The book opens with the enchanter Dallben sending off Princess
Eilonwy to finish the task of becoming a princess that Achren had begun.
To see her off, Taran and Gurgi journey with her to the Isle of Mona,
along with the incompetent and clumsy Prince Rhun of Mona, whom they meet
on the ship. Upon landing they are met by the King and Queen of Mona,
the latter of which hustles Taran off to the castle tailor and cobbler to
get his shoes and cloak in a presentable (for royalty, anyway) state. It
seems that the old cobbler is really Prince Gwydion in disguise, seeking
to discover exactly what the danger is that he fears for Eilonwy. The
erstwhile Fflewddur turns up in the stable after having been turned out by
the steward Magg for his lackluster tunes. This steward is seen by
Taran late at night quietly exiting the castle via a small exit and Taran,
eager to prevent harm to Eilonwy, rashly follows. He sees the steward
signal a ship at see and is roughly rescued from discovery by the returning
steward by Gwydion.
Taran stands guard over Eilonwy's room but in the morning, eager for adventure
and already frustrated with the petty castle women, she is hustled off by
Magg while Taran isn't looking. A search party is made and the King
of Mona confides his sorrow at his son's complete failure to succeed at
anything he puts his hand too, requesting that Taran watch over the Prince.
Of course, the Prince quickly becomes separated from the party, as
do Taran, Gurgi, and Fflewddur, who seek him out. They find him the
next morning in a little cottage and despite the advice of Fflewddur, who
smells enchantment (and as usual, wants none of it), they tarry to examine
a journal of the midget Glew. This Glew, apparently long dead, wanted
to become larger and experimented with potions on his cat, who eventually
did become larger. Very visibly so, as the cat, Llyan returns, trapping
them until put to sleep by Fflewddur's harp (apparently one of few to appreciate
his skill).
Having fled, they discover Eilonwy's bauble and trances of a boat being
dragged to the river, but having none of their own, they tie together a makeshift
raft to escape from the pursuing of Llyan (who is detained by the attacks
of Taran's crow, Kaw). The raft breaks up and they promptly lose the
accident-prone Prince to a sinkhole while repairing it. The rescue
ends them all in a cave, where Taran discovers that he can make Eilonwy's
bauble glow by thinking thoughts of her. However, no exit is to be
found, only the giant Glew who was trapped in the cave after having drunk
one of his potions while fleeing from Llyan. Now he complains of being
too big to get out of the cave and has concocted a new potion that he thinks
will work, needing only the life of one of them ("it doesn't matter which,
I'm terribly sorry"). A quick and rather accidental rescue by Prince
Rhun saves them (by thinking selfless of saving the others and causing the
bauble to glow and blind Glew) and they discover that the journal with empty
pages is really a book of magic, whose spells are revealed by the bauble.
At the shore they run into Gwydion who is planning to row out to Caer Colur,
the ancient castle of Eilonwy's family, now ruined and separated from the
main island. The castle was the treasure place of enchantments controllable
only by Eilonwy's family (now all dead except for her), once used by them
to greatly benefit the people. Achren seeks to use the enchantments
through Eilonwy as a proxy to regain control of Prydain, which we discover
was once ruled by her before she shared it with Arawn (who then stole it
from her). Upon reaching Caer Colur, Taran climbs Eilonwy's tower to
rescue her, only to discover she is enchanted by Achren. She promptly
calls for Achren and the party, after a brief fight, is taken before haughty
Achren (and an even haughtier Magg) in the great hall. Achren returns
the spellbook and the bauble to Eilonwy, telling her to destroy the party.
Eilonwy, however, chooses to destroy the book of spells, her family's
power, ending all hope of her becoming an enchantress. Magg, betrayed
by Achren once she was (prematurely) sure of her regained power, floods the
castle. The party ends up safely on the beach, including Achren, who
was prevented from committing suicide by Gwydion and promised a safe haven
by Dallben should she choose to seek it. Eilonwy returns to the castle
of Mona to learn the fine art of being a princess and the rest return to
Caer Dallben, but not before Taran receives the gift of a horn from Eilonwy
in exchange for a promise not to forget her.
