Red Queen Symbols
- Author :
🔣 Symbols 🎌 Flags 💡 Objects. 👑 Queen’s Birthday. Red Queen Symbols & Objects. Victoria Aveyard. This Study Guide consists of approximately 50 pages of chapter summaries, quotes, character analysis, themes, and more - everything you need to sharpen your knowledge of Red Queen. This section contains 890.
- Genres :
- Fantasy, Young Adult
Red Queen Symbols Meaning
- Series :
- Published :
- February 10th 2015
- Views :
- 65414
This is a world divided by blood – red or silver.
The Reds are commoners, ruled by a Silver elite in possession of god-like superpowers. And to Mare Barrow, a seventeen-year-old Red girl from the poverty-stricken Stilts, it seems like nothing will ever change.
That is, until she finds herself working in the Silver Palace. Here, surrounded by the people she hates the most, Mare discovers that, despite her red blood, she possesses a deadly power of her own. One that threatens to destroy the balance of power.
Fearful of Mare’s potential, the Silvers hide her in plain view, declaring her a long-lost Silver princess, now engaged to a Silver prince. Despite knowing that one misstep would mean her death, Mare works silently to help the Red Guard, a militant resistance group, and bring down the Silver regime.
But this is a world of betrayal and lies, and Mare has entered a dangerous dance – Reds against Silvers, prince against prince, and Mare against her own heart.
- 1.Page 1
- 2.Page 2
- 3.Page 3
- 4.Page 4
- 5.Page 5
- 6.Page 6
- 7.Page 7
- 8.Page 8
- 9.Page 9
- 10.Page 10
- 11.Page 11
- 12.Page 12
- 13.Page 13
- 14.Page 14
- 15.Page 15
- 16.Page 16
- 17.Page 17
- 18.Page 18
- 19.Page 19
- 20.Page 20
- 21.Page 21
- 22.Page 22
- 23.Page 23
- 24.Page 24
- 25.Page 25
- 26.Page 26
- 27.Page 27
- 28.Page 28
- 29.Page 29
- 30.Page 30
- 31.Page 31
- 32.Page 32
- 33.Page 33
- 34.Page 34
- 35.Page 35
- 36.Page 36
- 37.Page 37
- 38.Page 38
- 39.Page 39
- 40.Page 40
- 41.Page 41
- 42.Page 42
- 43.Page 43
- 44.Page 44
- 45.Page 45
- 46.Page 46
- 47.Page 47
- 48.Page 48
- 49.Page 49
- 50.Page 50
- 51.Page 51
- 52.Page 52
- 53.Page 53
- 54.Page 54
- 55.Page 55
- 56.Page 56
- 57.Page 57
- 58.Page 58
- 59.Page 59
- 60.Page 60
- 61.Page 61
- 62.Page 62
- 63.Page 63
- 64.Page 64
- 65.Page 65
- 66.Page 66
- 67.Page 67
- 68.Page 68
- 69.Page 69
- 70.Page 70
- 71.Page 71
- 72.Page 72
- 73.Page 73
- 74.Page 74
- 75.Page 75
- 76.Page 76
- 77.Page 77
- 78.Page 78
- 79.Page 79
- 80.Page 80
- 81.Page 81
- 82.Page 82
- 83.Page 83
- 84.Page 84
Blood of the Silvers
The Silvers stand in opposition to the Reds. Their blood is silver and their powers are mighty. And, according to the narrator, something of much greater metaphorical significance:
“Their blood is a threat, a warning, a promise. We are not the same and never will be.”
Rohr, of House of Rhambos
Red Queen Symbols
The narrator describes Rohr-of the House of Rhambos, mind you—as the tiniest girl she’s ever seen. But you know what they say about things that come in small packages:
“Below us, little Rohr destroys the floor in a whirlwind, turning statues into pulverized piles of dust while she cracks the ground beneath her feet. She’s like an earthquake in tiny human form, breaking apart anything and everything in her way.”
A Done Deal: Metaphorically Speaking
The narrator has become a royal bride, promised to the king’s second son. The position affords her a bit of bargaining power and she strikes a deal to save her brothers and friend. At the king’s almost instantaneous one-word assent, “Done,” she thinks:
“It sounds less like a pardon and more like a death sentence.”
Death Sentence for the Devil
Circumstances prevail upon the narrator to the point at which it is she who becomes the object of the king’s pronouncement of a death sentence. Not exactly a forgiving type is the king, whose decree makes it clear how badly things have broken down since the deal was done:
“As for the Red girl, the trickster [she is informed] She will have no weapons at all and die like the devil she is.”
Metaphorical Juxtaposition
The novel closes on a poetically constructed metaphorical image that is subtly juxtaposed with the unpleasant imagery of the sweaty, smelly high heat of summer with which the story opens:
Red Queen Symbols Images
“A strange warmth falls over me, a warmth like the sun though we are deep underground. It’s as familiar to me as my own lightning, reaching out to envelop me in an embrace we can’t have.”