TillWeHaveFaces

FiftyBooks Spread from C. S. Lewis's Till We Have Faces, pages 168 and 169: Orual presses Psyche about her unseen husband, monster, shadow, or god of the Mountain Till We Have Faces, pages 292 and 293: Orual chews the strange bread of the gods, declares herself Ungit, and despairs that no man will love an ill-favoured woman Till We Have Faces, pages 294 and 295: the dream of the golden rams that trample Orual in their joy, and the other woman gleaning bright wool from the thorns Till We Have Faces, pages 182 and 183: the god's unmoved voice sends Psyche into exile — you also shall be Psyche — as Orual hears distant weeping
  1. Till We Have Faces - C.S. Lewis http://www.bibliotheek.gent.be/webopac/FullBB.csp?WebAction=ShowFullBB&RequestId=7388_2&Profile=Default&OpacLanguage=dut&NumberToRetrieve=25&StartValue=1&WebPageNr=1&SearchTerm1=TILL%20WE%20HAVE%20FACES%20.2.136439&SearchT1=&Index1=Index1&SearchMethod=Find_1 http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0156904365/qid=1130181528/sr=8-1/ref=pd_bbs_1/002-2748136-4372832?v=glance&s=books&n=507846