Digory Kirke

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Digory Kirke
Narnia character
Belfast - CS Lewis Square - The Searcher 20230227.jpg
Digory Kirke on his way to Narnia (Ross Wilson, 1998), CS Lewis Square, Belfast.
In-universe information
Race Human
FamilyMr. Kirke and Mrs. Mabel Ketterley-Kirke (parents), Andrew Ketterley (uncle), Letitia Ketterley (aunt)
NationalityBritish

Professor Digory Kirke is a fictional character from C. S. Lewis' fantasy series The Chronicles of Narnia. He appears in three of the seven books: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe , The Magician's Nephew , and The Last Battle .

Contents

In the 2005 film The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe , he is portrayed (as an adult) by Jim Broadbent.

Character biography

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy Pevensie stay with the character, referred to in this book only as "the Professor", at his great house in the country to escape the Blitz. A wardrobe in this house leads Lucy to Narnia; when her siblings do not believe her story, the Professor speaks to them wisely and shows them that she is logically likely to be telling the truth. At the end of the story, he reassures the children that they will return to Narnia one day.

The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

The Professor is mentioned only briefly and in passing, but it is here that his surname, Kirke, is first used.

The Magician's Nephew

Digory Kirke is a young boy who lives in Victorian London with his Uncle Andrew and Andrew's sister Aunt Letty, because his father is in India and his mother is deathly ill. Uncle Andrew, having made magic rings that allow whoever wears them to travel to other worlds by passing through the Wood between the Worlds. He first tricks Digory's friend Polly Plummer into trying one; when she vanishes, he manipulates Digory into following her with another ring in order to bring her back. Reunited with Polly, and finding that they can return to London through the pool from which they emerged into the Wood, Digory persuades Polly to try one of the many other pools.

They find themselves in a lifeless world called Charn, over which a dying red sun hangs. In a great hall, they find a hall full of wax figures, and a golden bell. Against Polly's vehement opposition, Digory rings the bell, thus waking Queen Jadis, the last living resident of Charn, from her self-imposed enchanted sleep. Despite their attempts to shake her, Jadis follows Digory and Polly back to London, intent on conquest, where she causes havoc for an afternoon. Digory resolves to take her back to Charn, but instead accidentally brings her (and Uncle Andrew and others) into the empty world of Narnia shortly before Aslan starts creating it. Once the world is created, Jadis flees from Aslan, who sends Digory to a mysterious locked garden in the far west to retrieve an apple which, once planted, will grow a tree that will lock Jadis out of Narnia for centuries; it also has the power to cure sickness and grant immortality.

After Digory's long journey by flying horse, he arrives with Polly to find Jadis already there. Jadis tempts Digory to eat his apple himself and take another to save his ill mother. Digory, after a struggle of conscience, takes the apple to Aslan and plants it as instructed. With Aslan's permission and blessing, Digory is allowed to take an apple from this tree back to his world to cure his mother. He plants the core in his garden, from which a new tree grows. Years later this tree is blown down by a storm and Digory uses its wood to build the wardrobe that becomes the portal to Narnia in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe .

The Last Battle

Prior to the events of the book, the now elderly Digory and Polly have been regularly meeting with the child protagonists of the other books in the series (excepting Susan) to reminisce about their adventures in Narnia. After the titular battle, they all meet again in the renewed Narnia in Aslan's Country. At the end of the book it is revealed that they have all been killed in a railway accident and are now in an eternal blessed afterlife.

Portrayals

Michael Aldridge played Digory in the 1988 BBC miniseries adaptation. Jim Broadbent played the character in the 2005 film.

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