Imagination and The Arts in C. S. Lewis (Schakel)
Imagination and The Arts in C. S. Lewis (Schakel)
Imagination and The Arts in C. S. Lewis (Schakel)
Lewis
Peter J. Schakel
Copyright 2002 by The Curators of the University of Missouri University of Missouri Press, Columbia, Missouri 65201 Printed and bound in the United States of America All rights reserved 5 4 3 2 1 06 05 04 03 02 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Schakel, Peter J. Imagination and the arts in C. S. Lewis : journeying to Narnia and other worlds / Peter J. Schakel. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 0-8262-1407-X 1. Lewis, C. S. (Clive Staples), 18981963KnowledgeArt. 2. Lewis, C. S. (Clive Staples), 18981963. Chronicles of Narnia. 3. Art and literatureGreat BritainHistory20th century. 4. Childrens stories, EnglishHistory and criticism. 5. Fantasy ction, EnglishHistory and criticism. 6. Imagination in literature. 7. Art in literature. 8. Imagination. I. Title. PR6023.E926 Z885 2002 823'.912dc21 2002023837
This paper meets the requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, Z39.48, 1984.
Designer: Jennifer Cropp Typesetter: Bookcomp, Inc. Printer and binder: Thomson-Shore, Inc. Typefaces: Palatino, University & Wood Type Ornaments Unpublished material and manuscript reproduction on page 140 by C. S. Lewis copyright C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. Reproduced by permission. Also by permission of The Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. Photo of C. S. Lewis on page 136 copyright The Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. Unless otherwise noted, all photographs are by Peter Schakel.
To my grandchildren
Jonathan, Thomas, Michael and in memory of Alex
whose imaginative play keeps alive the wonder of childhood
Contents
Preface ix Acknowledgments xi Editions Used and Abbreviations xiii
2. The Temptation to Get a Nice New Book Texts and the Imaginative Reading Experience 23 3. It Does Not Matter Very Muchor Does It? The Correct Order for Reading the Chronicles 40 4. Narrative Nets Lewis and the Appeal of Story
53
5. He Looks As Though Hed Make It Come Out All Right Lewis and His Storytellers 70 6. Four Fiddles, Three Flutes, and a Drum Lewis and Music 89 7. Notable Dances and Feasts Lewis and Dance 111 8. Glimpses of Heaven in the Earthly Landscape Lewis and Art, Architecture, and Clothing 137 9. Let the Pictures Tell Their Own Moral Lewis and the Moral Imagination 163 Appendix Table for Converting Page References to Chapter Numbers
Bibliography Index 205 193
189
vii
Pref ace
C. S. Lewis was in love with imagination, according to his friend Owen Bareld. He had a very powerful imagination, a fanciful and inventive imagination.1 In fact, imaginative Lewis is one of the three identities Bareld distinguishes in his friend (along with logical Lewis and religious Lewis).2 Lewiss proclivity for imagination has long been well known and has been discussed in many books and articles. The imaginativeness of his writings in various genres has been one source of his great appeal to millions of readers for more than half a century. Less attention has been paid to the fact that Lewis also was in love with the arts. He gave a great deal of attention to all of the arts from his youth onward, and references to music, dance, drawing, painting, architecture, and clothing are scattered widely throughout his writings. In the following pages I seek to examine imagination and the arts in C. S. Lewis in a more thorough, sustained, unied way than previous studies have: to consider his different denitions of imagination and the way they relate to each other; to treat him as a contributor to what is now referred to as moral imagination as well as artistic imagination; and to demonstrate the extent of Lewiss interest in the other arts and show how the arts shape some of his deepest and most fundamental concepts about life and the universe. To know Lewis fully, one must understand the extent of his love of and devotion to both the imagination and the arts. It is inevitable that this study should focus considerable attention on the most imaginative of Lewiss works, the Chronicles of Narnia. The arts appear more prominently in the Chronicles than in his other works and evoke an encompassing imaginative experience. Lewis was a teacher, by profession and in many of his writings. One of the effects of the Chronicles is to teach young readers about the
1. Bareld, Conversations on C. S. Lewis, 137, 135. See also Bareld, Lewis, Truth, and Imagination, 98. 2. Bareld, Lewis, Truth, and Imagination, 9495.
ix
Preface
value of knowing and experiencing the various arts. In addition to the Chronicles, this book examines allusions to the arts in Lewiss letters, literary criticism, Christian writings, poems, and ction for adults. It provides a good way to connect the Chronicles to his other writings and to see his thought and work as a unied whole. Bareld held that Lewiss love for imagination was like romantic love, like adoration, in the sense of having a strong impulse to protect the beloved object from contamination, to insulate imagination from the harsh world of reality and from anything whatever to do with fact. He found in Lewis a separation between reason and imagination, a resistance until late in Lewiss life to allowing interpenetration between their two worlds.3 In an earlier book, Reason and Imagination in C. S. Lewis: A Study of Till We Have Faces, I made a similar case, though without Barelds illuminating comparison to love. I argued there that however deep Lewiss devotion to imagination, he was unable to commit himself fully to its efcacy and relied on the intellect to convey his central ideas, even in his imaginative ction. Only late in his life, in the Chronicles of Narnia, Till We Have Faces, A Grief Observed, and Letters to Malcolm: Chiey on Prayer, did he begin to break down the barrier between intellect and imagination and allow imagination to work on its own. In Barelds terms, Letters to Malcolm is irradiated by imaginative Lewis here and there in a way that the other books . . . are not.4 The present book is not concerned with the tension between intellect and imagination. It treats Lewis not as being in love with imagination romantically and protectively, but as delighted at being in the presence of the beloved, desirous to share activities with the beloved, and eager to promote the good and happiness of the beloved. It seeks not like the earlier study to show separations in Lewiss thought but to show unities. Its aim is to supplement existing biographies by a fuller understanding of Lewiss life, through seeing the centrality of the arts in it, and to supplement existing literary studies by a fuller appreciation of his imaginative achievements. If imagination and the arts were among his great loves, their inuence in his life and works deserves to be better known and more fully appreciated.
3. Ibid., 98, 100. 4. Ibid., 101.
Acknowledgments
The idea for this book grew out of an invitation to do a presentation on Lewis for a weekend celebration of Christianity and the Arts at Hope College in January 1999. I am grateful to Joel Tanis, organizer of the event, for including me. Earlier versions of chapters 3 and 7 were published in Mythlore 12, no. 3 (Spring 1986) and 23, no. 2 (Spring 2001). An earlier version of chapter 4 was published in A Christian for All Christians: Essays in Honour of C. S. Lewis (1990), edited by Andrew Walker and James Patrick. Part of chapter 9 appeared in The Canadian C. S. Lewis Journal, no. 100 (Autumn 2001). I am grateful to the editors of these publications for their permission to reuse that material here. I am also grateful to the C. S. Lewis Company Ltd., the Bodleian Library, and the Marion E. Wade Center for permission to reproduce extracts from unpublished letters and papers. I am indebted to many friends and colleagues for their help as I pursued this study. Both Charles Huttar and Doris Myers read the manuscript twice at different stages. Each corrected many errors and used their extensive knowledge of Lewis to suggest ways to develop ideas more protably. Huttar also consulted with me frequently, read the proofs, and prepared the index. Bruce Edwards, Paul F. Ford, and Susan Woolley read the manuscript and offered valuable suggestions. Myra Kohsel, ofce manager for the English department at Hope College, assisted in numerous ways to prepare the study for publication. Research on the book required several visits to the Marion E. Wade Center at Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. Each time the staff were gracious, helpful, attentive, and patient. I am grateful especially to Christopher Mitchell, Marjorie Lamp Mead, Pamela Schwartz, Alicia Pearson, Aubrey Sampson, and Heidi Truty. I am very grateful and honored to have been selected to receive the 2002 Clyde S. Kilby Research Grant from the Marion E. Wade Center for research relating to this book.
xi
xii
Acknowledgments
A major part of the book was drafted during a sabbatical leave, for which I am very grateful to Hope College. I want to express appreciation to the people at the University of Missouri Press who through their attentiveness and expertise have made this a better book than it would have been without them and who have at every point been a pleasure to work with. I am grateful especially to Beverly Jarrett and Clair Willcox for their condence in the project; to Jane Lago for the alert and efcient way she moved the book through the production process; and to copyeditor Tim Fox and designer Jennifer Cropp for their careful and creative work. Most of all I thank my wife, Karen. She read and commented helpfully on several chapters. She believed in the value of the project and encouraged me through it. And she unselshly put up with many months of more than my usual degree of distractedness and preoccupation.
xiii
xiv
and enlarged edition, edited by Walter Hooper. London: Fount, 1988. Lewis PapersThe Lewis Papers. 11 vols. Typescript published by The Leeborough Press. A collection of family papers assembled by Albert Lewis and edited, typed, and bound by Warren Lewis. The original is in the Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Illinois, with a copy in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. LtoMLetters to Malcolm: Chiey on Prayer. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1964. LWW The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. New York: Macmillan, 1950. MCMere Christianity. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1952. MN The Magicians Nephew. New York: Macmillan, 1955. OnSOn Stories. In Essays Presented to Charles Williams, edited by C. S. Lewis, 90105. London: Oxford University Press, 1947. [Reprinted in Of Other Worlds: Essays and Stories, edited by Walter Hooper, 321 (London: Geoffrey Bles, 1966); and On Stories and Other Essays on Literature, edited by Walter Hooper, 320 (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1982).] OSPOut of the Silent Planet. London: Bodley Head, 1938. PCPrince Caspian. New York: Macmillan, 1951. PerPerelandra. London: Bodley Head, 1943. PoemsPoems, edited by Walter Hooper. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1964. PPLA Preface to Paradise Lost. London: Oxford University Press, 1942. PRThe Pilgrims Regress. London: J. M. Dent, 1933. SbyJ Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1955. SCThe Silver Chair. New York: Macmillan, 1953. SLThe Screwtape Letters. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1942. THSThat Hideous Strength. London: Bodley Head, 1945. TST They Stand Together: The Letters of C. S. Lewis to Arthur Greeves (19141963). Edited by Walter Hooper. London: Collins, 1979. TWHFTill We Have Faces: A Myth Retold. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1956. VDT The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. New York: Macmillan, 1952.
xv
For the discussion of the Harry Potter books by J. K. Rowling in chapter 9, I have quoted from the British editions (see p. 180n). Citations are by chapters, using the following abbreviated titles: ChamberHarry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. London: Bloomsbury, 1998. GobletHarry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. London: Bloomsbury, 2000. PrisonerHarry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. London: Bloomsbury, 1999. StoneHarry Potter and the Philosophers Stone. London: Bloomsbury, 1997. [U.S. title, Harry Potter and the Sorcerors Stone.]
came to another school, where a tired-looking girl was teaching arithmetic to a number of boys who looked very like pigs. Here the teacher wants to nourish her students, but she is restrained by the educational system and by her students: Lets tell the inspector she talks to people out of the window when she ought to be teaching us (PC, 16869).1 The concern expressed in each of these cases indicates the centrality of imagination for Lewis. In his autobiography, Surprised by Joy, Lewis treats imagination as a major factor, if not the major factor, in his life: he describes his early years as ones in which imagination of one sort or another played the dominant part. He says he is telling the story of two livesan outer life of realism and reason and an inner life of fantasy and imagination. As a young man he wanted only two kinds of talkthe almost purely imaginative and the almost purely rational. The two hemispheres of my mind were in the sharpest contrast, he explains. On the one side a many-islanded sea of poetry and myth; on the other a glib and shallow rationalism. Nearly all that I loved I believed to be imaginary (SbyJ, 82, 119, 136, 170). Imagination is evinced, illustrated, and discussed again and again in his writingsit would not be too much to say that imagination is, except for salvation, the most important issue in Lewiss thought and life. He held that a healthy imagination in adults and children is vital because of the enlargement of being and enrichment of life it offers, and because of the potential it holds for the deepening of faith and understanding. Thus, neglecting the imagination is a matter of grave consequence. If Lewis felt children of the 1930s and 1940s were undernourished imaginatively, he would most likely regard many children of the past decadewith their diet of prepackaged visual images and simple narratives from television and video gamesas starved. Books require that readers or listeners use their imaginations to supply images and ll in details; for children and adults, television and video stie imaginations and lead to intellectual and
1. In a 1955 essay, Lilies That Fester, Lewis expresses concern that the analytic, prescriptive education being devised to prepare students to succeed in the managerial class sties their imagination: The hours of unsponsored, uninspected, perhaps even forbidden, reading, the ramblings, and the long, long thoughts in which those of luckier generations rst discovered literature and nature and themselves are a thing of the past (42).
imaginative laziness and inactivity.2 If Lewis were alive today, his concern would be much deeper than it was half a century ago. Mrs. Moore addressed imaginative undernourishment by reading stories to one young visitor. Lewis engaged the problem on a larger scale: he wrote poems and stories that would appeal to and stimulate the imaginativeness of his readers, and he used autobiographical, critical, and religious writings to clarify, defend, and support the imagination. A thorough understanding of Lewis as a person, as a creative writer, as a literary critic, and as an apologist for Christianity requires that imagination be given full and detailed attention, including discriminations between Lewiss different uses of the word itselfbetween imagination as creative activity (a term Lewis disliked, because it incorrectly implies production out of nothing) and imagination as receptive action, and between artistic imagination and romantic imagination. By Lewiss time the word had a long history, the modern sense having developed at the end of the eighteenth century. Prior to that, in the Renaissance, imagination was contrasted to reason and was looked upon as a means for fanciful conceptions (including poetry): The lunatic, the lover, and the poet / Are of imagination all compact, says Theseus in Shakespeares A Midsummer Nights Dream. As imagination bodies forth / The forms of things unknown, the poets pen / Turns them to shapes and gives to airy nothing / A local habitation and a name (5.1.717). The nding of material by an author and fresh ways of expressing it was conveyed by invention, a term carried over from classical rhetoric. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries imagination (usually synonymous with fancy) was the faculty by which images were called up and which must then be subjected to the check of reason. In the later eighteenth century such imaging began to be regarded as transcending reason; its vividness and power moved the passions and created a world of beauty of their own.3
2. Communications researcher Patti M. Valkenburg reports, The majority of studies suggest that television in general and television violence in particular have a reductive effect on imaginative play and creativity (Television and the Childs Developing Imagination, 124). See also Valkenburg and T. H. A. van der Voort, Inuence of TV on Daydreaming and Creative Imagination, and van der Voort and Valkenburg, Televisions Impact on Fantasy Play: A Review of Research. 3. John Ruskin, Chamouni (line 56), in The Poems of John Ruskin, 1:158.
The Romantic writers carried this further: imagination came to be thought of as a unifying mental power that enabled the poet to grasp such inner relationships as the identity of truth and beauty. Key texts for the Romantic (and subsequent) theories of imagination are several tantalizing fragmentary comments by Coleridge. In the Statesmans Manual (1816), he offers his clearest and fullest denition of imagination: That reconciling and mediatory power, which incorporating the Reason in Images of the Sense, . . . gives birth to a system of symbols, harmonious in themselves, and consubstantial with the truths, of which they are the conductors.4 In chapter 4 of the Biographia Literaria (1817) he distinguishes imaginationas the organic, creative, and unifying powerfrom fancy, the imagemaking power. And in chapter 13 of the Biographia Literaria he separates a primary level of imagination, which like the creative impulse of nature itself forms a dynamic and emerging balance of the general with the specic, the abstract with the concrete, idea with image, and thus mediates between truth and feeling, the head and the heart, from a secondary, lower level which is less original it dissolves, diffuses, and dissipates in order to re-create.5 Imagination, for Lewis, can be dened as the mental, but not intellectual, faculty that puts things into meaningful relationships to form unied wholes. Lewis does not include in his denition the initial dictionary entry and most basic denition, the power of forming a mental concept of what is not actually present to the senses. This he labels imaginatio, the image-making faculty, and treats as separate from imagination.6 His interest begins a step further along: imagination connects things that were previously unconnected, not through
4. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Statesmans Manual, 29. 5. Coleridge, Biographia Literaria, 8285, 3046. For studies of Coleridge, see J. L. Lowes, The Road to Xanadu: A Study in the Ways of the Imagination; I. A. Richards, Coleridge on Imagination; and Owen Bareld, What Coleridge Thought. On the character of imagination and some of the questions and problems raised by it, see Denis Donoghue, The Sovereign Ghost: Studies in Imagination. 6. Imaginatio forms an important part of Surprised by Joy. The rich details from Lewiss storehouse of mental images make the story of his life vivid and enable the reader to enter it visually. For example, he describes the suburbs of Belfast in which he grew up: The woods . . . are of small trees, rowan and birch and small r. The elds are small, divided by ditches with ragged sea-nipped hedges on top of them. There is a good deal of gorse and many outcroppings of rock. Small abandoned quarries, lled with cold-looking water, are surprisingly numerous. There is nearly always a wind whistling through the grass (SbyJ, 153). Imagi-
a logical or intellectual process but through association, intuition, or inspiration. This can occur at a lower or higher level (the signicance of this distinction will appear shortly). Creative imagination, at either the lower or higher level, can lead to scientic discoveries, of lesser or greater originality and importance respectively.7 Lewiss interest, however, is in literature and the arts. The composer connects notes, motifs, and movements in ways they have not been connected before but which have wholeness and unity. Visual artists arrange lines, shapes, colors, and masses in ways that are fresh and related. And writers connect words, images, and sounds in ways that articulate thoughts, depict characters, delineate events, and express emotions and experiences meaningfully and attractively. In the rst chapter of Surprised by Joy, after claiming that at ages six to eight he was living almost entirely in his imagination, Lewis acknowledges the need for denition and offers three uses of the word: imagination as reverie, daydream, or fantasies of wish fulllment; imagination as invention; and experiences of the imagination that produce the ecstatic experience he calls Joy (1516). The rst of these denitions does not involve artistic imagination. Imagination as wish-fulllment fantasies includes, for Lewis, typical adolescent daydreams, picturing oneself as cutting a ne gure (SbyJ, 15).
natio also appears in explicit references to the forming of mental images. Thus, when the young Lewis prayed for his mother to be healed, the God to whom he prayed (according to the older Lewis, looking back) was, in my mental picture of this miracle, to appear as a magician, not as savior or judge. Later, his bedtime prayers required what he calls a realization, by which he means a certain vividness of the imagination and the affections (SbyJ, 21, 61). 7. Lewiss mentor, George MacDonald, writes: But how does the man of science come to think of his experiments? . . . It is the far-seeing imagination which beholds what might be a form of things, and says to the intellect: Try whether that may not be the form of these things (The Imagination: Its Functions and Its Culture, 12). Owen Bareld agrees: There is no distinction between Poetry and Science, as kinds of knowing, at all (Poetic Diction: A Study in Meaning, 8.6; expanded on the preceding and following pages). For another elaboration of Barelds belief that gurative expression is central to meaning in all areas, see his Poetic Diction and Legal Fiction. Of particular value among the many studies of the role of imagination in scientic research are Jacob Bronowski, The Visionary Eye: Essays in the Arts, Literature, and Science; Denis Dutton and Michael Krausz, The Concept of Creativity in Science and Art; and Ian Stewart, Natures Numbers: The Unreal Reality of Mathematical Imagination. For an interesting discussion of Lewiss use of the creative and imaginative side of higher mathematics, see David L. Neuhouser, Higher Dimensions: C. S. Lewis and Mathematics.
This presumably led him at fourteen to aspire to knuttery, wearing ashy clothes and plastering his hair with oil (SbyJ, 67). He seems to have left such fantasizing behind when, two years later, he went to study with William Kirkpatrick.8 The second denition in Surprised by Joy correlates with the lower level artistic imagination mentioned above. Invention involves the conscious (or largely conscious) conception of character and construction of narrative, of organized sequences of events (what happens) or ideas (content), in either prose or verse (see SbyJ, 15; EinC, 53). Lewis says that his imaginative process as a story writer always began with imaginatio and continued with invention: All my seven Narnian books, and my three science ction books, began with seeing pictures in my head. At rst they were not a story, just pictures. The Lion all began with a picture of a Faun carrying an umbrella and parcels in a snowy wood. . . . One day . . . I said to myself: Lets try to make a story about it. 9 Invention appears in Surprised by Joy chiey in chapters 1 and 5 when Lewis discusses, at considerable length, the Animal-Land stories he wrote as a boy. He contrasts imaginative fantasies and imagination as invention in a sentence that summarizes the books consideration of both: In my day-dreams I was training myself to be a fool; in mapping and chronicling Animal-Land I was training myself to be a novelist (SbyJ, 15). Invention also appears in passing when Lewis says, about his fathers searching to nd the perfect school for his sons, While he thought he was interpreting Oldies prospectus, he was really composing a school story in his own mind (SbyJ, 30).
8. The sixth chapter of An Experiment in Criticism deals at greater length with psychological fantasy, especially with egoistic castle-building in the reading of unliterary adults. These readers, because of the extreme inertia of their imaginations, require detailed descriptions of a recognizable, everyday world: Though they do not mistake their castle-building for reality, they want to feel that it might be (EinC, 55). Castle-building will be dealt with further in chapter 9 below. 9. Lewis, It All Began with a Picture . . . , 42. He makes the point also in an earlier essay: Everything began with images (Sometimes Fairy Stories May Say Best Whats to Be Said, 36). See also On Three Ways of Writing for Children, 3233, and Unreal Estates, 87. Owen Bareld comments that Lewis had a very pictorial imagination, what some people call an eidetic memory, when your imaginative pictures are almost photographic. But he also had these purely inventive pictures, underived ones (Bareld, Conversations on C. S. Lewis, 13536).
The third denition of imagination in Surprised by Joy describes the highest sense of all (16). This correlates with the higher level of imagination discussed above and includes two related meanings. On the one hand is poetic imagination. Lewis distinguishes between invention and poetic imagination when he says that his Animal-Land stories were training him to be a novelist; not a poet (SbyJ, 15). The organic and intuitive power needed to write poetry (including both mythic ction and great lyric poetry) rises to a higher level than invention; it involves inspiration or genius.10 The same is as true for reading as for writing. The best poetry operates at a level beyond images. It conveys intense feeling, makes a powerful impression, through suggestiveness, not statement. Ideally it would be beyond words and in this sense akin to music, the highest art form, which, without words, can be a sort of madness in the strength of its effects (TST, 95). As he put it to Arthur Greeves, All day . . . you have hundreds of feelings that cant (as you say) be put into words or even into thought, but which would naturally come out in music. And that is why I think that in a sense music is the highest of the arts, because it really begins where the others leave off (TST, 112).11 Poetry uses metaphor or myth to lift a work (whether in prose or verse) beyond events or ideas, to make it profound and suggestive (TST, 427), and to enable it to evoke extraordinary affective power and impact. When Lewis says that he was living almost entirely in [his] imagination (SbyJ, 15), he means that he was spending much of his time looking at, listening to, and reading highly imaginative works and being caught up in the powerful impressions created by them, as Surprised by Joy and the letters to Arthur Greeves demonstrate vividly.
10. Thus, Shelley had a great genius, but his carelessness about rhymes, metre, choice of words etc [i.e., invention], just prevents him being as good as he might be (TST, 136). Similarly, If only the moment of inspiration cd. be identical with that of composition! (TST, 275). See also SbyJ, 1516; TST, 9596. Lewis adheres to distinctions traditional since the eighteenth century between fancy and imagination (as genius or inspiration). He follows Coleridge in thinking of fancy as mechanical and logical, the aggregative and associative power; thus he writes, Put the two side by side and see how imagination differs from mere fancy (TST, 358). 11. In the fourth act of Prometheus, Lewis says, Shelley reached a note of ecstasy no other English poet, perhaps no other poet, has attained: It can be achieved by more than one artist in music: to do it in words has been, I think, beyond the reach of nearly all (Shelley, Dryden, and Mr Eliot, 208).
On the other hand, Lewis also uses imaginative life to refer to the experiences that in The Pilgrims Regress he calls Romanticism and in Surprised by Joy he calls Joy. It is an experience of intense, even painful, but desired, longing, which, after his conversion, he came to believe was a desire for unity with the divine (though often intermediate objects are mistaken for the ultimate object). The experiences are similar to those he ascribed in his late teens to great music: its effect at its greatest moments of joy is painful (TST, 95). That effect can be approached by literature: Poetry and great novels do sometimes rouse you almost as much as music (TST, 95). By the imaginative life, he says when the experience returns in his teens after a long absence, I here mean only my life as concerned with Joy; later he refers to the imaginative longing for Joy, or rather the longing which was Joy (SbyJ, 7879, 175). Joy is imaginative in that it makes nonlogical (or superlogical) connections between outer and inner events, or between events in the present and the past. It is imaginative in that it is often set in motion by literature or music, which are the products of the imagination; it involves being transported beyond the physical and emotional to a rapturous state that could take place only in the imagination at an inspired level, and it usually depends on memory (in the sense of imaginatio), as a remembered experience triggers a longing not for the past but for something of which a past experience is a symbol. All joy reminds, he concludes (SbyJ, 78). A key instance in the recovery of Joy occurred when he realized that the remembering of an earlier experience was itself a new experience of just the same kind (SbyJ, 166).12 Surprised by Joy is in large part a celebration of the poetic and romantic imagination, present in the books he read and the longings he felt, central to all aspects of his lifehis work, his recreation, and ultimately his religion. Lewiss ruling ambition in his teens and twenties was to become a great poet. As Owen Bareld put it, At that time, if you thought of Lewis, you automatically thought of poetry.13 It is natural, therefore, that at this time he was also deeply interested in the imagina12. See also Lewiss 1941 sermon The Weight of Glory, which focuses on desireespecially, in the fth paragraph, the comment that if Wordsworth could have gone back to moments in the past that he longed for, what he remembered would turn out to be itself a remembering (24). 13. Bareld, C. S. Lewis, 56.
tion, as were others, such as his soon-to-be antagonist I. A. Richards and his close friend Bareld, each of whom published in the mid1920s a book that had imagination at its center.14 And it is not surprising to nd Lewis engaged in an extended dispute with Bareld in the 1920s about the nature and theory of poetic and romantic imagination. Lewis dubbed the dispute The Great Wara war because they fought over whether imagination was a way of attaining truth, as Bareld believed, or was not, as Lewis held. The war was carried on through a series of letters and philosophical treatises, some of them extant in manuscript, which move us beyond denition of imagination to its conceptual foundations. Stephen Thorson, in a series of ne articles, has analyzed the Great War manuscripts and reached important conclusions regarding Lewiss ideas about the imagination.15 The starting point for considering the place of imagination in Lewiss thought is that imagination cannot be considered in isolation. As Bareld put it, a theory of imagination must concern itself, whether positively or negatively, with its relation to truth.16 Lewiss ideas about imagination, Thorson believes, must be examined in the context of his metaphysics (what we are) and his epistemology (how we know). He proceeds to demonstrate that Lewiss metaphysics and hence his view of imagination changed signicantly after his conversion to theism around 1929.
14. Richards, Principles of Literary Criticism, especially chapter 32; Bareld, Poetic Diction. See also chapter 11, Imagination, in Barelds History in English Words, and chapter 3, The Psychology of Inspiration and of Imagination, in Barelds Speakers Meaning. 15. See Thorson, Knowing and Being in C. S. Lewiss Great War with Owen Bareld; Knowledge in C. S. Lewiss Post-Conversion Thought: His Epistemological Method; the two parts of Lewis and Bareld on Imagination; and Barelds Evolution of Consciousness: How Much Did Lewis Accept? Lionel Adeys C. S. Lewiss Great War with Owen Bareld provides additional valuable information about the Great War letters, though Adeys analysis of them is less helpful and reliable than Thorsons. 16. Bareld, Lewis, Truth, and Imagination, 97. A sign of the recently changing intellectual milieu is a session on Truth held at the annual convention of the Modern Language Association in Chicago, December 1999a decade or two ago, such a session would not likely have been proposed for or included on the program. The papers were published in PMLA 115 (October 2000): Jonathan Arac, Truth, 108588, and Barbara Herrnstein Smith, Netting Truth, 108995.
10
In his preconversion, Great War years, Lewis believed that a human being is an evolving Spirit, and he held a high, Coleridgean (and Bareldian) view of poetic and romantic Imagination (with a capital I ) as Spiritual Awareness, a consciousness of the souls oneness with universal Spirit as well as the souls oneness with the world of Nature.17 Through Imagination we can see things as Spirit sees them18 and thus participate in Spirit. In Barelds epistemology, Imagination is a method of attaining knowledge of spiritual reality (truth). Lewis, however, starting from a different epistemology, disagreed. From the time he read Samuel Alexanders Space, Time and Deity in the early 1920s, Lewis accepted Alexanders distinction between Enjoyment and Contemplation (both terms used in a special, technical sense). When one sees an object, one enjoys the act of seeing and contemplates the object; if one begins thinking about seeing, one contemplates the seeing and enjoys the thought. One cannot simultaneously focus attention on an object and on the self that is focusing attention. This, Lewis says, he accepted as soon as he read it and regarded thereafter as an indispensable tool of thought: You cannot hope and also think about hoping at the same moment; for in hope we look to hopes object and we interrupt this by (so to speak) turning round to look at the hope itself. Of course the two activities can and do alternate with great rapidity; but they are distinct and incompatible (SbyJ, 218). Bareld noticed a contradiction here. Metaphysically, Lewis afrmed the oneness of soul and Spirit; but epistemologically, he denied that oneness by saying one cannot simultaneously be Spirit (the contemplating self) and soul (the enjoying self). Therefore, Bareld suggested that Lewis reject enjoyment and contemplation and accept that Imagination is a source of truth. Instead, Lewis rejected his belief in emerging Spirit and with it his belief in Imagination. As a result of his conversion, he switched from viewing humans as evolving Spirits to regarding them as created beings, and he scaled back his high view of Imagination, coming to regard it as a lower faculty, able to reect spiritual values, but not spiritual itself.19
17. Thorson, Lewis and Bareld on ImaginationPart I, 15. 18. Lewis, Summa Metaphysices contra Anthroposophos, 2.24 (manuscript, part of the Great War series); see Thorson, Knowing and Being, 5. 19. Thorson, Lewis and Bareld on ImaginationPart II, 18.
11
In his new view, imagination (now with a small i) was no longer the highest human quality, though he still regarded it as a good and potentially valuable one. Imaginative experiences are not spiritual in themselves, though they may be an avenue leading toward the spiritual. With a metaphysic now compatible with his epistemology, Lewis could hold consistently that imagination was not the source of truth, but the source of meaning. Reason, he wrote a decade later, is the natural organ of truth; but imagination is the organ of meaning.20 The imagination, by making connections and establishing relationships between ideas, enables one to grasp and internalize the truths apprehended by the reason; through metaphor, myth, and symbol, it renders them in concrete ways we can understand, or begin to understand. As Lewis put it in Myth Became Fact, Human intellect is incurably abstract. . . . Yet the only realities we experience are concrete. The imagination bridges the divide, reconciles the opposites, allows us to experience the abstract concretely.21 Lewis was deeply interested in the way those connections are made by artists in the creative process, but his stronger interest and more valuable comments involve the receptive process, the way connections are recognized and completed by the listener, observer, or reader. To engage with an artistic work is itself an imaginative activity, one which can be carried out at lower or higher levels, as the creative process is. Although imagination plays a part in almost every book Lewis wrote, this chapter, building on Thorsons foundation, will deal with threeAn Experiment in Criticism (1961), Surprised by Joy (1954), and The Discarded Image (1964)and chapter 9 with a fourth, The Abolition of Man (1943). In each work, the nourishing of the imagination can be considered a central theme. An Experiment in Criticism is Lewiss major defense of the imagination in all the arts. He wrote it as a reply to Cambridge English, the subjective, evaluative approach to literature promulgated by F. R. Leavis and I. A. Richards at Cambridge University in the rst half of the twentieth century. Lewis disagreed strongly with the prescriptive way Leavis and his Vigilant school of critics sought to use literature to improve society and with their vigilance against those who promote the wrong literature or ideas (EinC, 124). He
20. Lewis, Bluspels and Flalansferes: A Semantic Nightmare, 265. 21. Lewis, Myth Became Fact, 6566.
12
objected to Leavis partly because Leavis made literature a means rather than an end, and partly because he allowed insufcient scope to the imagination and to appreciation of artistic beauty. Though he differed from Leavis, Lewis principally opposed Richards, particularly his view, as Brian Barbour summarizes it, that poetry was our most certain source of value, and the successful reading of poetry was the best preparation for an ethical life.22 Consistent with the postconversion position described by Thorson, Lewis resisted especially Richardss overvaluing, or misvaluing, of imagination and literaturehis belief, like Matthew Arnolds in the previous century, that poetry could replace religion and that culture could become a means of salvation. Such personal and societal salvation depended on a psychological approach to literature that would replace aesthetic and metaphysical readings, an approach whose representation of the imagination as good medicine for the nerves and of art as therapy was antithetical to Lewiss position.23 At the heart of Cantabrigian criticism were analysis and evaluation, with works being judged by the degree to which they promoted the ends pursued by Leavis, Richards, and their followers. From Lewiss perspective, literature needs rst to be understood, then received, and then appreciated for the enlargement of being it offers. Critical judgment should be a nal, nonessential step, and when taken it should focus not on analysis of the text but on the imaginative experience of the reader. In his refutation of Leavis and Richards, Lewis turned in An Experiment in Criticism to a spirited endorsement of imagination as the lifeblood of all the arts, crucial and indispensable to proper reception of literature and the arts as a whole. The experiment of his title inverts the Cantabrigian process for evaluating literature. Usually literary critics focus on the work and judge its quality by the extent to which it adheres to predetermined standards. Lewis proposes that attention be concentrated on the reader instead of the work, on identifying what constitutes
22. Barbour, Lewis and Cambridge, 443. Barbours ne essay shows that much of Lewiss writing on culture and literature is framed as a reply to the program of Richards and his disciples. Doris T. Myerss important study C. S. Lewis in Context focuses on Richards as the central gure in establishing the intellectual context which inuenced Lewiss ideas about language and literary theory. 23. Donoghue, The Sovereign Ghost, 3.
13
good reading instead of what characterizes a good book. He begins by describing two kinds of readers, the literary (the few for whom reading is a constant and indispensable part of life, who love to reread and who are deeply affected by what they read) and the unliterary (the many who read to relieve boredom, who rarely reread a book, and who are not deeply inuenced by what they read). Lewis initially applies his ideas to painting and music, demonstrating as he does so considerable experience with and critical understanding of the arts, which clearly were important and inuential in his life. He can start here because, he believes, in their origins all the arts originally were one. Once, song, poetry, and dance were all parts of a single dromenon (EinC, 96). He uses painting and music to clarify two kinds of imaginative engagement with works of art: using them and receiving them. Using is how the many approach the arts. It is a subjective, selective encounter in which details of a work serve as a self-starter for certain imaginative and emotional activities of your own (EinC, 16). The user may admire what a picture is of or be moved (or aroused) by what is depicted; the user hums along with a piece of music or taps a nger in response to its tune and rhythm. Using picks out from a work what it nds stimulating and neglects the rest of what is there; it does not see or hear what the work is in itself, but cares about only those parts which serve as effective starting points for an independent creative activity. Lewis characterized himself as a user (without using that term) when he wrote to Arthur Greeves in 1945, I . . . suspect that most of my enjoyment [of music] is emotion produced out of my own imagination at rather slight hints, rather than full musical judgments (TST, 506).24 Using is an imaginative response to art, but a very limited level of response: it is a self-absorbed re-creation, or re-experiencing, of what is already in the persons imagination. There is no openness to a new and larger experience. In applying this to reading, Lewis says that unliterary readers stick to the same types of story and concentrate on Events, on what happen[s] next (EinC, 30). They want generalized descriptive detail, out
24. As chapter 6 below indicates, however, this comment probably was selfdeprecatory. His comments on and discussions of music usually show him as a receiver, not a user.
14
of which they fashion their own, familiar visual images and create formulaic, clich characters and plots that can trigger the emotional response they desire from a story. Receiving is a much deeper, richer imaginative response. Receivers re-enact the fresh, surprising connections made by the creative artist and enter the meaningful relationships through which the work elicits profound and powerful feelings and impact. In order to re-enact those connections and enter the work as a whole, they concentrate intensely on the work, not on the self, and pay close attention to details and the whole. Receiving is an objective, obedient surrendering of the imagination to the work of art in its fullness and particularity. When we receive it we exert our senses and imagination and various other powers according to a pattern invented by the artist, though not completely at rst: that is the value of rereading (EinC, 88). Reception requires, Lewis says, disengagement before engagement. To experience a work of art fully, we must lay aside preconceptions, self-absorbed expectations, and personal needs or cravings. We must make room for the work by, as far as possible, emptying a space for the work to ll: Get yourself out of the way (EinC, 19).25 Then we must engage with the work by surrendering to it,26 by looking at or listening to everything in it: look at what the picture is of, but also at line, color, and composition; listen to the tune but also to what the composer does with the tune, to the structure of the whole work (EinC, 24). Applied to reading, literary readers pay close attention to all aspects of a workto its style, sound, and form as well as to what happens; they dwell upon, and temporarily within, the world of a story, play, or poem and can be profoundly affected by the state or quality27 which that world embodies; they reread works again and again to re-create, in ever enlarging ways, what they initially experienced; and they talk about books, frequently and at lengthfor them, books and the imagination are a main ingredient in [their] well-being (EinC, 3).
25. Experiencing nature fully requires a receptivity of a similar kind: To be always looking at the map when there is a ne prospect before you shatters the wise passiveness in which landscape ought to be enjoyed (DI, vii). 26. Similarly, in his Hamlet: The Prince or the Poem? (the Annual Shakespeare Lecture of the British Academy for 1942), Lewis asserts that the rst thing is to surrender oneself to the poetry and the situation (95). 27. Lewis, OnS, 18discussed further in chapter 4 below.
15
An Experiment in Criticism culminates in an impassioned celebration of the imagination and the imaginative experience. It is an eloquent statement in the old, humane tradition, clearly juxtaposed to the modern, Cambridge approach. It praises the imaginative life for the way it enlarges human beings, opening them to a fuller understanding of others and of themselves. What then, he asks, is the good ofwhat is even the defence foroccupying our hearts with stories of what never happened and entering vicariously into feelings which we should try to avoid having in our own person? Or of xing our inner eye earnestly on things that can never exist? His answer is that we seek enlargement of being, we want to be more than ourselves: We want to see with other eyes, to imagine with other imaginations, to feel with other hearts, as well as with our own. Within the self, Lewis claims, isin addition to an egocentric impulsean impulse to go out of the self, to transcend its provincialism and salve its loneliness; and in love, in virtue, in the pursuit of knowledge, and in the reception of the arts, we are doing this. The artist enables us to become other selves and to share experiences other than our own, offers us extension of being: My own eyes are not enough for me, I will see through those of others. Reality, even seen through the eyes of many, is not enough. I will see what others have invented (EinC, 137, 138, 140). Imaginative experience enables us to enter the lives of others while yet remaining ourselves. If An Experiment in Criticism describes and afrms the literary reader, Lewiss spiritual autobiography, Surprised by Joy, depicts himself as such a reader. He mentions many authors and books which he read and reread. He discusses how he engaged imaginatively with and was transformed by the works he read. As imagination is the central theme of An Experiment in Criticism, so it is in Surprised by Joy, and the parallels between the two books are striking and informative.28 For example, he says in An Experiment in Criticism that the starting point for real appreciation of any art is rst to empty oneself, and then to Look. Listen. Receive. Get yourself out of the way (EinC, 18, 19). The source of that idea might well have been observing his
28. The best discussion of Surprised by Joy can be found in the opening chapter of David C. Downings valuable book Planets in Peril: A Critical Study of C. S. Lewiss Ransom Trilogy, 833.
16
father. Lewis describes him in Surprised by Joy as a man not easily informed. . . . His mind was too active to be an accurate receiver (SbyJ, 30). He could never empty, or silence, his own mind to make room for an alien thought (SbyJ, 184). His father illustrates perfectly the way the many use art as a self-starter for imaginative and emotional activities of their own (EinC, 18, 16): His mind so bubbled over with humor, sentiment, and indignation that, long before he had understood or even listened to your words, some accidental hint had set his imagination to work, he had produced his own version of the facts, and believed that he was getting it from you (SbyJ, 121). It is tempting to think that the fathers subjective readings of his sons aural texts, his use of them to form imaginary stories of his own, helped shape Lewiss ideas about the subjective handling of written texts by unliterary readers. His fathers inability to listen is not the only, and not the most important, example of subjectivity and use in Surprised by Joy. More important are the ways Lewis began to use the Norse myths and Wagnerian operas and beauties in nature that had previously given him experiences of Joy. Initially he received them, was surprised by them into feelings of near ecstasy, similar to what he felt when, at a Christmas Eve program in 1929, the glorious windy noise of the bells overhead, the relight & candlelight, and the beautiful music of unaccompanied boys voices, really carried me out of myself (TST, 321). Later, however, he began to study Norse myths and became an expert on them; in the process, he lost the imaginative ecstasy they once had created. He tried to recover the old thrill by forcing it, by using the literature to stimulate self-centered longings. Only when he again became a receiver did the old thrill return. The language Lewis uses is very similar to what he would use later in An Experiment in Criticism. He allowed himself to fall into subjectivism, to think that what he wanted was a thrill, a state of his own mind, a whirl of images, a uttering sensation in the diaphragm (SbyJ, 168). Actually, he wanted something objective and external;29 the genuine imaginative experience returned only as he emptied himself and
29. It was true for Lewis, as he said it was for Spenser, that these formless longings would logically appear as among the sanest and most fruitful experiences we have; for their object really exists and really draws us to itself (English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama, 357).
17
xed his whole attention and desire on something other and outer (SbyJ, 168). Surprised by Joy reveals a semiautobiographical dimension in An Experiment in Criticism, showing that the latter deals not just with Lewiss understanding of how to read texts, but also with the relationship of the self to the other as he experienced it in his own life. In both An Experiment in Criticism and Surprised by Joy the premise of Lewiss literary thinking is objectivism, as it became for him after his conversion in the moral, philosophical, and religious areas as well. Engagement with the arts, like Joy, must be objective; one must receive what is there, not attempt to force it or use it as selfgratication, as a self-starter for imaginative and emotional activities of ones own (EinC, 16; SbyJ, 16667). Receptivity to the arts, Joy, and the Christian life, for Lewis, all require total surrender of the self to the other, or Other (SbyJ, 228). Likewise, Joy, literary reading, and full appreciation of the arts all aim at a similar end, unity. As literary experience heals the wound . . . of individuality, allows one to become a thousand men and yet remain [one]self (EinC, 140, 141), so Joy is evidence of our yearning for that unity which we can never reach except by ceasing to be the separate phenomenal beings called we (SbyJ, 22122). In literary experience as in worship, in love, in moral action, and in knowing, I transcend myself; and am never more myself than when I do (EinC, 141). In the postconversion Lewis, with his lowered view of imagination, no antagonism or incongruity exists between imagination and religion. Imagination at its highest levelmythand spirituality at its highest levelmysticismapproach each other, or perhaps even overlap. Lewis even uses the words together: for relief, after reading too long in Wordsworth and philosophy, he wanted something mysticalpure unadulterated imagination (TST, 263), though the mysticism here, in 1919, was non-Christian. Similarly, reading the Paradiso in 1930 in an especially receptive mood, he experienced a feeling of spacious gliding movement, like a slow dance, or like ying (TST, 32526).30 In this context, where imagination approaches the mystical, he can say, of the evening he rst read George MacDonalds Phantastes, That night my imagination was, in a certain sense,
30. Note this use of receptive thirty years before An Experiment in Criticism.
18
baptized (SbyJ, 181). That is, when imagination as spiritual experience encountered the true divine Spirit, in the quality of Holiness, a transformation was initiated. The imaginative experience of Joy, in order to be authentic, must not look to the inward, subjective spirit but must look outward to the objective reality of Spirit. Lewiss emphasis in Surprised by Joy is on the receptive imaginationhis receptivity to imaginative experiences he encountered and the enlargement and eventual transformation of self which resulted from it. The effect of the book depends on its readers receptivity to the imaginative description of those experiences. In a sense, all of Lewiss critical writings and his apologetics deal with receptivity. But one book, The Discarded Image, provides a particularly striking and provocative example of Lewiss exploration of the receptive imagination. The stated purpose for the book is to provide a map of the medieval world that will enhance receptive reading of medieval literary works (DI, vii). Lewiss further aim is to help his readers enter, if inevitably only partially, the imagination and world of a person of the Middle Ages. Lewis lays out for his readers the image constructed by the great thinkers of the Middle Ages, which enabled them to comprehend the universe: the whole organisation of their theology, science, and history into a single, complex, harmonious mental Model of the Universe (DI, 11). He stresses that it is only a model. Every age constructs its own model to account for as many observed appearances in the universe as possible in the most economical way possible.31 That model, that image, Lewis says, provided in the Middle Ages a backdrop for the arts, as artists selected from it what was intelligible to a layperson and what appealed to the imagination and emotions (DI, 14). The artists and general populace may or may not have believed the model and may or may not have recognized the
31. At about the same time Lewis was putting the nishing touches on the manuscript of his often-repeated university lectures on the medieval world, stating that eras have models of the universe which are abandoned by later ages in favor of what they consider more adequate models, Thomas S. Kuhn in The Structure of Scientic Revolutions (1962) published his argument that scientic revolutions take place when anomalies call into question explicit and fundamental generalizations of the existing paradigm and a crisis occurs; as a result, a paradigm shift takes place, as a new, neater, more suitable, or simpler paradigm (155) emerges to take the place of the previous one. Lewis hints at this same process in a remarkable paragraph in The Discarded Image, 21920.
19
extent to which it was provisional. The important thing is that it was imaginatively and emotionally satisfying to those who developed it and those who lived with it. Lewis emphasizes that the Model engaged both the creative and the receptive imagination of people in the Middle Ages. Its origins were not in the physical world but in books, as medieval thinkers drew upon auctours and wove what they borrowed into a new and intricate fabric (DI, 5). The result was an imagined universe (DI, 13), a universe of triads and plenitude (DI, 4344); a universe composed of the four elements (DI, 4); a universe lled not with inert spheres reecting borrowed light but with living beings, planets as well as gods (DI, 105); a universe full of light and resonant with music, moving constantly in expression of and response to the intellectual love of God (DI, 112, 115). It was a universe created inventedby the imagination: the supreme medieval work of art (DI, 12). It was a work of the characteristically medieval realising imagination,32 one which provided abundant close-up details to make sure that we see exactly what [the artist] saw (DI, 206). Few constructions of the imagination seem to me, says Lewis, to have combined splendour, sobriety, and coherence in the same degree (DI, 216). Medieval people responded to this universe with their imaginations and emotions. It delighted them (DI, 216); it satised them: Other ages have not had a Model so universally accepted as theirs, so imaginable, and so satisfying to the imagination (DI, 203). It held great signicance for them, as a manifestation of the wisdom and goodness that created it (DI, 204). Thus they re-created it again and again in their art, because their minds loved to dwell on [it] (DI, 2023).
32. In The Discarded Image, Lewis offers yet another set of denitions for the imagination: he contrasts the realising imagination of the Middle Ages with the transforming imagination of Wordsworth and the penetrative imagination of Shakespeare. One of the appeals of medieval literature, for Lewis, was its abundant detail and its grounding in reality. The vividness of medieval writers, he says, comes from their devout attention to their matter and their condence in it. They [do not try] to heighten it or transform it. It possesses them wholly. Their eyes and ears are steadily xed upon it, and soperhaps hardly aware how much they are inventingthey see and hear what the event must have been like (DI, 206, 208).
20
Lewiss aim in the book is not just to describe this imaginative achievement and contemporary responses to it, but to enable twentieth-century readers to enter more fully into the consciousness of our ancestors by realising how such a universe must have affected those who believed in it. Thus he invites readers to undertake an experiment, imagining themselves in the medieval world: Go out on a starry night and walk about for half an hour trying to see the sky in terms of the old cosmology. Remember that you now have an absolute Up and Down. The Earth is really the centre, really the lowest place (DI, 98). Looking up at the towering medieval universe is like looking at a great building, overwhelming in its greatness but satisfying in its harmonythus very different from the modern sense of looking out into the endless space of modern astronomy (DI, 99). You must conceive yourself looking up at a world lighted, warmed, and resonant with music (DI, 112). Here, receptivity is pushed to the point of active, physical participation by the reader in what the text is describing. It is striking in this discussion of the medieval world that nowhere does Lewis tell readers to see the object as in itself it really is, as he did (using see metaphorically) in discussing literary works (EinC, 119). He knows, with Kant and Bareld, that human eyes do not see the thing itself. Many in the nineteenth century still thought that through inferences based on sense experience and amplied by measurements, we could know the ultimate physical reality; . . . the truth would be a sort of mental replica of the thing itself (DI, 216). The twentieth century, however, recognizes that every age, in looking at the universe, views not it but an image of it, and recognizes that the Model is not close to reality, but only the closest we can get. The Model is a mere analogy, a concession to our weakness. Without a parable modern physics speaks not to the multitudes (DI, 218, alluding to Matthew 13:34). This acknowledges an element of subjectivity; Lewis retains belief that reality exists, but he accepts that perceptions of reality inevitably vary. He restrains the resulting subjectivity by holding that the variations in perceptions are collective, not individual; the Model for a given age is the way many people at that time perceive reality, which gives a degree of objectivity to the Model itself.33
33. An element of subjectivity in Lewiss re-creation of the medieval universe is evidenced by an important element of its thought that he leaves out: he makes
21
The interesting thing is that Lewis does not extend this analysis to the perception of artistic works, as reader-response theory has done. Starting with the same principle, that one cannot see the thing itself but only the image formed in ones mind by the stimulation of sense perceptions, much recent literary theory assumes that this is true of texts as well and goes on to deny the text any objective existence apart from what readers make of it. Lewis at one level anticipated in 1926 what later reader-response criticism would use as an axiom: a poem unread is not a poem at all (TST, 382). At another level, however, because of the results he saw in his fathers unchecked subjectivity as a receiver, and his need for objective foundations generally, he was not willing to accept the further implications of that sentence. Thus An Experiment in Criticism emphasizes the reading of the poem, not the poem as read, and Lewis oversimplies, or distorts, the contrast between unliterary and literary readers by implying that the latter can engage directly with unmediated texts. Its emphasis on the text (the words on the page) rather than on the poem as formed in the readers mind aligns the book more closely with the New Criticism of the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s (from which Lewis in other respects wanted to distance himself) than with the readerresponse theory promoted by Louise M. Rosenblatt, Stanley Fish, and Wolfgang Iser.34 The result is to limit Lewiss theoretical and practical understanding of receptive imagination: he loved imagination and realized its importance to a rich and full life, but he resisted subjectivity in imaginative experience, engaging in futile efforts to keep imagination grounded in objectivity.35
no reference to the Virgin Mary, apparently because he found veneration of her personally repugnant. See Peter Milward, S.J., A Challenge to C. S. Lewis, 6163. 34. Rosenblatt, Literature as Exploration and The Reader, the Text, the Poem: The Transactional Theory of the Literary Work ; Fish, Surprised by Sin: The Reader in Paradise Lost and Is There a Text in This Class? The Authority of Interpretive Communities; Iser, The Reading Process: A Phenomenological Approach and section 4, Interaction between Text and Reader, of The Act of Reading: A Theory of Aesthetic Response. In his excellent study A Rhetoric of Reading: C. S. Lewiss Defense of Western Literacy, Bruce L. Edwards, Jr., examines closely Lewiss theories regarding text, intentionality, and the reader in the context of other reading theories in the late twentieth century. 35. The tension in Lewis between the appeal of imagination and the necessity of reason, and his increasing reliance on imaginativeness in his writing, are discussed in Peter J. Schakel, Reason and Imagination in C. S. Lewis: A Study of Till We Have Faces.
