Addiction and the Silver Chair

Prince Rilian confronts the Witch.

Sweet Moses! I love C. S. Lewis’ The Silver Chair! It’s both entertaining and enlightening. Lewis was a master of symbolism! I reread it a few weeks ago and discovered something new: the Witch and the Silver Chair are symbols for addiction.

In this chronicle of Narnia, Eustace and Jill are sent by Aslan into Narnia to help rescue Rilian, a prince who has been put under the spell of an evil Witch.

Prince Rilian first encounters the Witch (although he doesn’t know it) when she comes in the form of a snake and kills his Rilian’s mother. The snake is described “great, shining, and as green as poison.”

“The Prince took his mother’s death very hardly, as well he might,” and he frequently rode out into Narnia, seeking to kill the beast and avenge his mother’s death. As time goes on, people begin to notice a change in Prince Rilian: “There was a look in his eyes as of a man who has seen visions.” It is later revealed that Prince Rilian had given up his hunt for the snake and was being actually being put under a spell by the Witch. “She was tall and great, shining, and wrapped in a thin garment as green as poison. And the Prince stared at her like a man out of his wits.”

The Witch eventually captures Prince Rilian and puts him under a spell. When Eustace and Jill discover him (in a dark, underground city many miles below the surface of the earth) they describe him as handsome and well-natured, but they also notice that there was “something about his face that didn’t seem quite right.” Because of the spell, neither the children nor Rilian know who he is–he has forgotten.

As they talk, Rilian is constantly laughing, finding even the darkest subjects (like war and death) to be humorous. He then tells the children that his Queen (the Witch), has the power to free him from an enchantment. Said he: “Every night there comes an hour when my mind is most horribly changed, and, after my mind, my body.” He then praises the Queen, saying: “Is not that a lady worthy of a man’s whole worship?”

Later that evening, and for many nights prior, Prince Rilian is bound to a silver chair. According to the Queen, Rilian being

Prince Rilian bound to the chair (his addiction).

bound to this silver chair will keep him from hurting himself and others. In actuality, the silver chair only reinforces the spell that has been cast on the Narnian Prince.

As he sweats and struggles in the bonds of the chair, Eustace and Jill see his need and help free him. Once free, Prince Rilian “crossed the room in a single bound, seized his own sword…and drew it.” He then cleaves the silver chair in two. “The silver gave way before its edge like string, and in a moment a few twisted fragments, shining on the floor, were all that was left. But as the chair broke, there came from it a bright flash, a sound like small thunder, and (for one moment) a loathsome smell.”

Prince Rilian then turns to the children and they notice that “the something wrong, whatever it was, had vanished from his face.”

The realization that the silver chair could represent addiction fascinated me. Working at the ANASAZI Foundation (a wilderness therapy program for struggling youth), and from personal experiences in my own life, I have come face to face with the horrors and anguish of addiction. C. S. Lewis did a masterful job in illustrating the journey of an addict in The Silver Chair.

    1. A Difficult Experience – In The Silver Chair, the death of Prince Rilian’s mother made him angry and vengeful. These emotions eventually led him to be caught under the spell of the Witch. Generally speaking, most addictions start because of negative life experiences: the death of a loved one, divorce, health problems, economic struggles or other difficulties.
    2. Self-Medicating – Seeking relief from his anguish, Prince Rilian found beauty in a Witch that eventually put him under her spell. Many addicts start their addiction (to drugs, alcohol, pornography, relationships, et cetera) because it “helps” them escape from their problems.
    3. Darkness and Secrecy – When the Witch captured Prince Rilian, she took him to an underground city deep beneath the surface of the earth. Secrecy is the hallmark of addiction. The addict knows that what they’re doing is wrong and they anxiously try to cover it up.
    4. Forgetting Who We Are – This is the most fascinating thing to me: Rilian forgot who he was. He forgot that he was a Prince. When the addict abuses a substance, they’re forgetting who they are–they’re forgetting their families and friends and who they have the power to become–they’re forgetting that they are a child of God.
    5. Darkness Becomes Light – After ten years of being under the spell of the silver chair, Prince Rilian could laugh at the darkness of death and murder. The more time an addict spends in secrecy and darkness, the more they’ll find delight in darker themes.
Luckily, there is always way out. Just as Aslan sent Eustace and Jill to find and save Rilian, God also sends people and positive influences our way to help us remember who we are and to help us come out of darkness and into light.

Destroying the Silver Chair

In order to recover from addiction, we first need to admit what we’re doing is wrong then reach out and develop meaningful relationships with God and with others. We need to rid ourselves of what is binding us, or holding us back (the silver chairs of our lives) and commit to walk forward into the light. As we do so, life will become more meaningful as we begin to see it more clearly.

As Prince Rilian said: “For now that I am myself, I can remember that enchanted life, though while I was enchanted I could not remember my true self.”