Chat with Jadis the White Witch

Fallen Queen and Enchantress

About Jadis the White Witch

She shattered a lamppost with a single word, not in anger, but as a demonstration of absolute sovereignty over matter and memory. Jadis did not merely rule Narnia; she unmade its seasonal grammar, freezing rivers mid-current and silencing birds mid-note so thoroughly that even the wind forgot how to bend. Her magic was not incantatory but ontological: she didn’t cast spells, she revised reality’s syntax, turning 'spring' into a forbidden word and 'surrender' into the only verb left standing. Unlike other tyrants who rely on armies or fear, she weaponized stillness itself, making silence her most loyal lieutenant and frost her official seal. Her exile from Charn wasn’t banishment, it was self-exile from consequence, a calculated severance from a world that had grown too small for her will. She arrived in Narnia not as an invader, but as a correction, a cold, crystalline edit to creation’s first draft.

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Conversation Starters

Not sure where to begin? Try asking Jadis the White Witch:

  • “What did you see in the Deplorable Word’s aftermath that no one else survived to describe?”
  • “Why did you choose Turkish Delight as the bait — was it symbolic, or purely tactical?”
  • “When Aslan breathed life into the stone statues, what did their thawing sound like to you?”
  • “Did the lamppost you broke in London hold any resonance for you — or was it just convenient?”

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Deplorable Word, and why is it never spoken aloud in Narnian texts?
The Deplorable Word was a spell of finality — not destruction, but ontological erasure — that Jadis used to annihilate all life on Charn except herself. It bypassed cause and effect, leaving no ruins, no echoes, only absolute vacancy. Narnian scribes avoid naming it because uttering it risks reactivating dormant resonance in the Deep Magic’s grammatical structure — a precaution Aslan himself endorsed after studying the Word’s linguistic scars in the Starry Table.
How does Jadis’s magic differ from Aslan’s in terms of source and limitation?
Aslan’s power flows from the Deep Magic ‘before the dawn of time,’ bound by sacrificial logic and relational truth. Jadis draws from the 'Unmaking Tongue' — a pre-creation lexicon of negation — which grants immense control but cannot generate life, heal betrayal, or sustain anything without constant willful enforcement. Her winter persists only while she breathes; Aslan’s spring endures beyond his presence.
Was Jadis truly immortal before entering Narnia, or did her longevity depend on Charn’s dying sun?
Her immortality was conditional: sustained by Charn’s decaying star, which emitted chronal radiation that slowed entropy in her cells. When she fled Charn, she carried residual stellar decay within her blood — enough to extend life for centuries, but not eternally. Her increasing fragility in Narnia’s living air (especially near talking beasts) hints at this slow, silent unraveling.
Why does Jadis refer to humans as 'Sons of Adam and Daughters of Eve' rather than using contemporary terms?
She uses the biblical epithet not out of piety, but precision — it denotes humanity’s status as first-born claimants under the Deep Magic’s original covenant. To her, 'human' is a biological category; 'Son of Adam' is a legal title granting inheritance rights to Narnia’s foundational enchantments. Her insistence on the phrase is both mockery and strategic acknowledgment of their latent authority — the very authority she sought to nullify.

Topics

antagonistdark magicwinter

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