22
Surprised by Joy shows that imagination was important in leading Lewis to a religious commitment: the imaginative pagan myths that lled his soul with longing from his childhood on, and the imaginative books by Christian authors that conveyed a sense of goodness as he read for his degree in English literature, helped prepare him for theism and Christianity; and the imaginative experience he called Joy drew him on and kept him searching for the object that would eventually give him fulllment. Imagination, fantasy, and myth were, for Lewis, pleasurable and satisfying in themselves, and he came to see them as pointers to the divine. Lewis, after his conversion, regarded the ultimate purpose of the imaginationlike that of romantic longing at the end of Surprised by Joyas bringing one to a vision of God: For this end I made your senses and for this end your imagination, that you might see my face and live (PR, 9.5).36 Without imagination, Lewis suggests, he would not have been a Christian. Small wonder, then, that he placed such a high value on imagination, even in his postconversion years when he no longer regarded it as the highest thing; small wonder, too, that he defended and promoted it, that he wrote works of fantasy and imagination himself, and that he advocated that imagination be nurtured in children in every way possible. To understand and appreciate Lewis fully, as person and writer, requires attention to the ways he thought about, used, and fostered imagination, as the following chapters will demonstrate.
36. Charles Huttar has suggested to me that two parallels may be pertinent to this quotation. It has a parallel in the ending of Dantes Paradiso, where Dante presents a vision of God while simultaneously acknowledging that the reality is beyond his vision, and indicates that not only his verbal powers but even his memory is inadequate for dealing with it. But the allusion to Exodus 33:20 may also be signicant, sincewith the play on seeit undercuts what the divine voice actually says: Lewiss line emphasizes the point that the imagination is a way of supervening the prohibition imposed on Moses.
Lewis learned to read early in his life, and already as a child he was a voracious reader: Nothing was forbidden me. In the seemingly endless rainy afternoons I took volume after volume from the
23
24
shelves. I had always the same certainty of nding a book that was new to me as a man who walks into a eld has of nding a new blade of grass (SbyJ, 10). To experience books goes beyond just reading them. It includes shopping for books. Since Lewiss father bought books, rather than borrowing them from libraries, it is safe to assume that he introduced Lewis to bookshops. Lewis mentions his love of nding books to Arthur Greeves, who in 1914 became his closest friend and who shared his love of books: I quite agree with what you say about buying books, and love all the planning and scheming beforehand (TST, 93). Like most book lovers, he enjoyed secondhand bookshops: My regular book-monger keeps his second-hand stock downstairs in a 12th century crypt, at one period haunted by Guy Faulkes [sic] (TST, 242).1 Acquiring books includes celebrating the arrival of the volumes one has ordered: if they come by post, nding the neat little parcel waiting for you on the hall table and rushing upstairs to open it in the privacy of your own room (TST, 93; see also SbyJ, 147 48). And it includes arranging books on the shelves in a way that is both efcient and attractive: Lewis asks Arthur if he has noticed the effect of the red leather Everyman books when two or three are together in a shelf and later sends Arthur some new books from England and asks him to put [them] in suitable places on the shelves in Lewiss room (TST, 88, 215). Lewis learned from Arthur to love not just reading books, but the bodies of books: The set up of the page, the feel and smell of the paper, the differing sounds that different papers make as you turn the leaves, [become] sensuous delights (SbyJ, 164). His early letters to Arthur Greeves are dotted with physical details about the books he was reading. The Chaucer . . . is in the very best Everyman stylelovely paper, strong boards, andarent you envious not one but two bits of tissue paper; it is exactly the sort of edition you describe in your last letterstrong, plain, scholarly looking and delightfully . . . solid . . . the exact opposite of the little book type were beginning to get tired of; it is also a good Everyman speciman [sic]: the paper is thin & crisp, the print just a comfortable
1. In an unpublished diary entry for May 2, 1930, Warren Lewis describes the twelfth-century crypt as a queer musty place entered by a circular iron staircase through a jagged hole in the masonry (Lewis Papers, 11.13).
25
size & the margins larger than usualmaking a very pretty page (TST, 104, 112, 212).2 In contrast, he mentions a Russian book badly printed on poor paper but exquisitely illustrated and illuminated, describes a good Bible commentary as a very fat, ugly volume in double columns, and offers Arthur an extra copy of an ugly book that includes an essay by Joy Davidman (TST, 244, 500, 529). Like every author, he hopes that his own books will be printed in a way pleasing to look at and to hold and read. He worries about how his rst book, Spirits in Bondage, will be printed: I saw a book of poems Counter-Attack by Siegfried Sassoon . . . published by [Heinemann] at 2/6 in a red paper cover and horrid type. I do hope they will give me something better than that (TST, 232). And, when his rst scholarly book, The Allegory of Love, is accepted for publication by Clarendon Press, he trusts that binding, paper etc will bein our old formulaexcellent, exquisite, and admirable. In other words, if you cant read it, you will enjoy looking at it, smelling it, and stroking it. . . . (It will be very funny, after this, if they do it in double columns and a paper cover). After seeing the page proofs, he worries that it will not be as tall a book as I had picturedand what is the good of a scholarly work if it does not rise like a tower at the end of a shelf?! I fear it may even be thickish and stumpy (TST, 474, 477). To experience books fully is to feel almost a personal relationship with them: he hopes Arthur will act as his librarian back home, to keep me in touch with my books to some extent (TST, 215). It means treating books with care and respect. Thus he is distressed by the way his tutor Kirkpatrick handles books: Kirk has made me get [Pindar] in the Loeb librarynice little books that have the translation as well as the text. I have now the pleasure of seeing a pretty, 5/- volume ruined by a reader who bends the boards back and wont wash his lthy hands: while, without being rude, I cant do anything
2. Warren wrote in his diary on April 29, 1930, that Jack has a beautiful little library, both qua books, (contents) and also pleasing to the eye and touch and smell: it is especially rich in leather bindings (W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends: The Diaries of Major Warren Hamilton Lewis, 41). Most of the ne books were purchased before he returned from service in World War I, began providing a home for Mrs. Moore, and lived in near poverty. In 1922 Lewis wrote in his diary, I seem almost to have lost the possessive love of books and shall henceforth be content with very few provided that I am within reach of a library (AMR, 54).
26
to save it. Of course it is a very little thing I suppose, but I must say it makes me quite sick whenever I think of it (TST, 110; see also SbyJ, 164). And it means annotating them with personal responses not marking lines with a yellow highlighter, but jotting notes and queries in the margins, and constructing indexes and maps on the yleaves.3 The love of books Lewis displayed in his life is conveyed within his stories, with attention given to the physical qualities of books as well as to their subject matter. Books are referred to frequently in the Chronicles of Narnia. The professors house has a series of rooms that are lined with booksmost of them very old books and some bigger than a Bible in a church. In her guided tours of the house, Mrs. Macready tells visitors about the rare books in the library. Mr. Tumnus has a shelf full of books with titles like The Life and Letters of Silenus and Nymphs and Their Ways (LWW, 4, 41, 11). Doctor Cornelius uses books as he tutors Prince Caspian, including Grammatical Garden or the Arbour of Accidence pleasantlie opend to Tender Wits (PC, 38). Eustace Clarence Scrubb liked books if they were books of information and had pictures of grain elevators or of fat foreign children doing exercises in model schools, or if they had a lot to say about exports and imports and governments and drains (VDT, 1, 71). Edmund has read several detective stories (VDT, 101). Reepicheep has a nice collection of books: If he had Eustace at his own house in Narnia . . . he could show him more than a hundred examples of emperors, kings, dukes, knights, poets, lovers, astronomers, philosophers, and magicians, who had fallen from prosperity into the most distressing circumstances (VDT, 8485). Jill Pole never liked giants even in books, and she notices that books in which people live on what they shoot never tell you what a long, messy job it is to pluck and clean dead birds (SC, 61, 69). In Uncle Andrews sitting-room, every bit of the walls was lined with shelves and every bit of the shelves was full of books, in addition to the books piled on the big table (MN, 9). The Pevensie children have read a great deal, and Lewis assumes young readers of the Chronicles have too: Edmund or Lucy or you
3. I begin by making a map on one of the end leafs: then I put in a genealogical tree or two. Then I put a running headline at the top of each page: nally I index at the end all the passages I have for any reason underlined (TST, 438). Before lunch, began indexing my Bunyan (TST, 320).
27
would have recognized [the creature as a dragon] at once, but Eustace had read none of the right books. . . . Most of us know what we should expect to nd in a dragons lair. . . . Eustace found . . . what any of us could have told him in advancetreasure (VDT, 68, 71). Shasta, unfortunately, has had little opportunity to read: It was a crazy idea and if he had read as many books as you have about journeys over deserts he would never have dreamed of it (H&B, 76). Of course, for Lewis (or his narrator) to assume that his readers have read widely also becomes a way of encouraging them to read widely. In the magicians house on the Island of the Voices, Lucy must go to a large room lined from oor to ceiling with books, more books than Lucy had ever seen before, tiny little books, fat and dumpy books, and books bigger than any church Bible you have ever seen, all bound in leather and smelling old and learned. When she nds the Magic Book, she appreciates in it qualities that Lewis valued as a book collector: The paper was crisp and smooth and a nice smell came from it; and in the margins, and round the big coloured capital letters at the beginning of each spell, there were pictures (VDT, 124, 12526). Books appear in Lewiss other stories as well. Most haunting, perhaps, are the efforts of Orual to gather a library in Glome: We built up what was, for a barbarous land, a noble library: eighteen works in all (TWHF, 1.20). The library of which Orual is so proud is a ragtag collection: it includes books 115 of the Iliad, but not 1624; some philosophya few dialogues of Socrates by Plato (or Xenophon), aphorisms by Heraclitus, and the Metaphysics of Aristotle; two plays by Euripideshis Andromeda (since lost) and The Bacchae; some lyric poetry, specically the poem on Helen for which, legend has it, Teisias Stesichorus was struck blind; and a practical book about animal husbandry that may have been a precursor to or imitation of Xenophons On the Art of Horsemanship and On Hunting. As the books begin to arrive, Arnom and younger men come to the Fox to learn to read in them; they are learning to read the Greek language, but from this library they certainly are not receiving an adequate introduction to Greek thought. Orual does not say that she read the books herself, and she does not seem to know them well, as indicated by her general descriptions of the second play by Euripides and the dialogues of Socrates, instead of giving their titles,
28
and by her incorrectly giving Stesichoruss name as Hesias rather than Teisias. Here is further evidence that she was too busy to be with [the Fox] much (TWHF, 1.20): she had become an activist queen and no longer had time for bookish learning. There are few books in the old stone age culture of Malacandra: It is better to remember, the sorns tell Ransom, reecting the ancient distrust of writing and preference for the reliability of oral testimony (OSP, chaps. 11, 16), in contrast with Western attitudes today. Ransom is author of Dialect and Semantics (THS, 9.3) and his rst thought after meeting a hross and nding that it has a language is the dazzling project of making a Malacandrian grammar. An Introduction to the Malacandrian languageThe Lunar verbA concise Martian-English Dictionary . . . the titles itted through his mind (OSP, chap. 9). There are, of course, no books as yet in the Edenic paradise of Perelandra. There is a library at Belbury, but it seems to be used as a meeting room, not for reading (THS, 6.3). The Belbury group shows no interest in imaginative writings, or in the traditional values that books and reading can convey. Marks rediscovery of books is part of his journey from the spirit of Belbury to that of St. Annes. The manor at St. Annes has a pretty large library, and when Jane is recuperating there from the tortures inicted by Fairy Hardcastle, she requests the Curdie books, . . . and Manseld Park and Shakespeares Sonnets (THS, 8.2). Such books are the sort Lewis liked to read when he was ill.4 All are excellent as examples of the literary imagination, but each also exemplies the moral imagination (discussed further in chapter 9, below). After the horrors she has encountered, Jane stands in need of the comforting pleasure of reading imaginative works, but she also needs the nourishment of mind and spirit that authors like MacDonald, Austen, and Shakespeare can afford.5
4. Will you think me affected if I number a small illness among the minor pleasures of life? . . . Work is impossible and one can read all day for mere pleasure with a clear conscience (Letters, January 25, 1926; see also SbyJ, 189). Lewis mentioned in a 1930 letter to Greeves, I read [The Princess & the Goblin] . . . for about the third time when I was ill this spring (TST, 361). He read Austens Sense and Sensibility while ill in 1929 and her Northanger Abbey in 1937 (TST, 302; Letters, February 1937). Jane Austen, Scott, and Trollope are my favourite authors when ill (Letters, January 31, 1943). 5. The Curdie books are The Princess and the Goblin (1872) and The Princess and Curdie (1873) by George MacDonald, Lewiss master, a major force in Lewiss
29
There seem to be booksunsubstantial ones, presumablyin the Grey Town of The Great Divorce: the Episcopal Ghost who has written a paper to read to the little Theological Society down there will surely want to expand his ideas into a book (GD, 4243; chap. 5). Screwtapes opening comment to Wormwood is that guiding your patients reading isnt enough (SL, letter 1), and in several later letters he mentions ways that reading can be turned to advantage, as for example, give him lots of modern Biographies to read (SL, letter 9)that is, give him factual, not imaginative works, telling about contemporary gures who do not take the Enemy seriously, not the notable personages from earlier ages who did. In letter 13 he rebukes Wormwood strongly for allowing the patient to read a book he really enjoyed, because he enjoyed it and not in order to make clever remarks about it to his friends. Reading for enjoyment is a pleasure, and, as Screwtape reminds Wormwood in letter 9, all pleasure is Gods invention, while pride of intellect belongs to our Father Below. If the setup on the page and the feel, smell, and sound of the paper could be sensuous delights for Lewis, the appearance and feel of a book can, or inevitably will, contribute to the experience for readers of Lewiss works, particularly the Chronicles of Narnia. Lewis and his early readers were fortunate that three of the
religious and imaginative development. After her arrest and torture, Jane would have appreciated the same qualities in the books that Lewis found in MacDonald, the homely and humble feel of the stories and the aura of goodness, conveyed in that elusive Form which if once seen must inevitably be desired with all but sensuous desire (Lewis, preface to George MacDonald: An Anthology, 21, 22). Manseld Park (1814) is Jane Austens third novel: I should almost say it was her best, Lewis wrote to Greeves in 1915 (TST, 76). The storyabout a young woman from a poor family who, after years of feeling like an outsider while living in the home of rich relations, nally nds love and acceptance, a true home and family thereis one Jane would have found comforting as she settled in at St. Annes. But she would also hunger for the moral strength of Austens work, the clarity of its moral principles (see Lewis, A Note on Jane Austen, 178). Lewis regarded the sonnet sequence as among Shakespeares nest imaginative works, a masterpiece of Golden technique. Jane, as a student of literature working on a study of Donnes poetry, would appreciate the technical mastery of Shakespeares verse. But, given the state of her marriage and personal life, she would be drawn to them also for their celebration of love: they express the quintessence of all loves, Lewis wrote, and are written from a region in which love abandons all claims and owers into charity (English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama, 505).
30
rst four editions of the Chronicles were published in very attractive volumes. Until the mid-1980s, the Chronicles were published in just four editionsa clothbound and a paperback edition published in Britain and sold throughout the world except (because of copyright restrictions) in the United States, and a clothbound and a paperback edition published and sold in the U.S. The rst British edition of each book was clothbound, on good paper; the printing was sharp and clear. The rst ve were published by Geoffrey Bles, the last two by the Bodley Head. They were, and remain, a delight to handle and read. The earliest U.S. editions were clothbound, published by Macmillan, and also were of excellent quality. First editions are becoming increasingly rare and prohibitively expensive, but early reprints generally maintained the high printing quality of the rst editions, and bargains can still be found in used bookstores. The seven books were issued between 1959 and 1965 as Pufn Book paperbacks. These too are delightful volumes. They contain the full texts of the rst British editions and all illustrations and maps, except the frontispieces for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian, the endpaper map for The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and four full-page plates in The Horse and His Boy. They have attractive covers, sharp, clear printing, and good bindingsfor paperbacks: they stay open and are easy to hold. The original United States paperback edition, published in 1970 by Collier Books, a division of Macmillan, is much less satisfactory. It reprints the texts of the Macmillan edition but has few illustrations and neither the frontispieces nor the endpaper maps. The covers are less inviting than the Pufn covers. The books are slightly smaller than the Pufn paperbacks; that, and page after page of unbroken text, and the mass-market gluing which requires more effort to hold the books open, all make them less pleasant to look at and read. In considering a holistic reading experience, a books illustrations are very important, especially for childrens books. The original British clothbound editions of the Chronicles contained from 34 to 46 pen and ink illustrations, plus full-page color frontispieces in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian, and maps in Prince Caspian, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, The Silver Chair, and The Horse and His Boy. The choice of illustrator was left to Lewis, and he selected Pauline Baynes, who had earlier done the illustrations
31
for Tolkiens Farmer Giles of Ham (1949).6 Illustrations become a part of a text, vital to the meaning and feeling the words convey. Tolkien said as much when he wrote to his publishers in 1949, Miss Baynes pictures . . . are more than illustrations, they are a collateral theme. I showed them to my friends whose polite comment was that they reduced my text to a commentary on the drawings. The joshing overstatement covers a nugget of serious truth, and Lewis acknowledged that truth in his reply to Baynes after she wrote to congratulate him when The Last Battle won the Carnegie Medal for the best childrens book of 1956: Is it not rather our Medal? Im sure the illustrations were taken into consideration as well as the text.7 The imaginative experiencing of such a text is deeply affected by the illustrations, especially when children rst encounter the books by hearing a parent or teacher read them aloud. These children read the illustrations before they read the words. The illustrations not only establish specic visual images, but also shape the way the entire story will be imaged. Thus Tolkien rejected the fashionableness of the rst drawings for Farmer Giles of Ham and preferred the drawings by Baynes, which were inuenced by medieval manuscript decorations, and Lewis was attracted to Baynes because her traditional style matched his concept of the avor of his stories.
6. Pauline Baynes was born in Brighton in 1922. Her father was a Commissioner in the Indian Civil Service, and she spent her rst ve years in India. She was educated in private schools in England. She entered the Farnham School of Art in 1937 and then spent two terms at the Slade School of Fine Art, then in Oxford. During World War II she used her artistic talents in the war effort and began illustrating books professionally. In the late 1940s she left a portfolio with Allen & Unwin, publisher of Lewiss friend J. R. R. Tolkien. When Tolkien rejected the illustrations the publisher had chosen for Farmer Giles of Ham, he was shown Bayness drawings. He liked what he saw, and she did a set of illustrations that Tolkien felt exactly suited the book. Lewis presumably learned about her from Tolkien (though Baynes says Lewis told her that he went into a bookshop and asked an assistant to recommend someone who could draw children and animalsWalter Hooper, Past Watchful Dragons, 77). In December 1949 Geoffrey Bles showed Lewis the initial drawings for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Lewis sent Baynes a note congratulating her on them, especially their vigorous detail. See Wayne G. Hammond, Pauline Baynes; Hooper, Past Watchful Dragons, 7680; and Nancy-Lou Patterson, An Appreciation of Pauline Baynes. 7. Tolkien, Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, 133. Lewis, letter to Baynes, May 4, 1957, original in the Bodleian Library (MS.Eng.lett.c. 220/1, fol. 158). For Lewiss assessment of Pauline Bayness illustrations, see George Sayer, Jack: C. S. Lewis and His Times, 190.
32
Walter Hooper had all this in mind when he noted how much our picture of Lewiss imaginary world owes to the skill and imagination of this lady.8 If illustrations are an integral part of the text, then to read an edition with fewer or different illustrations is in fact to read a different work. The original Macmillan clothbound edition of the Chronicles omitted many of the illustrations (in some books almost half of them); this edition, as a result, is signicantly different from the British edition in ways that most readers in the U.S. were not even aware of. Even more distressing was the Collier paperback edition of 1970, which sold millions of copies between 1970 and 1994. That edition included only one illustration per chapter: while the British edition of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe had forty-three illustrations, the Collier paperback had seventeen. Eight of those seventeen were cropped versions of the originals (the loss of details of the interior of the Beavers house is particularly sad), and four of the seventeen were the result of dividing two original full-page drawings in half. Thus, millions of readers in the United States (myself included), as we used the Collier texts, had severely impoverished reading experiences compared to readers of copies published in Britain. When I discovered the fully illustrated books later, I felt I had indeed found not different editions but different books from those I had read before. The imaginative experience was signicantly enriched.9 In 1994 HarperCollins issued a uniform worldwide edition of the seven Chronicles, in a hardcover version and in trade and massmarket paperbacks. This edition follows the initial British texts and contains all of the original illustrations and endpaper maps, except the frontispieces. Unfortunately, the illustrations lack the clarity and sharpness of the early editions (this is true as well for later reprintings of the British edition by Collins and of the U.S. edition by Macmillan). The most pleasing to use, of course, are the hardcover volumes. They have high quality covers and bindings and a good feel as one holds them. The trade paperbacks are a good bargain, less expensive than the hardcovers but higher in quality than the
8. Tolkien, Letters, 130; Hooper, C. S. Lewis: A Companion and Guide, 625. 9. In 1981 Macmillan published a hardcover version of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe illustrated by Michael Hague, in a style very different from that of Pauline Baynes. As would be expected, the imaginative effect changes greatly.
33
mass-market paperbacks: the print is larger, the page layout is more attractive, and the illustrations are larger and easier to grasp. The bindings are stronger, and the books stay open better and are easier to hold. Chris Van Allsburg designed the covers of the trade paperbacks in the United States, Leo and Diane Dillon those of the massmarket versionboth are acceptable, with differing strengths and weaknesses. The trade paperbacks include, inside the back cover, a color reprint of Pauline Bayness beautiful Map of Narnia and the Surrounding Countriesan appealing feature, though the miniature size makes some of the words hard to read. The mass-market paperbacks begin with a Cast of Characters, which is much less appealing: it seems unnecessary, and its capsule summaries of characters present as fact what sometimes are interpretations a reader should develop for him- or herself (a particularly unsettling example is the incorrect statement that the Queen of Underland in The Silver Chair is another embodiment of Jadis, the witch in The Magicians Nephew and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe).10 If, as discussed above, the physical makeup of a book affects the experience of reading it, spending a bit more for the trade paperbacks seems worthwhile.11
10. The oldest owl in The Silver Chair suggests that the White Witch and the Queen of Underland are of the same nature, but not the same person: Long, long ago, at the very beginning, a White Witch came out of the North and bound our land in snow and ice for a hundred years. And we think this may be one of the same crew (SC, 50). The fact that the Queen of Underland is killed by Prince Rilian (SC, 15657) is further evidence that she is not the White Witch. According to The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Aslan killed the White Witch in battle (144; the Witch was dead145); in that case she could not be the Queen of Underland many hundreds of years later. According to The Magicians Nephew, the White Witch, then known as Jadis, gained immortality by eating an apple from the tree in Aslans garden (144, 157); in that case, it could not be Jadis who is killed in The Silver Chair. 11. In the past few years, HarperCollins has published versions of the Chronicles with illustrations colorized by Pauline Baynes. The colored pictures are attractive, but coloring creates an effect quite different from the black and white originals, requiring the reader to exercise the imagination differently, perhaps less energetically. The same is true of watching the colorized version of a movie originally issued in black and whitecolor distorts the integrity of the original composition and visual artistry and does not represent an improvement over the original artistic conception. In 1998 HarperCollins issued a single-volume edition of the Chronicles. The book has many attractive features, including colorized pictures and the use of Pauline Bayness map as the cover. But the text is in double columns and the volume measures 8 3/4 inches wide and 11 1/4 inches high and weighs nearly ve pounds. It is not an easy volume to hold or read, especially for children.
34
In a holistic approach to the reading experience, the situation of a persons initial encounter also affects how he or she experiences a book imaginatively and emotionallysuch circumstances as age, location, and life situation at the time of reading exert an inuence. And the memories of that initial experience have an enormous effect when a person rereads the book. A person can often remember exactly where and when he or she read a book before, and those earlier associations avor the rereading experience, becoming an integral and important part of it. That is particularly true and important when the rereading is ooded with memories of the security of younger years and the warmth of home. These associations should not be dismissed as just an emotional overlay, separable from the actual book itself. As Lewis himself recognized, a book without a reader is only an object, like a rock or a vase: It is we [as readers] who make the poetry, not the poet.12 Current reading theory calls the experienced work the real book and regards it as more important than the text on the pages of the physical volume. A text becomes a book only as it is reador heard. Texts can be read only by individuals, so every reading is private, intimately connected to the situation in which it occurs. The images, emotions, and associations experienced by each individual reader are unique, at least slightly different from those of other readers, and are not to be taken lightly. Many people hear the Chronicles read aloud, in school, or church, or the home, before they read the words themselves. Here too the conditions affect the experience, particularly if the books were rst heard while sitting close to a loved parent or grandparent. The imaginative experience of hearing the books is signicantly different from that of reading the books, especially if considerable time elapses between hearing them and reading them oneself. That was made clear to me by a student whose rst memory of the Chronicles was from her parents reading them to her when she was seven and eight years old; she rst read them for herself in her mid-twenties. She told me her memory of the world of Narnia (and the other lands in which the Chronicles take place) was of a very solid place, more solid actually than many real-life experiences. She speculated that this was because she was not the one controlling the experience: no reading ahead, or skipping pages, or speed-reading to get to the nale. The
12. Lewis, The Personal Heresy: A Controversy, 16.
35
pace at which her imagination would travel through the stories, in memory through the years, was far slower than the pace at which she read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe when she nally began reading the book herself. This too seems related to the strictly audience role she had when she heard the stories. She remembers the Chronicles as being magnicently long, unbearably suspenseful, and encompassing what seemed like lifetimes of events in the matter of a single chapter. Thinking back on it now, she feels this may relate to the freedom her imagination had to run with the images, characters, and events of the stories without being bogged down by written words on a page. And while reading the text has not destroyed or particularly altered the worlds she already held in her head, reading has made it harder to see from within that previously formed world. Although the text, whether experienced by hearing a book read aloud or by reading it oneself, is more than words, words are a crucial part of the text. And changes to the words affect the imaginative experience of the readers. In the case of the Chronicles, some textual changes have occurred. Because of union regulations in the United States, the type of the Chronicles had to be reset for the edition sold in the U.S. That meant Lewis had to read another set of proofs, several weeks or perhaps months after he nished reading proofs for the British edition. As he did so, he occasionally had second thoughts and made changesusually minor ones, but at least one substantial revision. These changes do not appear in the 1994 HarperCollins edition, despite the fact that it is common practice in textual editing either to retain an authors nal revisions or at least to note such changes as variant readings. Paul Fords revised 1994 edition of Companion to Narnia lls the useful service of preserving and commenting on these alternate wordings.13 Some of the changes would have only slight and subtle effects on the reader. In chapter 1 of the original text of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, as the Pevensie children think of animals they might see in the woods around the professors house, Edmund mentions foxes and Susan says rabbits. The American edition changes these to snakes and foxes, respectively (LWW, 3). Ford suggests, rightly I think, that Lewiss afterthought better ts Edmund and Susans
13. Ford, Companion to Narnia, xlixlii and 457.
36
characters in this and later books and improves the imaginative experience of reading the books. Snakes conveys associations (including biblical ones) that suit the deceptive traitor Edmund is to become; and, while rabbits gives a warm, cuddly feel that ultimately doesnt t Susan, foxes suggests a wiliness that does t and may also convey a veiled reference to her desire for a high social life, riding to the hounds, and the like.14 Two revisions in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe involve allusions to Scandinavian mythology. In the American editions Lewis changed the name of the captain of the witchs secret police from Maugrim (meaning perhaps savage jaws or ill will) to Fenris, the great wolf of Scandinavian mythology who was spawned by Loki, god of strife and spirit of evil, and killed by the fearless Vidar, son of Odin.15 For readers who recognize the allusion, Fenris creates a much richer imaginative experience, carrying multiple ripples of meaning. Also, in chapter 13 of the British editions, the White Witch says that Deep Magic is written in letters as deep as a spear is long on the re-stones of the Secret Hill; Ford thinks that Lewis may have used the term to evoke in the imaginations of his readers pictures of annual druidical rites throughout the British Isles in which the old years res were extinguished and the new re was kindled at a sacred place, usually a low, round hill. The associations are vague, but properly sinister. The American edition substitutes on the trunk of the World Ash Tree (LWW, 114), an allusion to Yggdrasil, the great tree of Scandinavian mythology, whose branches tower into the heavens, whose trunk upholds the earth, and whose three roots reach into the realm of the dead, the land of the giants, and the abode of the gods. For those recognizing the allusion, the tree reinforces the truth that Deep Magic, or Natural Law, is universal, embedded in the created universe from the dawn of time, and the foundation upon which social order rests. Opinion on whether this was a desirable change varies,16 but the later version, like the change to Fenris, offers the potential for a richer imaginative experience to readers aware of the mythic background.
14. Ibid., 164n. 15. Ibid., 18990; see LWW, 47, 79, 107, 109. 16. On Fenris and the Secret Hill, see Ford, Companion, 366; on the World Ash Tree, see ibid., 44748.
37
More important than these is a change in the rst chapter of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, where Lewis originally described Eustace as far too stupid to make anything up himself. In the American editions the corresponding line reads that he was quite incapable of making anything up himself (VDT, 5). Paul Ford suggests that Lewis may have felt he should tone the line down for American readers or was beginning to like Eustace better as he wrote about him.17 It is a line that should have been changed in any case: calling a character stupid in a childrens book is insensitive and unwise; it does not offer young readers a good behavioral model. Beyond that, and more importantly, stupidas Ford saysis inaccurate; it does not t Eustaces character. Details throughout the chapter indicate Eustace has a high degree of intelligence, though he applies it in ways and to subjects for which Lewis did not have great respect. Still more important is a fairly extensive rewriting of the end of the twelfth chapter of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader that improves the imaginative experience considerably. As the Dawn Treader emerges from the waters surrounding the terrifying Dark Island, where dreams (not daydreams, but dreams) come true, and shoots out into the sunlight, the original British edition continues: All at once everybody realised that there was nothing to be afraid of and never had been. They blinked their eyes and looked about them. . . . First one, and then another, began laughing. Rynelf comments, I reckon weve made pretty good fools of ourselves, and a moment later, when they look back, the Dark Island and the darkness have vanished for ever. This version treats the episode itself as a dream, not as real. The effect is to diminish the seriousness of the adventure and of dreams themselves, which Lewiswho was bothered by bad dreams throughout his lifein all other cases regarded as very serious indeed. And this version treats Rynelfs feeling as inconsequential, even as wrong, and risks conveying to children that their feelings of fear in the face of danger (or anxiety or grief) are equally inconsequential or wrong. The American version deletes the above passage and replaces it with: And just as there are moments when simply to lie in bed and see the daylight pouring through your window and to hear the cheerful voice of an early postman or milkman down below and to
17. Ibid., 178n.
38
realise that it was only a dream: it wasnt real, is so heavenly that it was very nearly worth having the nightmare in order to have the joy of waking, so they all felt when they came out of the dark (VDT, 157). This version preserves the nightmarish quality of the adventure, but by explicitly comparing it to a dream, retains the reality of the island and what they went through. In this version, the island did not vanish but the hump of darkness grew smaller and smaller astern (VDT, 158). The reader is much more deeply involved, imaginatively and emotionally, in this version. The reader cannot dismiss the island as unreal or as no longer existing: it is still there, and anyone who can get to Narnia still could get caught in it. More important, the inserted analogy, with its second-person pronouns, draws readers into the episode and evokes in them the same emotions the characters experience. This is no laughing matter, as the earlier version risks making it. The result is similar when Lord Rhoop asks Caspian to grant him a boon. The boon in the original British edition, Never to bring me back there, lacks the ring of authenticity. Of course they would not bring him back there; there is no need to ask that. The revised boon in the American version adds greatly to the power and fearfulness of the episode: Never to ask me, nor to let any other ask me, what I have seen during my years on the Dark Island, to which Caspian replies, An easy boon, my Lord, . . . and added with a shudder, Ask you: I should think not. I would give all my treasure not to hear it (VDT, 158). The new lines create what reader-response critics call a gap, which will be discussed further in the next chapter. What did Lord Rhoop see? His request not to be asked leads readers to begin imagining what he might have seen, to substitute their own nightmares for Lord Rhoops, and to shudder along with Caspian and agree that it was better not to be told. In revising this passage, then, Lewis recognized a aw in its artistry and psychology and corrected it admirably. It is regrettable that Lewis did not include the revisions to this passageand the other changes as wellin reprints of the British editions. It is even more regrettable that Lewiss later revisions were not used in the uniform edition of 1994; because they were not, most readers henceforth will read and know only the earlier, less effective original wordings. Lewis adhered to an old tradition that viewed the imaginative reading experience as one which involves the whole personality. In
39
The imaginative experience of reading a book is affected in myriad ways and shaped by far more than just the words on the page. Books can be considered as tangible and appealing (or unappealing) objects, as objects to be collected and displayed, as objects to be respected and treated well, and as texts made up of illustrations in addition to words. In writing the Chronicles, besides wanting to entertain children, Lewis also wanted to move them toward being literary readers, toward being lifelong readers and lovers of books for whom reading is a holistic experience and who might come to experience at least some of the pleasure reading and books gave to Lewis throughout his life.
40
41
the autonomy and self-sufciency of texts: it is the effect of the work itself, read carefully and closely with attentiveness to its context, that matters, not the effect the author supposedly intended it to have. In light of all this, it is ironic that recent editors of Lewiss own work have used a particular interpretation of authorial intention to justify a renumbering of the Chronicles of Narnia. For those who were reading the Chronicles in the 1950s as each book appeared, one per year from 1950 to 1956, there was only one order in which to read and experience themthe order of publication. Most reprintings of the books in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s numbered them in that order:
1. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe: A Story for Children 2. Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia 3. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader 4. The Silver Chair 5. The Horse and His Boy 6. The Magicians Nephew 7. The Last Battle: A Story for Children.
So they were listed in the Geoffrey Bles and Bodley Head editions in Britain and the Macmillan editions in the United States once The Last Battle was completed, as well as in the later Collins clothbound
it to have was in every way, or even at all, better than the meaning which readers nd in it. (5657) Note that both intent and meaning, here, are said to be dependent upon the effect the work has on the readers response. Writing to readers of the Junior Radio Times in 1956, he makes the same point about the unreliability of what an author says concerning his or her own works: You must not believe all that authors tell you about how they wrote their books. This is not because they mean to tell lies. It is because a man writing a story is too excited about the story itself to sit back and notice how he is doing it. . . . And afterwards, when the story is nished, he has forgotten a good deal of what writing it was like (Sometimes Fairy Stories, 42). In a letter to Charles A. Brady, Lewis wrote, A books not worth writing unless it suggests more than the author intended (Letters, October 29, 1944). Lewiss emphasis as a historical scholar was not on authorial intent but what the work may be supposed to have meant in its own dayconsistent with his interest in the receptive imagination, not the authorial imagination (De Audiendis Poetis, 2). Bruce L. Edwards, Jr., holds that Lewis regarded intentionality as authoritative (A Rhetoric of Reading: C. S. Lewiss Defense of Western Literacy, 5976); my reading of Lewis shows him treating the objective text, not subjective authorial intent, as authoritative.
42
reprints in Britain, the Pufn paperback edition in Britain until the mid-1970s, and the Collier paperback edition in the United States until the mid-1980s. At the same time quiet but persistent voices began urging that they be renumbered in the order in which events occur in the stories (or nearly so: the events of The Horse and His Boy actually occur during, not after, those of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe):
1. The Magicians Nephew 2. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe 3. The Horse and His Boy 4. Prince Caspian 5. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader 6. The Silver Chair 7. The Last Battle.
These voices have won out, at least to the extent that the uniform, worldwide edition of the Chronicles issued in 1994 is arranged in that order. People who purchase new copies of the Chronicles now may never become aware that The Magicians Nephew was not always treated as Book 1, and that there is an alternative order for reading the series, one which produces quite different imaginative effects specically for the rst reading of the series; the order for rereading does not matter much, once the strategies for initial reading have been encountered. This chapter will consider how the new ordering developed and compare the effects of the different orderings. The rst time the stories were published with the new numbering was the set of Fontana Lions issued by Collins in 1980. Walter Hooper comments that for the rst time the books were given the order Lewis said they should be read in.2 They were listed in that order several years earlier, opposite the title page of the Pufn paperback edition of Prince Caspian. The earliest copy with such a list that I have seen is a 1974 reprint, with this intriguing heading: All seven stories of Narnia are published in Pufns, and the correct reading order is . . . Other Pufn reprints of Prince Caspian, from the mid-1970s on, give this ordering, though without the explanatory statement. But what does correct mean here? Correct by what criteria? The 1994 uniform edition includes the following statement on
2. Hooper, C. S. Lewis: A Companion and Guide, 453.
43
the copyright page: The HarperCollins editions of The Chronicles of Narnia have been renumbered in compliance with the original wishes of the author, C. S. Lewis. Again, the wording is puzzling. Why original wishes? Does original mean from the time at which The Magicians Nephew was completed? If so, why did Lewis not request the Bodley Head to include this renumbering in the new book, or in The Last Battle the following year, or have Geoffrey Bles change the order in later reprints of the other books? If it had been a matter of importance to Lewis, surely his publishers would have complied with his wishes, or included the renumbering in the paperback editions that appeared a few years later. Thus the strongest evidence that these were deeply held wishes of the author is missing. The renumbering presumably has grown out of a sincere respect for Lewis and a desire to follow his wishes. But the attempt to dictate a correct way to read the Chronicles reects an inadequate understanding of the reading process and a regrettable reliance on authorial intention, an approach questioned by many literary scholars today. That approach assumes that the correct way to interpret a literary work is to nd and follow what the author intended, the way the author said it should be read. Hooper, in C. S. Lewis: A Companion and Guide, follows that approach when he calls the new ordering the sequence in which Lewis meant for them to be read.3 Literary scholars challenge authorial intent on two grounds. The rst points out the difculty of determining what an author intended. Often an author does not tell us what he or she intended; authorial intent in such cases is read into the work by arguing that the author must have intended this or that because of the structure or effect of the work. And even when authors do tell us what they intended, the question arises of whether they actually achieved what they intended, or really understood themselves what they achieved. The second asks if what the author intended makes any difference. What really matters is the effect of the work, which could fall short of or go far beyond what the author expected or sought to achieve. The unconscious dynamic of the writing process can lead a writer to achieve more than, or something different from, what he or she consciously set out to do. Lewis gave qualied approval to the chronological arrangement in a letter to a young boy, Laurence Krieg, dated April 23, 1957.
3. Ibid., 408.
44
Laurence believed, after publication of The Magicians Nephew, that it should be read rst, but his mother believed the books should continue to be read in order of publication. Laurence wrote to Lewis to ask whether he or his mother was right. Lewis replied, I think I agree with your order for reading the books more than with your mothers. . . . [But] perhaps it does not matter very much in which order anyone reads them. Hooper reports that Lewis later reafrmed his preference for the chronological sequence in comments to Hooper.4 Even if this letter and the comment to Hooper are serious expressions of Lewiss intent, it is not wise to use them as a basis for limiting readers to one way of reading. Note that Lewis, despite expressing agreement with Laurence, does not say this is the correct order for reading them. When he says, perhaps it does not matter very much, he probably means that more than one order, or perhaps any order, is acceptable to him for reading the Chronicles. If, however, he is suggesting that the order doesnt make any difference to the reading experience, then he is simply mistaken. The order of reading in that sense matters a great deal. Viewed in terms of the imaginative reading experience, the new arrangement may well be less desirable than the original one.5 The only reason for putting The Magicians Nephew rst is to have the reader encounter events in chronological order, the order in which they happened, and that, as every storyteller knows, is quite unimportant as a reason. Often the early events in a sequence have a greater impact or effect as a ashback, told after later events that provide background and establish perspective. Beginning a story in medias res is one of the oldest and most basic of narrative strategies, going back at least to the Iliad and the Odyssey, two of the earliest stories in the Western literary tradition. Lewis had used it before in Perelandra and would use it later in Till We Have Faces. In the Chronicles, the effect of Prince Caspian depends upon it. In chapter 1, the
4. Lewis, Letters to Children, 68. Walter Hooper, Past Watchful Dragons, 32. 5. Two days before he died, Lewis had a visit from Kaye Webb, editor of Pufn Books, which had at that point brought out paperback editions of three of the ChroniclesThe Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Prince Caspian, and The Magicians Nephewand were soon to issue the other four. Webb reported that Lewis promised to re-edit the books (connect the things that didnt tie up) (Roger Lancelyn Green and Walter Hooper, C. S. Lewis: A Biography, 307). There is no indication that this re-editing would include rearrangement of the books or the extensive revision that reordering should actually entail.
45
four Pevensie children are whisked away from a train platform in our world to another world. They wonder if it might be Narnia, but everything looks unfamiliar. The children discover in chapter 2 that they are not only in Narnia but in the ruins of the castle Cair Paravel, where they had lived at the end of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (the castle is in ruins because a thousand years have passed in Narnian time since they returned to our world). In chapter 3 they capture a Dwarf, who agrees to tell them what they need to know about events during those thousand years. Chapters 47 are a ashback containing the Dwarfs story. Lewis carefully arranged the rst three chapters so that the reader would share imaginatively what the children experience: the feelings of fear and uncertainty, the slowly growing awareness of where they are, the perplexity over why things have changed so much. He could have started the book with chapter 4, relating it from Caspians point of view, the way he did with Tirian in The Last Battle. Doing that, however, would have sacriced the strategies through which he led readers into the story and got them involved in the action. So it is with the Chronicles as a whole. To read one of the other books before The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe sacrices strategies that Lewis used to lead readers into the world of Narnia and to help them share imaginatively in the experiences of Lucy, and later the other children, as they discover what that world is like. Consider, for example, the careful use of details as Lucy enters Narnia for the rst time. In an ordinary-seeming house in the country, Lucy steps into an ordinary-seeming wardrobe, to smell and feel the long fur coats in it. The vivid details enable the reader to share Lucys experience as she reaches ahead into the darkness of the wardrobe, hears a crunching underfoot, feels the cold wetness of the snow and the prickliness of the trees, and glimpses the light of the lamppost ahead of her. The reader shares her bewilderment and uncertainty about where she is and what she has gotten into, and her surprise as she hears footsteps and comes face to face with, not another human, but a creature which, though having the body of a man from the waist upwards, has legs shaped like a goats, with black hair, goats hooves, reddish skin, a short pointed beard and curly hair, two horns, and a tail. A key strategy in the book is use of what reader-response critics call gaps. All stories depend on gaps (details that need later to be
46
claried or questions that a reader wants answered, and immediately begins trying to answer by anticipating later events). The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe uses them very effectively. Its opening leads readers to ask, Who are these four children and the Old Professor? What are they like? What is the something that happened to them in the very large house far out in the country? The story, immediately or slowly as needed, begins lling those gaps. Notice that the story creates a gap by a reference to three servants, then quickly signals the reader that this is not an important gap: (Their names were Ivy, Margaret and Betty, but they do not come into the story much) (LWW, 1). The rst mention of the name Narnia creates such a gap. Tumnus the Faun asks Lucy how she came into Narnia, and Lucy asks what the reader also wants to know: Narnia? Whats that? Tumnus replies, This is the land of Narnia, . . . where we are now; all that lies between the lamp-post and the great castle of Cair Paravel on the eastern sea (LWW, 9). The reader will want and need to know more, of course, but for now he or she has been supplied the necessary basic information and given adequate orientation. The most important example of a gap in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, when it is read rst, is the buildup to the introduction of Aslan. The rst reference to Aslan is by Mr. Beaver, when he meets the children in the woods: They say Aslan is on the moveperhaps has already landed. These words create a gap for the Pevensie children andpresumablyfor the reader: None of the children knew who Aslan was any more than you do; but the moment the Beaver had spoken these words everyone felt quite different (LWW, 54). In the long paragraph that follows, Lewis seeks directly and intentionally to help readers share imaginatively what the children experience:
Perhaps it has happened to you in a dream that someone says something which you dont understand but in the dream it feels as if it had some enormous meaningeither a terrifying one which turns the whole dream into a nightmare or else a lovely meaning too lovely to put into words, which makes the dream so beautiful that you remember it all your life and are always wishing you could get into that dream again. It was like that now. At the name of Aslan each one of the children felt something jump in his inside. (LWW, 54)
47
For the reader fully to participate imaginatively with this paragraph, to feel something mysterious jump in his or her inside, requires that it be the rst book in the series to be read. The reader experiences the power of Aslans name butlike the Pevensie childrenis left to wonder who and what this person is. The anticipation and eventual lling of that gap is one of the great pleasures of reading the story. The fact that other books were written later, including a book describing events prior to these, does not change the artistic strategy of this passage.6 The gap is partially lled, and the mysteriousness heightened, in the next chapter, when the children ask Mr. Beaver to tell them more about Aslan and he replies: Aslan? . . . Why dont you know? Hes the King. Hes the Lord of the whole wood, but not often here, you understand. Never in my time or my fathers time (LWW, 63). The gap is lled still further, and Aslan made even more exciting and mysterious, when Lucy asks if Aslan is a man and Mr. Beaver replies: Certainly not. I tell you he is the King of the wood and the son of the great Emperor-Beyond-the-Sea. Dont you know who is the King of Beasts? Aslan is a lionthe Lion, the great Lion (LWW, 64). The excitement builds as the Beavers tell the children that Aslan is good but not safe, that everyones knees knock when they appear before him, and that the children will meet him tomorrow. For readers who have read The Magicians Nephew before encountering these passages, there are fewer, and smaller, gaps to ll, and as a result the story is less mysterious and less exciting. The imaginative experience of the opening sentences of The Magicians Nephew is very different from that of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and has a different effect, depending on which book is read rst: This is a story about something that happened long ago when your grandfather was a child. It is a very important story
6. Similarly, as Doris Myers has shown, the chronological order dampens the leap of faiththe decision to trust beyond the evidence which the books, in order of publication, require of readers as well as of the Pevensie children. From a position of superior knowledge, the reader watches, but does not share, the childrens doubts and risks (Spensers Faerie Land as a Key to Narnia). It attens the stories, imposing a single reading on them, whereas the Chronicles are in fact polysemic, having many layers of meaning. Myers concludes, As far as I know, there is no evidence that Lewis ever went back and read the books in chronological order to see if they held together that way as ction.
