Gumpas

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==Bio Info==
==Bio Info==
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'''Titles:''' Governor Gumpas of the Lone Islands
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'''Title:''' Governor Gumpas of the Lone Islands
'''Age:''' Old
'''Age:''' Old
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'''First Appearance:''' ''The Voyage of the Dawn Treader'', Ch. 4 (1952)
'''First Appearance:''' ''The Voyage of the Dawn Treader'', Ch. 4 (1952)
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==About Gumpas==
 
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Governor Gumpas is a bureaucrat. His wheezy insistence that the king of Narnia follow his rules about appointments and times is very comical, because he clearly does not understand who he is dealing with. Gumpas is cowardly and selfish, and knows nothing but his own little world of petty power and underhanded dealings. But he is also a cunning man who has long profited from the slave trade on the Lone Islands. Gumpas' men are like him: sloppy, slovenly, and disrespectful to the true authority of the Narnian king. In many ways Gumpas and the slaver [[Pug]] are two sides of the same coin, both seeking to profit from the suffering of others and the lack of accountability with their Narnian overlords. Gumpas' modern-world bureaucracy is very out of place in the medieval world of Narnia, and he represents what was to Lewis a corrupt and inane system.
 
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===~ The Voyage of the Dawn Treader ~ (1952)===
===~ The Voyage of the Dawn Treader ~ (1952)===
[[File:3778.jpg|left]]Governor Gumpas is sitting in his castle in Narrowhaven when he sees a Narnian ship signalling to the rest of its fleet to make for the cape. No one from Narnia has been to the Lone Islands for over 150 years, and he is not sure if the ships are coming in peace or not. When King [[Caspian]] arrives in Narrowhaven and forces his way into Gumpas' chambers, Gumpas has the impudence to tell the Narnian king that he cannot see the governor without an appointment. [[Lord Bern]] and Captain [[Drinian]] overturn Gumpas' table and [[Lord Bern|Bern]] speaks roughly to him while [[Caspian]] calmly sits in the governor's chair. [[Caspian]] calls Gumpas to account for the slave trade he has allowed to flourish on the Lone Islands, and the governor refuses to end it. Gumpas is aghast to learn that the Lone Islands' tribute to Narnia — which has not been paid for 150 years — is due from his own pocket. In the face of Gumpas' sputterings and equivocations, [[Caspian]] relieves Gumpas of his post, and the former governor watches as the King makes [[Lord Bern]] the Duke of the Lone Islands. [[Lord Bern|Duke Bern]] then gives Gumpas the choice to leave with or without a flogging. Gumpas leaves ignominiously — but without the flogging.
[[File:3778.jpg|left]]Governor Gumpas is sitting in his castle in Narrowhaven when he sees a Narnian ship signalling to the rest of its fleet to make for the cape. No one from Narnia has been to the Lone Islands for over 150 years, and he is not sure if the ships are coming in peace or not. When King [[Caspian]] arrives in Narrowhaven and forces his way into Gumpas' chambers, Gumpas has the impudence to tell the Narnian king that he cannot see the governor without an appointment. [[Lord Bern]] and Captain [[Drinian]] overturn Gumpas' table and [[Lord Bern|Bern]] speaks roughly to him while [[Caspian]] calmly sits in the governor's chair. [[Caspian]] calls Gumpas to account for the slave trade he has allowed to flourish on the Lone Islands, and the governor refuses to end it. Gumpas is aghast to learn that the Lone Islands' tribute to Narnia — which has not been paid for 150 years — is due from his own pocket. In the face of Gumpas' sputterings and equivocations, [[Caspian]] relieves Gumpas of his post, and the former governor watches as the King makes [[Lord Bern]] the Duke of the Lone Islands. [[Lord Bern|Duke Bern]] then gives Gumpas the choice to leave with or without a flogging. Gumpas leaves ignominiously — but without the flogging.
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==About Gumpas==
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Governor Gumpas is a bureaucrat. His wheezy insistence that the king of Narnia follow his rules about appointments and times is very comical, because he clearly does not understand who he is dealing with. Gumpas is cowardly and selfish, and knows nothing but his own little world of petty power and underhanded dealings. But he is also a cunning man who has long profited from the slave trade on the Lone Islands. Gumpas' men are like him: sloppy, slovenly, and disrespectful to the true authority of the Narnian king. In many ways Gumpas and the slaver [[Pug]] are two sides of the same coin, both seeking to profit from the suffering of others and the lack of accountability with their Narnian overlords. Gumpas' modern-world bureaucracy is very out of place in the medieval world of Narnia, and he represents what was to Lewis a corrupt and inane system.
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*[[File:BBCGumpas.jpg|left]]John Quarmby: BBC TV series, 1989 – 1990
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*[[File:BBCGumpas.jpg|left]]John Quarmby: BBC TV series, 1988 – 1990

Current revision as of 21:23, 19 December 2010

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