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Dawn Trader question

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Why is the Dawn Treader depicted in media images as not having a bowsprit? The book by C S Lewis describes a storm that destroyed the single mast. They had to use the bowsprit to make a jury mast.

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Could be. Ha! I bought the book yesterday and have already learned a few new things:

1. DT had one boat onboard that in two trips could get all the crew to shore.
2. There were 30 men in the crew that could “wield swords.”
3. Shields with the coat of arms of each man were included on the voyage and could be displayed along the side rails and in sub-deck windows.
4. The ship carried sails (plural) that had to be repaired after the storm that had also broken its only mast.

Thanks for following along!
 
As is true with almost all ships of early explorers, no one really knows what the real Dawn Traeder has looked like. So, in recreating her, the film crew did as good a job as they possibly could, more after some educated guesswork than from any hard historical and/or archaeological evidence. If they decided to leave away her bow sprit, it was probably only because they had to build her on a tight budget.
 
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The book by C S Lewis describes a storm that destroyed the single mast.
Pauline Baynes should have read the book as well. She did the illustration for Mr. Lewis or maybe he should have caught the mistake. By the same token maybe he did see it but did not care as it was all fiction anyway :) . She did many illustrations for Mr. Lewis but they mainly did it via mail as they only met two or three times in person. Fun stuff:)
Allan

First edition book cover

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Allan—Thank you for mentioning Pauline Baynes. I guess if you just pay £100 per book, the author couldn’t get too huffy. I enjoyed reading about her and had no idea she was a very strong woman who wasn’t all that much concerned with literary accuracy, such as basic anatomy, shields appearing on soldiers’ right shoulders, rowing a boat facing forward, or, as I’ve noted, the Dawn Treader as an ocean-going ship!
 
Glad to help Up. As the book cover describes, the book is for children and the "ship" can be anything anyone wants in our own childhood imaginations.
Allan
 
Allan: I can imagine that I just might need to quote this from time-to-time when giving a defense of my own DT variation: “…the book is for children and the ‘ship’ can be anything anyone wants in our own childhood imaginations.”
 
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