48
because it shows how all the comings and goings between our own world and the land of Narnia rst began (MN, 1). For someone who has previously read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, this invokes recognition and memory: Narnia immediately connects the reader with earlier imaginative experiences and awakens a ood of memories. The word will not be used again in The Magicians Nephew until the title of chapter 9, but that doesnt matter: knowing that this story will connect with the earlier one engages the reader imaginatively and emotionally and enables him or her to proceed in eager and watchful anticipation. For the reader who reads The Magicians Nephew before other books in the series, the opening sentence creates not the kind of skillful, satisfying gaps found in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, but vague and unsettling ones. The words all the comings and goings create the rst gap in The Magicians Nephew. The reader who reads this story rst is left asking, What comings and goings? The question is never answered in this book, though the next to the last paragraph of the nal chapter repeats the phrase and adds which you can read of in other books. It does not yield the imaginative satisfaction of a skillfully lled gap (like the Aslan gap in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe); it feels instead like the bait authors use to sell other books. The second gap is the land of Narnia. The reader has the clue that it must be separate from our own world and is left to wonder what and where this land is. But it too is not a satisfying gap (understandably, since Lewis was crafting this as a ashback, not a rst book). The second paragraph shifts abruptly to a different story, about Polly, Digory, Uncle Andrew, London, and Charn, which is set up and told very effectively, with skillful creation and lling of gaps. Indications of what Narnia is do not appear until the nal lines of chapter 9: Narnia, Narnia, Narnia, awake. Love. Think. Speak. Be walking trees. Be talking beasts. Be divine waters (MN, 103). Consider the difference in the imaginative experiencing of those words for those who read The Magicians Nephew rst, and those who have previously read one or more of the other Chronicles. If one reads this book rst, the account of the creation of Narnia is a beautiful, powerful story, told in vivid detail. It draws the reader into the events and enables him or her to experience the excitement, emotions, mystery, and magic of what is occurring. For a lion to bring a new world into being and breathe life into it is something
49
a reader will never forget. The imaginative experience of reading it as a readers rst encounter with the world of Narnia is exciting and wonderful. However, it will be even more meaningful and powerful when such a reader returns to it and rereads it after reading the other books and learning more about that mysterious lion; the memories, emotions, and associations from other stories make the creation of Narnia much more signicant to the reader than it can be on rst reading. For those who read other books before reading The Magicians Nephew, the delightful elements of surprise and recognition are added to that of deeper meaningfulness. Readers who had shared with Lucy the mysterious experience of encountering a lamppost unaccountably placed in the middle of a forest have the pleasure, upon seeing the lamppost grow in The Magicians Nephew, of recognition: Oh! Thats how the lamppost got there! (For those who watch the birth of the lamppost before reading The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, there is no mystery when they encounter it with Lucy.) Likewise, readers who have already encountered the White Witch in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe experience surprise and recognition in The Magicians Nephew as they gradually gure out who Jadis is and realize the long-term signicance of the events in Charn. Readers who rst were introduced to Aslan in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe experience the thrill of recognition as the lion comes into view, and perhaps the pleasure of accurate anticipation if they guess that the voice is Aslans before he comes into view or before his name is mentioned. The fullest imaginative experiencing of The Magicians Nephew comes through reading the book as a ashback, for that is the way Lewis thought of it as he wrote it and those are the narrative strategies he consciously or unconsciously built into it. Thus, there is no introduction to Aslan in The Magicians Nephew, no explanation that he is the king of the wood or the son of the great Emperor-Beyond-the-Sea; there was no need to explain readers already knew all that from earlier books. Imaginative experience extends also to the religious dimension of the Chronicles. The religious motifs are embedded in image and story, which the reader experiences imaginatively, not (as in Mere Christianity or Miracles) in concept and logical argument. The full religious signicance of the Chronicles depends on viewing them as a unied series and on reading them in order of publication. I have
50
demonstrated elsewhere that the Chronicles, intentionally or unconsciously, echo and parallel Mere Christianity, which Lewis was revising for republication at the time he was writing the early Chronicles.7 The Chronicles, read in order of publication, develop a sequential presentation of Christian ideas similar to that in Mere Christianity. Book 1 of Mere Christianity demonstrates the need for salvation; Book 2 explains the plan of salvation; Book 3 deals with morality, explaining how Christians should live as individuals and as a church, a company of the faithful, in light of their salvation; and Book 4 claries theological issues that cause difculties for Christians. The arrangement of the four books is deliberate. Their full effect depends on the order in which they are read: It is after you have realised that there is a real Moral Law, and a Power behind the law, and that you have broken that law and put yourself wrong with that Powerit is after all this, and not a moment sooner, that Christianity begins to talk (MC, 1.5). The discussion in Book 3 (Christian Behaviour), if read rst, will not have the same meaning as it does when read after the sections on Right and Wrong as a Clue to the Meaning of the Universe and What Christians Believe, which emphasize that the moral teachings in Book 3 grow out of the premises about law, grace, and faith laid out in the earlier parts. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe lays imaginatively a theological foundation for the succeeding books, much as Book 1 of Mere Christianity lays a foundation for the other three parts. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe begins, as Mere Christianity does, by establishing the existence of moral law, or Deep Magic from the Dawn of Time, and the fact that Edmund has broken that law and thus is forfeit and needs to be rescued. As Aslan dies in Edmunds place, the story images Book 2 of Mere Christianity: Deeper Magic from before the Dawn of Time (LWW, 127) represents the love and grace that saved Edmund from the penalty of the law. Other themes from Mere Christianity are reected in succeeding Chronicles, including the theme of Christian morality in The Magicians Nephew. When The Magicians Nephew is read in the order of publication, the earlier books create a context for the theme of morality, just as Books 1 and 2 of Mere Christianity establish a context for Book 3. Earlier stories imaging law, faith, spiritual growth, and divine guidance and care
7. Schakel, Reading with the Heart: The Way into Narnia.
51
provide a Christian basis for the moral instruction. Morality grows out of faith, not just out of a desire to do better. Christian meanings can come through the chronological arrangement, too, but in a less unied, less imaginatively and intellectually satisfying way than the sequence that owed out of Lewiss imagination as he wrote the stories.8 Imaginative experiencing of the Christian motifs is even more important when viewed from the perspective developed by Doris Myers in a ne essay on the Chronicles. Myers argues that the seven books, read in order of original publication, describe the emotional climate of Christian commitment at various ages, from very young childhood to old age and death. The Chronicles present, in a form attractive to young and old alike, the whole scope of a Christian life according to the Anglican style of gradual growth rather than sudden conversion, of love of tradition, and of emphasis on codes of courtesy and ethical behavior.9 This is not an allegorical way of reading the stories. It holds that the characters and events in and of themselves depict and convey religious feelings at different stages of life, not that the stories point outside themselves to parallel characters and events that add a deeper meaning to what one is reading. These stages of spiritual development according to the Anglican pattern can be experienced imaginatively only when the books are read in order of publication. The foundation in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and the subsequent steps built upon it are lost when the series is rearranged according to internal chronological order. In one sense, then, as Lewis said, the order in which the Chronicles are read doesnt really matter, but it unquestionably does make a differencewhich he didnt acknowledge, and perhaps didnt recognize fully. The decision to renumber and rearrange the Chronicles in current editions may or may not be considered unfortunate. But it is denitely unfortunate the publishers did not indicate that a different arrangement existed in earlier versions, remains an alternative
8. Walter Hooper, who endorses the chronological order of reading, does not discuss interrelationships between the books, but deals with each one separately (C. S. Lewis, 40819). Doris Myers holds, rightly I think, that the chronological order resists efforts to read the series as a connected whole (personal correspondence). 9. Myers, Growing in Grace: The Anglican Spiritual Style in the Chronicles of Narnia, 185, 202.
52
order for reading the books, and is preferred by a number of Lewis scholars.10 Principles of textual editing, past and present, call for signaling textual variants so the reader can evaluate the difference the variants make and perhaps choose between the alternative readings. Failure to indicate variants, of wording within the texts and of the numbering of the books, has the regrettable effects of wiping out the past and imposing a single, authoritative reading upon the Chronicles. It is a decision that detracts from, not enhances, recognition and appreciation of the artistry and meaning of Lewiss best-known books.
10. See Paul Ford, Companion to Narnia, xixxx; Evan K. Gibson, C. S. Lewis, Spinner of Tales: A Guide to His Fiction, 19495; Margaret Patterson Hannay, C. S. Lewis, 2371; Colin Manlove, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Patterning of a Fantastic World, 3031; Doris T. Myers, C. S. Lewis in Context, 227 n; Schakel, Reading with the Heart, 14345.
Narrative Nets
Lewis and the Appeal of Story
The appeal of story fascinated Lewis. In the title of an address to a Merton College undergraduate literary society in the mid-1940s, he called it the hidden element in ction.1 When he published a shortened form of the address in 1947, he changed the title to On Stories, probably to indicate that his essay was not on ction in the sense of the novel, with its emphasis on realism, characterization, and symbol; it was on the romances, adventure stories, and fantasies that he loved so much but that had received little serious critical attention. Literary scholars in the twentieth century have shown more interest in the novel, with its greater seriousness and relevance, than in romance or fantasy writing, typically dismissing them as casual reading and escapist literature. Lewis, by exploring the nature and appeal of Story, made a unique and important contribution to literary theory, and one that greatly helps to understand his own literary works. The ideas about narrative put forward in On Stories clarify the nature and appeal of Lewiss own stories, especially the Chronicles of Narnia.2 Lewis offers in his essay a caution about fairy tales that applies equally to his adult fantasies: not all readers will nd their imaginative approach appealing. The point is not that children like fairy tales or fantasy and then outgrow such tastes when they become adults (though it can be educated out of them, or lost through imaginative starvation). Rather, some children and some adults like fairy tales (and romances), while some children and some adults do
1. The title of the Merton College address was The Kappa Element in Fiction. According to Walter Hooper, Kappa stood for lsvqupo ( the hidden element (preface to Of Other Worlds, viii). 2. The Great Divorce and Till We Have Faces are not discussed in this chapter or the next. The Great Divorce is a medieval dream vision, and Till We Have Faces is a myth retold. Neither is romance, fantasy, or fairy tale, the genres he collectively called Story.
53
54
not. Some children and adults respond enthusiastically to a fantasy world and unrealistic happenings, but some resist them, preferring realistic settings, characters, and events in their ction, or preferring expository writing over ction. Within the Chronicles Lewis depicts such a reader. Eustace Clarence Scrubb in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader does not like fairy tales or romancesor imaginative literature generally. His parents and his education have made him prefer expository writing over fantasy (as he was quite incapable of making anything up himself, he did not approve of thatVDT, 5).3 He had avoided romances and fairy tales: Most of us know what we should expect to nd in a dragons lair, but . . . Eustace had read only the wrong books (VDT, 71). Eustace overcomes his dislike of fantasy by living literally what he refused to experience imaginatively: he becomes a dragon and is enabled to go beyond himself and the limited, materialistic, rationalistic world in which he had grown up. Lewiss purpose in On Stories is not to convince people they should appreciate romance and fantasyhe only wants to make clear what he and others who like them do enjoy. If the result of such clarication is that readers become more open to imagination, the way Eustace did, so much the better. The imaginative appeal of story begins with suspense and excitement. Almost all romances and fairy tales include suspense and excitement, and for some readers that is their main appeal. The narrator in Out of the Silent Planet says, The last thing Ransom wanted was an adventure (OSP, chap. 1), but he is plunged into oneand that is how a reader must engage imaginatively, sharing Ransoms anxiety about his unexpected space travels and his encounters with unknown species in an unknown world. The reader must feel the suspense of the narrators fear, in the opening chapter of Perelandra, as he pushes himself to continue toward Ransoms cottage, though unseen, unimaginable beings oppose him. The reader then must experience the tension as Ransom on a different planet battlesrst intellectually, then physicallya no-longer-human opponent. The reader must also become open to the overwhelming threat to human freedom, moral values, and spirituality posed by the increas3. See p. 37 above on the way Lewis changed this text from the version rst published.
Narrative Nets
55
ingly strange and powerful diabolical forces pervading the England of That Hideous Strength. A reader who cannot nd excitement in the trilogy and enjoy the atmosphere and suspense of the stories is not likely to nish them. Suspense and excitement is unquestionably one level of appeal in the Chronicles of Narnia. Each story involves danger to the children, or to Narnia, or both, and uncertainty and anxiety over whether, and how, disaster will be averted. Will Peter, Susan, Lucy, and the Beavers be able to escape from the White Witch as she pursues them, and will the Pevensie children and the good creatures be able to defeat the Witch and the evil creatures in battle? Will the four children reach Prince Caspian in time, and can Peter win in hand-tohand combat against the older, more experienced King Miraz? Can Caspian, Edmund, Lucy, and Eustace escape from the slave traders? Can the ship survive the storm and escape from the Dark Island? Can Lucy cope with the Magicians house and the Magicians Book? Can Jill and Eustace escape from the House of Harfang, and can they, Puddleglum, and Rilian overcome the enchantments of the Green Witch? Can Aravis, Hwin, Shasta, and Bree reach Archenland in time to save it from the treacherous attack by Rabadashs army? Suspense and excitement hold strong appeal in story, especially in ones rst reading of a tale. For Lewis, however, suspense and excitement are not the main appeal. He believes this is true for most people who love reading romances and fairy tales, especially for those who like to reread them. On a second or third reading, the suspense is gonerereaders know what is going to happen; yet they still derive great pleasure from the account. It is the quality of unexpectedness, not the fact that delights us. It is even better the second time. Knowing that the surprise is coming we can now fully relish [it]. So it is with children: Children understand this well when they ask for the same story over and over again, and in the same words (OnS, 103). And so it is with the Chronicles of Narnia. Children enjoy hearing again and again the suspenseful episodes of Aslans death and rebirth in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and the attack of the sea serpent in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and the escape from Tashbaan in The Horse and His Boy. Freed from the shock of actual surprise, they can attend better to the intrinsic surprisingness of the outcomes.
56
Suspensefulness, as opposed to simple suspense, is achieved when the story conveys the appropriate feeling of uncertainty or danger. Lewis gets at the difference by contrasting the original lm version of King Solomons Mines with the romance by Rider Haggard on which it is based. In the book, the heroes are entombed in a rock chamber and surrounded by the mummied kings of the land, awaiting death by starvation. The lm substitutes a subterranean volcanic eruption and an earthquake. The latter has more action and perhaps sheer excitement, but it ruins the story for Lewis. What I lose is the whole sense of the deathly (quite a different thing from simple danger of death)the cold, the silence, and the surrounding faces of the ancient, the crowned and sceptred, dead. . . . The one lays a hushing spell on the imagination; the other excites a rapid utter of the nerves (OnS, 92).4 Such a sense of a particular suspense and danger characterizes some of the most memorable scenes of the Chronicles of Narnia and helps to account for their appeal, for children and adults. The visit of the Dawn Treader to the Dark Island is perhaps the best example. The danger and the fear the voyagers experience there is qualitatively different from the danger and fear of the storm, or of Lucys venturing into the Magicians House. The Dark Island conveys not just physical danger (fear of being smashed and drowned, or caught and punished), but fear of darkness itselfinner darkness as well as external darkness, the darkness of the subconscious even more than the darkness of night or death:
How long this voyage into the darkness lasted, nobody knew. Except for the creak of the rowlocks and the splash of the oars there was nothing to show that they were moving at all. Edmund, peering from the bows, could see nothing except the reection of the lantern in the water before him. It looked a greasy sort of reection, and the ripple made by their advancing prow appeared to be heavy, small and lifeless. As time went on everyone except the rowers began to shiver with cold. Suddenly, from somewhereno ones sense of direction was very clear by nowthere came a cry, either of some inhuman voice or else a voice of one in such extremity of terror that he had almost lost his humanity. (VDT, 152)
4. In 1943 Lewis wrote to Arthur Greeves, Each of those fairy tale dangers has a different avour, hasnt it? I mean a dragon is quite a different feeling from a giant, and a witch from either (TST, 499).
Narrative Nets
57
Here is not just suspense and surprise that lose their impact after a rst reading, but a sense of darkness (quite a different thing, to paraphrase Lewis, from simple fear of the dark). It lays a spell on the imagination that is re-experienced upon each rereading. For Lewis, then, a central appeal in story is the evocation of a feel or sense that enables one to experience danger and uncertainty. Similarly, when Polly and Digory wander into the Hall of Images in The Magicians Nephew the episode creates a sense of the deathly, as Lewis puts it in the passage from On Stories quoted above, the cold, the silence, and the surrounding faces of the ancient, the crowned and sceptred, dead. One reason for the imaginative appeal of the Chronicles of Narnia is Lewiss ability to inject such feel or sense of danger or the deathly into them. A distinctive feel or sense is important beyond the suspense level, however. Lewis, in On Stories, talks at length about a quality he calls atmosphere, a more inclusive feel or sense that gave him much of the pleasure he found in story. Its importance comes out as he explains what he did not enjoy about The Three Musketeers: The total lack of atmosphere repels me. There is no country in the booksave as a storehouse of inns and ambushes. There is no weather. When they cross to London there is no feeling that London differs from Paris (OnS, 93; see also TST, 451). He deals with the same quality when he discusses science ction: one variety of it (the kind Lewis liked best) concentrates on atmosphere, on describing the feel of a place, on showing what it might be like to live in a place or condition no human being has ever experienced.5 Those are the best parts of Lewiss own science ction books Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength is less attractive in part because it lacks them. The most imaginative parts of Out of the Silent Planet depict the atmosphere of what Ransom learns to call the heavens and the feel of what it might be like to travel through them (OSP, chap. 5) and describe Ransoms everyday life on Malacandra: The wonder of [being on it] smote him most strongly when he found himself, about three weeks after his arrival, actually going for a walk. A few weeks later he had his favourite walks, and his favourite foods (OSP, chap. 11). Lewis was so successful in creating the vividly imaginative world of Perelandra, with its golden dome,
5. Lewis, On Science Fiction, 6773.
58
oating islands, and distinctive colors and smells, that he fell in love with it himself.6 In the Narnian Chronicles, too, the appeal of atmosphere probably exceeds the appeal of suspense. For Narnia to have atmosphere there must be a feeling, when the children cross over to it, that Narnia differs from England. When Lucy enters Narnia for the rst time, the countryside looks like England (or perhaps the Carlingford Mountains of southern Ireland),7 and she sees a familiar-looking London lamppost. But this is not London or England, as becomes clear by the rst inhabitant she meets:
She heard a pitter patter of feet coming towards her. And soon after that a very strange person stepped out from among the trees into the light of the lamp-post. He was only a little taller than Lucy herself. . . . From the waist upwards he was like a man, but his legs were shaped like a goats (the hair on them was glossy black) and instead of feet he had goats hoofs. He also had a tail, but Lucy did not notice this at rst. . . . He had a strange, but pleasant little face with a short pointed beard and curly hair, and out of the hair there stuck two horns, one on each side of his forehead. . . . He was a Faun. (LWW, 6)
He invites Lucy to his home for a thoroughly English tea, in an English-style drawing room (though in a cave), captured beautifully by Pauline Bayness illustrations. But the questions he asks (Excuse me . . . but should I be right in thinking that you are a Daughter of Eve? You are in fact Human?LWW, 8), the books on his shelves (Men, Monks and Gamekeepers: A Study in Popular Legend and Is Man a Myth?LWW, 11), and the stories he tells about the Nymphs who live in the wells and the Dryads who live in the trees, about the wild Red Dwarfs in deep mines and caverns, and about visits from old
6. Roger Lancelyn Green tells of walking with Lewis on a clear, starlit night, with Venus shining brightest of all: Perelandra! said Lewis with such a passionate longing in his voice that he seemed for a moment to be Ransom himself looking back with innite desire to an actual memory (Green and Walter Hooper, C. S. Lewis: A Biography, 171). 7. If you want to plunge into . . . the very quiddity of some Narnian countryside, you must go to what Lewis considered the loveliest spot he had ever seen. It is in the Carlingford Mountains of southern Ireland (Walter Hooper, quoted in Douglas Gilbert and Clyde S. Kilby, C. S. Lewis: Images of His World, 143).
Narrative Nets
59
Silenus and even Bacchus himself, signal that Lucy has not found a previously undiscovered part of our world, but has moved entirely outside itto a world in which our myths exist as realities and our realities become their myths.8 The distinctive atmosphere of Narnia is shaped by the blending of familiar things with unfamiliar, and by the placing of familiar things in an unfamiliar context. The technique is illustrated nicely as the four children together pass through the Wardrobe into Narnia for the rst time: Behind them were coats hanging on pegs, in front of them were snow-covered trees (LWW, 44). One should not nd trees in a wardrobe, or coats hanging in a forest, but there they are. The mixture of the familiar (European types of plants and animals, the customs and codes of Edwardian Englandand its foods and language, for example) with the unfamiliar (animals who think and talk, mythical characters who actually exist, the lack of other humans, reports of a powerful but absent Emperor) helps readers, especially young readers, adapt to and accept that world imaginatively and engage with its atmosphere. That atmosphere, once established, is elaborated for its own sake. The abundant detail describing the Beavers home and the supper the children help prepare, for example, has no role in furthering their adventure. It is there to help convey what ordinary existence in Narnia is likewhat it would be like to live there. That is one of the great appeals of the storiesthe sort of thing that could induce a child to smash through the back of his parents wardrobe and hack away at the wall behind it, in an effort to get into Narnia himself.9 The atmosphere of Narnia depends also on its depiction as a uniquely Lewisian pastoral paradise, blending the ordinary and the
8. See Peter J. Schakel, Reading with the Heart: The Way into Narnia, 5760. Similarly, Perelandra, chap. 4Were all the things which appeared as mythology on earth scattered through other worlds as realities?; also Perelandra, chaps. 8, 11, and 16. 9. See the story told by Walter Hooper in the preface to Kathryn Ann Lindskoog, The Lion of Judah in Never-Never Land: A few years ago I learned of a family here in Oxford who, one Sunday afternoon, nished reading their little boy The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. . . . While the parents were having tea downstairs, such a terrible racket began upstairs they thought the house was falling in. They rushed up to nd their son with a hatchet. He had smashed through the back of his parents wardrobe and was hacking away at the wall behind it (14).
60
impossible. Narnia is rural, a land of grassy slopes, heathery mountains, plashy glens, mossy caverns, and deep forests. It is unspoiled by the side effects of urbanization and industrialization: Lewiss ideal world has no cities, factories, pollution, or poverty. But it takes for granted the availability of many familiar, useful things which require labor, manufacture, and trade. Mrs. Beaver owns a sewing machine: where is the factory where it was made? Where were the raw materials obtained? Where did she purchase it? Purchase it with what? One could ask the same questions regarding the gum boots and oilskins and hatchets and pairs of shears and spades and trowels along the walls of the Beavers home (LWW, 59). Mr. Beaver drinks beer with his supper: who brewed it? If he brewed it himself, who grew the hops from which it was brewed? The story presupposes factories, shops, farms, laborers, shopkeepers, and farmers: but they are invisible. It is as Lewis says of Kenneth Grahames The Wind in the Willows: Meals turn up; one does not even ask who cooked them (OnS, 99).10 It all helps shape the atmosphere and imaginative appeal of Narnia, a place of quiet natural beauty where simple wants are lled without the messiness and unpleasantness that usually accompany their fulllment. The atmosphere of Narnia, the feeling that it is different from our world, is further established by the handling of time. That is a key imaginative aspect of the adventure in the rst book: for Lucy to return from spending hours and hours in Narnia and nd that no time has elapsed in our world reinforces the strangeness and separation of that world from ours. It is even stranger for the Pevensie children when, after many years as Kings and Queens in Narnia, they return the same day and the same hour of the day on which they had all gone into the wardrobe to hide (LWW, 153). The passage of time also contributes to atmosphere in Prince Caspian as the children
10. Having meals turn up, the way they do for children, and other needs taken care of without explanation occurs more in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe than in the later Chronicles, Doris Myers believes, and this contributes toward creating in the rst book a tone of young childhood (personal correspondence). Poet Ruth Pitter, a friend of Lewiss, stumped Lewis when she catechized him on how the Beavers could have put on such a splendid lunch for the children in view of the long winter which made it impossible to grow the things they served (quoted in Walter Hooper, C. S. Lewis: A Companion and Guide, 72122; a briefer version of the catechizing appears in Pitter, Poet to Poet, in Stephen Schoeld, ed., In Search of C. S. Lewis, 113).
Narrative Nets
61
are taken to an island that seems strange but familiar and discover they are in the castle of Cair Paravel a thousand years after they left it a year before. Their sense of discovery and nostalgia epitomizes a key imaginative appeal of the stories for readers: what happens is strange and new, but familiar and comfortable. It reminds adult readers of childhood experiences, of an era when life was less complicated and uncertain than it is now; and it reminds young readers of the previous book and creates a sense of how they already look back with longing to events and places they experienced before. At the center of the atmosphere of Narnia is the blending of childhood and adult experiences, established by the use of talking animals and of children. The effect again is similar to that of The Wind in the Willows: The life of all the characters is that of children for whom everything is provided and who take everything for granted. But in other ways it is the life of adults. They go where they like and do what they please, they arrange their own lives (OnS, 100). Lewiss animal characters, like Grahames, are supposed to be adults but seem in many respects like children. Humanized animals, even old ones, invariably do not seem to be as old as human equivalents would beperhaps because the life spans of animals in our world are so much shorter than those of humans: an old dog may have lived about as many years as some of the children in a family. Although Mr. and Mrs. Beaver in some respects have the feel of grandparents, they convey also the aura of children, of children fortunate enough to have potatoes and tea and hams and marmalade in the larder, without wondering how they get there. Human adults (except for Professor Kirke, Frank and Helen, King Lune, and the later kings of Narnia), when they appear, are usually the enemy. Children and animals achieve victories over evil or misguided adults, notably without the help of parents: parents are absent, doing war work or visiting America, or they are invisible referred to but not appearing in the action. In Narnia children and animals are independent and self-sufcient, adult-like without having passed into the distant and undesirable state of adulthood. Becoming absorbed in the atmosphere of the Narnian worldwith its fascinating mixture of England and other land, paradise and imperfection, animal and human, adult and childlikebeing enabled to live imaginatively in that world for as long as the book lasts, is one of the powerful appeals of Lewiss stories.
62
The Chronicles appeal to readers also because they satisfy an imaginative impulse as old as the human race, the urge to visit strange regions in search of such beauty, awe, or terror as the actual world does not supply.11 The appeal is that of the mythopoeic, the making of stories involving the marvelous or supernatural. Myths are imaginative storiesthat is, they are nonrational, nonintellectual (not irrational or anti-intellectual); they are explorations of matters beyond and above everyday life, concerning origins, endings, aspirations, purpose, and meaning. They open huge vistas, plumb depths of the emotions and the spirit, in ways realistic ction cannot; but they are couched in simple stories children can enjoy and respond to. The sheer imaginativeness of myth, like that of poetry, adds to life, creates sensations we never had before, and enlarges our conception of possible experience. Myths deal with basic issues of existence, the kind children constantly ask questions about. Children ask: Where did I come from? Why does the wind blow? How do airplanes y? Parents often respond with details about sperm and eggs, high and low pressure systems, velocity, vacuum, and liftand by purchasing encyclopedias; and children can appreciate and respond to the wonder and beauty of nature and scientic understanding of it. But such responses may, at times, be missing the point, giving cause and effect information where imaginative understanding is sought. We think children are seeking answers science can give, when what they really crave is a perspective only story can supply. Here, perhaps, is the most important reason the Chronicles of Narnia appeal to children: the mythopoeic dimension. In the Chronicles, as myths, children nd not answers to the questions they ask, but responses to the questions they did not know how to ask. And for adults Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra function similarly, arousing and satisfying an appetite for the mythopoeic. To read the Chronicles of Narnia is to be carried by myth to a new range of experience and to have ones outlook dramatically enlarged. It is to watch a world coming into existence:
The eastern sky changed from white to pink and from pink to gold. The Voice rose and rose, till all the air was shaking with it. And just
11. Lewis, On Science Fiction, 68.
Narrative Nets
as it swelled to the mightiest and most glorious sound it had yet produced, the sun arose. Digory had never seen such a sun. . . . You could imagine that it laughed for joy as it came up. . . . The earth was of many colours: they were fresh, hot and vivid. They made you feel excited; until you saw the Singer himself, and then you forgot everything else. It was a Lion. Huge, shaggy, and bright it stood facing the risen sun. . . . . . . As [the Lion] walked and sang the valley grew green with grass. It spread out from the Lion like a pool. It ran up the sides of the little hills like a wave. In a few minutes it was creeping up the lower slopes of the distant mountains. . . . . . . A little way off, along the river bank, willows were growing. On the other side tangles of owering currant, lilac, wild rose, and rhododendron closed them in. . . . . . . With an unspeakable thrill, [Polly] felt quite certain that all the things were coming (as she said) out of the Lions head. When you listened to his song you heard the things he was making up: when you looked round you, you saw them. (MN, 90, 92, 9495)
63
Children frequently ask How did the world begin? as if they desire a scientic account, because they do not know how to ask the deeper question, What is behind it all? Lewis, like the ancient writers, recognizes that the deepest questions are dealt with through story. Lewiss story supplies the broader perspective childrenand adultsactually are seeking. It invites readers to look at the world not as a thing composed of analyzable substances and organisms, but as a being, to which we are intimately, inextricably related. Myth shows that science does not have all the questions, let alone all the answers, and not the most important ones. In The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, Eustace raises the kind of issue modern western culture focuses on, but he is given a reply that thrusts him into a larger, higher mode of conception. He is talking to an ordinary-looking person who turns out to be a star, at rest or on a rest-and-recuperation leave. Eustace expresses surprise at a star who looks like this:
In our world, said Eustace, a star is a huge ball of aming gas. Even in your world, my son, that is not what a star is but only what it is made of. (VDT, 175)
The creation story in The Magicians Nephew is not concerned with what the world is made of, or the physical processes by which it came into being, but with what kind of thing that world is and what
64
(or Who) is behind it. It does not give answers but an image of what reality may well be like at some more central region (OnS, 101). To read the Chronicles is also to watch a world coming to an end:
Soon Tirian found that he was looking at a world of bare rock and earth. You could hardly believe that anything had ever lived there. . . . . . . The sea was rising. . . . You could see all the rivers getting wider and the lakes getting larger, and separate lakes joining into one, and valleys turning into new lakes, and hills turning into islands, and then those islands vanishing. . . . . . . At last the sun came up. . . . It was three timestwenty times as big as it ought to be, and very dark red. . . . Then the Moon came up, quite in her wrong position, very close to the sun, and she also looked red. And at the sight of her the sun began shooting out great ames, like whiskers or snakes of crimson re, towards her. . . . And the two ran together and became one huge ball like a burning coal. Great lumps of re came dropping out of it into the sea and clouds of steam rose up. . . . The giant . . . stretched out one arm . . . took the Sun and squeezed it in his hand as you would squeeze an orange. And instantly there was total blackness. (LB, 14749)
The Last Battle does not (like the best-selling Left Behind and its sequels) offer a realistic account of how events of the end times will take place.12 Its emphasis is on the broader and deeper issue: that worlds do end. The use of myth and imaginative detail (imaginatio) force cultural and physical existence into a wider perspective that exposes their temporality and fragility. Lewis moves next to the further question, which also is best explored through story: is there anything beyond the worlds end? The Last Battle goes on to offer a vision of a world beyond the end of the world:
So all of them passed in through the golden gates, into the delicious smell that blew towards them out of that garden and into the cool
12. This series of novels by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins describes the premillennialist Christian interpretation of the end times (the Rapture, in which all Christians are snatched up to heaven, and the Tribulation, seven years in which an Anti-Christ is allowed to disseminate evil throughout the world, before Christ returns to defeat the Anti-Christ and establish the Millennium a thousand-year reign of peace on earth). The series began with Left Behind (Wheaton, Ill.: Tyndale House, 1995) and has been followed by (at last count) eight sequels.
Narrative Nets
mixture of sunlight and shadow under the trees, walking on springy turf that was all dotted with white owers. The very rst thing which struck everyone was that the place was far larger than it had seemed from outside. . . . It was not really a garden at all but a whole world, with its own rivers and woods and sea and mountains. (LB, 16970)
65
Lewiss myth asserts that there is an existence beyond the physical world many of us hold on to and that such further existence is more signicant and meaningful than the present one. Jewel the Unicorn conveys that for Lewis when he cries, I have come home at last! This is my real country! I belong here. This is the land I have been looking for all my life, though I never knew it till now (LB, 162). The New Narnia, as the children go further up and further into it, should not spur speculation about what Heaven will be like this, like The Great Divorce, is a fantasy. . . . The transmortal conditions are solely an imaginative supposal: they are not even a guess or a speculation at what may actually await us (GD, 9; preface). In theology as in science, myth supplies not answers but experience of a larger existence than we can know cognitively. Such an experience touches depths the intellect cannot reach and conveys, to children and adults alike, the sense that this is not just true, but Truth. To read the Chronicles is, nally, to encounter Someone immensely greater and higher than ordinary mortals. Myth regularly deals with heroes and supernatural beings: that, Lewis believes, is part of its powerful attraction to human beings, whose natures need to have others above them to look up to and who crave having gures that inspire them. There is no spiritual sustenance in at equality, Lewis asserts. Under the necessary outer covering of legal equality, the whole hierarchical dance and harmony of our deep and joyously accepted spiritual inequalities should be alive.13 Lewiss inclusion of kings and queens in Narnia was deliberate and purposeful:
A mans reaction to Monarchy is a kind of test. Monarchy can easily be debunked; but watch the faces, mark well the accents, of the debunkers. These are the men whose tap-root in Eden has been cut: whom no rumour of the polyphony, the dance, can reachmen to whom pebbles laid in a row are more beautiful than an arch. Yet
13. Lewis, Equality, 18, 19.
66
To Lewis a hierarchical order is not conning and restrictive: to know ones place and to be aware of what stretches above is freeing and uplifting, drawing ones attitudes and goals upward, not letting them slide horizontally into mediocrity and sameness. More important even than human kings and queens is Aslan, who, as the Narnian embodiment of Christ and the manifestation of God, shows the greatness and grandeur of the divine. An emphasis on the majesty and exaltedness of God was basic to all of Lewiss Christian writings. It was in part a response to a need: I have stressed the transcendence of God more than His immanence. I thought, and think, that the present situation demands this.15 Lewis saw a tendency, echoing the pervasive search for equality, to bring God to our level, to treat God with familiarity, as a Big Daddy in the Sky. Lewis attempted in his expository writings and his stories to convey the sense of awe and mystery he thought was essential to a proper sense of self and relation to the Other. That Aslan is a lion, therefore, is no coincidence. Lewis claimed that the assignment of animal gures in such books as The Wind in the Willows is never accidental: Does anyone believe that Kenneth Grahame made an arbitrary choice when he gave his principal character the form of a toad, or that a stag, a pigeon, a lion would have done as well? (OnS, 99). So it is with Lewiss principal character: the situation required a lion. Aslan a man! said Mr. Beaver sternly. Certainly not. I tell you he is the King of the wood and the son of the great Emperor-Beyond-the-Sea. Dont you know who is the King of Beasts? Aslan is a lionthe Lion, the great Lion (LWW, 64). There would be biblical support for depicting Aslan as a lamband he does appear briey in that form in the last chapter of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. To make that his principal form, however, would limit him to qualities of meekness and vulnerability, while myth and Lewiss theology required the awesome. Lewis, in fact, wants both.
14. Ibid., 20. 15. Lewis, Rejoinder to Dr. Pittenger, 181.
Narrative Nets
67
Aslan, paradoxically, is meek and vulnerable as well as fearsome and not . . . a tame lion (LB, 15; see also LWW, 149), paradoxical because these oppositions do not t the popular image of the divine. The doctrine of kenosis reveals an all-powerful God who is also a self-emptying and suffering God: power is held in check by volition. Resolving that paradox, accepting the mystery of those seeming opposites, can be accomplished only through the imagination, which can accept the counterrational and appreciate its immensity and beauty. Although young readers do not understand all of these implications, part of the imaginative appeal of the Chronicles is Aslan in his rich complexity of forms and moodsfrom playful, kitten-like romps to erce, angry attacks on evil. As Lucy says, when Aslan tells her in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader that she will never come back to Narnia: It isnt Narnia, you know. . . . Its you (VDT, 209). In Miracles and Mere Christianity Lewis offers arguments to prove the existence of God. In Narnia there is no argument: through story and imagination the reader experiences God in a way that renders proof unnecessary.16 Lewis quoted his friend and former pupil Roger Lancelyn Green as once saying that the reading of Rider Haggard romances was to many people a sort of religious experience (OnS, 101). Lewis agreed, but qualied the statement: It would have been safer to say that such people had rst met in Haggards romances elements which they would meet again in religious experience if they ever came to have any (OnS, 102). That is, myth and the kind of religious experience Lewis has in mind create a powerful imaginative and emotional appealthe kind Lewis experienced through Joy, as described above in chapter 1a sense of wonder and longing that can be satised only by something beyond the realm of this world. When allowed to work as story, the Chronicles can have just the effect Lewis granted to Haggards stories: readers do encounter imaginatively and emotionally elements they have met, or may later meet, in religious experience. Some readers, when they encounter such elements, try to conne them to the Christian rather than the reli16. Compare this sentence from The Personal Heresy: A Controversy: We abstract to inquire whether God exists: Dante shows you what it would be like if He did (110).
68
gious. They seek biblical equivalents to every character and detail.17 To do so, however, violates the stories as examples of Story: that is, as ction intended to appeal to and work on readers imaginations. To concentrate on symbolic meanings and parallels to things outside the story overintellectualizes the story instead of responding to it with the imagination; it can work only by suppressing details and distinctions that are an integral part of the story.18 It also limits and lowers Lewiss mythic achievement. To have captured through myths about beginnings, endings, other worlds, and divine beingsimpulses that lie behind all religion is more valuable than to have created biblical parallels. For children and adults who, unlike the predragonized Eustace, are open to fairy tale, romance, and myth, and are willing to engage with them imaginatively, the Chronicles of Narnia appeal in various ways, at various levels: the suspense and suspensefulness in the narratives, the atmosphere of the Narnian world, and the mythic dimensions of the stories. They appeal also because children realize that, fantasy and other-worldly though they may be, they are fundamentally like life. Lewis concludes On Stories by suggesting that the tension in every story between the vertical movement of the narrative and the horizontal stasis of such qualities as atmosphere and mythopoeic resonance constitutes its chief resemblance to life: In real life, as in a story, something must happen. That is just the trouble. We grasp at a state and nd only a succession of events in which the state is never quite embodied (OnS, 105). Childrenlike adultstry to make friendship, happiness, or success permanent, something they can hold on to. But such states prove ephemeral and elude ones grasp: they are experienced only momentarily, then slip into memory. So it is with Narnia: we want the story to last, the joy of being in Narnia to be permanent; but the
17. For example: Peter deserves the role of the Apostle Paul. . . . Lucy is much like John, the disciple whom Jesus loved. . . . For a long time, [Edmund] seems to be Judas. . . . But he does come round in the end, rather in the fashion of the Apostle Peter (Paul A. Karkainen, Narnia Explored, 1516). Not only does Karkainens approach oversimplify the books and reduce their imaginative power, but the parallels he established are unconvincing: the closer parallels would be the high king Peter to the Apostle Peter and Eustace, with his radical conversion and being a latecomer to the inner circle, to the Apostle Paul. 18. See a ne article by Charles Huttar, The Heresy of Allegorizing Narnia: A Rejoinder. Also, Schakel, Reading with the Heart, 35.
Narrative Nets
69
book ends and we must, like the children in the books, return to our own world. The elusive bird we tried to catch in our net of passing moments escapedas it always will in life. But as we read the Chronicles the bird was at least entangled in the net for several chapters. We saw it close and enjoyed the plumage (OnS, 105). And until one passes to another world where such states are permanent, that is much, and must be enough.
70
71
twelfth-century Platonists, who writes Dr. Ransom asking for help with a scholarly crux. Lewis is invited to spend a weekend with Ransom, listens to his story, and joins forces with Ransom, to the extent of writing up the adventure in the form of ction. To counter Lewiss fear that the ctionalized account would not be accepted as true, Ransom replies that there would be indications enough in the narrative for readers to believe in its reality. And, ironically again, Ransom was right: Lewis received letters from readers inquiring if this was a true story.2 There are, in fact, multiple ironies here. Lewiss decision to start as a ction writer with a conventional third-person approach may have been a result of his limitations as a ction writer. But it was also in part a matter of control, a reection of his need for objectivity, which we have seen in his literary criticism and theology as well. A reliable third-person narrator provides a voice of authority in the story, an objective reality one can trust. Despite Lewiss interest in readers, he does not leave events solely to the interpretation of the reader. The decision to insert himself as narrator takes the authoritativeness of the narrative voice a step further. In the opening two chapters of Perelandra, the character Lewis is not just narrator, but has a major part in the action. Summoned by Ransom, Lewis provides a rst-person account of his journey to Ransoms cottage, an inside view of the terrors and obstacles he encounteredplaced in his way, he learns later, by the Dark Lord, the Oyarsa of Earth, to prevent his arrival. After helping Ransom into the cofn that carries him to Venus, Lewis returns to Oxford. About a year later he is directed to go to Ransoms cottage with a physician, Humphrey (modeled on Lewiss real-life friend and physician, Robert E. Havard); they are to provide assistance to Ransom when he arrives home. After helping Ransom settle in, Lewis assumes the role of traditional narrator: To that landing
bitter, please would have been the perfect ending to the story. Jared C. Lobdell, without justifying the ending, accounts for it as inuenced by the tradition of the eighteenth-century novel: The Ransom Stories and Their Eighteenth-Century Ancestry, 219. 2. Thanks for your letter. The day before I got a letter from someone else asking me if the Silent Planet was a true story. Its not the rst Ive had. So Im beginning to think that some people . . . just dont understand what ction is (Letters, February 2, 1955; similarly, August 16, 1960).
72
[on Venus], as Ransom narrated it to me, I will now proceed (Per, chap. 3). For the rest of that chapter, the narrator remains obtrusive: I take it he was now in the outer layer of the Perelandrian atmosphere; he even addresses readers directly: You must not lose sight of the fact that his whole life on Venus up till now had lasted less than ve minutes. Although the remainder of the book is given as straight third-person narration from Ransoms perspective, we are aware throughoutbecause of the way it is set up and the occasional rst-person sentences as remindersthat the voice of the narrator is Lewiss voice (in Out of the Silent Planet we are aware of that voice only upon rereading). The handling of the opening chapters establishes that voice and thus adds to the credibility of the narrator: because Lewis, as author and character, seems trustworthy, the story has reliability. Lewis again appears as storyteller in That Hideous Strength, but only in two passages. In chapter 1, section 2, the narrator says, Though I am Oxford bred and very fond of Cambridge, I think that Edgestow is more beautiful than either. And chapter 1, section 3 is a three-page narrative in which the storyteller recalls his only visit to Bracton College, describing what he saw and thought about as he walked through the college and went out to see Merlins Well. The rest of the story is told from a conventional third-person omniscient point of view, with the perspective alternating between Mark and Jane (though in one passage the perspective is that of a bear, Mr. Bultitude16.2). Those two passages are sufcient, especially for someone who has read Perelandra, to establish the approach as a narrated story and to gain authoritativeness through the objective presence of the author as both narrator of the story and participant in it. The narrative approach in the Ransom trilogy is unusual, but straightforward. There is little subtlety or sophistication. The approach in the Chronicles of Narnia seems much the same initiallya rst-person narrator who resembles the author and who is present in some sense as a character in the stories. However, a closer look reveals that the approach is handled with much more skill and subtlety than in the adult books. It serves not just as a means of adding objectivity to the stories, but as a way to infuse the stories with a distinctive and appealing voice. The aggressive and unpleasantly
73
avuncular manner Lewis often showed as a conversationalist3 is replaced by that of a genial, likeable storyteller. Lewiss ability to achieve and convey an attractive narrative approach and an appealing voice in the Chronicles of Narnia is one key to their success. The methods by which he did so are worth careful examination. From the opening lines of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Once there were . . . and This story is about . . . , the reader knows he or she is reading a narrative. It is not clear yet whether the events being described are an invented story or an account of things that actually happened. But it is clear that this is not real life unfolding without an interpretive intermediary, the impression nineteenth-century novelist Henry James sought to create in his realistic novels. Here events are being revealed by a speaker who refers to himself in the rst person: One of his hands, as I have said, held the umbrella (LWW, 6). Thus the unfolding of the story is under the control of someone who is relating the events, who follows one strand, then returns to another: And now of course you want to know what had happened to Edmund (71); Now we must go back to Mr. and Mrs. Beaver and the three other children (81). The narrator may not be able to control events, but he can control the way the events are related. The events may at times be scary, but if the narrator seems trustworthy, the reader can have condence things will turn out satisfactorily.4 The Chronicles succeed as stories in part because of the way Lewis is able, like the great eighteenth-century novelist Henry Fielding, to
3. See, for example, Simon Barrington-Ward, C. S. Lewis Moves to Magdalene College, Cambridge, 2324. 4. Barbara Reynolds relates the following encounter: On [one] occasion, as I opened my front door, [Lewis] happened to be passing by. With me was my six-year-old daughter, to whom I had just then been reading The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. A tender-minded child, she was very anxious about Edmund and had asked me to go out for a walk as she was nding the story frightening. Lewis stopped to talk with me and I told him what we had been doing. He was most affable. He wore a shabby grey-green overcoat, a battered felt hat, and he carried a knobbly walking stick. His large face was ruddy and cheerful, like a countrymans. No-one would have taken him for an academic. When he moved on, courteously raising his hat, I said to my daughter, who had looked at him intently and in silence all through the brief encounter, There! that is the very man who wrote the book weve just been reading. She paused
74
convert that narrator into a storyteller, to make readers forget they are reading and feel instead they are listening. This effect is reinforced, of course, when children hear the stories before they read them and they listen to the narrator being re-created orally. The storyteller, in Fielding and in the Chronicles, comes to life as a character, perhaps the most important character in the story. And in the Chronicles, young readers, in addition to the imaginative experience of listening to the story, have the sense of interacting with, even at times of replying to, the storyteller. The narrator does not emerge as a character in the rst four chapters of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The narrative simply describes events, often through dialoguechapter 2 is almost entirely dialogue, with little intervention by the narrator. One doesnt even have a clear sense, at this point, of the narrators age: it could be an older child retelling the story to a younger one. Events are related objectively, without much comment or interpretation. Even the interjections about not closing closet doors (leaving the door open, of course, because she knew that it is very foolish to shut oneself into any wardrobeLWW, 5) are presented simply as statements of common knowledge, not condescending advice or warnings. Despite the presence of a rst-person narrator, the narrative approach is generally third person, as in Perelandra and That Hideous Strength earlier, with the perspective usually limited to the viewpoint of one character. A young reader becomes involved imaginatively through identication with the young characters, the intriguing events, and the narrative techniques discussed above in chapter 4. The reader is listening to a story told by a skillful but impersonal narrator; no clear personality emerges from behind the narrative voice. It is, after all, essential to establish the characters, setting, and events rmly; a storyteller wont be listened to unless he has a good story to tell, one that can stand on its own. For the most part, the Chronicles are related from the perspective of one of the girls, an intriguing choice for an author generally more comfortable around men than women. The perspective is Lucys for
and then said thoughtfully, Well, he looks as though hed make it come out all right. (Memories of C. S. Lewis in Cambridge, 38081) Lewiss storyteller clearly projects the character and values of the author.
75
most of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as well as Prince Caspian and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and Jills in much of The Silver Chair and The Last Battle. That choice may reect Lewiss relation to Lucy Bareld, to whom he dedicated The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and whom he may have visualized as his initial reader while writing the rst book. Edmunds perspective is used when he is separated from the other children in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, as in parts of chapters 3, 4, and 13 and all of chapters 9 and 11; Eustaces perspective is used in much of chapters 57 of the Dawn Treader, as we read his diary, follow his adventures as a dragon, and hear about how he was undragoned. Lewis does not attempt to hold rigidlyor puristicallyto a single perspective: a clause is given from Mrs. Beavers perspective (LWW, 113) and even a paragraph from Governor Gumpass (VDT, 47). A fascinating passage in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader uses Eustaces perspective from inside the dragonskin, as he slowly gures out he is not with a dragon but he is a dragon (VDT, 7375). And a particularly interesting use of perspective occurs in chapter 15 of The Silver Chair, as Jill emerges from the underworld and the perspective switches from the others below, to Jill above, and back to the others below (SC, 18384, 18588, 189). The storyteller, who has referred to himself only once in passing in the rst four chapters, steps forward in chapter 5 and alters his own role, beginning to evince a personality: And now we come to one of the nastiest things in this story (LWW, 35). The use of we gives substance and identity to the storyteller. The narrative is no longer impersonal and objective: a person is telling this story and commenting on the events. The statement, with its evaluative comment, is the kind an adult is more likely to make than a young person. The we, at the same time, draws the reader into the tale at a new level: we come to this together, the grown-up storyteller and the younger listener. That moment of intimacy is reinforced a paragraph later: Edmund gave a very superior look as if he were far older than Lucy (there was really only a years difference) (LWW, 36). The storyteller interjects an observation that on the one hand quietly reinforces his authority as narrator (he is privy to more information than what could just be observed), and on the other establishes a bond with the young reader, by uttering exactly the kind of put-down statement the reader would have said and hopes will
76
be said. What Lewis says of an author is true also of his storyteller: he is not a parent, or even an uncleHe is a freeman and an equal, like the postman, the butcher, and the dog next door.5 The personality of the storyteller develops further as he repeatedly indicates that he lacks certainty about a detail. In fact I really think [Edmund] might have given up the whole plan . . .; How long this really lasted I dont know; I think the same idea had occurred to the leopards themselves; It was then that someone (Tumnus, I think) rst said . . .; and How Aslan provided food for them all I dont know (LWW, 73, 76, 113, 140, 147). This is not an omniscient narrator. The storyteller seems, rather, to have obtained his information from the characters who were there (thus the narrative approach must be limited to their perspectives). One passage indicates this directly: Father Christmas brought out (I suppose from the big bag at his back, but nobody quite saw him do it) a large tray (LWW, 88). He cannot speak authoritatively, here, because he can tell the reader only what one of the Pevensie children observed or heard. The ashback in which Trumpkin the Dwarf lls in the background to the main events in Prince Caspian illustrates the narrative approach of the Chronicles as a whole: So the Dwarf settled down and told his tale. I shall not give it to you in his words, putting in all the childrens questions and interruptions, because it would take too long and be confusing, and, even so, it would leave out some points that the children only heard later. But the gist of the story, as they knew it in the end, was as follows (PC, 32). The storyteller tells what he heard from the Pevensie children, who tell him what they heard from the Dwarf, who tells them what he heard from Caspian and other sources and learned through his own experience. Likewise, The Magicians Nephew mentions what Digory said afterwards when he was telling the story to the others (MN, 142). In the Chronicles as a whole, similarly, the storyteller does not relate the stories in the childrens own words, with all his questions and
5. Lewis, On Three Ways of Writing for Children, 34. Lewis introduces this statement with a story that illustrates well his sense of the relation between the storyteller and the young reader: Once in a hotel dining-room I said, rather too loudly, I loathe prunes. So do I, came an unexpected six-year-old voice from another table. Sympathy was instantaneous. Neither of us thought it funny. We both knew that prunes are far too nasty to be funny.
77
interruptions, but transforms them into shorter, less confusing tales with better focus and organization.6 Having stepped into the story, the storyteller continues to interject himself into the narrative, as a distinct personality with strong tastes and opinions. All the children thoughtand I agree with them that theres nothing to beat good freshwater sh if you eat it when it has been alive half an hour ago and has come out of the pan half a minute ago (LWW, 60). That personality begins to address readers directly. The passage above could have been phrased if one eats it instead of if you eat it. The you is more casual and conversational, but also more personal, spoken directly to the reader, offering the reader an opportunity to participate with the Pevensie children imaginatively, perhaps especially in the rst book, with its feel of being addressed to younger children. You is used again and again to create the sense of the storyteller and the listener sharing in the action of the story: From where the little house stood in the centre of the dam you could hardly see either bank; Mr. Beaver was just vanishing into a little hole in the bank which had been almost hidden under the bushes until you were quite on top of it; It made one cough and splutter a little and stung the throat but it also made you feel deliciously warm after youd swallowed it; Soon, wherever you looked, instead of white shapes you saw the dark green of rs or the black prickly branches of bare oaks and beeches and elms (LWW, 67, 84, 8485, 97; similarly, 86, 96, 101, 107, 111, 115). In other places in this story and the subsequent ones you is not a synonym for one, but addresses readers directly, involving them at a deeper level as they read or listen to the story. The rst occurs just after Mr. Beaver whispers the name Aslan and each of the children feels something jump inside:
6. Not everyone has the storytelling gift: Eustace, for example, never having read the right books, had no idea how to tell a story straight (VDT, 82). Presumably he started at the beginning, tried to include every detail, and didnt know how to build to a climax or withhold information in order to keep a listeners attentionthe way Aravis does, in telling her own story, when she does not disclose the contents of a letter. As Bree tells Shasta, Shell tell us all about the letter in the right place (H&B, 32). In Calormen, the skill of telling stories (whether true or made-up) is taught to children and highly prized: see H&B, 28, 2935; LB, 15357. The telling of stories, especially ones own story, forms an important part of Narnian culture: see PC, 29, 31, 32, 56; VDT, 38, 91, 114, 116, 130, 135; SC, 17172, 174, 193; H&B, 35, 8283; LB, 47.
