33 of "Maniac McGee," the author Jerry Spinelli uses the simile "Like ashes spreading on the wind" to describe a feeling of vulnerability and exposure. This simile conveys a sense of fragmentation and instability in the character's emotional state.
David Devereux has written: 'Hunter's moon' -- subject(s): Fiction, Magicians, Demonology, Conspiracies
Tobias Seamon has written: 'The Magician's Study' -- subject(s): Fiction, Magicians, Triangles (Interpersonal relations)
The author uses disdain to describe the Rose-Bud.
To cite a chapter in APA format, include the author of the chapter, the year of publication, the title of the chapter, the editor of the book, the title of the book, the page range of the chapter, and the publisher. The citation should follow this format: Author, A. A. (Year). Title of chapter. In E. E. Editor (Ed.), Title of book (pp. xx-xx). Publisher.
To include a chapter in an APA citation, you need to provide the author of the chapter, the year of publication, the title of the chapter, the editor of the book, the title of the book, the page numbers of the chapter, and the publisher.