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In the C.S. Lewis's fictional world of Narnia, Mr. Tumnus is a faun in the story The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. He is sometimes referred to as 'Faun Tumnus', and is described as having reddish skin, curly hair, horns on his forehead, cloven hooves and a long tail that he carries over his arm.

Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.

Tumnus meets Lucy Pevensie, one of the main four characters, when she first enters the magical land of Narnia through the eponymous wardrobe. They meet at a lamppost and Mr. Tumnus offers Lucy tea at his home. While at his house Mr. Tumnus gives Lucy tea and cakes, then plays his flute for her. Either the song or the flute has some enchantment which puts Lucy to sleep. She wakes up several hours later to find Mr. Tumnus crying. He then explains to her how he had entered the service of the White Witch, and was planning on turning Lucy over to Witch when she was asleep. He begs Lucy's forgiveness, which she readily gives and then takes her back to the Lamppost so she can go home.

Mr. Tumnus is later arrested and turned to stone by the White Witch. Much of Lucy's eagerness to fight the White Witch comes from her affection for and desire to rescue the Faun.

Allegorically, Tumnus signifies the moral standing of man apart from God, particularly as expressed by the Epistle to the Romans; which is to say, that conscience and "natural virtue" can never in itself be sufficient for salvation and that true righteousness can only descend from acceptance of God's mercy.

The Chronicles of Narnia
C. S. Lewis
Peter | Susan | Edmund | Lucy | Eustace | Jill
Aslan | Reepicheep | Tash | Tisroc | Mr. Tumnus | White Witch
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