78
To appreciate the story fully, the reader is forced to respond actively to the storyteller and to participate imaginatively in what he says. This sort of involvement becomes a recurring feature of this book and the ones that follow it: You can think how good the newcaught sh smelled while they were frying and how the hungry children longed for them to be done; Have you ever had a gallop on a horse? Think of that; and then take away the heavy noise of the hoofs . . . and then imagine you are going about twice as fast as the fastest racehorse; I expect youve seen someone put a lighted match to a bit of newspaper which is propped up in a grate against an unlit re. And for a second nothing seems to have happened; and then you notice a tiny streak of ame creeping along the edge of the newspaper. It was like that now; And, oh, the cry of the sea gulls! Have you heard it? Can you remember? (LWW, 59, 134, 136 37, 148). Implied in such questions is a speaking voice more than a writer putting pen to paper. Such passages establish a sense of shared experience between the reader as listener and the storyteller. The storyteller is not just an abstract voice but a person, a person whom one is getting to know and, more importantly, to trust. That seems particularly true in the following passage: I hope no one who reads this book has been quite as miserable as Susan and Lucy were that night; but if you have beenif youve been up all night and cried till you have no more tears left in youyou will know that there comes in the end a sort of quietness (LWW, 128). These seem the words of someone who is speaking from experience. Readers who themselves have been that miserable will feel a bond with the speaker at a very deep, personal level. Even those who have not been will feel greater sympathy toward him. In either case, a deeper relationship has been established, a relationship of trust, openness, acceptance. It makes a
79
reader more ready to go along with the kinds of things the storyteller has said all along, such as, You mustnt think that even now Edmund was quite so bad that he actually wanted his brother and sisters to be turned into stone (LWW, 72). The Chronicles, thus, succeed in part because of the way Lewis develops the character of his storyteller and establishes a personal, trusting relation between him and his readers. Crucial to that voice is the prose style of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The style is conversational in tone and structure, which helps create the sense of listening rather than reading. The diction is basic, but not simple Lewis is not condescending to young readers. The sentences tend toward short clauses and phrases. When sentences are long, they are usually cumulative; clauses and phrases are added with and or but to clarify and amplify meaning, or are inserted with dashes or parentheses. Introductory subordinate clauses are rare. There is a tendency toward strings of prepositional phrases. The rhythms are those of ordinary speech, not tightly knit argument. This is Lewis sitting by the re swapping stories with his friends, not Lewis talking to win. Conversational rhythms and style are characteristic not just of the Chronicles but of all Lewiss prose except his most formal scholarly work. In a letter to a schoolgirl in America who asked for advice on writing, Lewis suggested, Always write (and read) with the ear, not the eye. You shd hear every sentence you write as if it was being read aloud or spoken. If it does not sound nice, try again (Letters, December 14, 1959). A large part of Lewiss distinctive voice as a writer results from his ability to follow the advice he gave here: in the Chronicles, the adult stories, the popular essays, even his great scholarly book English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama, one hears a voice close to that in the BBC radio broadcasts, which he made as like real talk as possible (MC, preface).7 The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe includes the frequent similes and analogies more typical of Lewiss conversational style than of
7. The scripts of Lewiss four series of radio talks during World War II were published as Broadcast Talks (1942), Christian Behaviour (1943), and Beyond Personality (1944); the preface to Mere Christianity (1952) explains stylistic changes made as Lewis collected and revised these three slim books for republication in a more written form, while trying not to lose the familiar, conversational tone of the original form.
80
his formal style. Similes are used repeatedly, as for example a funny little house shaped rather like an enormous bee-hive and a great white beard that fell like a foamy waterfall over his chest (LWW, 56, 86see also 24, 44, 56, 74, 87, 105, 106, 127, 133). The later Chronicles show a marked increase in the use of similes and analogies: a noise like a small earthquake, like a slender girl, like a thunderbolt, rather like the stroke of a woodpecker, treading delicately, like a cat, gleamed like a little moon, rather like Blind Mans Buff, shouting like crowds at a football match, pierced as if by a dozen skewers, growing as quickly as a re grows, like a beacon (taking selected illustrations just from Prince Caspian59, 96, 100, 110, 125, 129, 131, 158, 163, 166, 178). Some two dozen similes and analogies appear in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe; the number nearly doubles in Prince Caspian, nearly doubles yet again in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and increases still further in The Silver Chair.8 In the later books, the storytellers character and voice develop in other ways as well (another feature which is obscured when the books are not read in the order of publication). It becomes clearer that the storyteller obtained his knowledge of these adventures from the characters themselves. Thus he does not know details the characters didnt observe: Whether [the trees] were still dancing nobody knew, for Lucy had her eyes on the Lion and the rest had their eyes on Lucy (PC, 124; see also 169 and VDT, 82). The Voyage of the Dawn Treader makes it clear that the storyteller heard about the adventures from the Pevensie children and identied closely with them and their experiences: In describing the scene [Aslan passing by on Deathwater Island] Lucy said afterwards, He was the size of an elephant (VDT, 105). Also, Some people may disagree with Lucy about this, but I think she was quite right. She said she wouldnt have minded if she could have shut the door, but that it was unpleasant to have to stand in a place like that with an open doorway right behind your back. I should have felt just the same (VDT, 125). He tells us that he learned from Lucy about the song Ramandu and
8. There is a similar pattern in Mere Christianity. Similes are infrequent in Book 1, where the emphasis is on laying out a logical argument demonstrating the existence of moral law and a lawgiver behind the law. In Books 2, 3, and 4, where the nature of the Christian faith is being claried and illuminated, similes abound, as they do in most of Lewiss poetry and prose.
81
his daughter sangI wish I could write down the song, but no one who was present could remember it. Lucy said afterwards that it was high, almost shrill, but very beautifuland that he talked to all three children about the song from beyond the end of the world: Edmund and Eustace would never talk about it afterwards. Lucy could only say, It would break your heart. Why, said I, was it so sad? Sad! No, said Lucy (VDT, 17172, 206).9 Similarly, he seems to have obtained his information about Digorys adventures from Digory himself: When he tried to describe it afterwards Digory always said, Years afterwards when he was an old man, Digory said . . . , I think (and Digory thinks too) . . . (MN, 26, 43, 64).10 Several times in later books point of view is treated as an epistemological issue as the storyteller calls attention to the importance of the perspective from which a story is told. For example, It is no use trying to describe the battle from Shastas point of view; he understood too little of the ght in general and even of his own part in it. The best way I can tell you what really happened is to take you some miles away to where the Hermit of the Southern March sat gazing into the smooth pool beneath the spreading tree (H&B, 158). Similarly, We must now go back a bit and explain what the
9. The following parenthetical comment reveals a great deal about the storytellers method: By the way, I have never yet heard how these remote islands became attached to the crown of Narnia; if I ever do, and if the story is at all interesting, I may put it in some other book (VDT, 2930). See also VDT, 26 (I never heard), 82 (then someone saidpeople disputed afterwards whether Lucy or Edmund said it rst), 92 (and there, for all I know), 98 (Lucy always said), 187 (Long afterwards when she . . . talked all these adventures over with Edmund, they thought of a reason and I am pretty sure it is the true one), 205 (none of them remembers), 207 (no one can truly claim . . . but my belief is). 10. Only occasionally does the storyteller supply information that is not obtainable from a character or from visiting Narnia and that therefore implies an omniscient perspective. That occurs, for example, after members of the Narnian army rescue Edmund from the White Witch but are unable to nd the Witch or the dwarf who was with her. The storyteller cleverly uses you to disguise the shift in perspective: It was perfectly still and presently the moon grew bright, if you had been there you would have seen the moonlight shining on an old tree-stump and on a fair sized boulder. . . . And if you had watched long enough you would have seen the stump walk across to the boulder . . . for in reality the stump and the boulder were simply the Witch and the Dwarf (LWW, 111). Similarly, at night among the tombs in The Horse and His Boy Shasta thinks he hears a lion roar, though it was really the cry of a jackal. But of course Shasta did not know this (H&B, 72).
82
whole scene had looked like from Uncle Andrews point of view. It has not made at all the same impression on him as on the Cabby and the children. For what you see and hear depends a good deal on where you are standing: it also depends on what sort of person you are (MN, 11112).11 For Lewis, point of view is important to the imaginative experience of a story thematically as well as artistically. As he put it later in An Experiment in Criticism, Each of us by nature sees the whole world from one point of view with a perspective and a selectiveness peculiar to himself . . . [though] we want to see with other eyes, to imagine with other imaginations, to feel with other hearts, as well as with our own. That is what stories (and plays and poems) enable readers to do, to participate imaginatively in other lives and other worlds. Doing so enlarge[s] our being (EinC, 137) and enables us better to empathize with other persons. That is demonstrated in The Horse and His Boy when Shasta asks, after Aravis has nished telling her story, What happened to the girlthe one you drugged? Shasta can reach out of himself and identify with others; Aravis at this point does not even try: Doubtless she was beaten for sleeping late (H&B, 35). Later in the story, in what for me is one of the most problematic episodes in the Chronicles, Aslan chases her and scratches her shoulders, and subsequently explains, The scratches . . . tear for tear, throb for throb, blood for blood, were equal to the stripes laid on the back of your stepmothers slave. . . . You needed to know what it felt like (H&B, 121, 171). The books following The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe also develop further the personality of the storyteller. They make it explicit
11. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, without calling attention to the importance of the perspective, uses irony to lead the reader to recognize it. The storyteller reports Eustaces view of the aftermath of the storm by quoting at length from the diary Eustace began to keep in his little black notebook: What Eustace thought had best be told in his own words (VDT, 24). Hearing Eustaces whining, self-interested voice, particularly his defense of his attempt to take more than his share of the water, is more effective in revealing his character than a third-person account of it could have been (VDT, 5862). The diary breaks off with What awaited them on this island was going to concern Eustace more than anyone else, but it cannot be told in his words, because, as the reader nds out a few pages later, he has turned into a dragon and can no longer write (VDT, 62).
83
that the voice is that of someone older than his assumed readers: When I was at school one would have said, I swear by the Bible. But Bibles were not encouraged at Experiment House (SC, 5); and, You have never seen such clothes, but I can just remember them (MN, 67). Even so, he is someone who can relate to young readers and share their attitudes and valuesMost of us, I suppose, have a secret country (VDT, 3); as some of us have done at parties when we werent quite sure which knife or fork we were meant to use (H&B, 132); some grownups (you know how fussy they can be about that sort of thing) (MN, 135). The storyteller respects his readers highly, taking for granted that they know a great dealIf you had been there you would probably have known (he didnt) that he was seeing oaks, beeches, silver birches, rowans and sweet chestnuts (H&B, 117). The storyteller is someone who realizes that adults tend to talk down to children (King Miraz had been talking in the tiresome way that some grownups have, which makes it quite clear that they are not really interested in what they are sayingPC, 34) and who will avoid that mistake himself. In addition to the information the storyteller receives from the children who go to Narnia, he also has independent, rsthand familiarity that could come only from having been in Narnia himself. Thus, for example, he gives a detailed description of the Great Snow Dance, being more specic about it than would have been possible by relying on what Jill saw before being hit by a snowball and more intimately knowledgeable than she could have become by having it described to her. He ends by saying to the reader, I wish you could see it for yourselves, as (it would seem) he has at some point seen it for himself (SC, 187). He also could have found out only in Narnia what happened in the centuries after Polly and Digory returned home (MN, 165). Other examples of rsthand experience include: Indeed, though one meets bad Dwarfs, I never heard of a Dwarf who was a fool (PC, 30); I know nothing so disagreeable as being kissed by a giantess (SC, 98); To this day in Calormene schools, if you do anything unusually stupid, you are very likely to be called a second Rabadash (H&B, 188); This, by the way, was true. A Hunter, a Man, had killed and skinned this lion somewhere up in the Western Wild several months before. But that doesnt come into this
84
story (LB, 6); Narnian Dwarfs, though less than four feet high, are for their size about the toughest and strongest creatures there are (LB, 73). When or how did the storyteller visit Narnia? That is not revealed. The question can be approached from within the stories and from outside them. At the end of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the professor talks as if there have been other visits to Narnia (the plural pronouns suggest other persons in addition to those Lewis was to write about later in The Magicians Nephew): Yes, of course youll get back to Narnia again some day. . . . But dont go trying to use the same route twice. . . . And dont mention it to anyone else unless you nd that theyve had adventures of the same sort themselves. . . . How will you know? Oh, youll know all right. Odd things, they sayeven their lookswill let the secret out. Keep your eyes open (LWW, 153). From within the stories perhaps we can assume the storyteller was drawn into Narnia for reasons, or on missions, that are not recounted in these books. And the children would feel free to tell him about their adventures because they could see in him the signs of a fellow traveler. From outside the stories, the storyteller is Lewis, closely akin to the author C. S. Lewis, whose imaginary world Narnia is and who presumably visited it often without the Pevensie children.12 Later books continue the use of passages in which the narrator actively involves young readers by asking them questions, such as Have you ever bathed in a mountain river that is rushing in shallow cataracts over red and blue and yellow stones with the sun on it? It is as good as the sea: in some ways almost better, and addressing them directly: They even thought they had struck an old path; but if you
12. Could the storyteller be the Professor? We know from The Magicians Nephew that he did visit Narnia as Digory. He could have referred to himself in the third person in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, but it would seem uncharacteristic of him to say of himself, the Professor, who was a very remarkable man . . . (LWW, 153). His knowledge of Narnia extends beyond what he could have learned during his visit when Narnia was created, so we would need to assume that he made later visits. It would seem odd that these later visits of someone who is a character within the stories were not recorded or mentioned in other stories. The main argument against the Professor being the storyteller is that Lewiss practice in writing adult ction was to think in terms of a narrator-character named Lewis, which also ts very well the narrative approach in the Chronicles.
85
know anything about woods, you will know that one is always nding imaginary paths (MN, 138; PC, 99). The use of passages requiring readers to engage their imaginations increases noticeably: Have you ever stood at the edge of a great wood on a high ridge when a wild southwester broke over it in full fury on an autumn evening? Imagine that sound. And then imagine that the wood, instead of being xed to one place, was rushing at you. . . .; It is rather hard to describe, but you will see what it was like if you imagine yourself looking into the mouth of a railway tunnela tunnel either so long or so twisty that you cannot see the light at the far end; You know how sad your own dogs face can look sometimes. Think of that and then think of all the faces of those Talking Beasts . . . all far sadder than that . . . . It would have broken your heart with very pity to see their faces (PC, 164; VDT, 14748; LB, 3132).13 The increasing use of active reader participation in the later books supports Doris Myerss claim that the images and emotional effects of the series, when read in the order of publication, engage readers at an increasingly mature level.14 Humor also becomes a means of actively engaging readers. There is little humor in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,15 but in the stories that follow wit and humor become important parts of the style and of the storytellers character. The storytellers wit appears in some of his choices of comparisons: the nose and chin [of the hag] stuck out like a pair of nut-crackers; He [Giant Wimbleweather] checked himself at once and looked as grave as a turnip; The cheeks of the Telmarine soldiers became the colour of cold gravy; His cheek bulged out as if he were sucking a big bit of toffee (PC, 143, 155, 172; LB, 7). It emerges also in his ability to turn a phrase
13. For additional examples of passages requiring reader participation, see PC, 86, 90, 97, 108, 114, 128, 164, 172; VDT, 6, 131, 157, 185, 186; SC, 8, 11; MN, 75, 105; LB, 38, 93, 94, 110, 161. 14. Doris T. Myers, C. S. Lewis in Context, 125, 149, 16769, 176. See also her essay Growing in Grace: The Anglican Spiritual Style in the Chronicles of Narnia. 15. The titles of the books on Tumnuss shelvessuch as Men, Monks and Gamekeepers: A Study in Popular Legend and Is Man a Myth?are amusing; so are Giant Rumblebufn and the overly enthusiastic lion whom Aslan brings back to life in chapter 16; the policies pursued by the four children as reigning monarchs in Narnia show a comic touch: They liberated young dwarfs and young satyrs from being sent to school, and generally stopped busybodies and interferers (LWW, 149).
86
effectively: There was a boy called Eustace Clarence Scrubb, and he almost deserved it; what used to be called a mixed school; some said it was not nearly so mixed as the minds of the people who ran it (VDT, 1; SC, 1). There is subtle wit in his chapter title A Parliament of Owls, with its allusion to Chaucers A Parlement of Foules [fowls] (SC, chap. 4). And there is wry wit in his comment that Eustace as dragon could dispatch a wild goat or wild swine so swiftly that it didnt know (and presumably still doesnt know) it had been killed and his quip about Pittencream, who was left behind on Ramandus island while the brave Reepicheep went to and beyond the end of the world: He lived happily [in exile in Calormen] ever after. But he could never bear mice (VDT, 83, 183). In addition to the humor that is part of the narrators genial character (given to him, of course, by the author), the stories are lled with comic touches that arise naturally out of the personality of the author and the ctional situation. There is humor in the choice and arrangement of the details the author decides to include: Trumpkins mistakes in understanding words because of his deafness (rangers for strangers, kill for Jill, useless for EustaceSC, 32). There is the reply Glimfeather the Owl says Trumpkin would make if they tried to give him advice: Youre a mere chick. I remember you when you were an egg (SC, 45). There is humor in the choice of names (such as Reepicheep, Puddleglum, Wimbleweather, and Adela Pennyfather and Cholmondely Major, Edith Winterblott, Spotty Sorner, big Bannister, and the two loathsome Garrett twins at Experiment HouseSC, 206) and in the way characters are sketched out: Eustace with his Plumptrees Vitaminised Nerve Food, his not caring much about subjects but caring a great deal about grades, his being so sulky that no one would take him as a slave, even thrown in free with other lots (VDT, 11, 24, 51).16 There is the humor of Lasaraleens vanity and preoccupation with herself, and of the warnings she issues to her servants: Anyone I catch talking
16. Likewise, the Governor of the Lone Islands, who makes appointments only tween nine n ten p.m. second Saturday every month (VDT, 44); the not-too-bright but totally agreeable Dufepuds (offering such sage observations as water. Powerful wet stuff, aint it?; washing their plates and knives before dinner to save time afterwards; and accepting both sides of incompatible, opposing positionsVDT, 121, 137, 143); and Puddleglum, who can nd a dark lining on the brightest of clouds (SC, 6263).
87
about this young lady will be rst beaten to death and then burned alive and after that be kept on bread and water for six weeks (H&B, 82). There are the wonderful comic scenes of The Magicians Nephew: Uncle Andrews misadventures and the disastrous attempts of the Narnian animals to help and feed him (MN, 11119, 15153); the rst three jokes in Narnia (MN, 106, 108, 116); the animals early discussions, with the objections raised by the Bulldog (MN, 11618). And there is humor in the use of ironyin Eustaces diary (VDT, 2425, 5862), Jill and Eustace not realizing as quickly as the reader what youd like to have us for your Autumn Feast really means (SC, 93), and Shifts deceptions of Puzzle (LB, 411)and of satire, which will be appreciated more by adults than young children: the Head who is a failure at Experiment House and at supervising other Heads being made a Member of Parliament, where she lived happily ever after (SC, 207), and in Shifts version of a socialist paradise (LB, 2931). All of this (directly addressing the reader, wit, humor, irony, satire) creates in the stories the impression of a genial, likeable storyteller whose tales are a pleasure to listen to. The storytellers presence also establishes in the stories the commonality of a shared moral perspective. The Chronicles have been unfairly criticized for their alleged didacticism.17 However, the stories do not talk down to readers, preaching about correct behavior and values. Rather, they present proper behavior and values objectively, as something readers already know perfectly well. The storyteller does not instruct but reminds, the way Samuel Johnson, the eighteenth-century moralist Lewis admired, said moral instruction should: Men more frequently require to be reminded than informed.18 Although the storyteller never is shown in Narnia or participates in any action,
17. Doris Myers defends Lewiss stories as didactic in the positive sense that Spensers works were, as they taught the virtues by making them concrete, and led readers to become truly human by helping them learn to make good stock responses (C. S. Lewis in Context, 121, amplied in a lecture, Spensers Faerie Land as a Key to Narnia). 18. Johnson, The Rambler (No. 2), edited by W. J. Bate and Albrecht B. Strauss, 14. Paraphrased in Mere Christianity, 3.3: People need to be reminded more often than they need to be instructed. According to Claude Rawson, a student of Lewiss in the 1950s, Lewis resembled Johnson in a number of respects, and was almost certainly conscious of this and felt a certain pride in it. . . . In Johnson, Lewis found a model for a whole range of behaviour patterns, from insatiable tea-drinking to talking for victory (The Schoolboy Johnson, 863); see also Rawson, C. S. Lewis, Schoolboy among the Moderns, 9, 11, 17, and 18.
88
heapart from Aslanis the most important character in the Chronicles. He establishes the appealing tone of the stories and creates an intimate, personal bond with the reader. He conveys a reassuring feeling that events are under control, that ultimately, for followers of Aslan, everything will turn out in a satisfactory way. And he creates a moral center for the stories, a sense of decency, honor, respect, common sense, and intelligence, which indicates to young readers that these are qualities that should be reected in their own lives.19
19. For example, I cant excuse what he did next [to strike the bell in Charn] except by saying that he was very sorry for it afterwards (and so were a good many other people) (MN, 4546). Things like Do Not Steal were, I think, hammered into boys heads a good deal harder in those days than they are now (MN, 142). The moral dimension of the Chronicles will be examined further in chapter 9 below.
1. In a diary entry in 1923 Lewis notes that his new friend Nevill Coghill seems very ignorant of literature and thinks music the greater art, because it can do two things at once. He is quite right there (AMR, 195).
89
90
delight (TST, 84). In 1934 he attended a concert of Beethoven, Debussy, Sibelius, and Elgar which I enjoyed more than any I have ever heard (TST, 471). The following year he wrote that he had seldom enjoyed anything more than a magnicent philharmonic performance of the Ninth Symphony: How tonic Beethoven is, and how festalone has the feeling of having taken part in the revelry of giants (TST, 475). Ten years later he mentioned being greatly moved by a gramophone performance of Holsts Planets (TST, 506). His musical tastes ranged widely. He knew a great deal about opera and attended many performances, though his familiarity probably came mostly from records;2 he mentioned, in addition to Wagners works, Faust, Carmen, Ada, The Magic Flute, and Tosca. The Lewis Papers include an essay Lewis wrote at Cherbourg House around 1912 (when he was thirteen) on Richard Wagner, which begins with a brief history of the development of the opera and how Wagner inuenced its development (3.23335).3 At Malvern College he wrote an opera libretto, Loki Bound, based on Norse mythology (TST, 5053). He also liked and referred to a wide variety of orchestral music, urging Arthur in 1935 to buy big works (symphonies etc) and never play them except in their entirety (TST, 478). He describes at length, in two different letters, his enjoyment of Sunday evenings at the Kilns in the early 1930s, when, after a quiet supper, Lewis, Warren, Mrs. Moore, and Papworth the dog would gather in the study and listen to a complete symphony on Warnies excellent
2. Lewis: Ive never seen Aida, but Ive known the music since I was a small boy: and how good it is (Letters to Children, 48). In 1916 he wrote to Arthur Greeves, I should give anything to be at home for these operas (TST, 146); discussions of operas appear in that and the next two letters. 3. From the time he discovered the Ring of the Nibelung through a review in a magazine, Wagner held a special place throughout Lewiss life, for his music and for the myth of Northernness his work epitomizes. I am a romantic person who has frankly revelled in my Nibelungs, and specially in Wagners version of the story, ever since one golden summer in adolescence when I rst heard the Ride of the Valkyries on a gramophone and saw Arthur Rackhams illustrations to The Ring (First and Second Things, 278; see also SbyJ, 7276). In his letters to Greeves and elsewhere he mentions going to London on numerous occasions to attend a performance of one or all of its parts. I will by no means join in the modern depreciation of Wagner. He may, for all I know, have been a bad man. He may (though I shall never believe it) have been a bad musician. But as a mythopoeic poet he is incomparable (The Funeral of a Great Myth, 84).
91
gramophoneI am sure one gains enormously by always hearing one symphony as a whole and nothing else (TST, 450; see also 46768).4 Violin solos were never much in my line (TST, 84), he informed Arthur, and he noted in his diary that the organ is a thing I cannot learn to like (AMR, 255). But he was very fond of the piano as a solo instrument: One sort of music still holds me as much, or indeed more than everpiano music (TST, 167); urging Arthur to look up the Chopin piece he liked so well, the 21st Prelude, he asked if it was not the best music in the world (TST, 124).5 Lewis says in his autobiography that their father gave the boys a gramophone as a present (SbyJ, 73)the brand was His Masters Voice, with a large horn, according to George Sayer (see photo 1, p. 125). One of Warrens most vivid memories of their home, Little Lea, was of rare warm summer afternoons in the garden with the gramophone. In 1967, some three years after Lewiss death, Warren was swept up by such memories in a wave of nostalgia: a ne
4. The excellent gramophone Lewis mentioned on March 25, 1933, was replaced just ve days later by an even better one. Warren noted in his diary on March 30, 1933, This afternoon my long expected new gramophone arrived by [road] in charge of two men, who set it up in the study where we tested it with a Debussy, a bit of the Pastoral symphony, and a chorus from Beethovens Mass. I am delighted with it. . . . After supper J [i.e., Jack, the name he wanted to be called from early childhood on], Minto [Mrs. Moore] and I sat cosily in the study and I played them the Pastoral Symphony and a sonata of Bach (W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends: The Diaries of Major Warren Hamilton Lewis, 100). Jill Freud, who stayed at the Kilns the summer of 1943, recalls such evenings: Almost every Sunday night the brothers listened to a complete symphony on Major Lewiss old gramophone. It had a large, wooden, handmade horn. The sound was good and he was proud of it; no one else was allowed to use it (Part B: With Girls at Home, 57). E. L. Edmonds mentions that in his Magdalen rooms in the mid-1930s, Lewis showed me his magnicent record player which had a long, tubular horn interfaced with green felt (C. S. Lewis, the Teacher, 4243). Robert E. Havard mentions, without indicating a date, that Lewis had in The Kilns an old-fashioned gramophone with an enormous horn lling one corner of the room (Philia: Jack at Ease, 226). 5. An interesting sidelight on Lewiss listening to music is provided by one of three schoolgirls who were housed at the Kilns during World War II. The bedroom the girls shared was above Lewiss study, which had a bay window with a at roof. Lewis would pass food up to the girls in the evening, or help them down so they could visit the kitchen when they were hungry. Sometimes we climbed through the window of his study and listened to his records with him (Margaret M. Weyland in a letter dated February 11, 1977, published in The Lamp-Post of the Southern California C. S. Lewis Society 1213 [December 1989]: 55).
92
summer morning, P safely off to town, J and I with two chairs in the shrubbery and the gramophone.6 Among those memories was the Incident of Mrs. Mop and the Dinner. On the cooks days off, the boys dinner was prepared by the charwoman. One week the charwoman, Mrs. Mop, served them raw steak, lightly browned on the outside, and potatoes immersed in warm water for a couple of minutes. After trying in vain to eat the food, Lewis suggested the only thing to do was to give it a ceremonial burial. According to Warrens description of the episode, We advanced on the ower bed in Indian le at a slow pace, Jack in front carrying our gramophone playing Chopins Funeral March, I following with a trowel in one hand and our dinner in the other. A grave was dug, the meal buried, and after a minutes reverent silence we withdrew to the house in the order in which we had come, the gramophone still playing.7 Lewis and his brother, in their teens, were avid collectors of gramophone records. Lewis approached this interest with the thoroughness he would later devote to his scholarship: he received the monthly lists issued by various record companiesgramophone catalogues were . . . one of my favorite forms of reading (SbyJ, 73) and he ordered more records than he could afford to (the bill is rather a staggerer . . . I am thinking of sending it out to my brother to payTST, 93). He compared the performances on various records and contributed to The Leeborough Review, which Warren describes as consisting almost entirely of reviews of new gramophone records.8 He knew which records lasted longer than others (Odeon records wear out in a monthTST, 74)9 and regularly asked Arthur about records he had purchased or would recommend (Any new records?TST, 102). But he also expressed concerns
6. George Sayer, Jack: C. S. Lewis and His Times, 17; W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends, 16, 269. 7. Recorded by Warren on page 25 of C. S. Lewis: A Biography, the typescript (now in the Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois) from which, considerably abridged, Letters of C. S. Lewis was published in 1966. 8. Lewis Papers, 3.259. One issue of The Leeborough Review is reproduced in appendix 11 (11.24850). 9. In 1930, Warren played a new recording of Beethovens Second Symphony, done with the latest technology, and Lewis was greatly impressed with the difference between electrical and non-electrical recording (W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends, 62).
93
about the effects of relying too heavily on recorded music in developing ones knowledge and tastes: The taste in music developed by a gramaphone [sic] is a bad, articial, exotic one; a gramophone gives you opportunity of hearing things that you might otherwise never know: but . . . it teaches you to expect a standard of performance which you cant get . . . on the stage (TST, 84, 89). Although his love of classical music was deep and his tastes in music were wide-ranging, he disliked church music intensely. Hymns were disagreeable to me (SbyJ, 234). His preference was to attend said services, because for Lewis hymns were the dead wood of a service.10 However, an intriguing comment on hymns occurs in the creation story in The Magicians Nephew. After Polly, Digory, Jadis, Uncle Andrew, and the cabby fall into a pitch-black, silent, breathless world, the cabby tries to calm and reassure the others, suggesting that the best thing they could do would be to sing a hymn: And he did. He struck up at once a harvest thanksgiving hymn, all about crops being safely gathered in. It was not very suitable to a place which felt as if nothing had ever grown there since the beginning of time, but it was the one he could remember best. He had a ne voice and the children joined in; it was very cheering (MN, 86). Lewiss reason for selecting Henry Alfords well-known hymn Come, Ye Thankful People, Come (1844) may in part have been humorfor the incongruity pointed out by the narratorand in part because it was a hymn likely to have been familiar to many of his young readers. Lewis disliked hymns partly because, he said, the lyrics are not good poetrythey often are sentimental and cheap and frequently contain confused or erroneous thought and unworthy sentiment.11 When Screwtape mentions the shabby little book containing corrupt texts of a number of religious lyrics, mostly bad, and in very small print (SL, letter 2), he reects closely Lewiss own view: fth-rate poems set to sixth-rate music.12 He also disliked hymns
10. Lewis, letter to Eric Routley, July 16, 1946, in God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics, 331. 11. Lewis, Christianity and Culture, 13, and Christianity and Literature, 2. 12. Lewis, Answers to Questions on Christianity, 62. On May Day, 1930, Warren and Lewis climbed to the top of Magdalen tower and at dawn heard the choristers sing a Latin hymn which was very effective and a beautiful tune: why on earth dont they sing these hymns in church? (Lewis Papers, 11.11).
94
because he found the airs, like those of certain popular songs, vile and ugly (EinC, 25), and because the English, unlike the Welsh and Germans (and the cabby), are not good singers13therefore, the singing in English churches is not the offering of our natural gifts at their highest to God, but people shout[ing] their favourite hymns. . . . What I . . . chiey desire in church are fewer, better, and shorter hymns; especially fewer.14 Beyond that, he questioned the spiritual value of church music whether it glories God or is only an aesthetic rather than truly spiritual aspect of worship. He had such an aesthetic experience when he, Arthur, and Maureen Moore attended a choral evensong at New College in 1922, at a time when he did not consider himself a Christian and would listen to the music as if at a concert; he enjoyed the music immensely, especially the psalms and Stanfords Magnicat: I wondered why I had never troubled to go before (AMR, 71). He also feared that the way both highbrow and lowbrow church music alienates and divides a congregation may outweigh its potential benets.15 He acknowledged, however, that such difference in tastes can be an opportunity for exercising spiritual humility: it can teach us humility and charity towards simple lowbrow people who may be better Christians than ourselves. I naturally loathe nearly all hymns: the face and life of the charwoman in the next pew who revels in them teach me that good taste in poetry or music are not necessary to salvation (Letters, December 7, 1950). Lewis does not say specically when or how his education in music began, or what inuenced the love of classical music that he and his brother shared from very early in their lives.16 Presumably, their father set an example by his own appreciation of music, as well as providing a gramophone and money for records; as George Sayer puts it, Note that it was the father whom he disparaged who encouraged him in literature and art, not the mother whom he loved and admired.17 They attended concerts together, and corresponded
13. Lewis, letter to Eric Routley, September 21, 1946, in God in the Dock, 331. 14. Lewis, On Church Music, 95, 96. 15. Ibid., 99; letter to Routley, July 16, 1946, in God in the Dock, 330. 16. His love of music began long before his discovery of Wagner: My general appreciation of music was not, at rst, much altered [by the discovery of Wagner], he wrote in 1955. Music was one thing, Wagnerian music quite another (SbyJ, 75). 17. Sayer, Jack, 19.
95
about others that they couldnt attend jointly. Lewis wrote to his father on February 2, 1911, about a month after entering Cherbourg House in Malvern: We had great fun this week, we went to the Messiah. It was only an amateur performance, but still it was simply lovely. His father wrote to him on December 17, 1915, I am sorry you are not home here tonight. John Harrison is singing the tenor of the Messiah and we might have gone.18 What the father sowed bore abundant fruit not only in Lewiss life but also in his writing. Music appears in ideas, plots, images, or gures of speech of virtually every book Lewis wrote, usually presented with positive, at times heavenly, implications, but occasionally as a danger tempting one away from the heavenly. The depth of music in Lewiss life and thinking is indicated by how frequently he used music in similes and metaphors throughout his writing. Only a few, varied examples can be cited here. He wrote to Arthur Greeves in 1915, On Saturday I met the prettiest girl I have ever seen in my life. . . . She is just like that grave movement in the Hungarian Rhapsody (or is it the dance?) that I love so much (TST, 7677). The early morning aromas on Malacandra did to the sense of smell what high, sharp violin notes do to the ear (OSP, postscript). Wine, Orual learns, can make sorrows seem glorious and noble, like sad music (TWHF, 1.19). In the story The Shoddy Lands, Peggys clothes, bath salts, and general voluptuousness were a huge overture to an opera in which she had no interest at all.19 Lewis frequently uses similes and metaphors involving music to clarify points in his literary criticism. Looking for the point of a story may prevent one sometimes from getting the real effect of the story in itselflike listening too hard for the words in singing which isnt meant to be listened to that way (like an anthem in a chorus).20 The medieval universe can be compared both to a great building and to a fuguethe orderly and varied reiteration of the
18. Lewis, Lewis Papers, 3.228 and 5.40. Similarly, Lewiss father wrote to him November 4, 1912: Next week we are promised an opera company. They are doing Carmen and Maritana and others that Warnie and you would rather like to hear. I am sorry that they did not postpone their visit till Xmas (Lewis Papers, 3.301). 19. Lewis, The Shoddy Lands, 105. 20. Lewis, Letters to Children, 36
96
same subject. 21 To convey the difference between danger and danger from giants, turn it into music and you will feel the difference at once(OnS, 94). Comparing English poetry with Old French, Ours is all instruments; theirs is the lonely ute (AofL, 135). The Parlement of Foules is like Mozartian music (AofL, 174). Spensers Epithalamion is extraordinary because of its ability to express joy: Music has often reached that jocundity; poetry, seldom.22 A romance or fantasy story is in a way more like a symphony than a novel. . . . The images are in every possible relation of contrast, mutual support, development, variation, half-echo, and the like, just as the musical themes are.23 Music is especially noticeable and important in A Preface to Paradise Lost. Not surprisingly, gures of speech involving music appear particularly in Lewiss discussions of Miltons style (It is common to speak of Miltons style as organ musicPPL, chap. 7). Thus, to blame Milton for lacking an intimate speaking voice is like damning an opera or an oratorio because the personages sing instead of speaking (PPL, chap. 7). To convey the pause needed at the end of a verse paragraph, Lewis says, it must be felt as we feel the pause in a piece of music, where the silence is part of the music, and not as we feel the pause between one item of a concert and the next; later, to emphasize the effect at a certain point, he adds, Then a pause, as if after a crashing piece of orchestration (PPL, chap. 7). Anticipating An Experiment in Criticism, he stresses the active role the reader must accept: We are [Miltons] organ: when he appears to be describing Paradise he is in fact drawing out the Paradisal Stop in us (PPL, chap. 7). But music also is used to clarify other aspects of the work. Concentrating on universal elements in a work may be twisting it into a shape the author never gave it, making him use the loud pedal where he really used the soft (PPL, chap. 9). That the Fall is disobedience and results from pride is reiterated by every character in Paradise Lost from every possible point of view, as if it were the subject of a fugue (PPL, chap. 10). Discipline exists for the sake of its
21. Lewis, Imagination and Thought in the Middle Ages, 57. 22. Lewis, Edmund Spenser, in Major British Writers, 1.96. 23. Lewis, Spensers Images of Life, 116. Likewise, Spenser can be as prosaic as Wordsworth: he can be clumsy, unmusical, and at (AofL, 318), and Virgils hexameters are more like the slow movement of the Seventh Symphony and less like the Walkrenritt (Metre, 284).
97
opposite, freedom, as the heavenly frolic arises from an orchestra which is in tune (PPL, chap. 11). Music appears prominently and appropriately in Lewiss lyric poetry. It runs through his earliest collection, Spirits in Bondage, as a sustained motif, in titlesFrench Nocturne, Irish Nocturne, Song of the Pilgrims, Song, Hymn (For Boys Voices), and Lullabyand in the imagery and gures of many poems.24 Later poems display the same interest, in titlesPindar Sang, Evolutionary Hymn, Science-Fiction Cradlesong, Coronation March, Angels Song, Evensong, and Narnian Suite, with its subtitles March for Strings, Kettledrums, and Sixty-three Dwarfs and March for Drum, Trumpet, and Twenty-one Giantsand in action, imagery, and gures.25 In Dymer music creates the kind of romantic longing discussed above in chapter 1: He heard the music, unendurable / In stealing sweetness wind from tree to tree (1.27); and in the concluding stanza of Dymer, for example, the sound of clear trumpets blowing, such a music as the dumb would sing, signals the efcacy of Dymers sacrice and the coming of great good into earth: the transformation of the wasteland into a paradise and the monster into a god, the resolving of discord and establishment of harmony (9.35).26 Music runs throughout The Nameless Isle, Lewiss retelling of The Magic Flute, climaxing as the dwarfs playing on the ute brings the marble statues back to life.27 References to music are prominent also in the Ransom trilogy, particularly Perelandra, with its operatic tone and movement.28 On Perelandra Ransom awakes to hear Tinidril singing to herself in a low
24. Lewis, Spirits in Bondage: A Cycle of Lyrics; see the prologue and the poems numbered 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 12, 17, 18, 21, 22, 25, 29, 31, 33, 35, 38, and 39. 25. See Lewis, Poems, 11, 14, 16, 17, 19, 24, 27, 30, 32, 41, 46, 50, 57, 67, 71, 74, 76, 81, 82, 90, 94, 97, 104, 105, 114, 115, 123, 124, 133, and 136. 26. Lewis, Narrative Poems, 14, 91. Music also appears in passing in Launcelot and The Queen of Drum (Narrative Poems, 97, 98, 100, 147, 167). 27. Lewis, Narrative Poems, 12122. In 1922 he wrote in his diary, I . . . looked into a book on Mozart and read the story of the Magic Flute which I found very suggestive. . . . I thought curiously of how this might be used for a big poem some day (AMR, 112; see also 11516 and 125). The poem his editor entitled The Nameless Isle (Narrative Poems, 10527) is the result: see Charles A. Huttar, A Lifelong Love Affair with Language: C. S. Lewiss Poetry, 86. 28. You will also see, if you look, how operatic the whole building up of the climax is in Perelandra (Lewis, Letters, October 29, 1944). Nearly two decades later, Donald Swann and David Marsh collaborated on an operatic version of Perelandra. Lewis heard the rst performance of it on June 29, 1963, and said it
98
voice, and when she tells Ransom that she is the Mother of the planet, he seems not just to hear her voice, but a phantom sense of vast choral music was all about him (Per, chap. 5). Perelandrian thunder is like the playing of a heavenly tambourine (Per, chap. 10). Ransoms body, as he prepares for physical conict with the Un-man, is an instrument . . . tuned up to concert pitch (Per, chap. 12). Of his long period of convalescence after destroying the Un-man, he remembers a song: It oated through his sleep and was the rst sound at every waking. It was formless as the song of a bird, yet it was not a birds voice. As a birds voice is to a ute, so this was to a cello: low and ripe and tender, full-bellied, rich and golden-brown (Per, chap. 15). And there is musicality in the liturgy-like conversation between Ransom, Tor and Tinidril, and the oyarsas of Perelandra and Malacandra; their speeches are described as being like the parts of a music into which all ve of them had entered as instruments (Per, chap. 17; this passage is discussed at greater length in the next chapter, on dance). On Malacandra the hrossa are great singers (OSP, chap. 17), and Ransom records the words of their song at Hyois funeral (chap. 19). He later recalls with longing the sound of their singinggreat hollow hound-like music from enormous throats, deeper than Chaliapin, a warm, dark noise (OSP, postscript)and the haunting qualities of the funeral music: They go down, singing, to the edge of the lake. The music lls the wood with its vibration, though it is so soft that I can hardly hear it: it is like dim organ music (OSP, postscript). And in That Hideous Strength one result of Janes rst meeting with Ransom is to remember that music has not played any part in her life recently, and to resolve to listen to many chorales by Bach on the gramophone that evening (THS, 7.3). Later, the descent of the spirit of Mercury leads the St. Annes group to such talk such eloquence, such melody (song could have added nothing to it). But the spirit of Jupiter (which inspires Arthur, the only musician among them, to get out his ddle and accompany the group in a festive dance) can be captured only faintly by such symbols as the pealing of bells and the blowing of trumpets, or the rst beginning
moved him to tears (see Donald Swann, Swanns Way: A Life in Song, 202, and William Phemister, Fantasy Set to Music: Donald Swann, C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien).
99
of music in the hall of a high king. Ransom and Merlin are caught up into the Gloria which those ve excellent Natures perpetually sing (THS, 15.1). In contrast, music frequently appears as a temptation in The Pilgrims Regress: the haunting sound of music draws John into the woods and to a glimpse of the island from whence his desires come (PR, 1.2, 4, 6). The songs of Mr. Halfways evoke for John a vision of the Island, but seduce him to substitute the charms of Media Halfways (PR, 2.5). Lack of genuine music reveals deciency in character and values: the avant-garde music of the Clevers in Eschropolis, which John dislikes (PR, 3.12), the song Savage bellows about violence and heroic nihilism (PR, 6.6), and the croaking, self-centered songs of Superbia (PR, 10.5) and the Northern Dragon (PR, 10.8). Juxtaposed with such music are the songs of praise, worship, and encouragement sung on their journey by John (PR, 8.6), the hermit (PR, 8.10), Vertue (PR, 10.1; 10.5), and their Guide (PR, 10.3, 4, 6, 10).29 Although allusions to music are scattered throughout Lewiss writings (those above are only a small sample), the use of music is most important, and most pervasive, in the Chronicles of Narnia. At least forty-ve references to music appear in the Chronicles, in six of the books and in many different contexts, creating a wide variety of imaginative effects.30 Music appears rst when Tumnus the Faun, in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, pulls a strange little ute from its case and begins to play for Lucy. The tune he plays moves her
29. Music seems less important in Till We Have Faces, though there too it does have a role. One of the earliest memorable events occurs as the King forces the Fox to teach fourteen young women to sing a Greek bridal hymn at his wedding; Orual recalls that they sang very badly (TWHF, 1.1). Temple music (drums, horns, rattles, and castanets) and singing are a part of the worship of Ungit and of its ceremonial rituals (TWHF, 1.8; 2.2). A voice sweeter than any music invites Psyche to enter her house, and music accompanies the banquet that is set for her (TWHF, 1.10). The voice of the god as it pronounces judgment on Orual is sweet, like a bird singing on the branch above a hanged man (TWHF, 1.15). 30. One such context is the use of music in gures of speech. A few examples: the sound of Susans horn is loud as thunder but far longer, cool and sweet as music over water (PC, 82). Aslans roar, deep and throbbing at rst like an organ beginning on a low note, rose and became louder . . . till the earth and air were shaking with it (PC, 129). The giant cooks snore in the House of Harfang is more welcome to Jill, Eustace, and Puddleglum than any music (SC, 11213). Once they get below the earth, they march across a mild, soft, sleepy place: It was very sad, but with a quiet sort of sadness like soft music (SC, 122).
100
deeply: it makes her want to cry and laugh and dance and go to sleep all at the same time (LWW, 1213). In The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe music is also associated with Aslan. When Mr. Beaver rst mentions the name Aslan, each of the children feels something jump inside: Susan felt as if some . . . delightful strain of music had just oated by her (LWW, 54). Later, as the two beavers and the three children approach the wonderful pavilion near the stone table, they hear music made on stringed instruments by a group of Dryads and Naiads; it is the music that leads them to turn and see what they had come to see, the great Lion (LWW, 101). Near the end of the story, as Narnia celebrates the coronation of the four Pevensie children with a great feast, the music inside the castle Cair Paravel is answered by the voices of the mermen and mermaids swimming close to the castle steps and singing in honour of their new Kings and Queens (LWW, 148). Music occurs throughout Prince Caspian, including poignant memories of the childrens previous visit, a year (or a thousand years) before. Susan recalls the mer-people singing in the sea, and Lucy remembers when we had the musicians up in the rigging [of the Splendour Hyaline] playing utes so that it sounded like music out of the sky (PC, 15, 93). As six mice carry the battered body of Reepicheep toward Aslan on a litter, their leader piped on his slender pipe a melancholy tune (PC, 173). In The Voyage of the Dawn Treader the sailors sing catches in the evenings, and Ramandu and his daughter greet the dawn with a high, almost shrill, very beautiful early morning kind of song (VDT, 21, 172). And Digorys mother, in The Magicians Nephew, after she was healed by the Narnian apple, had the old piano tuned and took up her singing again (MN, 164).31 Music is especially important in The Silver Chair, invoked or mentioned at least eighteen times. The music motif begins as Eustace
31. The importance of music is reinforced by its inclusion in the education of Prince Caspian and Prince Cor: Prince Caspian learns sword-ghting and riding, swimming and diving, how to shoot with the bow and play on the recorder and the theorbo (PC, 46), and Shasta as Prince Cor will have to learn reading and writing and heraldry and dancing and history and music (H&B, 178). Both are being given the Narnian version of the education of a Renaissance gentleman; music is one of the four subjects of the quadrivium because it teaches order and harmony. See H. R. Lyon, ed., The Middle Ages: A Concise Encyclopedia, 277; Donald Leman Clark, John Milton at St. Pauls School, 3; and especially Paul A. Olson, The Journey to Wisdom, 19499.
101
and Jill, upon going through the door in the stone wall around Experiment House, see a blaze of sunshine and hear birds making a riotous noise: but it was much more like musicrather advanced music which you dont quite take in at the rst hearingthan birds songs ever are in our world (SC, 10). They are on Aslans mountain, we learn at the end of the story, which The Last Battle tells us is connected to, or is the outskirts of, heaven. The intricate (advanced) harmonies of the musiceven, in the heavenly realm, of birds songscaptures the nature of that place, with its sense of order, harmony, and joy. But advanced music also takes us back to An Experiment in Criticism, where Lewis says that the best art is that which elicits and repays repeated readings or hearings. The phrase quietly, indirectly encourages readers to open themselves to serious music that is more difcultand more rewardingthan tunes that can be taken in on rst hearing. The music motif continues as Jill oats down from the mountains of Aslans Country toward Cair Paravel and hears a sound of music honoring the old, frail king as he boards the tall ship; then trumpets sound as the ship moves away from the quay (SC, 24, 30). The Green Witch plays a musical instrument rather like a mandolin, and her music has a hypnotic power (SC, 148). As the children, Puddleglum, and the prince escape, Rilian whistled as he rode, and sang snatches of an old song about Corin Thunder-st of Archenland (SC, 166). The Gnomes recollect that they havent had song or a dance for a long time (SC, 171). As Jill emerges from the Underworld through the opening into Narnia, she hears the music of four ddles, three utes, and a drum accompanying the Great Snow Dance (SC, 185). And the nal paragraph of the book tells how Narnians, on hot summer days, would go down through that opening with ships and lanterns and sail to and fro, singing, on the cool, dark underground sea (SC, 208). In all these references except for the Witchs hypnotic strumming and soft, musical laugh (SC, 148), the presence of music signals freedom and well-being, while its absence accompanies bondage and disorder. Near the end of The Silver Chair, sustained background music creates a mood paralleling the events as they take place, like the background music in a movie. The return of Caspians ship to Narnia is greeted by hidden musicians playing solemn, triumphal music, which stopped as the kings head fell in death, then began again:
102
this time, a tune to break your heart (SC, 201, 202). The funeral music continued as Eustace and Jill returned to Aslans mountain, though no one could tell where it came from, music so despairing that it brought tears to Jills eyes (SC, 203). The music went on as they walked along a stream and found King Caspians body lying in it. As a drop of Aslans blood splashed into the stream over the dead body of the king, the doleful music stopped suddenly (SC, 204), and Caspian came back to life, not as a doddering old man but as a very young man or a boy, who now will live in the country from which the music in the opening chapter came, for ever and ever. Three themes are highlighted by Lewiss uses of music throughout his works. Lewis often relies on music to convey occasions or atmospheres of festivity, celebration, and praise. Thus in Perelandra, following Tinidrils rst resistance of the Un-mans advances, Ransom senses the triumphant celebration of the planet, or the universe, as festal revelry and dance and splendour poured into him . . . in such fashion that it could not be . . . thought of except as music (Per, chap. 8). In Prince Caspian music helps celebrate the victory over Miraz and the Telmarines: Flutes were playing, cymbals clashing, and there was leaping and dancing and singing, with music and laughter and roaring and barking and neighing (PC, 165, 170). When the schoolmistress in Beruna looked out of the window and saw the divine revellers singing up the street, . . . a stab of joy went through her heart (PC, 16869). Similarly, in The Great Divorce, after the Angel kills the lizard and the formerly lustful ghost rides off toward the mountains as a new-made man, the whole plain shakes with a sound too large to hear in our world: I knew it was not the Solid People who were singing. It was the voice of that earth, those woods and those waters, singing a version of Psalm 110 adapted to this situation (GD, 9495; chap. 11).32 As Sarah Smith approaches, she is accompanied by a band of singers and musicians: If I could remember their singing and write down the notes, says the narrator, no man who read that score would ever grow sick or old (GD, 97; chap. 12).33 And as she walks away, bright spirits come forward to receive her, singing a paraphrase of Psalm 91 (GD, 10910; chap.
