Jonathan Middleton: Till We have Faces 1

 Psyche's stay on the mountain with her husband in the invisible castle represents what is means to have faith in your life. Psyche is told of her situation but is unable to truly see but believes all the same. This is in stark contrast to her sister Orual who is also told of her sister's situation but cannot believe it and believes rather that it is a fantasy concocted by some evildoer attempting to take advantage of her sister or worse yet some delusion of her own making. Unfortunately for them both, but particularly for Psyche, Orual's doubt proves to be undoing of her new found situation and casts her out of her fantasy and into a cruel reality.

This ignorance is not necessarily too uncommon when elements of fantasy are generally inspected as it is quite difficult to have faith in what cannot be seen or felt. This is why fantasy worlds like this are so enthralling, they are able to engage the reader into a world that they cannot see except for in their mind which allows the fantasy to be quite ironically universally unique to each individual. 

 

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