This, the third book in the series, continues to mainly chronicle Taran's
development. No longer is he the foolish and impetuous youth of
The
Book of Three, but now frequently shows restraint and occasionally wisdom
and is generally valued for his valor of the previous books. (Foolishness
and impetuosity are not absent, however) The events on Mona quite
tax him, however, as not only is his love (which he only vaguely realizes
in the beginning) leaving Caer Dallben, it turns out that Rhun's parents
intend to betroth he and Eilonwy. Having given his promise to the King,
however, Taran obliges himself to continue helping Rhun, pained as he is
by the knowledge that the undeserving Rhun will get Eilonwy. For his
part, Rhun learns that true leadership is not just yelling commands, and
realizing that Taran is much more deserving, disclaims his claim on Eilonwy
(an easy task since he had little desire for the marraige in the first place).
Eilonwy, although mostly absent, makes the painful choice to give
up her dream of being an enchantress, much as Taran gives up hope for his
relationship with Eilonwy when he commits to protecting Rhun. Although
no formal expressions of love are exchanged between Taran and Eilonwy, the
growing realization of how much he does love her occupies a large portion
of his thoughts throughout the book and is really the main theme of the
book. Eilonwy, characteristicly, appears to never have been in doubt
about her feelings.
The sad history of Prydain further unfolds through the character of Achren.
Originally presented as a mere parter of Arawn and disliked guardian
of Eilonwy in
The Book of Three, she now becomes much more malignant
and evil. She was always Eilonwy's guardian for her potential power,
but was kept from carrying out her plan because she did not know that it
was the bauble that unlocked the secrets of the house of Llyr. Nor
is she less evil than Arawn himself: in her long reign life was almost
as joyless as it would be under Arawn and now she seeks to use Eilonwy as
the gateway to regaining that power. However her power is shattered
by the events at Caer Colur and she is effectively pardoned by Gywdion, who
does not seek justice for past crimes but seeks the restoration of her spirt,
an ongoing theme of the series.
Review: 8.5 / 10 (lacks characters like the uniquely lovable yet
terrifying witches).
Character Notes
Taran
|
Assistant Pig-Keeper who becomes conscious of his
love for Eilonwy while rescuing her.
|
Eilonwy
|
Heir of the house of Llyr, sought by Achren for
her ancestral power, which she destroys to prevent Achren's re-ascension
to power in Prydain.
|
Achren
|
Scheming former ruler of Prydain, now her powers
are forever ruined.
|
Prince Rhun
|
An incompetent prince, who feels that leading consists
of shouting orders. Sadly, he tends to be a clutz, both in thought
and in deed.
|
Magg
|
Traitorous steward of the house of Mona, betraying
Eilonwy to Achren
|
Fflewddur
|
King turned bard who serves as a loyal companion.
Prone to "extending" the truth and evidences a strong dislike for
enchantments--don't meddle and you won't get hurt by the fallout.
|
Magic Items
- Eilonwy's Bauble: the Golden Pelydryn, which alone can reveal
the writing on the ancestral spellbook of Llyr
- Blank spellbook: sole repository of the ancestral spells of
the house of Llyr
Literary Notes
- As usual, the theme is repeated in various forms (Coll asks Taran
if he's told Eilonwy that he'll miss her, the pain at failing to protect her,
the sacrifice of helping a competitor, etc.) although each instance is simple
and direct.
- While the everything is presented directly, the theme is developed
rather fully, since children's literature does not demand the depth of subplots
and subthemes.
- The minor characters (Flewddur and Gurgi) don't really change much.
Flewddur shows no improvement in his embellishments and is still just
as brave "A Fflam never falters (but...)". "Faithful Gurgi" is still
self-conscious and still doing his "seekings and peekings", "spyings and
pryings", and happy to dispense "crunchings and munchings"
- Little additional details of Prydain are told, but they are inevitably
told through a character in the series, in the case Achren. This has
the effect of limiting the reader's knowledge to the short comments they
make and develops the character by revealing their past.
- In books two and three someone gives up a great good to destroy what
was once good that is now being used for evil. Taran gives up the
brooch to destroy the cauldron, Eilonwy gives up her ancestral powers to
prevent Achren from using them. Life seems to require sacrificing
something good to protect against something evil.
Copyright © 2002 by Geoffrey Prewett