32. See Charles A. Huttar, The Psalms, 342. 33. Charles Huttar has pointed out to me the similarity between this passage and Dantes Paradiso 18:1012; 20:1012; 24:23ff; 33:55ff, 73, 94, 106ff, 121.
103
13). Even the sound of the gigantic waterfall is musical, like the revelry of a whole college of giants singing and laughing together (GD, 45; chap. 6). Small wonder, then, that the tempter Screwtape warns Wormwood against that detestable art which the humans call Music, which expresses joy and is, therefore, disgusting and a direct insult to the realism, dignity, and austerity of Hell (SL, letter 11). Music and silencehow I detest them both! Screwtape fumes, and rejoices that great strides have been taken on earth toward replacing music with noise (SL, letter 22). A second major theme is Lewiss use of music to convey imaginatively the order, unity, and harmony of the universe. The most important example of this theme, and one of the most dramatic uses of music anywhere in his writings, appears in the creation scene of The Magicians Nephew. In the absolute darkness of the unknown place they fall into, Digory, Polly, Uncle Andrew, and Jadis hear a voice begin to sing, the most beautiful noise [Digory] had ever heard, . . . so beautiful he could hardly bear it. The voice is joined by other voices, more voices than one could count, singing in harmony with it, but far higher up the scale: cold, tingling, silvery voices. A moment later the blackness overhead blazes with thousands and thousands of stars. Digory is quite certain that it was the stars themselves who were singing, and that it was the First Voice, the deep one, which had made them appear and made them sing (MN, 8788). Two things are striking about this passage in a book for children. One is the specic detail about music it employs. By assuming readers know about harmony and scale, it afrms music as something one should know about, something that can be experienced as almost unbearably beautiful. The other is the way Lewiss use of music enables him to elaborate his creation story in ways that re the imaginations of young readers, enabling them to hear the process as well as to visualize it step by step: The Voice rose and rose, till all the air was shaking with it. And just as it swelled to the mightiest and most glorious sound it had yet produced, the sun rose (MN, 90). Then the lion sang a new song, softer and more lilting than the song by which he had called up the stars and the sun; a gentle, rippling music. And as he walked and sang the valley grew green with grass, spreading out from the lion like a pool and running up the sides of the little hills like a wave (MN, 92). Then the song changed again: It was more like what we should call a tune, but it
104
was also far wilder. It made you want to run and jump and climb. This song made the ground swell into humps of different sizes and from each hump burst an animal, with vivid detail describing their emergence: Butteries uttered. Bees got to work on the owers as if they hadnt a second to lose. But the greatest moment of all was when the biggest hump broke like a small earthquake and out came the sloping back, the large, wise head, and the four baggy-trousered legs of an Elephant (MN, 100, 1012). By having the lion sing the song of creation, Lewis has quietly, unobtrusively put young readers in touch with an ancient tradition regarding the universe. In western culture music has long served as an image of the orderliness and harmony of the universe, particularly through the music of the spheres, which keeps the concentric hollow globes circling the earth in an orderly way. The image is grounded in Platos adaptation of Pythagorean notions about the beauty and proportion of numbers to the physical universe: On the upper surface of each circle is a siren, who goes round with them, hymning a single tone or note. The eight together form one harmony.34 By association with the myth of Amphions use of the lyre to erect a wall around Thebes, charming rocks and moving them into their proper places, music became also a symbol of creation, bringing order to what previously had been chaotic. Thus, in the divine creative act, the elements, scattered about without form, and void (Genesis 1:2), were drawn into order by the harmonizing power of music. The opening of John Drydens A Song for St Cecilias Day, 1687 expresses this myth powerfully:
From Harmony, from heavnly Harmony This universal Frame began. When Nature underneath a heap Of jarring Atomes lay, And coud not heave her Head, The tuneful Voice was heard from high, Arise ye more than dead.
34. Plato, The Republic, book 10 (617a), in The Dialogues of Plato, 3.334. The medieval world, wrote Lewis, was resonant with music (DI, 112). On traditional ideas about music, see John Hollander, The Untuning of the Sky: Ideas of Music in English Poetry, 15001900.
105
In Drydens ode and Lewiss creation account, the beauty, orderliness, and harmony of music are integrally related to the deepest structures of the universenot that those structures are like music, but that they are formed of music and by music. Written in an era when order, harmony, and especially purposefulness are widely denied in the nature of things, Lewiss story afrms them, not through philosophical argument or scientic demonstration, but through the imaginativeness of story and myth. A third thematic use of music involves its connection in Lewiss mind with Sehnsucht, or intense longing, discussed above in chapter 1. In the preface added to the third edition of The Pilgrims Regress, Lewis distinguishes this from other longings in two ways: rst, though the longing is acute and even painful, the mere wanting is felt to be somehow a delight; and second, there is mystery about the object of this desirethe things that stir the longings are not what we in fact are longing for.36 The books or the music in which we thought the beauty was located will betray us if we trust to them; it was not in them, it only came through them, and what came through them was longing. . . . For they are not the thing itself; they are only the scent of a ower we have not found, the echo of a tune we have not heard, news from a country we have never yet visited.37 Surprised by Joy tells the story of how Lewis slowly, step by step, learned that the longing is a desire for God implanted by God to draw us to hima desire to be with God, in the presence of God, and thus a longing for heaven. In Lewiss life and writings, recurring images are frequently associated with such longing. It pierces us like a rapier at the smell of a bonre, the sound of wild ducks ying overhead, the title of The
35. Dryden, Poems 16851692, 201. The ode, commissioned by the Musical Society for the annual celebration of the patroness of music on November 22, 1687, was set to music originally by G. B. Draghi, then more tellingly by Handel in 1739. The Draghi setting is available in a recording by the Playford Consort and Parlay of Instruments; many recorded versions of the Handel are available. 36. Lewis, The Pilgrims Regress (1943), 78. 37. Lewis, The Weight of Glory, 24.
106
Well at the Worlds End, the opening lines of Kubla Khan, the morning cobwebs in late summer, or the noise of falling waves.38 Key images include autumn, northernness, distant hills, exotic gardens, the Utter East or the Utter West, and music,39 particularly the kind of music Samuel Pepys described as so sweet that it ravished me and, indeed, in a word, did wrap up my soul so that it made me really sick.40 Lewis mentions several such musical experiences in letters to Arthur Greeves. In response to hearing Mrs. Kirkpatrick play some preludes of Chopin, he writes: Arent they wonderful? . . . They are so passionate, so hopeless, I could almost cry over them: they are unbearable (TST, 95). His next letter mentions how some combinations of words can give a thrill like music (TST, 96). On Christmas Eve, 1929, the glorious windy noise of the bells overhead, the relight & candlelight, and the beautiful music of unaccompanied boys voices, really carried me out of myself (TST, 321). Music is frequently associated with heaven and the longing for heaven. In Mere Christianity, explaining the imagery used for heaven in the Bible, Lewis writes: Musical instruments are mentioned because for many people (not all) music is the thing known in the present life which most strongly suggests ecstasy and innity (MC, 3.10). In The Pilgrims Regress John hears the sound of a musical instrument . . . very sweet and very short . . . so high and strange that he thought it was very far away, further than a star and sees a calm sea, and in the sea an island. He experiences a sweetness and a pang so piercing that he longs to hear the music again and to go to that island (PR, 1.2). He undertakes a long journey in pursuit of his desire, but he learns that the island can be reached only through death. What John longs for is heaven. Such longings form an underlying theme in the Chronicles as well, and they are an important component of the imaginative experience in reading them. The most signicant development of the theme appears in the character of Reepicheep in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and it is closely associated with music. Reepicheeps hope, in joining the voyage, is to reach the very eastern end of the world
38. Lewis, The Pilgrims Regress (1943), 910. 39. See Corbin Scott Carnell, Bright Shadow of Reality: C. S. Lewis and the Feeling Intellect, 8791. 40. Lewis quotes this passage from Pepyss Diary (entry for February 27, 1668) in his sermon entitled Transposition, 11.
107
and there to nd Aslans own country. When he was very young, a Dryad sang over him a song that epitomizes divine longing, or Sehnsucht, for Lewis:
Where sky and water meet, Where the waves grow sweet, Doubt not, Reepicheep, To nd all you seek, There is the utter East.
Although Reepicheep says he does not know what it means, the spell of it has been on me all my life (VDT, 17). Reepicheeps life, like Johns, becomes a quest to reach the object of his desire. Because he feels the ship never gets on fast enough, he sits at its front, far forward on the bulwarks, gazing out at the eastern horizon and singing softly in his little chirruping voice the song the Dryad had made for him (VDT, 26). He keeps his goal constantly in mind, despite dangers, obstacles, and temptations along the way. When Lord Bern urges Caspian to abandon the search for the remaining lost lords and help solve the problems of the Lone Islands, Caspian declines: I have an oath, my lord Duke. . . . And anyway, what could I say to Reepicheep? (VDT, 53). At the Beginning of the End of the World, Reepicheep is told that, to break the spell that holds the sleeping lords, someone must go on into the utter east and never return, and he replies, That is my hearts desire (VDT, 174). The description of the end of the world is one of the most dazzlingly imaginative and emotional passages in the Chronicles. As the Dawn Treader glides smoothly eastward through the lilies, the light becomes more brilliant, no one wants to eat or sleep, and everyone grows younger every day and is lled with joy and excitement. When the ship has gone as far as it can, the voyagers encounter things always associated for Lewis with Joy: eastward, beyond the sun . . . a range of mountains . . . so high . . . they never saw the top of it; and a breeze bringing both a smell and a sound, a musical sound they never forgot. Edmund and Eustace would never talk about it afterwards. Lucy could only say, It would break your heart. Why, said I, was it so sad? Sad! No, said Lucy (VDT, 2056). Reepicheep, quivering with happiness, glides away in his coracle
108
up and over the wave that marks the worlds end, and the storyteller comments: My belief is that he came safe to Aslans country and is alive there to this day (VDT, 207). The account of Reepicheeps longing for Aslans country is echoed by the longing of Edmund and Lucy in the nal chapter to return to Narnia, which brings the story full circle. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader begins with Edmund and Lucy looking at a picture of a Narnian ship, talking about Narnia, and wondering when they will get back thereas they had been promised they would. At the end of the book, one of the most beautiful passages in the Chronicles expands that longing into their desire to follow Reepicheep into Aslans country. Lucy wants to know when she and Edmund will return to Narnia, and asks Aslan oh, do, do, do make it soon, but she is told they will never come back. Lucy begins sobbing and says, It isnt Narnia, you know. . . . Its you. . . . How can we live, never meeting you? She is reassured that they will meet him in their own world, though there I have another name, and that for them the way into Aslans country is from their world. They are not told how long or short their journey to his country will be, but for them, as for John in The Pilgrims Regress and for everyone, it lies across a river (VDT, 209). The theme of longing is carried one step further. As music serves as a vehicle of longing for Narnia and Aslans country for Reepicheep, Edmund, and Lucy, so the Narnia books themselves become vehicles of longing for many readers. For most young readers, that longing does not lead to chopping through the back wall of a wardrobe, as it did for the child whom Walter Hooper described (see above, p. 59n). It takes instead the form of reading the stories again and again and wanting to be in Narnia, imaginatively, as often as possible. But this desire for our own far-off country,41 in Lewisian terms, would not really be a longing for Narnia. Jill expresses the desire to have Narnia go on for ever and ever and ever, as young readers want it to for them, imaginatively. But Jewel cautions Jill, and the young readers, that all worlds draw to an end; except Aslans own country (LB, 84). As readers watch Narnia draw to an end in The Last Battle, they are carried by their imaginations beyond Narnia to the actual object of their desires, to the real Narnia, Lewiss depiction of heaven and being in the presence of God. Jewels response
41. Lewis, The Weight of Glory, 23.
109
points the way for the reader to respond: I have come home at last! This is my real country! I belong here. This is the land I have been looking for all my life, though I never knew it till now (LB, 162). Lewiss words in Mere Christianity capture all this in terms Reepicheep and Jewel would readily recognize and accept: I must keep alive in myself the desire for my true country, which I shall not nd till after death; I must . . . make it the main object of life to press on to that other country and to help others to do the same (MC, 3.10). So too, Lewis hopes, will readers of the Chronicles, as expressed in the beautifully written paragraph culminating the series: And for us this is the end of all the stories, and we can most truly say that they all lived happily ever after. But for them it was only the beginning of the real story. All their life in this world and all their adventures in Narnia had only been the cover and the title page: now at last they were beginning Chapter One of the Great Story, which no one on earth has read: which goes on for ever: in which every chapter is better than the one before (LB, 17374). It is signicant that, despite the frequent association of music with imagings of longing and of heaven, music rarely is mentioned in The Last Battle. Although many people regard music as the thing which most strongly suggests ecstasy and innity (MC, 3.10), this story depicts it instead through light, color, tastes, space, and freedom of movement. The only bits of music in The Last Battle are the queer little marching song of the dwarfs (LB, 71 and 82), the horrible sound of the Calormene war drum (LB, 113), the sound of Father Times horn (LB, 142), and the great horn, wonderfully loud and sweet that accompanies the opening of the great golden gates (LB, 167). The absence of music is noted once: It was far too quiet. On an ordinary Narnian night there ought to have been noises . . . a ute in the distance to tell of Fauns dancing. . . . All that was silenced (LB, 58). Although music characterizes the creation of Narnia, the absence of music characterizes its dissolution, and that perhaps is as it should be: the harmony and order established by music now crumble into dissonance and disorder. The crumbling is signaled by a nal note, the sound of the last trumpet: Then the great giant raised a horn to his mouth. . . . After thatquite a bit later, because sound travels so slowlythey heard the sound of the horn: high and terrible, yet of a strange, deadly beauty (LB, 142). The absence of music from The Last Battle connects this story also to the creation myth Lewis
110
drew upon in The Magicians Nephew. As the opening section of A Song for St. Cecilias Day, 1687 illuminates Lewiss handling of his creation story, so its concluding grand chorus, both Drydens words and Handels magnicent setting, illuminate his handling of Narnias return to chaos:
As from the powr of sacred Lays The Spheres began to move, And sung the great Creators praise To all the blessd above; So when the last and dreadful hour This crumbling Pageant shall devour, The Trumpet shall be heard on high, The Dead shall live, the Living die, And Musick shall untune the Sky.
Samuel Johnson, an eighteenth-century writer whom Lewis loved and whom he resembles in several ways, found the image of music untuning the sky in the nal lines so awful in itself that it can owe little to poetry.42 The account of night falling on Narnia is similarly powerful and disturbing. What makes it bearable, perhaps, especially for young readers, is that these are not the nal words of the story. Night is followed by light, and the characters move further up and further in, to the real Narnia which is the true object of their desires. It would be hard to overstate the importance of music in Lewiss life, thought, and works.43 It gave him great pleasure, informed his writing in a variety of ways, and as a source of longing helped lead to his return to acceptance of the Christian faith. He never talked of gaining spiritual enrichment from music, not even from the great choral or orchestral music of Bach or Handel. But music permeated his being, to the innermost part, and it permeates the Chronicles of Narnia, to their very core, shaping and directing the imaginative experience of young readers in the most crucial of ways.
42. Johnson, Dryden, 1.440. 43. For an approach slightly different from mine, but to which I am indebted, see Clyde S. Kilby and Linda J. Evans, C. S. Lewis and Music.
111
112
The appeal of dance for Lewis, it would seem, did not arise from experience with it as a participatory activity, or from viewing it as a spectator: in 1923 Lewis turned down a free seat at a folk dance, because I really [do] not understand that sort of thing: I could be said to like dancing only as a girl who picnicked in a ruin could be said to like architecture (AMR, 240).4 Its appeal came rather from its aesthetic and imaginative impact as an idea, or archetype, for the
3. SbyJ, 4647. A dance was held at Lewiss Belfast home, Little Lea, during the Christmas holidays in 1912. On November 28, 1913, Lewis wrote to his father: Talking about social functions reminds me of some wild fantastic talk of another dance this year. Dont let us spoil the Xmas holidays by a chore as colossal as it is disagreeable, and as disagreeable as it is unnecessary. No one else gives a dance on two consecutive years. Nip this matter in the bud. . . . It is quite bad enough having to attend the functions of others without adding to the nuisance ourselves. Please convey to Aunt Annie and the other conspirators that you are determined not to hear of it. (Lewis Papers, 4.108) A week later he reiterated, there MUST be no dance FOR ME; nor for any other rational being I hope, and told his father to quash it: You have your orders (4.111). A week later he asked why he had not heard that the dance had been quashed: You have your orders (4.115). Warren added his objections in a letter dated December 6 (4.114). Since nothing more was said about a dance, it seems likely Albert Lewis acceded to his sons wishes. Warren asked his father in a letter the following February, Is Uncle Gussie still cadging for a dance at Easter? (4.136). 4. He wrote a year earlier, when a young woman staying in the house he and Mrs. Moore were sharing danced for them, She seemed good to me but I know nothing of dancing (AMR, 88).
113
meaning it had collected over hundreds of years as authors Lewis loved dearly used it to depict a physical and metaphysical universe Lewis emotionally longed for and spiritually lived in.5 In the Western cultural tradition, music is better known than dance as an image of the creation of order and harmony in the universe; but an analogous and closely related myth has the universe becoming orderly and regular by being made to dance. Andrew Marvells retelling of how Amphion constructed the walls of Thebes illustrates the easy transition from the one myth to the other: The rougher Stones, unto his Measures hewd, / Dansd up in order from the Quarryes rude. Such use of dance as a cosmological symbol, like the use of music, can be traced to Plato, who, in the Timaeus, describes how the Creator fashioned the world after its eternal pattern:
When all things were in disorder God created in each thing in relation to itself, and in all things in relation to each other, all the measures and harmonies which they could possibly receive. . . . The xed stars were created, to be divine and eternal animals, everabiding and revolving after the same manner and on the same spot; and the other stars which reverse their motion. . . . Vain would be the attempt to tell all the gures of them circling as in dance, . . . and to say which of these deities in their conjunctions meet, and which of them are in opposition, and in what order they get behind and before one another.6
Used recurrently in the Middle Ages, especially in Neoplatonic writers, the image received its nest articulation in Sir John Daviess long poem Orchestra, published in 1596; Lewis wrote of it, Daviess Orchestra gives us the right picture of the Elizabethan or Henrican universe; tingling with anthropomorphic life, dancing, ceremonial, a festival not a machine. Daviess narrator, Antinous, urging Penelope to dance with him, gives this explanation of the origin of dancing:
5. On Lewiss use of dance and the backgrounds he drew upon, I am indebted to Roland M. Kawano, C. S. Lewis and the Great Dance, and an unpublished paper, The Celestial Dance, by Sarah E. Thomson. 6. Marvell, The First Anniversary of the Government under O.C., lines 51 52, in Poems and Letters, 1.104. Plato, Timaeus, 69 and 40, in The Dialogues of Plato, 3.491 and 3.459.
114
It is to this tradition that Doctor Cornelius refers when he assures Caspian that the stars Tarva and Alambil are not going to collide: Nay, dear Prince, . . . the great lords of the upper sky know the steps of their dance too well for that (PC, 40).8 This tradition is invoked when Ramandu, the star at rest in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, anticipates his reentry into the great dance (VDT, 175). The important thing in this image, for Lewis, is the worldview it afrms. It assumes that the universe is a cosmos, a harmonious system, and that human life, as an integral part of that whole, also has order, unity, and meaning. The universe is not engaged in disco dancingunpatterned, chaotic, individualistic; it echoes instead the stately movement of the chorus in a Greek tragedy or the stylized formality of the country dance in an Austen novel: The ladies and gentlemen ranged as two long rows facing one another, whilst the couples at the extreme ends danced down the set.9 Lewis accepted that worldviewhe responded to such imagery with an empathy impossible for most of his colleagues at Oxford and for the modern world as a whole: dinosaurs can dance, though the curators of museums may not recognize or be able to enter the movements.10
7. Lewis, English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama, 4. Davies, Orchestra, Or a Poeme of Dauncing, stanzas 1718, in The Poems of Sir John Davies, 9495. 8. See also the opening lines of Le Roi Samuse, in Lewis, Poems, 23. 9. Constance Hill, Jane Austen: Her Homes and Her Friends, 58. 10. Cf. Lewis, De Descriptione Temporum, 1314. An exception to the majority view is Lewiss contemporary, and friend later in their lives, T. S. Eliot, who
115
Examples of dance can be found scattered throughout Lewiss works. Dance is a central image in the unnished poem Walter Hooper entitled The Nameless Isle. As the dwarf plays upon a magical ute, he turns into an elf; then heroes and horses that had been turned to stone are disenchanted and begin to dance round him: dancing in order and dancing in love, they encircle the unmarbled lady and bring her to the narrator, blushing as it were a bride mortal, / To hold to her heart my head as I kneeled.11 In Pindar Sang, the chorus of beautiful young men danced his ode.12 In The Great Divorce, a group of bright spirits, who danced and scattered owers, lead the procession that accompanies Sarah Smith (GD, 97; chap. 12). We see no dancing in Out of the Silent Planet, but we are told in the postscript of the great crested hrossten feet high, a dancer rather than a singer. And in That Hideous Strength, the members of the company at St. Annes dance as a festive response to the approach of the Oyarsa of Jupiter:
The chairs were pushed back, the oor cleared. They danced. . . . It seemed to each that the room was lled with kings and queens, that the wildness of their dance expressed heroic energy, and its quieter movements had seized the very spirit behind all noble ceremonies. (THS, 15.1)
On the other hand, no one dances in The Pilgrims Regress (though the Clevers like the music of the jazz age, Lewis does not show them in apper-type dancing), or Perelandra (except the last chapter perhaps because the entire world is engaged in a sort of spiritual ballet), or Till We Have Faces (reecting the joyless and disordered affections of the narrator), or The Magicians Nephew (although the
used dance as a symbol in Burnt Norton (see note 20 below) and East Coker, where he borrowed language directly from his ancestor Sir Thomas Elyots The Governour: In daunsinge, signifying matrimonie (Eliot, The Complete Poems and Plays 19091950, 124). 11. Lewis, Narrative Poems, 12123. See Roland M. Kawano, C. S. Lewis and The Nameless Isle: A Metaphor of a Major Change. 12. Lewis, Poems, 15. Passing references to literal dance also appear in The Magician and the Dryad (line 2), The Landing (line 18), The Small Man Orders His Wedding (line 4), and Infatuation (stanza 7)Poems, 8, 27, 31, 74. In Reections on the Psalms, Lewis writes, The most valuable thing the Psalms do for me is to express that same delight in God which made David dance (chap. 5).
116
creation scene includes the appearance of stars and a sun, the emphasis is on lling a world with natural life rather than on setting the universal dance in motion). Dancing appears frequently as a metaphor, though less frequently than music does. For example, in Till We Have Faces, as Orual reaches the top of the holy mountain, an inner voice seems to ask her, Why should your heart not dance? and the beauty of all that is around her makes her feel as if she had misjudged the world: It seemed kind, and laughing, as if its heart also danced (TWHF, 1.9); in the following chapter, Psyche asks her the same question (TWHF, 1.10). In The Great Divorce the sound of the gigantic waterfall is like giants laughter: like the revelry of a whole college of giants together laughing, dancing, singing, roaring at their high works (GD, 45; chap. 6). Inside the back cover of his copy of G. K. Chestertons Fancies versus Fads Lewis noted that page 14 discusses Rhyme like swimming or dancing. In The Allegory of Love he wrote, In Montgomerie we seem to hear the scrape of the ddle and the beat of dancing on the turf: in Googe, the ticking of a metronome (AofL, 259). And, attempting to convey to Arthur Greeves the effect on him of reading the Paradiso, he described it in part as like a slow dance, or like ying (TST, 326).13 Dancing occurs or is mentioned at least thirty times in the Chronicles of Narnia. Tumnus tells Lucy, in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, about midnight dances when the Nymphs and Dryads came out to dance with the Fauns (LWW, 12). Such a midnight
13. Other examples include, What is it, Aslan? said Lucy, her eyes dancing and her feet wanting to dance (PC, 165); the reections of the sunlit water dancing on the ceiling of her cabin (VDT, 5455); The water danced brightly in the early sunlight (H&B, 43); The waterfall keeps the pool always dancing and bubbling and churning (LB, 2). Also, In Williams the two sides lived in a perpetual dance or lovers quarrel of mutual mockery (preface to Essays Presented to Charles Williams, xii). And then one or other dies . . . like a dance stopped in mid career (A Grief Observed, chap. 3). Cast aloft by the fountains with their soft foam, / A tremor of light was dancing in the emerald dome (Solomon, lines 34Poems, 46). I am almost inclined to set it up as a canon that a childrens story which is enjoyed only by children is a bad childrens story. The good ones last. A waltz which you can like only when you are waltzing is a bad waltz (On Three Ways of Writing for Children, 24). See also Lewis, Poems, 36, 51; Narrative Poems, 91, 97, 146, and 165; and Spirits in Bondage, 16, 34, 55. Lewiss copy of Fancies versus Fads is now in the Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois.
117
dance takes place in Prince Caspian, with Fauns dancing and Caspian, and then even the dwarf Trumpkin, joining in (PC, 67). On a different night Lucy sees the trees move in and out through one another as if in a complicated country dance (PC, 114). Later, Bacchus and Silenus lead a romp across the countryside freeing those who have been held by the constraints of Miraz (PC, 165 70). Still later, Bacchus, Silenus, and the Maenads join in a magic dance of plenty (PC, 177). Aravis in The Horse and His Boy dances before her father (H&B, 31), and Shasta, after he becomes Prince Cor, complains that he will have to be educated and learn reading and writing and heraldry and dancing (H&B, 178). And in The Last Battle, Jewel the Unicorn tells Jill about whole centuries in which notable dances and feasts were the only things that could be remembered (LB, 84). These allusions bring dance before readers repeatedly, but mostly unobtrusively, as a beautiful and meaningful artistic expression, suitable for boys and men as well as girls and women. By far the most beautiful and memorable dance in the Chronicles is the one Jill Pole sees when she emerges from the underworld in The Silver Chair. She nds Fauns and Dryads
doing a dancea dance with so many complicated steps and gures that it took you some time to understand it. . . . Circling round and round the dancers was a ring of Dwarfs. . . . As they circled round they were all diligently throwing snowballs, . . . throwing them through the dance in such perfect time with the music and with such perfect aim that if all the dancers were in exactly the right places at exactly the right moments, no one would be hit. This is called the Great Snow Dance and it is done every year in Narnia on the rst moonlit night when there is snow on the ground. (SC, 18586)
The placement and effect of the dance are striking: the Underworld from which Jill is emerging had been a totally repressive regime where a tyrant allowed no freedom and citizens (or slaves) forgot how to make a joke or dance a jig (SC, 172). There was order, but it was the mechanized orderliness of a march, not the interactive patternings of a dance. The rst thing Jill sees as she emerges is a dance that epitomizes Narnian society, a perfect blending of order and freedom. One feels in the passage delight and eeriness, structure and wildness, harmony and festivity.
118
Dance does not seem to be something Lewis thought of for himself or his characters as a planned activity done purely for pleasure, or as a performance he would want to attend.14 Rather, it is a spontaneous celebration or a ceremonial occasion, and it is valued for what it expresses or stands for, rather than for what it is. The numerous uses of dance in the Chronicles convey to readers the kind of metaphorical and symbolic meanings Lewis embodies when dance appears in other works. Although infrequent, these are important as thoughtful, deliberate ways to encapsulate traditional values, illustrated by the appearance of dance as a gure in four vital passages in That Hideous Strength, Mere Christianity, Miracles, and The Problem of Pain. In the rst, near the end of Ransoms initial meeting with Jane, as they discuss obedience and marriage, Ransom says, But you see that obedience and rule are more like a dance than a drillespecially between man and woman where the roles are always changing (THS, 7.2). The dance metaphor draws together a key theme of the novel. Mark and Janes marriage serves as a paradigm of the larger struggle of independence against authority throughout the novel: a struggle that involves the St. Annes group and the N.I.C.E. as well as Jane and Mark personally. Mark and Jane must learn that obedience is different from servility and that authority is different from arbitrary tyranny, and then learn that equality is not the deepest thing (THS, 7.2).15 Each must recognize that humility and obedience are rooted in love (which, in Davies, set the universe dancing), and that the source of love is Christ. More like a dance than a drill captures in one image issues central to the two levels of the plot: the contrast between St. Annes (like a dance) and the N.I.C.E. (like a drill) on one level, and the ideal for Mark and Janes marriage on the other. It claims as true for St. Annes, and for marriage, what Lewis said about the knights of Charles Williamss Camelot: There is, inside
14. I have found only one reference to Lewis attending a ballet or dance concert. In an undated letter from October 1914, he wrote to his father, Last week I went up to town with Mrs. K[irkpatrick] . . . to the Coliseum to see the Russian ballet, which was very good (Lewis Papers, 4.234). He told Arthur Greeves it was magnicent and he enjoyed it, but I had sooner have gone to some musical thing (TST, 58). 15. See John H. Timmerman, Logres and Britain: The Dialectic of C. S. Lewis That Hideous Strength. Compare to the section on equality in chapter 4 above, pp. 6566.
119
the company, no real slavery or real superiority. Slavery there becomes freedom and dominion becomes service. As willed necessity is freedom, so willed hierarchy becomes equality.16 Dance metaphors in Mere Christianity, Miracles, and The Problem of Pain are closely related to those in That Hideous Strength. In his radio talks, Lewis, attempting to clarify the difcult and abstract doctrine of the Trinity, says that the words God is love have no real meaning unless God contains at least two Persons, since love is an activity between different individuals. Then he continues: In Christianity God is not a static thingnot even a personbut a dynamic, pulsating activity, a life, almost a kind of drama. Almost, if you will not think me irreverent, a kind of dance (MC, 4.4). Groping for a way to express the inexpressible, Lewis turns to an image which has divine associations for him because of its archetypal overtones and which readily unites his understanding of God with the Western cultural myth. That it should even occur to him to compare God to a dance can be understood from Plato. Plato emphasizes that the act of creation involves correspondences between the world and its pattern, and the creation and the Creator. If creation can be viewed as a dance, so too, by correspondence, can the Creator: Lewis simply follows through and concretizes what is implicit in the Timaeus.17 And in doing so he relates the nature of God to the attributes of the universe dance has traditionally imaged: dance is active, orderly, and hierarchical, and Lewis deliberately attaches those qualities to God. The metaphor also posits qualities about the humandivine encounter: it afrms that the human response to God must be active and involvedone can know God authentically only by entering into relation with him and participating in the activity that makes
16. Lewis, Williams and the Arthuriad, 142. Lewis uses dance to image the same idea in A Preface to Paradise Lost, where he refers to the life of beatitude as one of orderan intricate dance, so intricate that it seems irregular precisely when its regularity is most elaborate (78) and calls the paradox of discipline and freedom, in an unfallen world, a pattern deep hidden in the dance, hidden so deep that shallow spectators cannot see it (7980). For Williams on slavery and dance, see Letters to Lalage: The Letters of Charles Williams to Lois Lang-Sims, especially 10; also, 36, 42, 47, 82. See also Williamss A Dialogue on Hierarchy, where the dance runs all through, although the word is never mentioned. 17. Plato, Timaeus, 2930, in The Dialogues of Plato, 3.450.
120
him what he is. The whole dance, or drama, or pattern of this threePersonal life is to be played out in each one of us: or (putting it the other way round) each one of us has got to enter that pattern, take his place in that dance. There is no other way to the happiness for which we were made (MC, 4.4). Similarly, in Miracles Lewis writes, The partner who bows to Man in one movement of the dance receives Mans reverences in another.18 And in The Problem of Pain, to explain the hellish quality of selfhood and the heavenly quality of self-giving, Lewis writes: But when [the golden apple of selfhood] ies to and fro among the players too swift for eye to follow, and the great master Himself leads the revelry, giving Himself eternally to His creatures in the generation, and back to Himself in the sacrice, of the Word, then indeed the eternal dance makes heaven drowsy with the harmony. 19 The Chronicles capture such creaturedivine interaction most fully through the dancing in chapter 11 of Prince Caspian. Aslans roar, deep and throbbing at rst like an organ, awakens the Dryads, who circle around Aslan in a dance, bowing and curtseying in adoration. As Bacchus and Silenus, with their retinue, join in, the dance becomes faster and more celebratory (PC, 12933). Next morning, Aslan leads the divine revelry, liberating those who are willing to follow him and enter the dance: And so at last, with leaping and dancing and singing, with music and laughter and roaring and barking and neighing, they all came to the place where Mirazs army stood inging down their swords and holding up their hands (PC, 170).
18. Lewis, Miracles, chap. 14. The participatory nature of the humandivine encounter, as well as of the reading process, is conveyed also in A Preface to Paradise Lost: We are summoned not to hear what one particular man thought and felt about the Fall, but to take part, under his leadership, in a great mimetic dance of all Christendom, ourselves soaring and ruining from Heaven, ourselves enacting Hell and Paradise, the Fall and the repentance (chap. 8). 19. Lewis, The Problem of Pain, chap. 10. The quotation is from the fourth chapter of Anthony Trollopes 1861 novel, Framley Parsonage: When [ministers] speak [in the cabinet room], is the music of the spheres audible in their Olympian mansion, making heaven drowsy with its harmony? Lewis also uses dance, in a metaphor closely related to this one, for the object of Joy, that is, the heavenly world and the presence of God: For a few minutes [in an experience of Joy] we have had the illusion of belonging to that world. Now we wake to nd that it is no such thing. . . . We have not been accepted, welcomed, or taken into the dance (The Weight of Glory, 29).
121
In Letters to Malcolm Lewis (or rather the persona he creates) halfapologizes for his use of such frivolous gures of speech for spiritual matters: There! Ive done it again. I know that my tendency to use images like play and dance for the highest things is a stumblingblock to you. But he further explains and justies them because no serious imagery from our world can convey at all adequately the utter beauty and blessedness of heaven. In particular it cannot possibly convey the reconciliation in heaven of what on earth are direct opposites, of boundless freedom with orderwith the most delicately adjusted, supple, intricate, and beautiful order (LtoM, letter 17). Dance is Lewiss best attempt to convey all of this, inadequate though he knows the attempt ultimately must be. So it is in the magnicent scene in the nal chapter of Perelandra. Near the end of his stay on Perelandra, Ransom, confused by the complexity of all that he has experienced since his arrival on the planet, doubting for the moment the coherence of things, fearing that all is mere chance or chaos, is allowed a glimpse of the Great Dance to which Doctor Cornelius and Ramandu referred:
What had begun as speech was turned into sight, or into something that can be remembered only as if it were seeing. He thought he saw the Great Dance. It seemed to be woven out of the intertwining undulation of many cords or bands of light, leaping over and under one another and mutually embraced in arabesques and ower-like subtleties. Each gure as he looked at it became the master-gure or focus of the whole spectacle, by means of which his eye disentangled all else and brought it into unityonly to be itself entangled when he looked to what he had taken for mere marginal decorations and found that there also the same hegemony was claimed, and the claim made good, yet the former pattern not thereby dispossessed but nding in its new subordination a signicance greater than that which it had abdicated. (Per, chap. 17)
Ransom is shown, not what the universe looks like, but the Truth about what it actually is like. The details in Perelandra, particularly in the twenty sections of the closing litany, celebrate the Dance and the Lord of the Dance. Christ is the center of the Dance, but he is constantly moving so that the center is everywhere and everywhere is the center:
Each grain is at the centre. The Dust is at the centre. The Worlds are at the centre. The beasts are at the centre. The ancient peoples are
122
there. The race that sinned is there. Tor and Tinidril are there. The gods are there also. Blessed be He! Where Maleldil is, there is the centre. He is in every place. . . . Each thing was made for Him. He is the centre. Because we are with Him, each of us is at the centre.20
The dancing gures are used to emblematize hierarchy and wholeness: In the plan of the Great Dance plans without number interlock, and each movement becomes in its season the breaking into ower of the whole design to which all else had been directed. Thus each is equally at the centre and none are there by being equals, but some by giving place and some by receiving it. . . . Blessed be He. . . . They also emblematize correspondence, relation, and truth:
All that is made seems planless to the darkened mind, because there are more plans than it looked for. . . . Set your eyes on one movement and it will lead you through all patterns and it will seem to you the master movement. But the seeming will be true. Let no mouth open to gainsay it. There seems no plan because it is all plan: there seems no centre because it is all centre. Blessed be He! (Per, chap. 17)
Lewis, in his ction and other writings, took for granted the truth and relevance of the Old Western model he described in The Discarded Image, as discussed above in chapter 1. That model afrms a universe full of life sympathetic with and interacting with other levels of lifean elaborate cosmology with a hierarchy of created orders, physical and spiritual, all of it unied by a single supernatural reality whose Good and presence are sought by the immortal souls of people nding and accepting their place in the whole.21 The fullest image for capturing that model is a dance, a festival, a symphony, a ritual, a carnival, or all these in one.22
20. Compare T. S. Eliots lines in the second section of Burnt Norton (1936; the rst of his Four Quartets): At the still point of the turning world . . . there the dance is. . . . And do not call it xity, / Where past and future are gathered. . . . Except for the point, the still point, / There would be no dance, and there is only the dance. Helen Gardner has stated that Eliot borrowed from the dance of the Tarot gures in Charles Williamss 1932 novel, The Greater Trumps (The Art of T. S. Eliot, 161), and Eliot acknowledged his indebtedness to Williams. Lewis surely had read all of Williamss novels and is not likely to have forgotten Williamss dance image. 21. See Robert Houston Smith, Patches of Godlight: The Pattern of Thought of C. S. Lewis, chaps. 2 and 4. 22. Lewis, Imagination and Thought in the Middle Ages, 60.
123
If myth is a dance, it is participatoryone must enter the dance imaginatively. A wallower doesnt know the danceonly a visual image, a shadow of the real thing. To experience the dance one must step into it, yield to its rhythms, become involved imaginatively and emotionally. The Great Dance passage in Perelandra expresses all this in high literary and imaginative art: nearly pure poetry, but also nearly pure myth. Beyond imaging the Old Western myth, dance images myth itself. Myth is not nearly so rational as conversation, or as realistic ction, but it is much more like a ball: it is imagination in motion, it reects wholeness, unity, and harmonic pattern, it celebrates the richness and plurality of things. The last chapter of Perelandra and the best episodes in the Chronicles of Narnia provide ways to enter the dance, to extend our understanding of its manifold and intricate movements, to appreciate its inuence upon the quality of our personal and spiritual lives. One enters the dance of myth by reading imaginatively: the Chronicles of Narnia and Lewiss other mythical works are a ball; dancing, not conversation, is the order of the day.
125
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
126
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
127
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
128
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
129
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
130
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
131
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
132
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
133
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
134
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
135
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
136
"To view the complete page image please refer to the printed version of this work"
137
138
pointing toward divine beauty and greatness, and they are central to the imaginative experience of reading them, for all readers, both children and adults. Drawing was an activity Lewis engaged in rst on his own and later in school. He observes in his autobiography, From a very early age I could draw movementgures that looked as if they were really running or ghtingand the perspective is good (SbyJ, 6). Early in his life, Lewis, Warren, and their father all drew pictures of ships.2 Between the ages of eight and fourteen, Lewis wrote and illustrated stories about Animal-Land, which later was combined with Warrens India to form Boxen. Examples of illustrations in black and white can be found on almost every page of Boxen: The Imaginary World of the Young C. S. Lewis; three ink and watercolor illustrations and several others in black and white are reprinted in C. S. Lewis: Images of His World.3 In addition to the drawing Lewis did at home, it was also part of the curriculum at Cherbourg House and Malvern College, two of the schools he and his brother attended (perhaps at Wynyard School as well, though neither Lewis nor Warren mentions it). Warrens school report for his nal term at Malvern, spring 1913, includes DRAWING. Has some ability (Lewis Papers, 4.55). That fall, in Lewiss rst term at Malvern, he wrote to his father that he did not have time to keep up both drawing and Shakespeare, though he would like to continue both (Lewis Papers, 4.77), and a week later he wrote, I think it would be best if you were to write to the Old Boy [S. R. James, headmaster at Malvern] about my giving up drawing (Lewis Papers, 4.80). Meanwhile, an exciting thing happened, as described to his father: One of the questions in our weekly exam was to draw a picture illustrating an incident in the book of Cicero which were reading. My picture was marked top and pinned up on the form room door for several days. The James came down and said it was spiritedwhich may mean anything (Lewis Papers, 4.85).4 Lewis
2. George Sayer, Jack: C. S. Lewis and His Times, 16. 3. Douglas Gilbert and Clyde S. Kilby, C. S. Lewis: Images of His World, 98103. 4. A letter reporting this incident to his brother appears in the Lewis Papers, 4.7879. Warren mentions it in a letter to their father, adding plaintively, That was one of the few distinctions I used to get in that form (4.89).
139
told his father in December about a chance meeting with Mr. Taylor, his former drawing master at Cherbourg House, who was very distressed because he had heard that I had given up my drawing at the Coll., but was consoled by my assurance that it was only a temporary xture so long as it clashed with English (Lewis Papers, 4.115). Lewiss interest in drawing continued in later years. In June 1915, Lewis told Arthur Greeves, I scribble at pen and ink sketches a bit, and have begun to practise female faces which have always been my difculty. I am improving a very little I think, and the margins of my old Greek lexicon as well as my pocket book now swarm with studies (TST, 79; see also 85). A month later he asked Arthur to help me to improve my drawing next hols. Figures I can do tolerably, but from you I must learn the technique of the gameshading, curves, how to do a background without swamping the gures etc. Of course this will all be in pen and ink which is the best medium for my kind of workI can imagine your smile at my calling such scribbles work, but no matter (TST, 80). In 1922 he drew pictures for a school sale, including an Indian ink drawing of which Arthur approved parts (AMR, 64). In 1932 he had great fun sketching the maps for the end leaves of The Pilgrims Regress (TST, 452). The letters to Arthur frequently include drawings to illustrate scenes from books (such as Grendel stalking up from his fen and fastness or the mist scene from Scotts Guy Mannering), or to clarify his descriptions such as that of a dovecote he saw in a French village, of the Castle of Dunster as it stands on a little wooded hill just at the mouth of a long valley, and of the incredible sunset he saw when he sailed out of Waterford in August 1933 (TST, 144, 210, 272, 457).5 Drawings are sprinkled throughout his letters to children, along with comments on pictures and drawings children sent to him and discussions of the drawing process:
5. For other examples, see TST, 154, 156, 163, 277, 279, 288, and 390.
140
He drew two sketches of Dufepuds, to show Pauline Baynes how they should look.7 None of the characters in the Chronicles engage in drawing. On endless rainy afternoons, the Pevensie children explore and play hide-and-seek, rather thanlike the Lewis brothersread, write, and draw. Perhaps Polly drew illustrations for the story she was writing and kept in the dark place behind the cistern (MN, 6), but that is not stated specically. Lewiss lifelong interest in drawing does help explain his choice of Pauline Baynes as illustrator of the Chronicles. If pen and ink . . . is the best medium for my kind of work as an amateur artist, it follows that a classic pen and ink style would t his image of the best medium for his kind of fairy tales for children. Beyond that, the classic pen and ink style would t a motif the last two chapters have developed, of subtly educating and encouraging young readers toward openness to and participation in the arts. Upon seeing pen and ink illustrations, children might begin themselves to draw sketches, using the pictures they see in
6. Lewis, letter to his godchild Sarah Neylan, February 11, 1945. First published in Letters to Children, 2224 and endpapers. 7. The drawings are reproduced in Charles A. Huttar, ed., Imagination and the Spirit: Essays in Literature and the Christian Faith presented to Clyde S. Kilby, 313. Lewis had undoubtedly seen drawings of monopods in medieval manuscripts. For a late example, see the drawing of a Skiapod in Malcolm Letts, Sir John Mandeville: The Man and his Book, illustration no. 8, opposite page 80. Mandeville describes the Skiapods as a cheerful race who, like the Dufepuds (VDT, 138 39), lie on their backs, each using its single foot as an umbrella for protection from the sun.
141
their books as models and inspiration.8 Good as the more elaborate and colorful illustrations by Michael Hague (see above, page 32n) may be, they play a different role in affecting young readers imaginations: children can admire and enjoy them but are less likely to be inspired by them to draw or to use them as models for their own art.9 Looking back on his early drawings from more than forty years later, Lewis comments that he strove for action, comedy, and invention, but did not achieve beauty. There was, he says, no sense of design or natural form. In fact, the absence of beauty was characteristic of his childhood: No picture on the walls of my fathers house ever attractedand indeed none deservedour attention (SbyJ, 6).10 Perhaps that reected Belfast as a whole: in a 1914 letter to Arthur Greeves, he inquired about Arthurs progress in art, and joshingly supposed that it was already being exhibited, then paused: Where? Here the sentence comes to a stop: for I have suddenly realized that there is no picture gallery in Belfast. It never occurred to me before what a disgrace that was (TST, 60).
8. In his letters to children Lewis comments on Narnia pictures sent to him by children (Letters to Children, 3132, 38, 39, 40, 67) and suggests to other children drawing a map (104) or writing Narnia tales of their own (99, 101, 104), presumably with illustrations. 9. The Chronicles have evoked some excellent artwork, in addition to Hagues. See, for example, several drawings on covers of Mythlore: Stephen Peregrines of Aslan and Eustace as dragon (8.3 [Autumn 1981]); Sarah Beachs of the Great Snow Dance (14.2 [Winter 1987]); and Tim Callahans Edmund and the White Witch (14.4 [Summer 1988]). See also the ne depiction of Lucy and Tumnus by Kathleen Chaney Fritz on the cover of my book Reading with the Heart: The Way into Narnia and the striking painting of Aslan by Robert Cording in the Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. 10. After the sale of the contents of Little Lea in 1930 following Albert Lewiss death, Warren wrote in his diary, The pictures were, as I suspected, worthless, but Im surprised that the frames were not worth more: here are some of the prices: the old lady reading the newspaper, 1.0.0: large painting of a girl in the dining room, 19/-: and the old woman with the child 15/-. He then reminisced about that sher girl who has watched over so many hundreds of family meals in the dining room (Lewis Papers, 11.87). Albert Lewis, in his diary, Christmas 1925, noted: The boys arrived on Sunday 20th December, both looking well and in great spirits. Previous to their arrival they had sent on from London as my Xmas present a Medici printan excellent picture and one which I am glad to have (W. H. Lewis, C. S. Lewis: A Biography [see above p. 92, note 7], 173 74; on Medici prints, see below, note 13). This picture is not referred to again; presumably the brothers shipped it to Oxford, rather than including it in the auction.
142
By his mid-teens he had acquired some knowledge of and appreciation for art and beauty. He wrote to Arthur in May 1915 of a visit to the little village of Compton in Surrey where George Frederic Watts, the painter, lived: There is a little gallery, a lovely building, designed by himself, containing some of his quite famous pictures . . . which I always thought were in the Louvre or the Tate or some such place (see photo 2, p. 126). With all the bravado of a highly intelligent adolescent, he continued: Of course I dont really quite understand good painting, but I did my best, and succeeded in really enjoying some myself, & persuading the other people that I knew a tremendous lot about them all (TST 73).11 A. C. Harwood notes that when Lewis stayed with him in London, there were many visits to theatres and picture galleries. I remember especially walking with him to the charming little gallery in Dulwich and his delight in the classical landscapes of Poussin.12 Subsequent references to art are not frequent, but they are sufcient to indicate Lewiss continuing involvement. He told Arthur in 1917 that the chief event in things of art this week had been his discovery of Albrecht Drer, the sixteenth-century German painter and engraver (TST, 184). He came across some postcard reproductions of Drers pictures, bought some, and liked them greatly, partly because they were precursors to Rackhams style. After the war, in 1919, he bought copies of two drawings by Drer, S. Jerome and The Prodigal Son, which he described at length for Arthur (TST, 246). He had them framed and, three months later, mentioned that his attempt at distempering the walls of his new rooms had turned out excellently and suits the two Drers very well and also the Venus (TST, 251). In 1923 he described cutting reproductions of works by Leyden, Van Dyck, and Vecchio out of a magazine and framing them (AMR, 273). The following year he wrote that his Aunt Lily had given him three prints, including one of Giottos Francis before Honorius, which later hung in his rooms at Magdalen
11. Nine years later he wrote in his diary, I am only partially able to appreciate [prints and paintings]I can get the satisfying, unwearying decorative effect and the sentimental pleasure and a little of the naf pleasure in the mere seeing things wh. the people for whom they were painted had in them (AMR, 303). 12. Harwood, A Toast to the Memory of C. S. Lewis, Proposed at Magdalen College, July 4th, 1975, 4.
143
College (AMR, 303 and note). Warrens diary in 1930 makes reference to inspecting Jacks two new Medici prints;13 later that year, Warren and Lewis took one of the prints to the Kilns, soon after Lewis and Mrs. Moore moved there (J sitting perched on the seat [of the sidecar on Warrens motorbike] with his knees up to his chin, clutching one of the Medicis, which completely obscured his view).14 No one, as far as I can discover, knows what the two Medici prints were. Perhaps one was The Origin of the Milky Way by Tintoretto. Peter Bayley says it was the only picture on the walls of the New Buildings room at Magdalen where Lewis gave his tutorials. A picture of which Lewis was very fond was Michelangelos Creation of Adam, a copy of which, according to Walter Hooper, Lewis had possessed since he was an undergraduate. It hung in his rooms at Magdalen visible in a 1947 photo by A. P. Strong of Lewis standing with legs crossed, leaning against some cupboards. Lewis apparently moved it with him to Cambridge in 1955Hooper reports having brought it back to Oxford when he emptied Lewiss Magdalene College rooms after Lewis retired in 1963. A copy of the Wilton Diptych sat on Lewiss desk in his college rooms and later in the common room of the Kilns, and a detail of the Turin shroud, a gift from Sister Penelope, hung in his bedroom, across from his bed. A photo of the Kilns
13. W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends: The Diaries of Major Warren Hamilton Lewis, 36. The Medici Society was founded in 1908 for the purpose of producing high-quality photographic reproductions of Old Master prints using a recently improved collotype process. A contemporary magazine afrmed that nothing of the kind so good and so cheap has ever been issued before (Sophie Dickins, in The Dictionary of Art, ed. Jane Turner, 21:32). 14. W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends, 36, 71. In his diary for June 18, 1930, Warren mentioned sending for a Medici catalogue, having resolved that the rst result of my altered nances [money from his fathers estate] will be three or four really good pictures, things which I have always wanted (Lewis Papers, 11.78). On July 28, 1930, he recorded the arrival of one print: At last my Claude [picture by Claude Lorraine] has arrived and is now hung over the re place [in his room at Bulford military base] (Lewis Papers, 11.95). The diary reports, with obvious satisfaction, that Lewis admired the Claude when he visited Warren in August (Lewis Papers, 11.103; W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends, 62). On August 6 Warren anticipated receipt of another picture: Began the day well with a letter from the Medici people to say that my Breughel is being sent off by goods train today (Lewis Papers, 11.100). Warren recorded a visit to the National Gallery in 1930, where I renewed my acquaintance with a lot of old favourites (Lewis Papers, 11.21; W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends, 45).
144
sitting room shows an unidentiable picture over the replace, but photos show that most walls in the Kilns and in Lewiss rooms, if not lined with books, were unadorned.15 As to paintings, Lewis in 1922, having time on his hands in London, took the desperate resolve of entering the National Gallery, where I nally came to the conclusion that I have no taste for painting (AMR, 95). Perhaps; but a deep and continuing interest in art is revealed in a letter late in Lewiss life to Christopher Derrick: Yes, I jolly well have read Gombrich and give him alpha with as many plusses as you please. The writers on art have hopelessly outstripped the writers on literature in our period. Seznec, Wind, and Gombrich are a very big three indeed (Letters, August 10, 1962).16 This might, however, represent more of an academic interest in the contribution of art to cultural history than an interest in the aesthetic pleasures art can afford. Paintings appear occasionally in Lewiss stories. Ransom sees some stone carvings made by the ptriggi, but he misses Malacandras nest art because he does not visit the homes of the ptriggi, splendid buildings with all the world painted on the walls (OSP, chap. 17). There are, as yet, no paintings on Perelandra. There must have been paintings decorating the walls at Belbury, but they are not mentioned. The only ones referred to are the surrealistic paintings in the Objective Room: There was a portrait of a young woman who held her mouth wide open to reveal the fact that the inside of it was thickly overgrown with hair and a man with corkscrews instead of arms (THS, 14.1). No visual arts are mentioned at St. Annes: the one room described is called austere and conventual (THS, 3.3). The only paintings in Till We Have Faces are those in the cool chamber to which the Fox takes Orual in one of her visions: I
15. Bayley, From Master to Colleague, 77. Information from Walter Hooper is from a conversation with the author on July 11, 2001. The Strong photo can be found in the photo section of Sayer, Jack, and in Hooper, Through Joy and Beyond: A Pictorial Biography of C. S. Lewis, 91. Sayer notes that this is the photo chosen to represent Lewis in the National Portrait Gallery in London. The photo of the Kilns sitting room can be found in Gilbert and Kilby, C. S. Lewis, 68. 16. E. H. Gombrichs The Story of Art is one of the most highly respected art history books in English; rst published in 1950, it went into its sixteenth edition in 1995. Lewiss Spensers Images of Life cites Jean Seznecs The Survival of the Pagan Gods (8 n, 10) and Edgar Winds Pagan Mysteries in the Renaissance (9 n, 12, 129 n).
145
now saw that the walls of the place were all painted with stories. We have little skill with painting in Glome, so that its small praise to say they seemed wonderful to me. But I think all mortals would have wondered at these (TWHF, 2.4).17 Art plays a minor role in the Chronicles of Narnia, but a more signicant one than in Lewiss other ction. In The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, there is a long room full of pictures in the professors old and famous housethe sort of house that is mentioned in guide books and even in histories; Mrs. Macready gives tours of the house to visitors and tells them about the paintings (LWW, 3, 40, 41). The Pevensie children, unfortunately, dont seem to pay much attention to the works of art. Tumnus has a picture of his father over the mantelpiece; it was cut to shreds when Tumnuss cave was sacked (LWW, 11, 14, 46). The Beavers less sophisticated house has no books or pictures (LWW, 59). It is different, however, at the Narnian court, where tapestries once adorned the walls of Cair Paravel (PC, 15). The most important uses of art in the Chronicles occur in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. In the opening chapter Lucy and Edmund are sitting in Lucys room looking at a picture of a shipa ship sailing nearly straight towards you. Her prow was gilded and shaped like the head of a dragon with wide open mouth. She had only one mast and one large, square sail which was a rich purple (VDT, 4). It is a realistic work that their Aunt Alberta, with her up-to-date and advanced ideas, does not like at all, but cant get rid of because it was given to her as a wedding present by someone she does not want to offend (VDT, 34). Her son Eustace calls it a rotten picture (VDT, 5) because its romantic aura does not t with his mundane materialistic ideas. But Lucy and Edmund like it, partly because of its realism I like it because the ship looks as if it was really moving. And the water looks as if it was really wet. And the waves look as if they were really going up and downand partly because it reminds them of
17. For another use of visual arts, see Lewis, On a Picture by Chirico, Poems, 69. Painting is used occasionally, though less frequently than music, in gures of speech: for example, trying to be like Christ is more like painting a portrait than like obeying a set of rules (MC, 4.7); The scene would have been pretty in a picture but was rather oppressive in real life (VDT, 62). Still another use of the visual arts is the examination of iconography in Spensers Images of Life.
146
Narnia: The question is . . . whether it doesnt make things worse, looking at a Narnian ship when you cant get there (VDT, 5, 4). As they look at the picture, Lucy and Edmund experience a longing for Narnia, a ctionalized version of the desire Lewis felt upon viewing Arthur Rackhams illustrations to Siegfried and the Twilight of the Gods. They are plunged into their past, as Lewis said he was by Rackham, and are reminded that [they] had once had what [they] had now lacked for years (SbyJ, 73). One of the things Lewis believed art is supposed to do is to arouse Sehnsucht. Music had that effect for Lewis more often than visual art, as when he saw Wagners Valkyrie at Drury Lane Theatre in 1918 and had thrills and delights of the real old sort (TST, 221). The picture in Aunt Albertas back bedroom calls the attention of young readers to art and conveys at least a glimpse of a positive effect art can convey. Paired with this passage is one later in the story. Lucy encounters pictures again in the illuminated manuscript of the Magicians Book: Round the big coloured capital letters at the beginning of each spell, there were pictures (VDT, 12526). These also are realistic: The picture of the man with toothache was so lifelike that it would have set your own teeth aching if you looked at it too long (VDT, 126), and some of them are moving pictures, creating the effect of watching events on a color television set. Some pages contain a blaze of pictures (VDT, 127). Lucy is not supposed to use them, in the terminology of An Experiment in Criticism: unless they are appreciated disinterestedly, for their line, color, composition, and artistry, they become temptations to misuse, temptations to become beautiful beyond the lot of mortals or to learn what your friends [think] about you (VDT, 127, 129). The correct response is to surrender and receive, as she does with the page promising refreshment of the spirit, which has very beautiful pictures and is more like a story than a spell. She surrenders so fully that soon she has forgotten that she was reading at all, and her reward is the loveliest story Ive ever read or ever shall read in my whole life (VDT, 130). She gets herself out of the way, empties herself, and receives the story as art. It is striking that nowhere in the examples of art in the Chronicles or in the other stories is there suggestion of its potential to achieve what Lewis believed it could be at its best. He indicates that potential in another story, the section involving the famous painter in The Great Divorce (7376; chap. 9). Upon emerging from the bus and look-
147
ing at the landscape, the artist wants to paint it. The spirit who comes to meet him tells him to look rst and gives a theory of painting that would seem to be Lewiss: When you painted on earthat least in your earlier daysit was because you caught glimpses of Heaven in the earthly landscape. The success of your painting was that it enabled others to see the glimpses too. But here you are having the thing itself. It is from here that the messages came (GD, 73). He urges the artist to look at the countryside for its own sake, as he did when he began painting, rather than for the sake of painting it: Light itself was your rst love: you loved paint only as a means of telling about light, to which the artist ghost replies: One grows out of that. Of course, you havent seen my later works. One becomes more and more interested in paint for its own sake.18 His guide warns him that such an attitude is a snare: Ink and catgut and paint were necessary down there, but they are also dangerous stimulants. Every poet and musician and artist, but for Grace, is drawn away from love of the thing he tells, to love of the telling (GD, 74).19 All artistsmusicians, dancers, architects, clothing designers, poets, storywriterscan catch glimpses of heaven and attempt to convey them imaginatively. Lewiss own experiences enabled him to receive those glimpses of heaven, in greater and lesser degrees, from all the arts. Lewiss stories give glimpses of heaven through writing, but they also, especially the Chronicles of Narniaby their constant attention to music, dance, and the visual artsconvey to readers that the other arts are important and that glimpses of heaven are available through them as well. As dance requires participation, so do the
18. Compare this with a letter to his brother in 1921: Of landscapes, as of people, one becomes more tolerant after ones twentieth year. . . . It is not merely a question of lines and colours but of smells, sounds and tastes as well: I often wonder if professional artists dont lose something of the real love of earth by seeing it in eye sensations exclusively? (Letters, July 1, [1921]). 19. There are interesting parallels here to Tolkiens story Leaf by Niggle. It was not published during Lewiss lifetime, but it was written in the mid-1940s when Lewis was encouraging Tolkien to resume work on The Lord of the Rings, so it seems very likely that he heard the story from Tolkien, or at least was told about it (see Humphrey Carpenter, Tolkien: A Biography, 5.2). For other contributions to Lewiss unsystematized theory of art, see Christianity and Literature, 57, and Lewiss sermon Transposition, which Bareld believes is the fullest statement of Lewiss theory of imagination (Lewis, Truth, and Imagination, 103). Because of its discussion of music and art as well as language, I believe Transposition also gives insight into his ideas about the arts.
148
other arts: if books on a shelf are only potential literature (EinC, 104), then paintings in a gallery are only potential art, and notes played in an auditorium are only potential music. For each art imaginative involvement is required, a willingness to receive the work, not just use it in a self-interested way. Appreciation of architecture was something Lewis acquired slowly. Of his childhood, he writes, We never saw a beautiful building nor imagined that a building could be beautiful (SbyJ, 6). That realization came only when he entered Cherbourg House in January 1911, at age thirteen: Wyvern [Malvern] Priory was the rst building that I ever perceived to be beautiful (SbyJ, 58see photos 3 and 4, pp. 12728). A few years later, in a letter to his father (September 30, 1914) he mentioned the church at Great Bookham, where he was studying with William Kirkpatrick: It is of pre-Norman structure, and is, like all these old churches, no particular shape. . . . It is, in its own way, very, very, beautiful (Lewis Papers, 4.22526see photos 5 and 6, p. 129). Informed appreciation came only later. In 1921 he described to Warren a visit to Wells Cathedral while on a motor tour with his father and uncle:
I . . . am no architect and not much more of an antiquarian. Strangely enough it was Uncle H. with his engineering more than the O.A.B. [their father] with his churchmanship that helped me to appreciate [its features]; he taught me to look at the single endless line of the aisle, with every pillar showing at once the strain and the meeting of the strain (like a ships frame work inverted): it certainly is wonderfully satisfying to look at. The pleasure one gets is like that from rhyme a need, and the answer of it following so quickly, that they make a single sensation. (Letters, August 7, 1921see photo 7, p. 130)
Lewis seems never to have overcome the disadvantages of this late introduction to the beauties of architecture. Perhaps he was less drawn to develop his knowledge in this area because architecture never stirred pangs of longing, as music and art did for him. There are fewer references to architecture in his writings than to the other arts, and other indications of a lack of interest as well. Lewis mentioned in 1924 that he agreed with [Warrens] view that Kings Chapel, Cambridge, is the perfect building (AMR, 316see photos 8 and 9, pp. 13132). Warren recorded in 1930 that he and Lewis
149
visited Salisbury Cathedral (see photo 10, p. 133), J[ack] pointing out that the symmetry for which it is praised would have existed in all our Cathedrals had the money been available to nish them in the style in which they were begun.20 On the other hand, Lewis was nearly thirty-six before he visited St. Pauls Cathedral: We decided on going to St. Pauls, which J had never seen.21 He did, however, appreciate the beauty of Oxford and its rich architecture. In a 1919 letter to Arthur Greeves, he wrote, As you come out of our college gate you see All Souls and just beyond it the grey spire of St. Marys Church: you know what real Gothic is like: all little pinaccles [sic] with every kind of ornament on them and in the snow they look like a wintry forest hung up against the dark sky, and always associated in ones mind with the sound of bells (TST, 243see photos 11 and 12, pp. 13435).22 Architecture plays a minor role in the written texts of the Chronicles. This is to be expected in a mainly rural setting where most buildings are simple and functional. When architecture does appear in Narnia, it is often in the gothic style of Narnian castles. The White Witchs house was really a small castle. It seemed to be all towers; little towers with long pointed spires on them, sharp as needles (LWW, 74). Cair Paravel, as Peter looks at it from the Hill of the Stone
20. W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends, 61. We should approach [Malorys Morte Darthur] not as we approach Liverpool Cathedral, but as we approach Wells Cathedral. At Liverpool we see what a particular artist invented. At Wells we see something on which many generations laboured, which no man foresaw or intended as it now is, and which occupies a position half-way between works of art and those of nature (C. S. Lewis, The Morte Darthur, 110). 21. W. H. Lewis, Brothers and Friends, 149. Lewis described a previous visit to Salisbury Cathedral in a letter to his father, when his response seems initially to have been one of use, which changed later to one of reception: in daylight he considered it very good in its own way but not in my favourite way, but seeing it by moonlight on a perfect spring night, he was completely conquered (Letters, April 1925). 22. Compare those comments on Oxford with Lewiss rst impressions of Cambridge a year later: It was very interesting . . . to see Cambridge. . . . Some thingssuch as Kings College Chapel, in which I was prepared to be disappointedare indeed beautiful beyond hope or belief: several little quadrangles I remember, with tiled gables, sun dials and tall chimnies like Tudor houses, were charming. . . . Oxford is more magnicent, Cambridge perhaps more intriguing (Letters, December 8, 1920). Cambridge is the setting of The Dark Tower; the tower replicates the university library, completed in 1934. Architectural images are scattered through the fragment.
150
Table, looked like a great star resting on the seashore (LWW, 105). The gothic style ts the medieval romance setting, and it reects the images Lewis internalized through years in Oxford, with its gothic and neo-gothic beauty. The only building in Narnia resembling a great English house is on the Island of the Voices in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. The Magicians house is very long and grey and quiet-looking, . . . two stories highmade of a beautiful mellow stone, many windowed, and partially covered with ivy (VDT, 108, 110). The most important use of architecture in the Chronicles occurs as a way of contrasting Calormen and Narnia in The Horse and His Boy. Shasta, on his journey to reach Narnia and the North, must go through the magnicent city of Tashbaan, with its architectural splendors: Inside the walls the island rose in a hill and every bit of that hill, up to the Tisrocs palace and the great temple of Tash at the top, was completely covered with buildingsterrace above terrace, street above street, zigzag roads or huge ights of steps bordered with orange trees and lemon trees, roof-gardens, balconies, deep archways, pillared colonades, spires, battlements, minarets, pinnacles (H&B, 41). Despite its architectural splendor, Tashbaan is busy, dirty, and oppressive: crowded partly by the peasants (on their way to market) . . . but also with water-sellers, sweetmeat sellers, porters, soldiers, beggars, ragged children, hens, stray dogs, and bare-footed slaves and reeking with the smells of unwashed people, unwashed dogs, scent, garlic, onions, and the piles of refuse which lay everywhere (H&B, 4445). Aravislike Shasta and the Narnianshad always lived in the country and had hated every minute of her time in Tashbaan (H&B, 105). The rural life and simple buildings of Archenland and Narnia come as a welcome contrast to Tashbaan. After Shasta is helped across the mountains by Aslan, he is found by talking animals and by a Dwarf who takes him home to a little house with a smoking chimney and an open door. . . . The roof was very low, and everything was made of wood and there was a cuckoo-clock and a red-and-white checked table-cloth and a bowl of wild owers and little white curtains on the thick-paned windows (H&B, 14647). The contrasting architectural and decorating stylesornateness and splendor vs. simplicity and homeyness parallel the contrast between slavery (of humans and talking horses) and freedom. The natural beauty of Narnia reects its way of life:
151
Oh the sweet air of Narnia! Bree sighs. An hours life there is better than a thousand years in Calormen (H&B, 8). The written descriptions of buildings and cities in the Chronicles are less successful in conveying the beauty of architecture than are Pauline Bayness illustrations. Her drawings place before the readers eyes the numerous, rather ominous spires of the White Witchs castle (LWW, 75), the graceful towers, turrets, and arches of Cair Paravel (LWW, 147; SC, 27), the enormous, multitowered house of the giants of Harfang (SC, 87), the crowded island city of Tashbaan with its minarets and domes rising above at rooftops (H&B, 42), and the ruins of magnicent, multistoried buildings and arches of the palace in Charn (MN, 37). The words, reinforced by the drawings, place before the young reader a fact not conveyed to the young Lewis, that buildings can be beautiful and should be looked at closely and attentively for that which makes them beautiful. Architecture is used frequently in other stories to convey or reinforce values. Among the most memorable references to buildings are those of the gray city in The Great Divorce, the pragmatic, featureless sections (dingy lodging houses, small tobacconists, hoardings from which posters hung in rags, windowless warehouses, with residential areas beyond: roofs spreading without a break as far as the eye can reach13, 16; chap. 1), contrasting with the spectacular design of Napoleons home: Hed built himself a huge house all in the Empire stylerows of windows aming with light (GD, 20; chap. 2). That few of the buildings are impressive architecturally reects the poor aesthetic tastes and self-centeredness of the inhabitants, since youve only got to think a house and there it is (GD, 19; chap. 2). The inhabitants of the gray town cant get far enough outside or beyond themselves even to imagine ne architecture. Likewise, Screwtape notes that the half-nished, sham Gothic erection on the new building estate is what humans see when they think of the Church: not the Church as we [devils] see her spread out through all time and space and rooted in eternity (SL, letter 2). In Till We Have Faces architecture is used to add realism to the depiction of Glome, a little barbarous state on the borders of the Hellenistic world with Greek culture just beginning to affect it (Letters, February 10, 1957) and to help set Glome apart from the countries around it. The royal palace is, for Glome, a large, impressive structure, built at various times. The newer part is of painted brick; the
152
oldest part, the attached barn at the back, has wooden walls (TWHF, 1.1).23 Orual notes, We have upper rooms and even galleries in the palace; it is not like a Greek house (TWHF, 1.6). Realistic detail appears in the temple of Ungit, fashioned of great, ancient stones, twice the height of a man and four times the thickness of a man, with brick lling the spaces between the stones and the roof thatched with rushes. It has the shape of an egg, which is a holy shape, and the priests say it resembles, or (in a mystery) that it really is, the egg from which the whole world was hatched (TWHF, 1.9). The gods house to which Psyche is taken as a bride is not like any house in Glome or like the Greek houses the Fox has described, but something new, never conceived of (TWHF, 1.10). When Orual catches a glimpse of it at night, across the river, it is solid and motionless, wall within wall, pillar and arch and architrave, acres of it, a labyrinthine beauty. . . . Pinnacles and buttresses leaped up . . . unbelievably tall and slender, pointed and prickly as if stone were shooting out into branch and ower (TWHF, 1.12). And the temple Orual happens upon in Essur is no bigger than a peasants hut but built of pure white stone, with uted pillars in the Greek style (TWHF, 1.21). The Ransom trilogy conveys the spiritual dimensions of architecturethat it can be used to Gods glory and that its beauties can draw viewers closer to him. Architecture appears in both literal structures and gurative references in Out of the Silent Planet. In the stone-age world of Malacandra, the hrossa live in beehive-shaped huts made of stiff leaves and the sorns in mountain caves (OSP, chaps. 11, 15), but the ptriggi live in buildings that are spectacular in architectural design: I could show you houses with a hundred pillars, one of suns blood [gold] and the next of stars milk [silver] (OSP, chap. 17); however, Ransom has no opportunity to see them. Architectural detail is also suggested, broadly, in the description of Meldilorn, the holiest site on Malacandra, with its low buildings of stone and its broad avenue of monoliths leading to the hilltop on which Ransom meets Oyarsa (OSP, chap. 17). The most signicant references to architecture in Out of the Silent Planet occur as gures of speech. Ransom understands that the tall,
23. Nancy-Lou Patterson, The Holy House of Ungit, 7. Patterson examines the various structures and buildings of Till We Have Faces in this illuminating study of Ungit as a central character of the story.
153
thin shapes he sees on Malacandra are a result of this world having a lighter gravitational pull than Earth. More important than the scientic explanation, however, is the spiritual realization which he slowly reaches about this theme of perpendicularity, this skyward impulse. As Ransom looks at the trees, he notes, vast as they were, air was sufcient to support them so that the long aisles of the forest all rose to a kind of fan tracery (OSP, chap. 8). The whole of Malacandra, such imagery implies, is a cathedral, with thousands of Gothic arches and spires pointing Godward and directing attention toward the heavens.24 They were enormously high, so that Ransom had to throw back his head to see the top of them. Some ended in points that looked from where he stood as sharp as needles. When Ransom learns, later, that the Malacandrians live in constant touch with spiritual beings who pervade the planets atmosphere, it comes as no surprise. That this planet is a holy place is conveyed long before Ransom learns about eldils, Oyarsa, and the Old One. Architecture, like painting, can afford glimpses of heaven. In the Chronicles, however, although Lewis afrms the value of both arts for young readers, such glimpses are missing. Painting and architecture are present, but they are limited mostly to aesthetic, not eternal, effects. Only one reference to architecture occurs in Perelandra (the oating islands, of course, cannot sustain constructed buildings), but that one reference reects the need sentient created beings seem to have of erecting buildings with images, to honor and glorify their creator. After Tinidril has withstood the Un-mans temptations and the Fixed Land is no longer forbidden, Tor proclaims that they will build on the xed island a great place to the splendour of Maleldil. Our sons shall bend the pillars of rock into arches . . . pillars of stone [throwing] out branches like trees and knit[ting] their branches together and bear[ing] up a great dome as of leafage, but the leaves shall be shaped stones. And there our sons will make images (Per, chap. 17). The cathedrals on Malacandra are metaphorical, but those on Perelandra will be literal, and will invert the imagery of Malacandra: on the older planet, trees are like cathedrals, while on the newer one cathedrals will be like trees.
24. Rudolf Otto, whose book Das Heilige (1924) inuenced Lewis deeply, wrote that for Western cultures, the Gothic cathedral is the best spatial expression of the numinous (see Otto, The Idea of the Holy: An Inquiry into the NonRational Factor in the Idea of the Divine and Its Relation to the Rational, chap. 9).
154
In That Hideous Strength architecture reinforces the contrast in values between the N.I.C.E. and the company at St. Annes. The N.I.C.E. headquarters are at Belbury, which is described as a modern building: a orid Edwardian mansion which had been built for a millionaire who admired Versailles with a widespread outgrowth of newer and lower buildings in cement sprouting from its sides (THS, 2.4). In contrast, the Manor House at St. Annes, home of Ransom and his followers, is an older building, reminding one of the professors house in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe: it is a large house, featuring a ne Georgian staircase and long passages, with landings at different levels and a large hall where daylight mixed with relight (THS, 3.3, 7.1, 8.2). The most important use of architecture in any of Lewiss works is the careful description of the varied styles of the buildings of Bracton College. The style of each college ts the values reected in its name and leads the viewer (or reader) deeper into the moral qualities of academic, public, private, and spiritual life: the Newton quadrangle contains orid, but beautiful, Georgian buildings; in the Republic quadrangle, the medieval college, the stone of the buttresses that rise from [the grass] gives the impression of being soft and alive; in the Lady Alice quadrangle, the buildings to your left and right were seventeenth-century work: humble, almost domestic in character, with dormer windows, mossy and grey-tiled; and the gate to Bragdon Wood, the innermost sanctum, was by Inigo Jones (THS, 1.3).25 The N.I.C.E. cares nothing about architectural aestheticstheir gigantic building plan destroys the integrity of the collegeor about rural beauty of the Narnian sort: they intend to destroy Cure Hardy (a beauty spot, . . . [with] sixteenth-century almshouses, and a Norman church) and replace it with a new model village. When Mark says, Well have to be careful that whatever were building up in its place will really be able to beat it on all levelsnot merely in efciency, Cosser dismisses his concern in a telling phrase: Oh, architecture and all that. . . . Well, thats hardly my line, you know (THS, 4.6). The most important kind of visual art in the Chronicles is one that sometimes is not even thought of as artthe designing and mak25. The signicance of the architecture of Bracton College is examined in detail by Nancy-Lou Patterson in The Unfathomable Feminine Principle: Images of Wholeness in That Hideous Strength, and by Doris Myers in Law and Disorder: Two Settings in That Hideous Strength.
155
ing of clothes. Clothing is often regarded in pragmatic rather than artistic terms, but the garments displayed in museums, and designer clothes today, should be sufcient reminders of the artistry involved. It is the most domestic and widely practiced of the arts, for the fashioning of attractive, practical clothing is carried out in the homes of the lower classes as well as the shops patronized by the rich. Clothing is used in the Chronicles, That Hideous Strength, and The Great Divorce to bring out character, to clarify cultural setting, and to develop theme and meaning. Such an emphasis on clothing is intriguing for someone whose own clothes were a matter of complete indifference to him. He had, his brother writes, an extraordinary knack of making a new suit look shabby the second time he wore it.26 Lewis described himself as one of those on whom Nature has laid the doom that whatever they buy and whatever they wear they will always look as if they had come out of an old clothes shop (SbyJ, 67see photo 13, p. 136). Lewiss central concern about his own clothing was almost always comfort, not appearance. Consider, for example, Lewiss memories of the rst time he left for boarding school in England:
The most important fact at the moment is the horrible clothes I have been made to put on. Only this morningonly two hours agoI was running wild in shorts and blazer and sand shoes. Now I am choking and sweating, itching too, in thick dark stuff, throttled by an Eton collar, my feet already aching with unaccustomed boots. I am wearing knickerbockers that button at the knee. Every night for some forty weeks of every year and for many a year I am to see the red, smarting imprint of those buttons in my esh when I undress. Worst of all is the bowler hat, apparently made of iron, which grasps my head. (SbyJ, 22)27
The Chronicles repeatedly contrast such queer, dingy conning clothes of the twentieth-century world (LB, 44) with the colorful vibrancy of Narnian dress. That contrast happens particularly when
26. W. H. Lewis, Memoir of C. S. Lewis, in Letters, 36. 27. The only time he cared about appearance was the brief period at Cherbourg House in which, under the inuence of Pogoa dressy, sophisticated new instructor fresh from universityLewis learned knuttery: he became dressy, wearing spread ties with pins in them, low-cut coats, trousers worn high to show startling socks, and brogue shoes with immensely wide laces. A more pitiful ambition for a lout of an overgrown fourteen-year-old with a shilling a week pocket money could hardly be imagined (SbyJ, 67).
156
the children leave Narnia and return to our world: They were no longer Kings and Queens in their hunting array but just Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy in their old clothes (LWW, 153), and it was odd, and not very nice, to take off their royal clothes and to come back in their school things (PC, 185). At other times the contrast is implied, as in the following parenthetical comment when Tirian, after being thrown through the stable door, nds that he was dressed in such clothes as he would have worn for a great feast at Cair Paravel. (But in Narnia your good clothes were never your uncomfortable ones. They knew how to make things that felt beautiful as well as looking beautiful in Narnia: and there was no such thing as starch or annel or elastic to be found from one end of the country to the other) (LB, 12526).28 Of course the clothes contrasted to our worlds are royal dress, but that is just the point. In egalitarian, twenty-rst-century Western society, everyone dresses pretty much the same. Even those who cannot afford them spend money on designer jeans and footwear endorsed by star athletes in an effort to equate themselves with the rich and famous. In the monarchical, hierarchical world of Narnia, the royal wardrobe contains silk and cloth of gold, with snowy linen glancing through slashed sleeves, with silver mail-shirts and jewelled sword-hilts, with gilt helmets and feathered bonnets . . . almost too bright to look at (PC, 180). The same was true of the royal rooms in Charn: the blaze of their colours was rich and majestic (MN, 42). Lewis uses the roomful of monarchs to suggest to readers that clothing is something they might well pay attention to: All the gures were wearing magnicent clothes. If you were interested in clothes at all, you could hardly help going in to see them closer. . . . I can hardly describe the clothes. The gures were all robed and had crowns on their heads. Their robes were of crimson and silvery grey and deep purple and vivid green: and there were patterns, and pictures of owers and strange beasts, in needlework all over them (MN, 42).
28. The one exception to clothes being comfortable in Narnia occurs in the grim school run by Miss Prizzle, in which a lot of Narnian girls, with their hair done very tight and ugly tight collars round their necks and thick tickly stockings on their legs, were having a history lesson (PC, 166). Aslan frees Gwendolen from the school and Maenads help her take off some of the unnecessary and uncomfortable clothes that she was wearing (PC, 168). Note, however, that this school is run by the Telmarines, not true Narnians.
157
The splendor of Narnian clothing is very different from the effect fancy clothes have in our world: in a vain attempt to impress Jadis, Uncle Andrew changed into the formal attire of the turn of the century, clothes that young readers never will have seen and that the narrator barely can remember: He put on a very high, shiny, stiff collar of the sort that made you hold your chin up all the time. He put on a white waistcoat with a pattern on it and arranged his gold watch chain across the front. He put on his best frockcoat, the one he kept for weddings and funerals. He got out his best tall hat and polished it up (MN, 67). From this elegance, Uncle Andrew descends to being a miserable object in muddy clothes after being planted, watered, caged, and fed thistles, worms, and honeyfor of course the animals knew nothing about clothes (MN, 151, 115). Similarly, Helen, the Cabbys wife, would have looked dreadful if she had had time to put on her good clothes (her best hat had imitation cherries on it), but in an everyday dress and apron, with her sleeves rolled up to the elbows, she looked rather nice (MN, 123). As she and Frank leave behind their clothing from our world, their expressions and attitudes change as well: All the sharpness and cunning and quarrelsomeness . . . seemed to have been washed away. And their transformation into King Frank and Queen Helen of Narnia is signaled by new clothing: The children now noticed these two for the rst time. They were dressed in strange and beautiful clothes, and from their shoulders rich robes owed out behind them (MN, 150). Clothes convey an even deeper personal transformation when Aslan tells Eustace, the dragon, in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, to undress. Because he doesnt have clothes on, he peels off his dragon skin three times before Aslan nally pulls it off for him and then dresses him in new clothes (VDT, 8892). Clothes are emphasized frequently in The Horse and His Boy as well, here to comment on the values held by individual characters and by cultures. The clothes of the Narnians visiting Tashbaan (of ne, bright, hardy colours46) contrast with the clothes of the Calormenes. Lasaraleens preoccupation with expensive, showy garments is satirized repeatedly and highlights the contrast between her and Aravis: Lasaraleen had always been . . . interested in clothes and parties and gossip. Aravis had always been more interested in bows and arrows and horses and dogs and swimming (H&B, 8283). Royalty are expected to wear clothing betting their
158
status; note particularly King Lunes explanation of what it means to be a king in lean years: to wear ner clothes and laugh louder over a scantier meal than any man in your land (H&B, 173, 180, 190). Clothes are used for disguises (H&B, 3839 and 87), and clothes are used for humorous effects: not only do they nd Rabadash hanging from a hook by his chain-shirt, but he is described as looking just as a man looks if you catch him in the very act of getting into a stiff shirt that is a little too small for him, or like a piece of washing hung up to dry (H&B, 16263, 164). Clothing is described in detail throughout The Silver Chair as a sustained motif to establish the tone and setting of the story. The quest to nd a prince, naturally, involves mingling with royalty and courts, and one encounters dress appropriate to that echelon of society. Entering it from an ordinary prep school in our world can be uncomfortable or disconcerting. When Jill lands near Cair Paravel after being blown down from Aslans mountain, she is struck by the beauty of the castle and the tall ship, and then by the clothes. She sees the king wearing a rich mantle of scarlet and a silver mail shirt, leaning on the arm of a richly (but not magnicently) dressed lord. A dwarf nearby is as richly dressed as the King, with fur and silk and velvet. The courtiers were well worth looking at for their clothes and armour alone (SC, 28). In such a setting, the clothes Jill is wearing (a blazer and sweater and shorts and stockings and pretty thick shoes) look grubby and inappropriate: Trumpkin issues instructions that she and Eustace be given suitable clothes, and soon they are splendidly dressed in Narnian clothes, the kind that not only felt nice, but looked nice and smelled nice and made nice sounds when you moved as well (SC, 2324, 34, 35). In the rest of the story, clothes bring out contrasts between good guys and bad guys, particularly by means of ironyoften a lack of correspondence between outward appearance and inward characteror dress inappropriate for a particular situation. Jill and Eustace undertake a journey to nd Prince Rilian, having changed back into sweaters and shorts as being better for travel than fancy court clothes (SC, 40). Along the way they meet a beautiful lady wearing a long, uttering dress of dazzling green, a scrumptious dress Jill thought (SC, 73, 75). They (and readers as well) should have been wary of her, however, because the temptress whom Drinian saw earlier had worn, not clothes of Narnian beauty, but a thin garment as
159
green as poison (SC, 48). They are deceived by her appearance and follow her suggestion that they go to the castle at Harfang for the Autumn Feast. The king, queen, and members of the court at Harfang are all dressed in magnicent robes (SC, 91), more ostentatious than Narnian nery, but again appearances are deceiving. As with the lady, the clothing is beautiful, but the people inwardly are not. Jill, after a warm bath, is given very splendid clothes that make her feel content and well suited for court life (SC, 97). The clothes, however, are not appropriate for traveland travel is their duty. Thus, when they try to escape, they must deal with clothes not conducive to speedy, inconspicuous movement: Jill wore a vivid green robe, rather too long for her, and over that a scarlet mantle fringed with white fur. Scrubb had scarlet stockings, blue tunic and cloak, a goldhilted sword, and a feathered bonnet (SC, 113). Jill has to gather up her long skirtshorrible things for running inwhen the hounds begin to chase them (SC, 114). In these clothes, progressively more dirty and torn, they move through the underworld and eventually rescue Prince Rilian. As Jill emerges from the underworld, she sees a ring of Dwarfs, all dressed in their nest clothes; mostly scarlet with furlined hoods and golden tassles and big furry top-boots (SC, 186) appropriate Narnian garb. When Rilian comes out, he is dressed in black, not in clothing tting for royalty. The Narnians, clearer-eyed than the children on their journey, look beyond outward appearance to inner reality and recognize him by his look and air (SC, 192). When he is next seen, he has changed his black clothes and is now dressed in a scarlet cloak over silver mail (SC, 200). Clothing also contributes to the humor and the gentle ironies that mark the concluding episode. When Jill and Eustace return to our world, the gang of bullies at Experiment are terried to see, rushing down upon them, gures in glittering clothes with weapons in their hands. After putting the gang to ight, Jill and Eustace slip quietly indoors and change out of their bright clothes into ordinary things. Later, Eustace buried his ne clothes secretly one night in the school grounds, but Jill smuggled hers home and wore them at a fancy dress ball next holidays (SC, 206, 207). The point being made about clothing in the Chronicles is reinforced by two passages in That Hideous Strength. The rst is when
160
Ransom, for his conference with Merlin, dons sweepy garments of blue and explains to his comrades, I have for once put on the dress of my ofce to do him honour. . . . He mistook MacPhee and me for scullions or stable-boys. In his days . . . men did not, except for necessity, go about in shapeless sacks of cloth, and drab was not a favourite colour (THS, 13.3).29 The second passage occurs before the dinner celebrating the defeat of the N.I.C.E., when the members of the company lay aside their everyday clothes and wear robes of state. The women choose clothes from a wardrobe which looks like a tropical forest glowing with bright colours, . . . [a] background of purple and gold and scarlet and soft snow and elusive opal, of fur, silk, velvet, taffeta, and brocade. The clothing brings out the inner beauty and nobility in each woman. As Ivy puts on a sumptuous robe, for example, the commonplace had not exactly gone from her form and face: the robe had taken it up, as a great composer takes up a folk-tune and tosses it like a ball through his symphony and makes of it a marvel, yet leaves it still itself. And Mrs. Dimble is transformed from the provincial wife of a rather obscure scholar, a respectable and barren woman with gray hair and double chin, into a kind of priestess or sybil, the servant of some prehistoric goddess of fertilityan old tribal matriarch, mother of mothers, grave, formidable, and august (THS, 17.2). The mens clothing is not described in detail, but they too are wearing festal garments (THS, 17.4). The clothes of two women in The Great Divorce bring out the contrast between an unhealthy, self-oriented inner condition and a healthy, other-oriented one. On the one hand is the well-dressed woman whose nery looked ghastly in the light of heaven and who tries to stay hidden because she doesnt have a real solid body and doesnt want to have everyone staring through me (GD, 56; chap. 8). On the other hand is Sarah Smith: I cannot now remember, says the narrator, whether she was naked or clothed. If she were naked, then it must have been the almost visible penumbra of her courtesy and joy which produces in my memory the illusion of a great and shining train that followed her across the happy grass. If she were clothed, then the illusion of nakedness is doubtless due to the clarity
29. Clothing as an external indicator of high ofce appears also in Till We Have Faces when Orual, after freeing the Fox and declaring him the Queens Lantern, wants him to be splendidly dressed (TWHF, 1.19).
161
with which her inmost spirit shone through the clothes. For clothes in that country are not a disguise: the spiritual body lives along each thread and turns them into living organs (GD, 97; chap. 12).30 That Hideous Strength and the Chronicles use clothing as an important vehicle for creating a sense of what Thomas Howard calls heraldry. The struggle of the artist, Howard contends, is to speak about what poets and artists have always extolledbeauty, perfection, felicityto a generation whose eyes and ears are so diseased [they] . . . are now incapable of receiving such news.31 The modern, Western world in general desires simplicity, not nobility, but that, Lewis says, is a late and sophisticated [desire]. We moderns may like dances which are hardly distinguishable from walking and poetry which sounds as if it might be uttered ex tempore. Our ancestors did not. They liked a dance which was a dance, and ne clothes which no one could mistake for working clothes (PPL, chap. 4). Nobility, and the way clothing symbolizes it, point Lewiss readers toward a higher mode of existence for which they are destined: thus Jane, after her rst encounter with Ransom, feels lifted to the sphere of Jove, amid light and music and festal pomp, brimmed with life and . . . clothed in shining garments (THS, 7.3). A sense of cosmological hierarchy is essential, Lewis believed, for a right understanding of God: In God you come up against something which is in every respect immeasurably superior to yourself. Unless you know God as thatand, therefore, know yourself as nothing in comparisonyou do not know God at all (MC, 3.8).32 In earlier
30. The absence of clothes becomes signicant several times: Ransom, while on Perelandra and his journey to it and back, is naked, as are Tor and Tinidril, except when Weston dresses Tinidril in robes of colorful feathers in an attempt to teach her vanity (Per, chap. 10). So are some of the spirits in The Great Divorce: Some were naked, some robed. But the naked ones did not seem less adorned, and the robes did not disguise in those who wore them the massive grandeur of muscle and the radiant smoothness of esh (GD, 29; chap. 3). Orual must stand naked before herself as judge (TWHF, 2.3), and John in The Pilgrims Regress must take off his clothes, which by then hung in shreds, plastered with blood and with the grime of every shire from Puritania to the canyon before he dives into the baptismal waters that will purify and save him (PR, 9.4). 31. Howard, The Achievement of C. S. Lewis: A Reading of His Fiction, 29. 32. In That Hideous Strength Ransom uses clothing to remind Jane that humans are fallen creatures: We must all be guarded by equal rights from one anothers greed, because we are fallen. Just as we must all wear clothes for the same reason. But the naked body should be there underneath the clothes, ripening for the day when we shall need them no longer (179).
162
cultures, that sense of superiority was conveyed through social and ecclesiastical hierarchies, but it has been lost in the egalitarianism of the twenty-rst century. In Narnia, that sense of superiority is imaged in the nobility, with the clothing that sets them apart, and in the still greater nobility of Aslan, as king over all. But it is also crucial to remember that it is only in comparison to God that humans are nothing. The transformative effect of clothing in That Hideous Strength and in the Chronicles emphasizes the inherent nobility and value of each individual human being. The passage quoted above from That Hideous Strength conveys in story what Lewis expressed directly in his sermon The Weight of Glory: There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. . . . It is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit. . . . Next to the Blessed Sacrament itself, your neighbour is the holiest object presented to your senses.33 When characters in the Chronicles are transformed by putting on Narnian clothes, it becomes in the imaginative reading experience of young readers an image of transformation for themselves. They can identify with Eustace, who, after he is undragoned, is dressed in new clothes and begins to be a different boy (VDT, 90, 92).34 All of the artsstory, music, dance, the visual arts, and architecture as well as the design and crafting of clothescelebrate the nobility and value of humanity. Lewis held that all artists, whether Christians or non-Christians, as they use their imaginations to create works of beauty, reect the beauty God embodied in the created universe and the sense of beauty God implanted in human beings. Lewis appreciated the arts and afrmed the imagination for its importance in producing and enjoying works of art, and he used the Chronicles of Narnia to convey his regard for imagination and the arts to children and to adult readers. The Chronicles, through their stories and through their invocation of the arts, appeal to and help develop the imaginativeness of readers young and old and foster their openness and sensitivity to the creative arts.
33. Lewis, The Weight of Glory, 33. 34. Lewis uses clothing metaphorically to clarify the implications of addressing God as Our Father in the Lords Prayer: Do you now see what those words mean? They mean . . . that you are putting yourself in the place of a son of God. To put it bluntly, you are dressing up as Christ (MC, 4.7; emphasis in the original).
163
164
presented a clear, accessible, and powerful delineation of the concept long before it became popularized in the 1980s and 1990s. Intellect can know principles of morality, but until these become meaningful and internalized, they have no practical effect. Imagination, according to Lewis, is the organ of meaning. Imagination is needed in the moral realm, therefore, to give meaning to morality, to connect its principles to life, to bridge the gap between theory and practice. The subjects treated in the previous eight chapters are so important because Lewis believed that the artistic imagination could be used in the service of the moral imagination. That does not mean that he advocated reading only works with overt moral themes or that he believed in censoring works that did not support his Christian beliefs or moral principles. As he put it in An Experiment in Criticism, when we read, we . . . delight to enter into other mens beliefs (those, say, of Lucretius or Lawrence) even though we think them untrue (EinC, 138). The writer (and to some extent the artist or composer) using his or her imagination depicts characters, events, and feelings vividly so that the reader, through his or her imagination, experiences the reality of the implicit or explicit moral issues involved. As part of his initiation into the inner ring of the N.I.C.E., Mark Studdock needs to undergo a process whereby all specically human reactions [are] killed (THS, 14.1). He spends repeated sessions in what Lewis ironically labeled the Objective Room, where everything is slightly irregular: the room is ill proportioned, a bit too high and too narrownot enough to be obviously wrong, but enough to throw off ones sense of proper balance. The arch of the door is barely off-center, spots on the ceiling almost but not quite form a pattern, spots on the table perhaps reect those of the ceiling or perhaps dont, paintings on the walls have one or two details that clash with ones expectations. The intent is to frustrate and then kill off the sense of order and proportion that Lewis believed is part of the human imagination as right and wrong are part of the human soul. Training in the Objective Room would presumably be followed by the eating of abominable food, the dabbling in dirt and blood, the ritual performances of calculated obscenities, all working counter to natural human tastes and impulses and, by familiarity, making the wrong seem right. The names of those initiating Mark into this inner circle, Wither and Frost, reect what is happening:
165
the withering of natural human impulses and the replacing of them with cold, unfeeling lust for power. In order to undermine Marks values, Wither and Frost must alter his imagination. The undermining process, however, does not succeed. Marks imagination rebels against it. Against the background of the distorted and crooked arises in him some kind of vision of the sweet and the straight. Something elsesomething he vaguely called the Normalapparently existed. He had never thought about it before. But there it wassolid, massive, with a shape of its own, almost like something you could touch, or eat, or fall in love with. Lewis here uses imagination to give concrete substance to the abstract concept of the Objective, which Lewis accepted and adhered to from at least his mid-twenties on, as discussed in chapter 1 above. He depicts it as something implanted in Marks imagination. Mark, who had seldom made a moral resolution (THS, 12.7), was not thinking in moral terms at all, but he was having his rst deeply moral experience. He was choosing a side: the Normal (THS, 14.1). He reached it not through reection on moral principles, but through a decision based on moral imagination. Lewis notes in his preface that That Hideous Strength embodies in story form the serious point he tried to make in The Abolition of Man. This work, the publication of the Riddell Memorial Lectures delivered at the University of Durham on the evenings of February 24, 25, and 26, 1943, has been termed Lewiss most important book.2 Although the word imagination does not appear in it, this is Lewiss fullest articulation of the importance of moral imagination. Addressing educators (but also by implication parents, who are a childs rst educators), he raises again the problem of imaginative impoverishment. The educational system has misread the need of the moment: fearing that young people will be swept away by emotional propa2. It is generally seen as his most important pamphlet and the best existing defense of objective values and the natural law (George Sayer, Jack: C. S. Lewis and His Times, 183). Owen Bareld regarded it as Lewiss greatest philosophical achievement (Bareld, Conversations on C. S. Lewis, 146; see also 134). See also Peter Kreeft, C. S. Lewis for the Third Millennium: Six Essays on The Abolition of Man, 4851; Dabney Adams Hart, Through the Open Door: A New Look at C. S. Lewis, 87; Thomas C. Peters, Simply C. S. Lewis: A Beginners Guide to the Life and Works of C. S. Lewis, 145.
166
ganda, educators have decided the best thing they can do for children is to fortify their minds against imagination and emotion by teaching them to dissect all things by rigorous intellectual analysis. Lewis says in reply, My own experience as a teacher tells an opposite tale. For every one pupil who needs to be guarded from a weak excess of sensibility there are three who need to be awakened from the slumber of cold vulgarity. The task of the modern educator is not to cut down jungles but to irrigate deserts (AofM, 9). Childrens and adolescents imaginations need to be fed. Lewis writes in The Abolition of Man as a philosopher, dealing with abstract concepts that many readers today nd difcult to grasp. The central argument of the book propounds the doctrine of objective value, the belief that certain attitudes are really true, and others really false, to the kind of thing the universe is and the kind of things we are (AofM, 11). This, of course, connects directly to Marks experience in the Objective Room, where when Frost attempts to train Mark in impersonal objectivity, an objective sense of the Normal arises from Marks subconscious to defeat the effort. Objective standards of proportion and correctness, in the aesthetic and moral realms (the Objective Room connects the two), are present for Mark because they exist as part of the fabric of the universe. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe refers to them as Deep Magic from Before the Dawn of Time (LWW, 127) and Mere Christianity as the Law of Human Nature (MC, 1.3). That law, Lewis believes, is like language, both innate (as emphasized in Mere Christianity, 1.1) and something that has to be learned, absorbed from parents and society, nurtured by example and precept.3 Such nurturing is the central theme of The Abolition of Man. The role and approach of education are totally different for parents and educators who accept objective norms and values and for those who do not. For those who accept objectivity, the task is to train in the pupil those responses which are in themselves appropriate, whether anyone is making them or not, and in making which the very nature of man consists. The child must be guided to feel pleasure, liking, disgust, and hatred at those things which really are pleasant, likeable, disgusting, and hateful. Those who do not accept objectivity must decide either to remove all sentiments,
3. Doris T. Myers, C. S. Lewis in Context, 8081.
167
as far as possible, from the pupils mind: or else to encourage some sentiments for reasons that have nothing to do with their intrinsic justness or ordinacy (AofM, 12, 10, 12). Crucial to such nurturing is the childs internalization of the standards and the appropriate response. Intellectual apprehension of abstract principles is not enough. When a child is tempted to steal a sweater that appeals to him or her greatly, the goal is not to have the child intellectually weigh the moral issues at stake; the child must feel that stealing is not only wrong but repugnant, feel it through trained emotions: Without the aid of trained emotions the intellect is powerless against the animal organism (AofM, 13). Elsewhere, Lewis refers to trained emotions as practical reason4 not the abstract reections of the head, but the properly nurtured judgments of the heart: The ChestMagnanimitySentiment these are the indispensable liaison ofcers between cerebral man and visceral man (AofM, 14). Lewis goes even further, to call this the dening quality of the human species: It may even be said that it is by this middle element that man is man: for by his intellect he is mere spirit and by his appetite mere animal (AofM, 14). Education, whether at home or school, aimed only at developing knowledge and intellect produces Men without Chests (the title of the rst lecture) and children who are emotionally and imaginatively impoverished. The loss of belief in moral law and its implementation through practical reason will ultimately, inevitably lead to the abolition of man, the loss of the qualities that dene the human species. In The Abolition of Man Lewis makes a powerful case for the existence of objective values and the importance of nurturing in children awareness of those values and appropriate responses to them. But he does not bring the matter down to earth and illustrate in practical ways how parents and educators can carry out such nurturing. For that we must return to That Hideous Strength. Perhaps through the remaining memory of some childhood training not specied in the story, perhaps through innate impulses not totally squelched by his modern education, Mark is able to escape the clutches of the N.I.C.E. But his moral imagination is badly undernourished and in need of sustenance. After eeing the holocaust in which Belbury, the headquarters of the N.I.C.E., is destroyed, he stops in a small, country4. Lewis, The Poison of Subjectivism, 7273.
168
side hotel, the kind Lewis always wanted to nd in the late afternoon when he was on a walking tour with a friend or two. As Mark has tea, he notices in the cozy sitting room two shelves of books, bound volumes of The Strand. In one of these he found a serial childrens story which he had begun to read as a child, but abandoned because his tenth birthday came when he was half-way through it and he was ashamed to read it after that. He begins reading and chases the story from volume to volume till he had nished it. It was good. The grown-up stories to which, after his tenth birthday, he had turned instead of it, now seemed to him, except for Sherlock Holmes, to be rubbish (THS, 17.1).5 The nourishing of his imagination has begun. Even this much food for the imagination is sufcient to lead him to some serious moral reection, perhaps the rst he has undertaken as an adult. He realizes that, in marrying Jane, he was using her rather than really loving her. Sensing a vitality in her from her openness to the imagination, he had hoped to be enriched by association with her: When she had rst crossed the dry and dusty world which his mind inhabited she had been like a spring shower; in opening himself to it he had not been mistaken. He had gone wrong only in assuming that marriage, by itself, gave him either power or title to appropriate that freshness. He reaches another moral decision: He must give her her
5. Marks former attitude presents an interesting parallel to Susan Pevensies ideas about being grown-up in The Last Battle, 12627. Through Marks experience Lewis embodies in story what he states elsewhere as a literary principle: Where the childrens story is simply the right form for what the author has to say, then of course readers who want to hear that, will read the story or re-read it, at any age. I never met The Wind in the Willows or the Bastable books till I was in my late twenties, and I do not think I have enjoyed them any the less on that account. I am almost inclined to set it up as a canon that a childrens story which is enjoyed only by children is a bad childrens story. The good ones last. (On Three Ways of Writing for Children, 24; see also 2526) Further, a book worth reading only in childhood is not worth reading even then (Sometimes Fairy Stories, 38). The point is restated in On Juvenile Tastes, 3941. Compare with Marks experience what Lewis wrote to Lucy Bareld in the dedication to The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe: You are already too old for fairy tales. . . . But some day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again. You can then take it down from some upper shelf, dust it, and tell me what you think of it.
169
freedom, he would release her. As he decides to release her, his arrogance and self-centered desire die and he becomes able to love selessly: he encounters Venus, who opens the door to the bridal suite, and he nds himself in some place of sweet smells and bright res, with food and wine and a rich bed (THS, 17.1, 17.7). Here is the practical advice Lewis did not include in The Abolition of Man. In addition to the direct moral guidance of parents, teachers, and society through instruction and rules, practical reason can be nurtured in children through reading and engagement with the other arts. The term practical reason refers to a union of abstract universals with everyday meaningfulness; meaning, for Lewis, is conveyed by the imagination. Thus practical reason and moral imagination are closely related, if not virtually synonymous. Through stories, music, dance, painting, and drawing, children learn the discipline that art involves, and the rules they are taught become more meaningful and emotionally accessible. The imaginativeness of stories enables children to form and internalize sentiments, those complex combinations of feelings and opinions that provide a basis for action or judgment. They are helped to learn and live out magnanimity, the nobleness of mind and generosity that enable one to overlook injury and rise above meanness. And childrens experience with the other arts cultivates an emotional sensitivity and openness that enable the imagination to achieve such results.6 In On Three Ways of Writing for Children, Lewis afrms that a writer should not impose a moral lesson upon a story: Let the pictures [i.e., images] tell you their own story. . . . The only moral that is of any value is that which arises inevitably from the whole cast of the authors mind.7 Here, in sum, is Lewis on the moral imagination: images are seen through imagination, and the moral of the story must be embodied in the images.
6. It is not just children whose imaginations become undernourished. Adults too need constant nourishment through the moral imagination. Robert Coles has used literature in graduate classes in education, medicine, law, business, and theology to confront students with social and moral issues they will encounter in their careers; he urges all adults to read, and then reread, the authors his parents read aloud to each other as a way of drinking from the reservoirs of wisdom they containGeorge Eliot, Dickens, Hardy, Hawthorne, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner, Chekhov, Dostoevsky, and Tolstoy (Coles, The Call of Stories: Teaching and the Moral Imagination, xixx). 7. Lewis, On Three Ways of Writing for Children, 33.
170
Upon reection it should be evident that the preceding eight chapters have anticipated this one, each laying groundwork for understanding the moral imagination in Lewis. Those chapters have dealt with story and the imaginative reading experience, for stories and reading are central to the nurturing of the moral imagination. They have also examined the degree to which the order of reading the Chronicles affects the reading experience, for both the artistic and the moral imagination. And they have explained the way Lewiss storytellers become vital aspects of the effect of his stories on the moral imagination, and how Lewis viewed music, dance, and the other arts as symbols for an orderly, unied, harmonious cosmos, which underlies the moral truths that the arts make accessible to the moral imagination. Nurturing of the moral imagination is an effect of all his poems and stories. Readers often concentrate on the Christian dimension of his works, but equally or more important to him was the moral dimension. This seems especially true for the Chronicles of Narnia. They denitely contain Christian motifs, as discussed in chapter 4 above, and Lewis says explicitly that he used the imagination to restore the emotional impact of events that had become commonplace: Suppose that by casting all these things into an imaginary world, stripping them of their stained-glass and Sunday school associations, one could make them . . . appear in their real potency? Could one not thus steal past those watchful dragons? I thought one could. But that was the second stage in the process, according to the essay. Prior to that came the impulse, even the need, to write a story about some mental images circling through his mind, a story which it turned out needed to be a fairy tale: I wrote fairy stories because the Fairy Tale seemed the ideal Form for the stuff I had to say.8 Fairy stories do not always, or often, deal with Christianity, but they almost always, by their nature, deal with moral issuesgood vs. evil, loyalty, courage, etc. Fairy stories are fundamental nurturers of moral imagination. Before Lewis knew his stories would be Christian, he suggests, he knew they would involve moral issues, such as Edmunds nastiness, untruthfulness, and disloyalty; Lucys honesty, integrity, and courage; the valor and sense of justice displayed by Peter; the hypocrisy, cruelty, and vindictiveness of the White Witch;
8. Lewis, Sometimes Fairy Stories, 37.
171
and the utter goodness, lovingness, and bravery of Aslan. By weaving references to the arts into the fabric of the Chronicles, Lewis sought to stimulate the readers artistic imaginations,9 but equally important to him was the nurturing of their moral imaginations. Lewiss interest in the moral imagination as well as the artistic imagination corresponds to what Doris T. Myers sees as dual approaches to art in Lewis. On the one hand, she notes, Lewis is a critic of the twentieth century who believes in art for arts sake and denigrates literary puritanism. On the other hand, he adheres to the traditions of critics from Horace through at least the eighteenth century who believe art must be useful as well as entertaining. He knows that art lacking a strong moral commitment, a strong component of transcendence, simply hasnt survived because the scribes didnt bother to recopy it.10 Thus, the approach of The Experiment in Criticism must be balanced with that of the discussion of Spenser in Lewiss volume of the Oxford History of English Literature. Lewis in the Chronicles, like Spenser in The Faerie Queene, embodied in moving images the common wisdom, with both exemplifying the moral imagination. Lewis, like Spenser, assumed from the outset that the truth about the universe was knowable and in fact known.11 Lewis, like Sidney, Spenser, and Shakespeare, did not write to express his moral ideas, but what all would have called common knowledge. The Lewis of the moral imagination is in one sense the dinosaur Lewis, speaking as a specimen of assumptions and values from an earlier age, passing on and attempting to preserve something of a traditional heritage to a modern world.12
9. In the letters he wrote to children, one also nds efforts to feed childrens imaginations and afrm their imaginative pursuits of every kind. He comments on their stories and poems and encourages them to write: Why dont you try writing some Narnian tales? I began to write when I was about your age, and it was the greatest fun. Do try! (Letters to Children, 99; similarly, 1012. For other comments on stories children sent him, see 40, 80, 88; on their poems, see 76, 81, 103). He praises their work in the drawings, paintings, and art objects they sent him: Reepicheep in your coloured picture has just the right perky, cheeky expression (Letters to Children, 32; see also 21, 31, 35, 38, 39, 40, 41, 43, 65, and 67). He discusses music and opera with another: How lucky you have been to have such a season of Opera. It must have been lovely (Letters to Children, 5556; also 48, 50, 69). 10. Myers, letter to the author, June 23, 1999. Quoted by permission. 11. Lewis, English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama, 38687. 12. Lewis, De Descriptione Temporum, 14.
172
Although Lewis was a strong advocate for both the artistic and the moral imagination, his endorsement was not unqualied. He was concerned about propensities that could render the imagination dangerous and immoral. First is the danger of placing too high a value on the imagination, of affording it spiritual status. Lewis himself had raised imagination to such a position before his conversion, as discussed in chapter 1 above. After his conversion, he came to a balanced vision of imaginations role: although imagination is a good, it must not be viewed as the highest good.13 A second danger is misuse of the imagination. In addition to positive uses of imagination Lewis talks of another, inwardly centered imagination, a kind that creates illusions and seeks escape, that renders one unable to see or recognize reality. Mark Studdock falls briey into such imaginings:
The approval of ones own conscience is a very heady draught; and specially for those who are not accustomed to it. Within two minutes Mark had passed from that rst involuntary sense of liberation to a conscious attitude of courage, and thence into unrestrained heroics. The picture of himself as hero and martyr, as Jack the Giant-Killer still coolly playing his hand even in the giants kitchen, rose up before him, promising that it could blot out forever those other, and unendurable pictures of himself which had haunted him for the last few hours. (THS, 12.7)
This imagination Lewis describes as the world of reverie, daydream, wish-fullling fantasy (SbyJ, 15; see also EinC, 5153), which was mentioned above in chapter 1now we see it is not just delusive, but can be morally harmful. In the world of wish-fullling fantasy lie two dangers: of an undisciplined imagination, creating a lack of faith when there is no rational ground for disbelief, and of a disobedient imagination, whose self-absorption leads to self-indulgence: Sensuality really arises more from the imagination than from the appetites; which, if left merely to their own animal strength, and not elaborated by our imagination, would be fairly easily managed.14 Thus, imagination
13. For discussions of imagination as a secondary good, see Lewis, Christianity and Literature and Christianity and Culture. 14. On undisciplined, see Lewis, Religion: Reality or Substitute? 43; on disobedient, see Lewis, Letters to an American Lady, November 26, 1962.
173
needs not just to be nourished, but also to be nurtured in positive directions, and Lewis believed that the reading and writing of fantasy are among the best vehicles for such nurturing. Lewiss short story The Shoddy Lands illustrates the result if imagination is not nourished and nurturedthe impoverished imagination of an adult. The narrators dream shows him the world as it exists for Peggy: At the centre of that world is a swollen image of herself, remodelled to be as like the girls in the advertisements as possible.15 Lewis did not share a concern some parents and religious leaders have about what they regard as a dangerous misuse of imaginationthat is, the use of witches and magic in his Chronicles of Narnia. In my community parents have withdrawn children from participating in classroom readings of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe because of the word witch in the title. Why, asked someone writing to an organization dealing with Lewis materials, would a Christian [Lewis] use magic or possibly mislead a child to believe in something else to get across a point about good vs. bad? An article on the Balaams Ass Speaks website calls Lewis the single most useful tool of Satan since his appearance in the Christian community sometime around World War II and the Chronicles of Narnia an indoctrinating tool of witchcraft, one of the most powerful tools of Satan that Lewis ever produced.16 Lewis used witches and magic in the Chronicles because they are an integral characteristic of the genre in which he was writing, the fairy tale. This in itself is not an adequate defense, of course, to those who would object to reading all fairy tales on the same grounds, as
15. Lewis, The Shoddy Lands, 106. 16. Mary Van Nattan, C. S. Lewis: The Devils Wisest Fool. The Chronicles glorify and promote many occult ideas; in them Lewis was introducing children to witchcraft through esoteric (hidden meanings) writings. The concerns expressed by such critics arise out of strong biblical injunctions against witches and magic, especially when the texts are interpreted literally. See, for example, Exodus 22:18, 1 Samuel 15:23, Micah 5:12, Nahum 3:4 in the King James Version of the Bible. Problems of translation and cultural differences complicate the issue. The Revised Standard Version, for example, uses sorcerer and divination where the KJV uses witch and witchcraft. Such concerns would not be as great, presumably, if it were not for the rise of Wicca and Witchcraft movements in recent years. See Doug Beyer, Whats the Mutter with Magic? Its Use in the Writings of C. S. Lewis, for a thorough survey and sensible analysis of Lewiss handling of magic in his ction and nonction writings.
174
unedifying and non-Christian. Within the tradition Lewis was drawing on, however, witches are the evil characters in stories depicting good and evil in black and white terms. In stories like Hansel and Gretel, they are ugly, scary old creatures who may do things that endanger childrens bodies, like eating them, but they do not engage in occult practices. Calling the characters in these stories witches may be questionable socially, as it attaches a pejorative label on a marginalized group (old women without husbands or families), but it does not have religious overtones and specically is not antiChristian. Lewis pushes a step beyond this. His witchesthe White Witch in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and the Queen of Underland in The Silver Chairdo have magical powers and he does present them as characters who are evil and represent evil. But they are beautiful and supercially appealing, not old and ugly. Lewis conveys through his descriptions the allurement and deceptiveness of evil. They may (or may not) symbolize diabolical powers, but there is never any suggestion of them engaging in or representing devilish deeds or Satanic worship. There is hardly any danger of young readers being misled by these witches, always portrayed negatively, into sympathetic leanings toward witchcraft today. In Lewiss Chronicles good and evil are presented in starkly obvious contrasts. The evil characters are sometimes human, like King Miraz in Prince Caspian or Prince Rabadash in The Horse and His Boy; sometimes they are wicked animals, like Shift the ape and Ginger the cat in The Last Battle. But they are always clearly bad and to be avoided. When witches do appear, they are used the same way as Miraz, Rabadash, Shift, or Ginger, as the evil force that must be opposed by the good and that will ultimately be defeated by the good. Lewis intends the evil witches as vehicles of the moral imagination. Lewis also includes magic and magicians in the Chronicles. His use reects the traditional division of magic into white magic and black magic. White magic involves superhuman control over the processes of nature. Coriakin, the disobedient star assigned as punishment to oversee the Dufepuds on the Island of Voices in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, has magical powers. He owns a magical book and can make food appear on a table, transform Duffers into Monopods, turn descriptions of places into maps, and mend a damaged ship (VDT, 136, 139, 145, 146). The Hermit of the Southern
175
March in The Horse and His Boy is a contemplative, not a magician; he can look into a magic pool and see what is going on in the world outside his secluded hermitage, but he does not tryor lacks the powerto control what is happening (H&B, 158). White magic has traditionally been regarded as benign and fairly harmless, conveying a sense that there are mysteries in our world that go beyond the materialistic forms the everyday world presents to the senses. The magic of the Chronicles is fairy-tale magic, which Lewis denes not as magic that attempts to control nature, but as objective efcacy which cannot be further analysed: When I say Magic I am not thinking of the paltry and pathetic techniques by which fools attempt and quacks pretend to control Nature. I mean rather what is suggested by fairy-tale sentences like: This is a magic ower, and if you carry it the seven gates will open to you of their own accord (LtoM, letter 19). The Pevensie children enter Narnia the rst time through a magic wardrobe. At that point, the efcacy of the wardrobe cannot be further explained than calling it magic. A later book allows the efcacy of the wardrobe to be further analyzedthe tree from which it was made grew from the seeds of an apple from Narnia. But the efcacy of that apple, and the tree that grew from it, cannot be analyzed furtherwe are not told whether Aslan endowed the tree with special powers. It is simply a tree with fairy-tale magic. Magic of this sort, Lewis says, will always win a response from a normal imagination because it is in principle so true to nature (LtoM, letter 19): things that occur around us seem like magic until they can be explained (mix certain liquids together and theres an explosionits magic, until a chemist analyzes and explains it). The borders of what can be explained keep getting pushed further back, but most scientists agree the process of explanation will never be concluded: ultimate reality is unexplainable, except as what in fairy tales is called magic. The importance of this sense of magic for Lewis is that it relates to the divine mysteries of Christianityand of most religions. His discussion in Letters to Malcolm is specically on the mystery of the eucharist: the mystery of bread and wine becoming esh and blood is an example of objective efcacy which cannot be further analysed, any more than the power of creation can be analyzed. Gods breath bringing dust to life is divine magic, echoed in the divine magic of Aslan breathing on the statues in The Lion, the Witch and
176
the Wardrobe and bringing them to life (LWW, 13638). Lewis claims that the magical elements of Christianity ground it in a realm of hard, determinate facts; those elements resist the impulse to allow Christianity to become a totally spiritual and abstract religion, and they resist attempts to explain away the magic by demythologizing Christianity. It is in this sense that Lewis in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe uses magic to give concrete embodiment to divine mysteries. He uses the phrase Deep Magic from the Dawn of Time to describe the Law of Human Nature, the magic of proper values and behavior that, the story says, God implanted in the universe to show how people are supposed to behave and to enable society to function in an orderly way, but which ultimately cannot be fully explained: it is an objective efcacy which cannot be further analyzed. So it is also with the use of Deeper Magic from Before the Dawn of Time to describe Gods grace and love, which existed before the law was given and which is greater and stronger than law. It is magic in the sense of something beyond analysis, beyond human understanding and expectation, almost beyond belief. Lewis would have been surprised and perplexed at the objections raised against his inclusion of magic in the Chronicles. Magic is deeply imbedded in the imaginative stories Lewis loved and is never used there for an un-Christian or anti-Christian effect. He was sufciently comfortable with the motif to carry it further and use it in ways consistent with his view of the moral imagination. Black magic, on the other hand, is the assumption of diabolical power to gain control over the forces of nature. The magician yields himself or herself to the devil and accepts damnation (sells his or her soul) to obtain not just superhuman but supernatural powers. Black magic appears in the Chronicles, but it is always and clearly depicted as an evil of the deepest kind. Nikabrik, in Prince Caspian, engages in black sorcery, drawing a circle and preparing a blue re to call up an accursed spirit (PC, 142). This clearly involves horrible, fearsome evil, represented by a hag and a werewolf, and Lewis clearly is reinforcing the Old Testament injunctions against witchcraft. The evil Queen in The Silver Chair has black magic powers and uses them to enchant Prince Rilian and all the creatures of Underland. Uncle Andrew in The Magicians Nephew studies for years and gets to know devilish queer people (his use of Victorian
177
slang is unconsciously ironic) in order to learn how to use some dust from the lost world of Atlantis to gain control over this world and other worlds. He pays a great price: One doesnt become a magician for nothing; he is marked, though faintly, with the look that all wicked Magicians have (MN, 18, 62). The most interesting embodiment of black magic involves Jadis in The Magicians Nephew. Although she is called a Witch in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, here she is termed a magician, dealing in the darkest of black magic. To defeat her sister in a civil war, she had used the Deplorable Word, which if spoken with the proper ceremonies, would destroy all living things except the one who spoke it (MN, 54), thus killing all the armies, ordinary people, women, children, and animals of Charn. She cast strong spells so she could be preserved among the statues of her ancestors until someone came and struck the bell to wake her. She now wants to use her magic powers to gain control over England and the Earth, or over the new land of Narniabut she nds that, in Aslan, she has encountered someone with far greater power than hers. Ultimately, the power of love, the strength of the Good, proves to be a magic deeper still than hers, a magic that overcomes and destroys her (LWW, 132). Is the use of evil witches and black magic, and the violent destruction of them by good forces, a desirable thing in books for children? The issue is certainly debatable. Lewis, however, thought it was acceptable. He acknowledged the terrible creatures in fairy tales, presumably like the White Witch, the Hag, the werewolf, and Jadis in his own stories. But, he pointed out, in the fairy tales, side by side with the terrible gures, we nd the immemorial comforters and protectors, the radiant ones. There is no use, he says, trying to hide from children the fact that they are
born into a world of death, violence, . . . good and evil. . . . Since it is so likely that they will meet cruel enemies, let them at least have heard of brave knights and heroic courage. . . . Let there be wicked kings and beheadings, battles and dungeons, giants and dragons, and let villains be soundly killed at the end of the book. Nothing will persuade me that this causes an ordinary child any kind or degree of fear beyond what it wants, and needs, to feel. For, of course, it wants to be a little frightened.17
17. Lewis, On Three Ways, 32, 31.
178
The Narnia stories are works of moral imagination in part because they present good and evil as stark opposites, which children have no difculty in differentiating, and because they present witches consistently as on the evil side. Defending Lewiss books against such charges may be too easy, overt Christian and defender of the faith that he was. What about a story that treats witches not as evil characters to be avoided but as the heroes, as characters the readers identify with? What might Lewis think about the Harry Potter stories, if he were still here to read them? Would he have approved of their imaginative artistry? Would he have regarded them as fostering the moral imagination? The Harry Potter stories, a series by J. K. Rowling, have proved controversial among some groups, especially conservative Christian groups, because of their apparent endorsement of magic and wizardry.18 Harry Potter is a very ordinary-seeming young orphan boy who discovers he is special: he is a wizard, even a famous wizard. He grew up with his non-wizard uncle and aunt who have hidden from him the fact that his parents were magicians who were murdered by a powerful evil wizard, Voldemort, and that he has inherited magical powers from them. At age eleven he learns that he is eligible to attend Hogwarts, the best school of witchcraft and
18. See the Focus on the Family website (search for Harry Potter on http://www.family.org) and the website for Kjos Ministries, http://www. crossroad.to. The extensive notes in Richard Abanes, Harry Potter and the Bible: The Menace behind the Magick, cover thoroughly both favorable and unfavorable critiques of the series. Abaness thesis is that the activities Rowling describes in the books are not magic (sleight-of-hand tricks) but magick (a term popularized by Aleister Crowley, by which he meant the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in conformity with Will, that is, occult practice96). Much of Abaness book is devoted to demonstrating that not everything in the Potter series is imaginary (23). Rowling, he shows, has pulled a great deal of material from actual occult legends, beliefs and history (96): the Philosophers Stone, for example, was an object, or formula, actually pursued by medieval alchemists (who Abanes says were involved in occult practices); Nicolas and Perenelle Flamel really existedhe was a French alchemist who allegedly did succeed in producing the Philosophers Stone; the names of other historical gures with occult associations are used or echoed in the books; and the titles of imaginary books in the stories often resemble the titles of actual books on magic. But what Abanes is objecting to is a standard writing technique for adding realism to an imaginary story. For a balanced, well-informed approach to the series from a conservative Christian perspective, one sensitive to literary traditions and techniques, see Connie Neal, Whats a Christian to Do with Harry Potter?
179
wizardry in the land. On Harrys eleventh birthday, the realm of wizardry (which exists alongside the ordinary world) establishes contact with him and assists him to enter Hogwarts. Each of the projected seven books treats one year of Harrys seven-year educational program at Hogwarts, and each, it appears, will involve an attempt by Voldemort to destroy Harry or to persuade him to join the forces of evil. The stories are fantasy stories of the kind Lewis delighted in, despite the presence of details from our world in them. They are examples of what Brian Attebery has called indigenous fantasythat is, stories that take place in the ordinary world accessible to our senses but that include, contrary to all sensory evidence and experience, magical beings, supernatural forces, and a balancing principle that makes fairy tale endings not only possible but obligatory.19 As the children in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe enter Narnia through a wardrobe, so characters in the Potter books enter another realm by going into a pub other people cannot see, or by walking straight at the barrier between platforms nine and ten of Kings Cross station in order to reach platform nine and three-quarters, which is invisible and inaccessible to everyone else. A scarlet steam engine pulls a line of carriages into the countryside beyond neat elds and farms through woods, twisting rivers, and dark mountains until they reach the school, a vast castle atop a high mountain across a great black lake. These are staples of imaginative fantasya world separate from ours with its own inhabitants and natural laws. It, like Narnia, is a pretend world: as Narnia is based on the pretense that animals have intelligence and speech (what child hasnt wished animals could talk or pretended that they could?), the Potter books pretend that magical powers are real and that wizards and witches possessing those powers really exist. As Lewis, building on his pretense, lls out details about what life in Narnia would be like, so Rowling depicts what Hogwarts and its environs are likea world where pictures are alive and move, where mail is delivered by owls, where stairs lead to different places on Fridays, where one encounters ghosts, dragons, unicorns, and centaurs. It is a place where, as in Alice in Wonderland, chessmen are alive and chess is played by directing ones troops in battle.
19. Attebery, Strategies of Fantasy, 129.
180
The books are so popular because they tell skillfully constructed, exciting, fast-moving stories, and they include a great deal of adolescent wit and humor. They are popular also because the central characters are ones readers can identify with closely. Only a few preadolescents and adolescents think of themselves as good-looking, popular, and successful. Most children think of themselves as unpopular, not very good-looking, not successful, always bungling thingsin other words, a great deal like Harry and his friends Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger. Most children suffer from or fear bullies and can relate appreciatively to lines like, Piers . . . was usually the one who held peoples arms behind their backs while Dudley hit them (Stone, chap. 2).20 Like the Chronicles of Narnia, the Potter books are fairy tale as well as fantasy: they are extended developments of two fairy-story archetypes, Cinderella and the Ugly Duckling. Like Cinderella, Harry is disliked and mistreated by his stepparents (in his case, uncle and aunt) and highly favored stepbrother (cousin). As Cinderella sits in the ashes, Harry lives in a spider-lled cupboard under the stairs. As Cinderella wears rags while her stepsisters are dressed in nery, skinny Harry wears handme-downs from fat Dudley, and though Dudley will attend Smeltings and get a brand new uniform, Harry is to attend Stonewall wearing some old things Aunt Petunia dyes gray for him. As Cinderella is forced to scrub and clean, Harry has to nish frying the bacon so Dudley can have a nice birthday. The Potter books also follow, in form and details, the conventions of traditional British school stories, a very popular and extensive genre in Britain past and present.21 They contain the typical boarding school experiences: start of term notices; buying a school
20. I have quoted from the British editions of the Potter books. In the editions published in the United States, of the rst three books especially, terms which might be unfamiliar to American readers were changed to ones Americans would recognize. For scholarly purposes, therefore, the American editions offer less authentic texts. For a discussion of the practice of translating British childrens books for American audiences, see Jane Whitehead, This is NOT what I wrote!: The Americanization of British Childrens Books. For a discussion focused on the Potter books, see Philip Nel, You Say Jelly, I Say Jell-o?: Harry Potter and the Transguration of Language. 21. See David Steege, J. K. Rowlings Harry Potter Novels and the British School Story: Lost in Transit? For background on the school story genre, see Robert J. Kirkpatrick, The Encyclopedia of Boys School Stories, and Sue Sims, The Encyclopedia of Girls School Stories.
181
uniform (robes and a pointed hat), textbooks (such as The Standard Book of Spells [Grade 1] and A History of Magic), and school accessories (including a wand and a cauldron); the journey to school by train; assignment to a school house; playing for ones house in athletic contests; boring lecturers, bullies, and good friends; banquets, homework, and exams. Traditional school stories usually draw upon the Ugly Duckling archetype: an unpromising boy succeeds despite all the odds against him. In this case, the small, skinny, thin-faced boy with broken glasses and hair that sticks out all over the place someone young readers can identify with closelyturns out to be the hero, widely admired and praised. The stories are built on things every kid wantsto do something spectacular and unexpected (like Harry, the rst time he mounts a broomstick, turning out to be a natural at it and being able to catch Nevilles glass Remembrall ball when Malfoy drops it from a great height), to be the only rst-year student ever to be chosen for his house team, to be the hero of the big match, and to save his school from destruction. Lewis refers to this genre, in its traditional form, as twaddling school stories (SbyJ, 35) and criticizes them for indulging psychological fantasysatisfying the desire for escapisminstead of the desire for the more positive imaginative experience literary fantasy provides. The problem is the realistic setting of school stories, and thus the seeming realism of the adventures. We . . . long to be the immensely popular and successful schoolboy or schoolgirl, or the lucky boy or girl who . . . rides the horse that none of the cowboys can manage. When directed at something as close as school life, such longing can prove ravenous and deadly serious. Its fulllment on the level of imagination is in very truth compensatory: we run to it from the disappointments and humiliations of the real world: it sends us back to the real world undivinely discontented. For it is all attery to the ego. The pleasure consists in picturing oneself the object of admiration.22 These stories are examples for Lewis of the dangerous and immoral misuses of the imagination discussed above: The story of the unpromising boy who became captain of the First Eleven exists precisely to feed [the readers] real ambitions (SbyJ, 35).
22. Lewis, On Three Ways, 29. Cf. This is not . . . a school story (SC, 1).
182
In a brilliant move, Rowling retains the appeal of the traditional school stories for boys and girls23 while avoiding the pitfalls Lewis pointed out by moving them from the realistic school in the next town to a fantasy settinga school for wizards that the reader knows is like his or her school, but can never be his or her school. One can no more get to Hogwarts by going to Kings Cross Station than one can get to Narnia by bashing through the back of a wardrobe. Thus the fascination of reading stories about the kinds of things that happen to oneself at school can still be present, but instead of provoking daydreams and wish-fulllment focused on the self, the stories take readers to a world outside themselves. Thus the Potter books satisfy not the longing for psychological escape, but the longing for fairy land, which is very different:
In a sense the child does not long for fairy land as a boy longs to be the hero of the rst eleven. Does anyone suppose that he really and prosaically longs for all the dangers and discomforts of a fairy tale? really wants dragons in contemporary England? It is not so. It would be much truer to say that fairy land arouses a longing for he knows not what. It stirs and troubles him (to his life-long enrichment) with the dim sense of something beyond his reach and, far from dulling or emptying the actual world, gives it a new dimension of depth. . . . The boy reading the school story of the type I have in mind desires success and is unhappy (once the book is over) because he cant get it: the boy reading the fairy tale desires and is happy in the very fact of desiring. For his mind has not been concentrated on himself, as it often is in the more realistic story.24
From descriptions of the way children read and reread the Potter books, it seems very possible that the stories have the kind of romantic and mythic power Lewis describes here. Only time, and completion of the series, will tell for sure.25 One could object that the fantasy world which readers of the Potter books are encountering is a world containing wizardry, witches,
23. Ibid., 30. 24. Ibid., 2930. 25. The Potter books capture a sense of wonder, which Attebery cites as a dening response to fantasy (Strategies of Fantasy, 1617, 128), but not, thus far, a sense of the numinous, which is an important ingredient of myth, according to Lewis. Numinous is Rudolf Ottos term, dened in the second chapter of The Idea of the Holy: An Inquiry into the Non-Rational Factor in the Idea of the Divine and Its Relation to the Rational. Lewis discusses it in The Problem of Pain, chap. 1.
183
and magic. But this too deserves considering. Rowling has said that the book is really about the power of the imagination, not magic.26 That seems to me an accurate description. Much of what is called magic there is simply the kind of things children imagine doing in our world: what kid hasnt dreamed of being made invisible (the way Harrys invisibility cloak does for him) and being able to observe without being observed? What kid hasnt dreamed of being able to y, to soar through the air, the way Harry can on a broomstick in the rst book, or the way the Weasleys do in a car in the second? What kid hasnt watched a magic show by David Coppereld on television and not wanted to pull rabbits out of hats or make things disappear? The stories depend on characters being able to do things kids fantasize about doing; the witches arent essential Martians taking human form and inltrating our world might have been used instead, though the imaginative effect would been quite different. Concerns have been expressed by some of Rowlings critics that exposure to magic in the Potter books will desensitize children to the evils of magic and induce them to think it harmless, even benecent. I think the books could have quite the opposite effect: to undermine the basis for any belief in the efcacy of magic. There is a tonguein-cheek quality in the handling of magic in the books: they come close to ridiculing magic, partly by treating it as a wholly mechanical process, partly by the examples of what such processes achieve: in Transguration class, Professor McGonagall changes her desk into a pig and students practice turning a match into a needle or converting a beetle into a button (Chamber, chap. 6). A student accidentally turns his friend into a badger. In Potions class a Swelling Solution splashes onto Malfoys face and causes his nose to swell like a balloon; charms the students learn include a Tickling Charm (Chamber, chap. 11). The efcacy of magic is turned into a joke. The undermining of anything magic or occult is especially evident in the handling of divination in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. Sybill Trelawney is a comic guredreamy, delicate, oddly dressed. The title of the textbook in her course, Unfogging the Future, undercuts the subject she teaches. Ron and Harry mock the very idea of reading tea leaves, crystal balls, and palmistry, and even
26. Rowling, Interview with Judy OMalley, Book Links 8 (July 1999): 33.
184
other professors ridicule the class. Professor McGonagall dismisses the professor and the subject: Sybill Trelawney has predicted the death of one student a year since she arrived at this school. None of them has died yet. . . . Divination is one of the most imprecise branches of magic. I shall not conceal from you that I have very little patience with it (Prisoner, chap. 6). The handling of magic and wizardry as a whole undermines them as a subject for serious consideration and moves away from occult practice. The occult deals with hidden knowledge and supernatural powers. There is nothing hidden about the magic in these stories: this is what Lewis called fairy-tale magicobjective efcacy that cannot be further analyzed. The source of the magic is perfectly clear. It is imaginary, and young readers realize this and enjoy it. Broomsticks and cars y. These are characteristics of Saturday morning cartoons; they work against considering magic as something real or serious. There is never a suggestion that any kind of power lies behind the mechanical process the characters engage in: even the ghosts have no feel of being spirits; they are just another variety of character in a fantasy world, much like elves in J. R. R. Tolkiens world or dwarfs in Narnia. Young readers realize that what is happening in the stories is make-believe: their parents may buy them a Harry Potter Wand that shoots sparks out its end, but they know it takes three AA batteries to make it work. A Harry Potter Invisibility Cloak wont really make them invisible, but they can pretend it does. Young readers sense that magic in the stories is a narrative prop and tool. If they begin investigating witchcraft and the practice of magic in our world, they will quickly nd that this is not what they are looking for: they want the power of imaginative experience, not the power of occultish experience. The stories may well have the effect of making children less susceptible to magick and the occult in our world, not more susceptible. Concerned adults, reading the books gravely and suspiciously, may miss the effect of tone, with its exaggeration and subtle mockery, as, for example, broken bones mended instantlyor removed and regrown by taking doses of Skele-Gro (Chamber, chap. 10), but for children this tone is familiar from books and television, and they are therefore less likely to be taken in than adults. Will reading about Harry Potter incline young readers to buy
185
pointed hats, pretend to be wizards or witches, and draw a bolt of lightning on their foreheads? Certainly. Pretense and imitation are the nature of childhood imagination. Children also pretend to go through the backs of wardrobes and live in Narnia. Should parents be concerned that children will believe that such things are really possible? Lewis didnt think so: a child does not want to be a rabbit, though he may like pretending to be a rabbit as he may later like acting Hamlet (SbyJ, 35); It is a great mistake to suppose that children believe the things they imagine (SbyJ, 5960). The white magic of the Potter books is largely the stuff of imagination, much of it contemporary adaptation of details from the fantasy story tradition, like the ying carpets and amulets of the Edith Nesbit stories Lewis loved and was inuenced by. The Potter books, like the Chronicles of Narnia, include dark magic, the Dark Arts, the Dark Side (Stone, chap. 16), and always treat it, like the Chronicles, as a representation of evil, of going bad, of making self and power the center of ones life. Professor Quirrell in book one illustrates the results of an overweening greed and desire for power, a willingness to pay any price to acquire it, even a willingness to align himself withand surrender his soul tothe Dark Side, a diabolically evil force. The effects of such surrender are depicted vividly in the story, in the adventure of the Forbidden Forest and particularly in the description of Quirrell in the nal episode; and students at Hogwarts are constantly warned away from experimenting with, or even showing interest in, that kind of magic. In the second book, Tom Riddel is transformed from being a model student, Head Boy at Hogwarts, to an evil force Voldemortby allowing the dark arts to take over his life. And the third and fourth books, as Voldemort gathers his earlier followers around him and intensies his efforts to destroy Harry, provide increasingly vivid imaginative representations of the power and unambiguous evil of dark magic. Do the Potter books illustrate moral imagination? Many people think they do. Catherine M. Wallace calls Rowling a master storyteller and a narrative moralist with something important to say. Emily Grierson goes further, believing that the Potter series can be interpreted as a creative narrative fantasy grounded in Christian
186
ethics and a Christian theology of hope.27 The books are not explicitly Christian, the way the Narnia books are. But the stories do afrm the virtues of courage, courtesy, and friendship, as Lewiss Chronicles do. The Potter books are partly fairy tales, as mentioned above, and fairy tales are important vehicles for moral imagination. Abanes criticizes the books because characters do not always follow the rules and do not always tell the truthand do not show remorse or suffer consequences for what they do. Breaking the rules and telling bs are a central part of the tradition of school storiesmuch of the tension generated in the stories comes from whether the characters will get away with what they have done. This may not reinforce the kind of behavior some parents expect, but it is realistic, true to the life many children actually lead. And the stories do show consequences, though they do not moralize about them; many of the difculties characters encounter are created by, or complicated by, untruths or law breaking.28 The Potter stories do not try to teach meticulous obedience to a schools rules and the rules of an ethical code, but they do provide models who afrm the desirability of telling the truth and adhering to rules and codes of behavior. Their moral imagination comes into play in providing readers with appealing models of characters whose overall character is brave, true, reliable, caring, and courageous. And they demonstrate that good and evil existthough the lines between them, in the books and in real life, are not as clear and tidy as Abanes would wish themand that one must choose to side with one or the other. The theme of the second book is summed up by a powerful sentence near the end: It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities (Chamber, chap. 18). The way the books present such choices is not incompatible with Christianity, despite the fears of many critics of the series. A central
27. Wallace, Rowling as Moralist, 18; Grierson, Harry Potter and the Deeper Magic. 28. See Neal, Whats a Christian to Do with Harry Potter? chapter 9, for a critique of the books potential for positive moral instruction: If one is looking for a simple message of Dont break the rules! forget the Harry Potter books. But if one is looking for deeper lessons in moral decision making based on principles and a growing discernment of good and evil, these books provide a rare opportunity for such instruction (179).
187
theme, love and sacrice, is very similar to the heart of the Narnia books. Harry learns that Voldemort was not able to kill him because of his mothers love. His mother sacriced her life for Harrys: Your mother died to save you. If there is one thing Voldemort cannot understand, it is love. He didnt realise that love as powerful as your mothers for you leaves its own mark. . . . To have been loved so deeply, even though the person who loved us is gone, will give us some protection for ever (Stone, chap. 17). Similarly, Ron sacrices himself in the chess game (Thats chess! . . . Youve got to make some sacrices!Stone, chap. 16) to save the friends he loves, and Nicolas and Perenelle Flamel sacrice their lives so that the Philosophers Stone can be destroyed and never again endanger the world. A person who wants to read Christianity into this will have no difculty in doing so, but it invitesas the Chronicles do alsoa moral nonreligious reading rst.29 Rowling names the Chronicles of Narnia among books that have inuenced her strongly.30 I think Lewis would have enjoyed and commended the Potter books, for their creativity in conceiving of a unique fantasy world, for their skill in adapting the traditional school story to a new and more positive use, and for the way in which they nurture the moral imagination by having characters and events afrm virtues that Lewis valued highly. In his 1938 postconversion essay Donne and Love Poetry in the Seventeenth Century, Lewis chided critics of the time for the seriousness with which they regard the literary enterprise. They look for seriousness not as wisdom or virtue, but as a stern and tough outlook on life. They dislike peace and pleasure and heartsease simply as such. They distrust the pleasures of imagination, however hotly and unmerrily [they] preach the pleasures of the body.31 Lewis, both before and after his conversion, derived enormous pleasures, probably daily pleasures, from the imagination, in addition to what it contributed to his nding faith and moral development. You must be enjoying yourself no end, he wrote to Greeves in 1931 about
29. See, for example, ibid., chaps. 1011. 30. Rowling, Interview with Stories from the Webhttp://www.stories fromtheweb.org/stories/stories/rowling/interview.htm. 31. Lewis, Donne and Love Poetry in the Seventeenth Century, 13.
188
reading Platos Phaedrus; I dont know any greater pleasure than returning to a world of the imagination which one has long forsaken (TST, 430). Without the imagination, Lewiss life would have been diminished in many waysdimmer, more constricted, less rich and rewarding. It is in that light that he worried about ve-year-old Michaels poor imagination ha[ving] been left without any natural food at all (see chapter 1 above). Because a starved imagination leads to an impoverished life, Lewis was concerned about all the Michaels of the world, and he did all he could to advocate a diet of imagination and to provide rich imaginative materials for them to feast on. The aim of this book has been to illustrate that concern, to show how important imagination and the arts were to Lewis; how they lled a vital and valuable place throughout his life and contributed in important ways to his character and to his work as writer, thinker, critic, and apologist; and how they are pleasures to be relished and pursued as part of the feast God has set before his world.
Appendix
Table for Converting Page References to Chapter Numbers
Quotations from the Chronicles of Narnia are from the Macmillan hardbound editions published in the United States (19501956); the page references are to those editions. The table below will enable readers using other editions to nd the references by chapter and approximate location within the chapter. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe pp. 17: ch. 1 pp. 817: ch. 2 pp. 1825: ch. 3 pp. 2634: ch. 4 pp. 3542: ch. 5 pp. 4350: ch. 6 pp. 5161: ch. 7 pp. 6270: ch. 8 pp. 7180: ch. 9 Prince Caspian pp. 19: ch. 1 pp. 1123: ch. 2 pp. 2432: ch. 3 pp. 3345: ch. 4 pp. 4658: ch. 5 pp. 5968: ch. 6 pp. 6981: ch. 7 pp. 8293: ch. 8 pp. 94106: ch. 9 pp. 10721: ch. 10 pp. 12233: ch. 11 pp. 13445: ch. 12 pp. 14656: ch. 13 pp. 15771: ch. 14 pp. 17286: ch. 15 pp. 8189: ch. 10 pp. 9098: ch. 11 pp. 99107: ch. 12 pp. 10816: ch. 13 pp. 11726: ch. 14 pp. 12735: ch. 15 pp. 13644: ch. 16 pp. 14554: ch. 17
189
190
Appendix
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader pp. 114: ch. 1 pp. 1528: ch. 2 pp. 2940: ch. 3 pp. 4153: ch. 4 pp. 5466: ch. 5 pp. 6780: ch. 6 pp. 8192: ch. 7 pp. 93106: ch. 8 The Silver Chair pp. 113: ch. 1 pp. 1425: ch. 2 pp. 2638: ch. 3 pp. 3951: ch. 4 pp. 5264: ch. 5 pp. 6579: ch. 6 pp. 8092: ch. 7 pp. 93106: ch. 8 The Horse and His Boy pp. 114: ch. 1 pp. 1528: ch. 2 pp. 2940: ch. 3 pp. 4153: ch. 4 pp. 5466: ch. 5 pp. 6777: ch. 6 pp. 7890: ch. 7 pp. 91102: ch. 8 The Magicians Nephew pp. 113: ch. 1 pp. 1424: ch. 2 pp. 2535: ch. 3 pp. 3647: ch. 4 pp. 4858: ch. 5 pp. 5969: ch. 6 pp. 10315: ch. 9 pp. 11628: ch. 10 pp. 129140: ch. 11 pp. 14153: ch. 12 pp. 15466: ch. 13 pp. 16779: ch. 14 pp. 18091: ch. 15 pp. 10718: ch. 9 pp. 11932: ch. 10 pp. 13345: ch. 11 pp. 14658: ch. 12 pp. 15970: ch. 13 pp. 17182: ch. 14 pp. 18394: ch. 15 pp. 195208: ch. 16 pp. 10719: ch. 9 pp. 12033: ch. 10 pp. 13446: ch. 11 pp. 14758: ch. 12 pp. 15970: ch. 13 pp. 17183: ch. 14 pp. 18495: ch. 15 pp. 196210: ch. 16
Appendix
pp. 7081: ch. 7 pp. 8291: ch. 8 pp. 92103: ch. 9 pp. 10414: ch. 10 pp. 11525: ch. 11 The Last Battle pp. 111: ch. 1 pp. 1223: ch. 2 pp. 2433: ch. 3 pp. 3443: ch. 4 pp. 4454: ch. 5 pp. 5565: ch. 6 pp. 6676: ch. 7 pp. 7786: ch. 8 pp. 8796: ch. 9 pp. 97106: ch. 10 pp. 10716: ch. 11 pp. 11727: ch. 12 pp. 12840: ch. 13 pp. 14152: ch. 14 pp. 15362: ch. 15 pp. 16374: ch. 16 pp. 12637: ch. 12 pp. 13848: ch. 13 pp. 14958: ch. 14 pp. 15967: ch. 15
191
Bibliography
Abanes, Richard. Harry Potter and the Bible: The Menace behind the Magick. Fremont, Calif.: Horizon Books, 2001. Adey, Lionel. C. S. Lewiss Great War with Owen Bareld. Victoria, B.C.: University of Victoria, 1978. . Knowing and Being in C. S. Lewiss Great War with Owen Bareld. CSL: The Bulletin of the New York C. S. Lewis Society 15, no. 1 (November 1983): 18. Alexander, Samuel. Space, Time, and Deity: The Gifford Lectures at Glasgow, 19161918. London: Macmillan, 1920. Attebery, Brian. Strategies of Fantasy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1992. Babbitt, Susan E. Impossible Dreams: Rationality, Integrity, and Moral Imagination. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1996. Barbour, Brian. Lewis and Cambridge. Modern Philology 96 (1999): 43984. Bareld, Owen. Conversations on C. S. Lewis (1978, 1984, 1987). In Owen Bareld on C. S. Lewis, 12352. . C. S. Lewis (1964). In Owen Bareld on C. S. Lewis, 316. . History in English Words. London: Faber and Faber, 1967. . Lewis, Truth, and Imagination (1977). In Owen Bareld on C. S. Lewis, 90103. . Owen Bareld on C. S. Lewis. Edited by G. B. Tennyson. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1989. . Poetic Diction: A Study in Meaning. London: Faber and Gwyer, 1928. . Poetic Diction and Legal Fiction. In Lewis, Essays Presented to Charles Williams, 10627. . Speakers Meaning. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1967. . What Coleridge Thought. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1971. Barrington-Ward, Simon. C. S. Lewis Moves to Magdalene College,
193
194
Bibliography
Cambridge. The Canadian C. S. Lewis Journal, no. 99 (Spring 2001): 2331. Bayley, Peter. From Master to Colleague. In C. S. Lewis at the Breakfast Table and Other Reminiscences, edited by James T. Como, 7786. New York: Macmillan, 1979. Beyer, Doug. Whats the Mutter with Magic? Its Use in the Writings of C. S. Lewis. The Lamp-Post of the Southern California C. S. Lewis Society 24, no. 4 (Winter 20002001): 414. Bronowski, Jacob. The Visionary Eye: Essays in the Arts, Literature, and Science. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1978. Carnell, Corbin Scott. Bright Shadow of Reality: C. S. Lewis and the Feeling Intellect. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1974. Carpenter, Humphrey. Tolkien: A Biography. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1977. Clark, Donald Leman. John Milton at St. Pauls School. New York: Columbia University Press, 1948. Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. Biographia Literaria (1817). Edited by James Engell and W. Jackson Bate. Vol. 7:1 of The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1983. . Statesmans Manual (1816). In Lay Sermons, edited by R. J. White, 3114. Vol. 6 of The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1972. Coles, Robert. The Call of Stories: Teaching and the Moral Imagination. Boston: Houghton Mifin, 1989. Davies, Sir John. The Poems of Sir John Davies. Edited by Robert Krueger. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1975. Donoghue, Denis. The Sovereign Ghost: Studies in Imagination. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976. Downing, David C. Planets in Peril: A Critical Study of C. S. Lewiss Ransom Trilogy. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1992. Dryden, John. Poems 16851692. Edited by Earl Miner. Vol. 3 of The Works of John Dryden. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969. Dutton, Denis, and Michael Krausz. The Concept of Creativity in Science and Art. The Hague: M. Nijhoff, 1981. Edmonds, E. L. C. S. Lewis, the Teacher. In In Search of C. S. Lewis, edited by Stephen Schoeld, 3751. South Plaineld, N.J.: Bridge Publishing, 1983.
Bibliography
195
Edwards, Bruce L., Jr. A Rhetoric of Reading: C. S. Lewiss Defense of Western Literacy. Values in Literature Monographs No. 2. Provo, Utah: Center for the Study of Christian Values in Literature, 1986. Eliot, T. S. The Complete Poems and Plays 19091950. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1962. Fish, Stanley. Is There a Text in This Class? The Authority of Interpretive Communities. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1980. . Surprised by Sin: The Reader in Paradise Lost. New York: St. Martins Press, 1967. Ford, Paul. Companion to Narnia. 1980. Rev. ed. New York: HarperSanFrancisco, 1994. Freud, Jill. Part B: With Girls at Home. In In Search of C. S. Lewis, edited by Stephen Schoeld, 5559. South Plaineld, N.J.: Bridge Publishing, 1983. Gardner, Helen. The Art of T. S. Eliot. 1950. Reprint, New York: E. P. Dutton, 1959. Gibson, Evan K. C. S. Lewis, Spinner of Tales: A Guide to His Fiction. Washington, D.C.: Christian University Press, 1980. Gilbert, Douglas, and Clyde S. Kilby. C. S. Lewis: Images of His World. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1973. Green, Roger Lancelyn, and Walter Hooper. C. S. Lewis: A Biography. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974. Grierson, Emily. Harry Potter and the Deeper Magic: Narrating Hope in Childrens Literature. Forthcoming in Christianity and Literature 51 (2002). Guroian, Vigen. Tending the Heart: How Classic Stories Awaken a Childs Moral Imagination. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. Hammond, Wayne G. Pauline Baynes. In British Childrens Writers, 19141960, edited by Donald R. Hettinga and Gary D. Schmidt, 3644. Vol. 160 of Dictionary of Literary Biography. Detroit: Gale Research Inc., 1996. Hannay, Margaret Patterson. C. S. Lewis. New York: Ungar, 1981. Hart, Dabney Adams. Through the Open Door: A New Look at C. S. Lewis. University, Ala.: University of Alabama Press, 1984. Harwood, A. C. Owen Bareld. In Evolution of Consciousness: Studies in Polarity, edited by Shirley Sugerman, 3133. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1976. . A Toast to the Memory of C. S. Lewis, Proposed at Mag-
196
Bibliography
dalen College, July 4th, 1975. Mythlore 3, no. 4 (June 1976): 35. Havard, Robert E. Philia: Jack at Ease. In C. S. Lewis at the Breakfast Table and Other Reminiscences, edited by James T. Como, 215 28. New York: Macmillan, 1979. Hill, Constance. Jane Austen: Her Homes and Her Friends. 1901. 3d ed. London: John Lane, 1923. Hollander, John. The Untuning of the Sky: Ideas of Music in English Poetry, 15001900. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961. Hooper, Walter. C. S. Lewis: A Companion and Guide. London: HarperCollins, 1996. . Past Watchful Dragons. New York: Collier, 1979. . Through Joy and Beyond: A Pictorial Biography of C. S. Lewis. London: Collier Macmillan, 1982. Howard, Thomas. The Achievement of C. S. Lewis: A Reading of His Fiction. Wheaton, Ill.: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1980. Huttar, Charles A. The Heresy of Allegorizing Narnia: A Rejoinder. CSL: The Bulletin of the New York C. S. Lewis Society 11, no. 3 (January 1980): 13. . A Lifelong Love Affair with Language: C. S. Lewiss Poetry. In Word and Story in C. S. Lewis, edited by Peter J. Schakel and Charles A. Huttar, 86108. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1991. . The Psalms. In The C. S. Lewis Readers Encyclopedia, edited by Jeffrey D. Schultz and John G. West, Jr., 342. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 1998. , ed. Imagination and the Spirit: Essays in Literature and the Christian Faith presented to Clyde S. Kilby. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1971. Iser, Wolfgang. The Act of Reading: A Theory of Aesthetic Response. Translation of Der Akt des Lesens: Theorie sthetischer Wirkung, 1976. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1978. . The Reading Process: A Phenomenological Approach. In The Implied Reader: Patterns of Communication in Prose Fiction from Bunyan to Beckett, 27494. Translation of Der Implizite Leser: Kommunikationsformen des Romans von Bunyan bis Beckett, 1972. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1974. Johnson, Mark. Moral Imagination: Implications of Cognitive Science for Ethics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993.
Bibliography
197
Johnson, Samuel. Dryden. In vol. 1 of Lives of the English Poets (17791781), edited by George Birkbeck Hill. 3 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1905. . The Rambler (17501752). Edited by W. J. Bate and Albrecht B. Strauss. Vol. 3 of The Yale Edition of the Works of Samuel Johnson. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969. Karkainen, Paul A. Narnia Explored. Old Tappan, N.J.: Fleming H. Revell, 1979. Kawano, Roland M. C. S. Lewis and the Great Dance. Christianity and Literature 26 (1976): 2038. . C. S. Lewis and The Nameless Isle: A Metaphor of a Major Change. CSL: The Bulletin of the New York C. S. Lewis Society 15, no. 5 (March 1984): 14. Keane, Philip S., S.S. Christian Ethics and Imagination: A Theological Inquiry. New York: Paulist Press, 1984. Kilby, Clyde S., and Linda J. Evans. C. S. Lewis and Music. Christian Scholars Review 4 (1974): 115. Kirk, Russell. Eliot and His Age: T. S. Eliots Moral Imagination in the Twentieth Century. New York: Random House, 1971. Kirkpatrick, Robert J. The Encyclopedia of Boys School Stories. Vol. 2 of The Encyclopedia of School Stories. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000. Kreeft, Peter. C. S. Lewis for the Third Millennium: Six Essays on The Abolition of Man. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1994. Kuhn, Thomas S. The Structure of Scientic Revolutions. 1962. 2d ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970. Letts, Malcolm. Sir John Mandeville: The Man and His Book. London: Batchworth Press, 1949. Lewis, C. S. See also Editions Used and Abbreviations, p. xiii. . Answers to Questions on Christianity (1944). In God in the Dock, 4862. . Bluspels and Flalansferes: A Semantic Nightmare (1939). In Selected Literary Essays, 25165. . Boxen: The Imaginary World of the Young C. S. Lewis. Edited by Walter Hooper. London: Collins, 1985. . Christianity and Culture (1940). In Christian Reections, 12 36. . Christianity and Literature (1939). In Christian Reections, 111.
198
Bibliography
. Christian Reections. Edited by Walter Hooper. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1967. . The Dark Tower and Other Stories. Edited by Walter Hooper. London: Collins, 1977. . De Audiendis Poetis (ca. 1960). In Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature, 117. . De Descriptione Temporum (1955). In Selected Literary Essays, 114. . Donne and Love Poetry in the Seventeenth Century (1938). In Selected Literary Essays, 10625. . Edmund Spenser. In Major British Writers, 1:91181. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1959. . English Literature in the Sixteenth Century Excluding Drama. Vol. 3 of The Oxford History of English Literature, edited by F. P. Wilson and Bonamy Dobre. New York: Oxford University Press, 1954. . Equality (1943). In Present Concerns, edited by Walter Hooper, 1720. London: Collins Fount, 1986. . First and Second Things (1942). In God in the Dock, 27881. . The Funeral of a Great Myth (mid-1940s?). In Christian Reections, 8293. . God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics. Edited by Walter Hooper. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1970. [British title: Undeceptions] . [N. W. Clerk, pseud.]. A Grief Observed. London: Faber and Faber, 1961. . Hamlet: The Prince or The Poem? (1942). In Selected Literary Essays, 88105. . Imagination and Thought in the Middle Ages (1956). In Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature, 4163. . It All Began with a Picture . . . (1960). In Of Other Worlds, 42. Also reprinted in On Stories, 5354. . Letters to an American Lady. Edited by Clyde S. Kilby. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1967. . Letters to Children. Edited by Lyle W. Dorsett and Marjorie Lamp Mead. New York: Macmillan, 1985. . Lilies That Fester (1955). In The Worlds Last Night and Other Essays, 3149. . Metre (1960). In Selected Literary Essays, 28085.
Bibliography
199
. Miracles: A Preliminary Study. London: Geoffrey BlesThe Centenary Press, 1947. . The Morte Darthur (1947). In Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature, 10310. . Myth Became Fact (1944). In God in the Dock, 6367. . Narrative Poems. Edited by Walter Hooper. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1969. . A Note on Jane Austen (1954). In Selected Literary Essays, 17586. . Of Other Worlds: Essays and Stories. Edited by Walter Hooper. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1966. . On Church Music (1949). In Christian Reections, 9499. . On Criticism. In Of Other Worlds, 4358. Also reprinted in On Stories, 12741. . On Juvenile Tastes (1958). In Of Other Worlds, 3941. Also reprinted in On Stories, 4951. . On Science Fiction (1955). In Of Other Worlds, 5973. Also reprinted in On Stories, 5568. . On Stories and Other Essays on Literature. Edited by Walter Hooper. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1982. [British title: Of This and Other Worlds] . On Three Ways of Writing for Children (1952). In Of Other Worlds, 2234. Also reprinted in On Stories, 3143. . The Pilgrims Regress: An Allegorical Apology for Christianity Reason and Romanticism. 1933. New and rev. ed. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1943. . The Poison of Subjectivism (1943). In Christian Reections, 7281. . Priestesses in the Church? (1948). In God in the Dock, 234 39. . The Problem of Pain. London: Geoffrey BlesThe Centenary Press, 1940. . Reections on the Psalms. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1958. . Rejoinder to Dr Pittenger (1958). In God in the Dock, 177 83. . Religion: Reality or Substitute? (1941). In Christian Reections, 3743. . Selected Literary Essays. Edited by Walter Hooper. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1969.
200
Bibliography
. Shelley, Dryden, and Mr Eliot (1939). In Selected Literary Essays, 187208. . The Shoddy Lands (1956). In Of Other Worlds: Essays and Stories, 99106. Also reprinted in The Dark Tower and Other Stories, 10411. . Sometimes Fairy Stories May Say Best Whats to Be Said (1956). In Of Other Worlds, 3538. Also reprinted in On Stories, 4548. . Spensers Images of Life. Edited by Alastair Fowler. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1967. . Spirits in Bondage: A Cycle of Lyrics (1919). Edited by Walter Hooper. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1984. . Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature. Edited by Walter Hooper. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1966. . Transposition (1944). In Transposition and Other Addresses, 920. Also reprinted in The Weight of Glory, 5473. . Transposition and Other Addresses. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1949. . Unreal Estates (a 1962 interview). In Of Other Worlds, 86 96. Also reprinted in On Stories, 14353. . The Weight of Glory and Other Addresses. Edited by Walter Hooper. Rev. and expanded ed. New York: Macmillan, 1980. . The Weight of Glory (1941). In Transposition and Other Addresses, 2133. Also reprinted in The Weight of Glory, 319. . Williams and the Arthuriad. In Arthurian Torso, edited by C. S. Lewis, 91200. London: Oxford University Press, 1948. . The Worlds Last Night and Other Essays. New York: Harcourt Brace & World, 1960. , ed. Essays Presented to Charles Williams. London: Oxford University Press, 1947. , ed. George MacDonald: An Anthology. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1946. , and E. M. W. Tillyard. The Personal Heresy: A Controversy. London: Oxford University Press, 1939. Lewis, W. H. Brothers and Friends: The Diaries of Major Warren Hamilton Lewis. Edited by Clyde S. Kilby and Marjorie Lamp Mead. San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1982. Lindskoog, Kathryn Ann. The Lion of Judah in Never-Never Land. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1973.
Bibliography
201
Lobdell, Jared C. The Ransom Stories and Their Eighteenth-Century Ancestry. In Word and Story in C. S. Lewis, edited by Peter J. Schakel and Charles A. Huttar, 23255. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1991. Lowes, J. L. The Road to Xanadu: A Study in the Ways of the Imagination. Boston: Houghton Mifin, 1927. Lyon, H. R., ed. The Middle Ages: A Concise Encyclopedia. London: Thames and Hudson, 1989. MacDonald, George. The Imagination: Its Functions and Its Culture (1867). In A Dish of Orts. Chiey Papers on the Imagination, and on Shakspere, 142. Enlarged ed. London: Sampson Low Marston & Company, 1893. Manlove, Colin. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Patterning of a Fantastic World. New York: Twayne, 1993. Marvell, Andrew. Poems and Letters. Edited by H. M. Margoliouth. 2 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1927. Milward, Peter, S.J. A Challenge to C. S. Lewis. Madison, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1995. Myers, Doris T. C. S. Lewis in Context. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1994. . Growing in Grace: The Anglican Spiritual Style in the Chronicles of Narnia. In The Pilgrims Guide: C. S. Lewis and the Art of Witness, edited by David Mills, 185202. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1998. . Law and Disorder: Two Settings in That Hideous Strength. Mythlore 19, no. 1 (Winter 1993): 914. . Spensers Faerie Land as a Key to Narnia. Lecture delivered at Wheaton College, September 24, 1998. Neal, Connie. Whats a Christian to Do with Harry Potter? Colorado Springs: WaterBrook Press, 2001. Nel, Philip. You Say Jelly, I Say Jell-O?: Harry Potter and the Transguration of Language. In The Ivory Tower and Harry Potter: Perspectives on a Literary Phenomenon, edited by Lana A. Whited. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2002. Neuhouser, David. L. Higher Dimensions: C. S. Lewis and Mathematics. Seven: An Anglo-American Literary Review 13 (1996): 4563. Olson, Paul A. The Journey to Wisdom. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1955.
202
Bibliography
Otto, Rudolf. The Idea of the Holy: An Inquiry into the Non-Rational Factor in the Idea of the Divine and Its Relation to the Rational (1917). Translated by John W. Harvey. London: Oxford University Press, 1923. Patterson, Nancy-Lou. An Appreciation of Pauline Baynes. Mythlore 7, no. 3 (Autumn 1980): 35. . The Holy House of Ungit. Mythlore 21, no. 4 (Winter 1997): 415. . The Unfathomable Feminine Principle: Images of Wholeness in That Hideous Strength. The Lamp-Post of the Southern California C. S. Lewis Society 9 (July 1986): 339. Peters, Thomas C. Simply C. S. Lewis: A Beginners Guide to the Life and Works of C. S. Lewis. Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway Books, 1997. Phemister, William. Fantasy Set to Music: Donald Swann, C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien. Seven: An Anglo-American Literary Review 13 (1996): 6582. Plato, The Dialogues of Plato. Translated by B. Jowett. 3d ed. 5 vols. New York: Macmillan, 1892. Rawson, Claude. C. S. Lewis, Schoolboy among the Moderns. The New Criterion, June 1990, 819. . The Schoolboy Johnson. TLS, August 1117, 1989, 86364. Reynolds, Barbara. Memories of C. S. Lewis in Cambridge. The Chesterton Review 17 (1991): 37884. Richards, I. A. Coleridge on Imagination. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1960. . Principles of Literary Criticism. London: Kegan Paul, 1925. Rosenblatt, Louise. Literature as Exploration. New York: AppletonCentury, 1938. . The Reader, the Text, the Poem: The Transactional Theory of the Literary Work. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1978. Ruskin, John. The Poems of John Ruskin. Edited by W. G. Collingwood. London: George Allen, 1891. Sayer, George. Jack: C. S. Lewis and His Times. San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1988. Schakel, Peter J. Reading with the Heart: The Way into Narnia. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1979. Text available at http:// www.readingwiththeheart.com.
Bibliography
203
. Reason and Imagination in C. S. Lewis: A Study of Till We Have Faces. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1984. Seznec, Jean. La Survivance des Dieux Antiques: Essai sur le Rle de la Tradition Mythologique dans lHumanisme et dans lArt de la Renaissance (1940). Translated by Barbara F. Sessions as The Survival of the Pagan Gods: The Mythological Tradition and its Place in Renaissance Humanism and Art. New York: Pantheon Books, 1953. Sims, Sue. The Encyclopedia of Girls School Stories. Vol. 1 of The Encyclopedia of School Stories. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000. Smith, Robert Houston. Patches of Godlight: The Pattern of Thought of C. S. Lewis. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1981. Steege, David K. J. K. Rowlings Harry Potter Novels and the British School Story: Lost in Transit? In The Ivory Tower and Harry Potter: Perspectives on a Literary Phenomenon, edited by Lana A. Whited. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2002. Stewart, Ian. Natures Numbers: The Unreal Reality of Mathematical Imagination. New York: Basic Books, 1995. Swann, Donald. Swanns Way: A Life in Song. Edited by Lyn Smith. London: Heinemann, 1991. Swetcharnik, William. C. S. Lewis and Visual Art. CSL: The Bulletin of the New York C. S. Lewis Society 13, no. 4 (February 1982): 17. Thorson, Steven. Barelds Evolution of Consciousness: How Much Did Lewis Accept? Seven: An Anglo-American Literary Review 15 (1998): 935. . Knowing and Being in C. S. Lewiss Great War with Owen Bareld. The Bulletin of the New York C. S. Lewis Society 15, no. 1 (November 1983): 18. . Knowledge in C. S. Lewiss Post-Conversion Thought: His Epistemological Method. Seven: An Anglo-American Literary Review 9 (1988): 91116. . Lewis and Bareld on Imagination. Part 1 Mythlore 17, no. 2 (Winter 1990): 1218 and 32; Part 2 Mythlore 17, no. 3 (Spring 1991): 1621. Timmerman, John H. Logres and Britain: The Dialectic of C. S. Lewiss That Hideous Strength. CSL: The Bulletin of the New York C. S. Lewis Society 9, no. 1 (November 1977): 18.
204
Bibliography
Tolkien, J. R. R. The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien. Edited by Humphrey Carpenter. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1981. Turner, Jane, ed. The Dictionary of Art. 34 vols. London: Macmillan, 1996. Valkenburg, Patti M. Television and the Childs Developing Imagination. In Handbook of Children and the Media, edited by Dorothy G. Singer and Jerome L. Singer, 12134. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications, 2001. , and T. H. A. van der Voort. Inuence of TV on Daydreaming and Creative Imagination: A Review of Research. Psychological Bulletin 116 (1994): 31639. van der Voort, T. H. A., and P. M. Valkenburg. Televisions Impact on Fantasy Play: A Review of Research. Developmental Review 14 (1994): 2751. Van Nattan, Mary. C. S. Lewis: The Devils Wisest Fool. Balaams Ass Speaks website, http://www.balaams-ass.com/journal/ homemake/cslewis.htm. Wallace, Catherine M. Rowling as Moralist. Christian Century, July 1825, 2001, 1821. Whitehead, Jane. This Is NOT What I Wrote!: The Americanization of British Childrens Books. Part 1. Horn Book (Nov.Dec. 1996): 68793. Part 2. Horn Book (Jan.Feb. 1997): 2734. Williams, Charles. A Dialogue on Hierarchy (1943). In The Image of the City and Other Essays, edited by Anne Ridler, 12730. London: Oxford University Press, 1958. . Letters to Lalage: The Letters of Charles Williams to Lois LangSims. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1989. Wind, Edgar. Pagan Mysteries in the Renaissance. London: Faber and Faber, 1958.
Index
Abanes, Richard, 178n, 186 Adey, Lionel, 9n Alexander, Samuel, 10 Alford, Henry, 93 Allegory. See Chronicles of Narnia: not allegorical Amphion, 104, 113 Analogies, 20, 38, 7980 Antichrist, 64n Apocalypse. See Time: end of Aporia. See Gaps Arac, Jonathan, 9n Archetypes, 112, 119, 180, 181 Architecture: in Chronicles, 14951, 153; as an expression of cultural values, 15051, 153, 154, 156; Lewiss appreciation of, 14849; as metaphor, 65, 15253; in other works by Lewis, 15154; spiritual effect of, 15253. See also Objective Room Aristotle, 27 Arnold, Matthew, 12, 40 Art: receiving vs. using, 1314; as therapy, 12. See also Ecstasy; Emotional response; Visual art Aslan, 1, 33n, 4647, 4849, 50, 55, 63, 6667, 76, 77, 80, 85n, 88, 99n, 100, 101, 102, 1034, 105n, 108, 110, 116n, 120, 141n, 150, 156n, 157, 162, 171, 175, 177 Atlantis, 177 Attebery, Brian, 179, 182n Austen, Jane, 28, 29n, 111, 114, 163 Author: as judge of own work, 4041, 43, 51 Authorial intention: importance of, 96; relation to meaning of a work, 4041, 43 Babbitt, Susan E., 163n Bach, J. S., 91n, 98, 110, 111n, 163 Barbour, Brian, 12 Bareld, Lucy, 75, 168n Bareld, Owen, 4n, 20; as dancer, 11112n; on imagination, 9; on Lewis, ix, x, 6n, 8, 147n, 165n; on meaning, 5n. See also Great War Barrington-Ward, Simon, 73n Bayley, Peter, 143 Baynes, Pauline, 3032, 33, 58, 140, 151 Beach, Sarah, 141n Beauty, 3, 4, 12, 16, 62, 65, 103, 104, 105, 109, 116, 121, 138, 141, 14861 passim, 162, 163, 174; personal, temptation to, 146 Beethoven, Ludwig von, 90, 91n, 92n, 96n Belfast, 4n, 141. See also Little Lea Beowulf, 139 Beyer, Doug, 173n Bible, 20, 22n, 25, 27, 36, 66, 68, 83, 104, 106, 176, 178n; Psalms, 102, 115n, 173n. See also Eden Books: contribution to well-being, 14; effect on creative imagination, 19; ctitious titles of, 26, 28, 58, 85n, 178n, 181, 183; illustrations in, 27, 31, 137, 138, 14041, 146; as physical objects, 2326, 27, 2933, 39. See also Chronicles of Narnia Bookstores, 23, 24, 30 Brady, Charles A., 41n Breughel (painter), 143n Bronowski, Jacob, 5n Bunyan, John, 26n Burke, Edmund, 163n Callahan, Tim, 141n Cambridge University, 11, 12, 15, 72, 7374n, 13132, 143, 148, 149n Capron, Robert. See Wynyard School Carnell, Corbin S., 106n Carpenter, Humphrey, 147n Carroll, Lewis, 137n, 179
205
206
Index
Cicero, 138 Clark, Donald L., 100n Claude Lorraine, 143n Clothing, 83; absence of, 16061; as art form, 15455; in Chronicles, 15559, 161, 162; deception through, 15859, 161; in Harry Potter stories, 180, 183; as metaphor, 162n; in other works, 15961, 162; as reection of culture, 15558, 16162; transformative effect of, 157, 160, 162; as worn by Lewis, 6, 73n, 112, 136, 155 Coghill, Nevill, 89n Coleridge, S. T., 4, 7n, 10, 106 Coles, Robert, 169n Conversion: vs. gradual growth, 50, 51. See also Lewis, C. S.: conversion of Cording, Robert, 141n Creation: divine, 19, 6364, 11314, 119, 143, 162, 175, 176; of Narnia, 4849, 6264, 1035, 116. See also Imagination: kinds of Crowley, Aleister, 178n Dalziel, Edward and George (illustrators), 137n Dance: as art form, 13, 112, 117, 118; in Chronicles, 114, 11617, 147; in education, 100n, 169; in Lewiss life, 11112; as metaphor, 17, 39, 65, 102, 111, 11214, 115n, 116, 11823, 170; participation in, required, 11920, 123, 147 as activity: festive or ritual, 114, 115, 117, 118, 120, 12122; social, 98, 100, 101, 102, 109, 11112, 114, 115, 11617, 118, 161. See also Great Snow Dance Dante, 17, 22n, 67n, 102n, 116 David, King, 115n Davidman, Joy. See Lewis, Joy Davidman Davies, Sir John, 11314, 118 Debussy, Claude, 90, 91n Derrick, Christopher, 144 Dialogue, 74 Dickens, Charles, 169n Dickins, Sophie, 143n Didacticism: question of, in Chronicles, 74, 82, 87, 88, 17071; Lewiss rejection of, 164, 169, 170. See also Moral imagination
Castle-building. See Fantasy: wishfullling Censorship, 173, 178, 184 Chaliapin, Fyodor Ivanovich, 98 Charity, 29n, 94 Chaucer, Geoffrey, 24, 86, 96 Chekhov, Anton, 169n Cherbourg House, 90, 95, 137n, 138, 139, 148, 155n Chesterton, G. K., 116 Children: attitudes of, toward adults, 61, 76, 83, 112; as readers, 1, 2627; religious experience of, 51; tendency of to identify with characters in books, 74, 162, 180. See also Education; Imagination: deprivation of; Lewis, C. S.: writings: Letters to Children; Story: taste for encouraging them: to draw, 140, 141n; to read, 2627, 39; to write, 141n, 171n normal experiences of: asking questions, 6263; exposure to harsh realities, 37, 177; pretending, 179, 185 responses of, to Narnia, 74, 184; actual accounts, 3435, 59, 73n, 108, 182 Chirico, Giorgio de, 145n Chopin, Frederic, 91, 92, 106 Christ, 64n, 66, 12122, 145n, 162n Chronicles of Narnia, ixx, 6, 26, 39, 53, 55, 56, 57, 58, 123, 137, 147, 162, 173, 178, 179, 184, 186, 187; not allegorical, 51, 68; characters in editions of, 2930, 3233, 3538, 4143, 5152, 18991; events in Narnia omitted from, 81n, 8384, 101; illustrations of, 3032, 33n, 58, 140, 141n, 151, 171n; moral imagination nurtured by, 16971; music in, 89, 99102, 1035, 1067, 109; order in which to read, 4152, 61, 80, 85, 170; readers experience of, 3435, 4451, 67, 108; religious dimension of, 4951, 6468, 170, 176; revision and nonrevision of, 3538, 44n, 47n, 52, 54n; time in, 56, 6061. See also Aslan; Didacticism; Jadis; Pevensie children; Lewis, C. S.; Plot; Reepicheep; Story; Storyteller(s) in Lewiss ction
Index
Dillon, Diane, 33 Dillon, Leo, 33 Donne, John, 29n Donoghue, Denis, 4n, 12n Dostoevsky, Fyodor M., 169n Downing, David C., 15n Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan, 168 Draghi, G. B., 105n Dragons, 27, 54, 56n, 75, 99, 141n, 145, 177, 179, 182. See also Lewis, C. S.: writings: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader Drawing(s), 169, 171n; Lewiss advice on, 13940; Lewiss practice of, 137, 13840, 141, 171n. See also Drer, Albrecht; Visual art Dreams, 3738, 46, 78; as literary genre, 53n. See also Fantasy: wish-fullling Druids, 36 Dryden, John, 1045, 110 Drer, Albrecht, 142 Dumas, Alexander, 57 Dunbar, Lady. See Moore, Maureen Dutton, Denis, 5n Ecstasy: conveyed in music, 106, 109; produced by art, 7n, 8, 16, 1718, 8990, 106 Eden, 28, 65 Edmonds, E. L., 91n Education: ne arts in, 100n; Lewiss critique of, 13, 54, 88n, 163, 167; task of, 16667; use of Chronicles of Narnia in, 33, 173; in world of Narnia, 12, 77n, 83, 85n, 100n, 117, 156n. See also Cherbourg House; Experiment House; Lewis, C. S.: writings: Abolition of Man; Malvern College; Reductionism; Wynyard School Edwards, Bruce L., Jr., 21n, 41n Elgar, Edward, 90 Eliot, George, 169n Eliot, T. S., 11415n, 122n, 163n Elyot, Sir Thomas, 115n Emotional response to art: an aspect of meaning, 40n; engagement, 38, 48; excitement, 47, 5455, 85, 107, 123, 169; involves ambient circumstances, 34; relation to religious experience, 51, 67; sense of satisfaction, 1819; as use, 13, 14, 16, 17. See also Ecstasy
207
Empathy, 82, 114 Epistemology, 20, 8182; Lewiss, 911; Barelds, 9, 10, 20 Equality, 76, 161n. See also Hierarchy Escapism. See Fantasy: wish-fullling Euripides, 27 Evans, Linda J., 110n Evil. See Good vs. evil Evolution, 9n, 10, 97 Experiment House (in Silver Chair), 83, 86, 87, 101, 158, 159 Fairy tales, 1, 6n, 5354, 56n, 168n, 170, 17374, 175, 177, 180, 181, 182, 184, 186 Faith, 47n, 5051, 172 Fantasy: as literary genre, 5354, 65, 70, 96, 98n, 179, 182, 184, 185; as a mental faculty, 2, 3, 22, 183; relation to reality, 6869; in visual art, 137n; wish-fullling, 56, 17273, 181. See also Imaginatio; Story Faulkner, William, 169n Fielding, Henry, 7374 Film, 33n; Lewiss critique of, 56 Fish, Stanley E., 21 Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 169n Flamel, Nicholas, 178n, 187 Flashback. See Plot Ford, Paul, 3537, 52n France: Lewis in, 139 Freedom: vs. slavery, 101, 117, 119, 150. See also Paradox Freud, Jill, 91n Fritz, Kathleen, 141n Gaps: as a device in narration, 38; in the Chronicles, 4548 Gardens, 6465, 106, 150. See also Eden; Pastoral Gardner, Helen, 122n Giants, 26, 56n, 64, 83, 85, 96, 97, 99n, 103, 116, 151, 172, 177 Gibson, Evan K., 52n Gilbert, Douglas, 58n, 13132, 138, 144n Giotto, 142 God, 29, 50, 6567, 94, 105, 115n, 152, 162, 188; conceptions of, 5n, 66, 119, 161; desire for, 105, 120n, 122; divine-human encounter, 11920; presence of, 105, 108, 120n; union with, 8; vision of, 22. See also Christ; Creation: divine; Love: Gods; Trinity
208
Index
Hooper, Walter, 31n, 32, 42, 43, 44, 51n, 53n, 58n, 59n, 60n, 108, 143, 144n Horace, 171 Howard, Thomas, 161 Human beings: inherent value of, 162; nature of, 10, 11, 122, 167; spiritual dimension of, 66, 67. See also Nature; Selfhood Humor, 16, 8587, 93, 111, 117, 141, 158, 159, 180, 183, 184 Huttar, Charles, 22n, 68n, 97n, 102n, 140n Hymns: cited in MN, 93; Lewiss dislike of, 89, 9394, 99n; Latin, 93n; parodied by Lewis, 97 Illustrations. See Books: illustrations in Imaginatio (image-making faculty), 3, 45, 6, 8, 13, 64 Imagination: baptized, 17 18; dangers in, 17273, 181; denitions of, 38, 14, 19, 32n; and fancy/fantasy, 34, 6, 7n; history of term, 34, 7n; importance of, to Lewis, ix, x, 2, 8, 11, 22, 188; Lewiss analysis of, 3, 422, 147n; pleasures of, 18788; power of (Rowling), 183, 184; relegated to a secondary place, 1011, 22, 172. See also God: vision of; Moral imagination; Reading; Rowling, J. K.; Science; Selfhood; Temptation deprivation of: in children, 12, 22, 27, 53, 163, 16566, 167; in adults, 163, 169n, 173 kinds of: artistic, ix, 3, 5, 67, 28, 32, 147, 162, 171; creative, 3, 5, 11, 19, 51; penetrative, 19n; poetic, 7, 8, 11; realizing, 19n; receptive, 3, 11, 12, 13, 1420, 21, 41n; romantic, 3, 4, 8, 11; transformative, 19n relation to: belief, 1819, 185; reason, x, 4, 8, 11, 21n, 49, 67; spiritual experience, 10, 11, 1718, 66, 67; truth and meaning, 1011, 164, 169 Internet, 163n, 173, 178n, 187n, 199 Interpretation. See Authorial intention Invention, 3, 5, 6, 15, 19, 32n Ireland, 58, 139. See also Belfast Irony, 70, 71, 82n, 87, 158, 159, 164, 177
Gombrich, E. H., 144 Good vs. evil, 64n, 67, 170, 173, 174, 17778, 179, 185, 186 Googe, Barnabe, 116 Grace, 147; vs. law, 50, 176. See also Law Grahame, Kenneth: The Wind in the Willows, 60, 61, 66, 168n Gramophones, 9092, 94, 125; recordings for, 9293, 105n Great Bookham, 129, 148 Great Malvern, 12728, 148. See also Cherbourg House; Malvern College Great Snow Dance (in VDT ), 83, 101, 117, 141n Great War (Lewis vs. Bareld), 911 Green, Roger Lancelyn, 44n, 58n, 67 Greeves, Arthur, 24, 89, 94, 139. See also Lewis, C. S.: writings: They Stand Together Grierson, Emily, 18586 Guroian, Vigen, 163n Haggard, H. Rider, 56, 67 Hague, Michael, 32n, 141 Hamilton, Annie (Lewiss aunt), 112n Hamilton, Augustus (Lewiss uncle), 112n, 148 Hammond, Wayne G., 31n Handel, G. F., 95, 105n, 110 Hannay, Margaret, 52n Happiness, 68, 120 Hardy, Thomas, 169n Harrison, John, 95 Hart, Dabney A., 165n Harwood, A. C., 111n, 142 Havard, R. E., 71, 91n Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 169n Heaven, 6465, 69, 97, 101, 102, 105, 1069, 110, 120n, 121, 147, 153, 161n Hemingway, Ernest, 169n Heraclitus, 27 Heraldry, 100n, 117. See also Howard, Thomas Hierarchy, 122, 161; vs. equality, 65 66, 118, 156, 162; gured as dance, 65, 11819, 12122; monarchy, 6566, 15758 Hill, Constance, 114 History, 1, 18, 100n, 156n, 178n Hollander, John, 104n Holst, Gustav, 90 Homer, 27, 44
Index
Iser, Wolfgang, 21 Jadis (the White Witch), 33, 36, 49, 55, 81n, 103, 141n, 149, 151, 157, 170, 174, 177 James, Henry, 70, 73 James, S. R., 138 Jenkins, Jerry B., 64n John, Saint, 68n Johnson, Mark, 163n Johnson, Samuel, 87, 110 Jones, Inigo, 154 Joy. See Longing Judas, 68n Kant, Immanuel, 20 Karkainen, Paul, 68 Kawano, Roland M., 113n, 115n Keane, Philip S., 163n Kenosis, 67, 120 Kilby, Clyde S., 58, 110n, 138, 144n Kilns, 1, 90, 91n, 14344 Kirk, Russell, 163n Kirkpatrick, Louise, 106, 118n Kirkpatrick, Robert J., 180n Kirkpatrick, William, 6, 2526. See also Great Bookham Krausz, Michael, 5n Kreeft, Peter, 165n Krieg, Lawrence, 4344 Kuhn, Thomas S., 18n LaHaye, Tim, 64n Law (rules), 145n, 169, 186. See also Grace; Morality Lawrence, D. H., 164 Lawson, Penelope, 143 Leavis, F. R., 1112 Letts, Malcolm, 140n Lewis, Albert (father), 6, 16, 21, 23, 24, 91, 9495, 112n, 118n, 138, 139, 141, 148, 149n Lewis, C. S.: advice on writing, 79; attacks on, 173; appreciation of books, 2326; as character in his ction, 7072, 84, 121; childhood and youth of, 2, 45, 6, 7, 2324, 89, 90, 9193, 9495, 11112, 137 39, 14142, 148, 151, 155, 171n; compared to Samuel Johnson, 87n, 110; as conversationalist, 73, 79; conversion of, 8, 9, 10, 12, 17, 22, 110, 172, 187; illness of, 28; interest in art history of, 144, 145n; and
209
literary theory, 1112, 21, 34, 53, 187; opposition to modernity, 15, 20, 29, 63, 99, 114, 115, 154, 161, 171; personal appearance of, 73n; pictures of, 136, 143, 144n; place of the arts in life of, ix, 13, 28; as poet, 8; prose style, 7980; reading, 15, 2324, 28, 39, 144; rhetoric of self-deprecation, 13n; on science ction, 57, 97; as teacher, ix, 1, 166; troubled by dreams, 37. See also Architecture; Clothing: as worn by Lewis; Dance; Drawing(s); Education; Music; Imagination; Reductionism writings: The Abolition of Man, 11, 16567; All My Road before Me, 25n, 89n, 91, 94, 11112n, 139, 14243, 148; The Allegory of Love, 25, 96, 116; Animal-Land stories, 6, 7, 138; Answers to Questions on Christianity, 93; apologetic works, 3; Beyond Personality, 79n; Bluspels and Flalansferes, 11; Broadcast Talks, 79n; Christian Behaviour, 79n; Christianity and Culture, 93, 172n; Christianity and Literature, 93, 172n; The Dark Tower, 149n; De Audiendis Poetis, 41n; De Descriptione Temporum, 114n, 171; The Discarded Image, 11, 14n, 1820, 104n, 122; Donne and Love Poetry . . . , 187; Dymer, 97, 116n; Edmund Spenser, 96; English Literature in the Sixteenth Century, 16n, 29n, 79, 113, 114n, 171; Equality, 6566; essay on Wagner, 90; Essays Presented to Charles Williams, 116n; An Experiment in Criticism, 6, 1115, 16, 17, 20, 21, 39, 40, 82, 94, 96, 101, 137, 146, 148, 164, 171, 172; First and Second Things, 90n; The Funeral of a Great Myth, 90n; George Macdonald: An Anthology, 29n; The Great Divorce, 29, 53n, 65, 70, 1023, 115, 116, 14647, 151, 155, 16061; A Grief Observed, x, 116n; Hamlet: The Prince or the Poem? 14n; The Horse and His Boy, 27, 30, 41, 42, 55, 61, 77n, 81, 82, 83, 8687, 100n, 116n, 117, 15051, 15758, 17475, 190;
210
Index
102, 114, 116n, 117, 120, 121, 145, 156, 174, 176, 189; The Problem of Pain, 118, 119, 120, 182n; The Queen of Drum, 97n, 116n; Reections on the Psalms, 115n; Rejoinder to Dr. Pittenger, 66; Religion: Reality or Substitute? 172n; The Screwtape Letters, 29, 93, 103, 151; Shelley, Dryden, and Mr Eliot, 7n; The Shoddy Lands, 95, 173; The Silver Chair, 26, 30, 33, 41, 42, 55, 75, 77n, 80, 83, 85n, 86, 87, 99n, 1002, 151, 15859, 174, 176, 190; Sometimes Fairy Stories . . . , 6n, 41n, 168n, 170; Spensers Images of Life, 96, 144n, 145n; Spirits in Bondage, 25, 97, 116n; Summa Metaphysices contra Anthroposophos, 10n; Surprised by Joy, 2, 4n, 57, 8, 11, 1518, 22, 23, 24, 26, 28n, 89, 90n, 92, 93, 94n, 105, 112, 137, 141, 155, 172, 181, 185; That Hideous Strength, 28, 55, 57, 72, 74, 9899, 115, 11819, 144, 154, 155, 15960, 161, 162, 163, 16465, 166, 16769, 172; They Stand Together, 1, 7, 8, 13, 17, 21, 2426, 28n, 29n, 56n, 57, 8991, 9293, 95, 106, 111, 116, 118n, 139, 141, 142, 149, 18788; Till We Have Faces, x, 2728, 44, 53n, 70, 95, 99n, 115, 116, 14445, 15152, 160n, 161n; Transposition, 106n, 147n; Unreal Estates, 6n; The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, 1, 2627, 30, 3738, 41, 42, 54, 55, 5657, 63, 66, 68, 75, 77n, 8081, 82n, 83, 85, 86, 87, 100, 1068, 114, 116n, 121, 140, 141n, 145, 150, 157, 162, 174, 190; The Weight of Glory, 8n, 105, 108, 120n, 162; Williams and the Arthuriad, 11819. See also Chronicles of Narnia Lewis, Flora Hamilton (mother), 94 Lewis, Joy Davidman, 25 Lewis, W. H., 9092, 93n, 9495, 112n, 137, 138, 141n, 143, 147n, 14849; Brothers and Friends, 25n, 91n, 92n, 143, 149; C. S. Lewis: A Biography, 92, 141n; diary, 24n, 143n; Lewis Papers, 24n, 90, 92, 93n, 95n, 112n, 118n, 13839, 141n, 143, 148; Memoir of C. S. Lewis, 155 Lindskoog, Kathryn, 59n Liszt, Franz: Hungarian Rhapsody, 95
Imagination and Thought in the Middle Ages, 9596, 122; It All Began with a Picture, 6n; Lancelot, 97n, 116n; The Last Battle, 31, 41, 42, 43, 45, 6465, 67, 75, 77n, 8384, 85, 87, 101, 10810, 116n, 117, 155, 156, 168n, 174, 191; The Leeborough Review, 92; letters, 31n, 93, 94n, 95, 112n, 118n, 138, 139, 148; Letters, 28n, 41n, 71n, 79, 94, 144, 147n, 148, 149n, 151; Letters to an American Lady, 172n; Letters to Children, 4344, 90n, 95, 140, 141n, 171n; Letters to Malcolm, x, 111, 121, 175; Lilies That Fester, 2n; The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, 6, 26, 30, 32, 33, 3536, 4151 passim, 55, 5861, 67, 73, 74, 7576, 7780, 84, 85, 99100, 116, 141n, 145, 149, 151, 154, 156, 166, 168n, 17379 passim, 189; Loki Bound, 90; The Magicians Nephew, 26, 33, 41, 42, 43, 44, 4749, 50, 57, 61, 6264, 76, 8182, 83, 8485, 87, 88n, 93, 100, 1034, 10910, 11516, 151, 15657, 175, 17677, 19091; marginalia, 26, 116, 139; Mere Christianity, 49, 50, 67, 79, 80n, 87n, 106, 109, 118, 11920, 145n, 161, 162n, 166; Metre, 96n; Miracles, 49, 67, 118, 119, 120; The Morte Darthur, 149n; Myth Became Fact, 11, 111n; The Nameless Isle, 97, 115; A Note on Jane Austen, 29n; On Church Music, 94; On Criticism, 40n; On Juvenile Tastes, 168n; On Science Fiction, 57n, 62; On Stories, 14, 5354, 55, 56, 57, 60, 61, 64, 66, 67, 68, 69, 96; On Three Ways of Writing for Children, 6n, 76, 116n, 168n, 169, 177, 18182; Out of the Silent Planet, 28, 54, 57, 62, 7071, 72, 95, 98, 115, 144, 15253; Perelandra, 28, 44, 54, 5758, 59n, 62, 7172, 74, 9798, 102, 115, 12122, 123, 144, 153, 161n; The Personal Heresy, 34, 67n; The Pilgrims Regress, 8, 22, 99, 105, 106, 108, 115, 139, 161n; Poems, 3, 80n, 97, 114n, 115, 116n, 145n; A Preface to Paradise Lost, 9697, 119n, 120n, 161; Priestesses in the Church? 111n; Prince Caspian, 12, 26, 30, 41, 42, 4445, 55, 6061, 75, 76, 77n, 80, 83, 8485, 99n, 100,
Index
Little Lea, 9192, 112n, 141n Liturgy, 98, 99 Liverpool Cathedral, 149n Lobdell, Jared C., 71n London, 57, 58, 142, 179; art galleries in, 142, 143n, 144; St. Pauls Cathedral, 149 Longing, 5, 8, 16, 17, 18, 22, 61, 65, 67, 97, 102, 1059, 113, 120n, 14647, 148, 182; relation to memory, 8. See also Fantasy: wish-fullling Love, x, 17, 29n, 114, 115, 118, 169, 187; charity, 29n, 94; as a creative power, 114; Gods, 19, 50, 118, 119, 176. See also Marriage Lowes, J. L., 4n Lucas van Leyden, 142 Lucretius, 164 Lyon, H. R., 100n MacDonald, George, 5n, 1718, 2829, 163 Magic, 5n, 115n, 173, 178, 179, 18384; black, 174, 17677, 178n, 185; Deep and Deeper Magic (in LWW ), 36, 50, 166, 176, 177; as feeling experienced by readers, 48; Magician and Magic Book (in VDT ), 27, 55, 56, 146, 150, 174; as term for the unexplained, 17576, 184; white, 17476, 185 Malory, Sir Thomas, 149n Malvern College, 89, 90, 13839. See also Great Malvern Mandeville, Sir John, 140n Manlove, Colin, 52n Marginalization, 174 Marion E. Wade Center, 116n, 141n Marriage, 29n, 115n, 11819, 16869 Marsh, David, 97n Marvell, Andrew, 113 Mary, Virgin, 21n Medici Society: prints, 141n, 143 Memory, 8, 58n, 68, 78, 100, 160, 167; aroused by encounters with art, 14546; as psychological faculty, 6n, 8, 22n; of reading experiences, 34, 48, 49, 56; of rst encounter with Chronicles, 3435. See also Imaginatio; Reading: rereading Metaphor, 7, 11. See also Architecture; Clothing; Dance; Music Metaphysics: Lewiss, 911
211
Michael (boy living at Lewises), 1, 163, 188 Michelangelo, 143 Milton, John, 96, 120n Milward, Peter, 21n Models of reality, 1820, 1045, 113, 114, 122 Monarchy. See Hierarchy Montgomerie, Alexander, 116 Moore, Janie King, 1, 3, 25n, 90, 91n, 112n, 143 Moore, Maureen, 94 Mop, Mrs. (charwoman), 92 Moral imagination, ix, 28, 16371, 172, 173, 174, 177, 178, 18587 Morality, 12, 1718, 29n, 37, 5051, 54, 80n, 88, 163, 165; moral law, 36, 50, 80n, 163, 16465, 16667, 168, 170, 176. See also Didacticism; Good vs. evil; Moral imagination Morris, William, 1056 Moses, 22n Mother Goose, 137n Mozart, W. A., 96; The Magic Flute, 90, 97 Music: absence of, associated with dissolution, 10910; associated with celebration and praise, 1023; associated with longing, 8, 97, 1059, 146; in creation of Narnia, 63, 1035, 10910; in education, 100n, 103; vs. noise, 103; receiving vs. using, 8, 13, 14; relation to other arts, 5, 7, 13, 89, 96, 97, 147n; taste in, 93, 94; as temptation, 99, 101, 147. See also Bach, J. S.; Ecstasy; Gramophones; Hymns; Opera; Songs; Worship in Lewis: his life, 8, 13, 16, 89, 94n, 9798n, 106, 110, 137; Chronicles, 8081, 89, 99102, 1035, 10610, 147; other writings, 9599, 1023 as metaphor: harmony, 20, 65, 97, 100n, 1035, 113, 117, 120n, 122, 170; symbol of creation, 104, 113; other images, 9598, 116, 120, 122 Myers, Doris T., 12n, 47n, 51, 52n, 60n, 85, 87n, 154n, 166n, 171 Mystery, 47, 48, 175. See also Gaps; Numinous, the; Paradox Mysticism, 17 Myth, 2, 7, 11, 17, 22, 53n, 59, 6265, 67, 1045, 10910, 123, 152, 182;
212
Index
Palma Vecchio, Jacopo, 142 Papworth (Lewiss dog), 90 Paradox, 67, 122; of order and freedom, 9697, 117, 119, 121 Partridge, J. Bernard, 137n Pastoral, 5960, 150, 154. See also Gardens Patterson, Nancy-Lou, 31n, 152n, 154n Paul, Saint, 68n Penelope, Sister, CSVM. See Lawson, Penelope Pepys, Samuel, 106 Peregrine, Stephen, 141n Perspective, 72, 7475; of a bear, 72; in drawing, 138; female, 7475; importance of, 8182. See also Viewpoint Peter, Saint, 68n Peters, Thomas C., 165n Pevensie children, 26, 3536, 45, 4647, 55, 59, 60, 68n, 76, 100, 140, 145, 156, 170, 175 Phemister, William, 98n Pindar, 25, 97 Pitter, Ruth, 60n Planets, 19, 71, 72, 9899, 113, 161, 169 Plato, 27, 104, 113, 119, 188 Platonism, 71. See also Neoplatonism Pleasure: Gods invention, 29. See also Imagination: pleasures of; Reading: for pleasure Plot: nonchronological sequence in, 4446, 48, 49, 76. See also Gaps Poetry, 2, 5, 7, 8, 12, 116, 161; as a substitute for religion, 12, 13 Point of view. See Viewpoint Potter, Beatrix, 1, 137 Poussin, Nicolas, 142 Prayer: childish, 5n; Lords Prayer, 162n Prints. See Painting(s) Pythagoras, 104 Rackham, Arthur, 90n, 137, 142, 146 Ransom novels, 6, 15n; storytellers in, 7072. See also Lewis, C. S.: writings: specic titles Rawson, Claude, 87n Reading: aloud, and being read to, 1, 3, 31, 33, 3435, 55, 74, 169n; holistic, extraverbal aspects of, 23, 3035, 3839; for pleasure, 28,
demythologizing, 176; Greek, 5859, 117, 120, 152, 156n, 169; Norse, 16, 36, 58, 90, 137n. See also Amphion; Atlantis; Paganism; Story: mythopoesis Mythlore, 141n Napoleon, 151 Narration. See Dialogue; Plot; Story; Storyteller(s) Nature: our kinship to, 63; Lewiss descriptions of, 4n, 60, 63, 83, 85; receptivity to, 14n, 16, 20, 147n Neal, Connie, 178n, 186n Nel, Philip, 180n Neoplatonism, 113 Nesbit, E., 168n, 185 New Criticism, 21, 4041 Newhouser, David L., 5n Neylan, Sarah, 140 Novels, 6, 8, 53, 71n, 73, 96 Numinous, the, 4849, 6667, 153n, 182n Nursery rhymes, 1. See also Mother Goose Obedience: to authority, 118; disobedience, 96, 172. See also Reading: submission in Objective Room (in THS), 144, 16465, 166 Objectivity, 14, 1617, 18, 20, 21, 40, 41n, 70, 71, 72, 74, 75, 87, 165, 16667, 17576, 184 Occult: dened, 178n, 184. See also Magic; Witchcraft Olson, Paul A., 100n Opera, 16, 90, 95, 96, 97, 171n. See also Wagner, Richard Oral tradition, 28, 77n. See also Songs Other: relation of self to, 1516, 17, 20, 82, 160, 163 Otto, Rudolf, 153n, 182n Oxford, 59n, 70, 71, 72, 111n, 114, 135, 141n, 149, 150; Magdalen College, 93n, 14243; other colleges, 53, 94, 134, 149. See also Kilns Paganism, 22, 11617, 144n, 160. See also Druids Painting(s), 13, 14, 14244, 164, 169, 171n; in Lewiss ction, 14446, 153, 164; Lewiss theory of, 14647
Index
29, 39, 55; relation to religious experience, 67; submission in, 14, 17, 146; two ways of, 1214, 21, 23, 29, 39 as imaginative activity, 11, 15, 35, 44, 45, 4649, 54, 59, 6162, 67, 74, 77, 8485, 103, 138, 164, 184; role of imagination in full reading experience, 18, 21, 33, 34, 40, 78, 89, 96, 148; as stimulus to imagination, 8, 12, 35, 36, 3839, 68, 106, 110, 162, 163n, 164, 16869, 182 Lewiss analysis of reading process: appreciation, 12, 15; evaluation, 12; receiving vs. use, 12, 1318, 146, 148, 149n; understanding, 12, 14, 20 rereading, 57, 108, 168n, 182; value of, 14, 49, 55, 72, 101, 169n; in Lewiss practice, 15, 28n Reader-response criticism, 21, 34. See also Gaps Realism, 2, 19n, 53, 54, 103, 181, 182; devices of, 178n; failures in, 26; Lewiss cultivation of, in OSP, 7071; in TWHF, 151; in painting, 145, 146; realism of Hell, 103; rejection of, 60, 61, 64, 70, 73, 123 Reason, ix, x, 2, 3, 21n, 111, 123; dangers and limits of, 29, 54, 63, 65, 122, 167, 172; practical, 169. See also Imagination: relation: to reason Recordings, musical. See Gramophones Reductionism: Lewiss opposition to, 63, 176 Reepicheep, 26, 86, 100, 1079, 171n Reynolds, Barbara, 7374n Richards, I. A., 4n, 9, 11, 12 Romance, 53, 67, 70, 96, 150 Rosenblatt, Louise M., 21 Routley, Eric, 93n, 94n Rowling, J. K.: inuenced by Lewis, 187 Harry Potter stories, 17887; attacks on, 178; defenses of, 18586; changes in U.S. editions, 180n; imagination, not magic, as theme in, 183; magic belittled in, 18384; relation to Christianity, 18587; witchcraft and wizardry in, 17879,
213
181, 182, 184. See also Archetypes; Fantasy; School stories Ruskin, John, 3 Salisbury Cathedral, 133, 149 Salvation, 2, 12, 50, 94 Sambourne, Edward Linley, 137n Sassoon, Siegfried, 25 Satire, 87, 154, 157, 184 Sayer, George, 31n, 91, 92n, 94, 138n, 144n, 165n Schakel, Peter: Reading with the Heart, 50, 52n, 59n, 68n, 141n; Reason and Imagination in C. S. Lewis, x, 21n School. See Education School stories: genre, 6, 18082, 186, 187; Lewiss attitude toward, 181, 182 Science, 1, 18n, 20, 62, 63, 65, 105, 175; role of imagination in, 5 Scott, Sir Walter, 28n, 139 Sculpture: on Malacandra, 144 Sehnsucht. See Longing Selfhood: egocentric, 10, 14, 1516, 120, 151, 160, 169, 172, 173, 181, 182, 185; enlarged through imagination, 2, 12, 15, 1617, 54, 6263, 82, 164. See also Ecstasy; Objectivity; Subjectivism Seznec, Jean, 144 Shakespeare, William, 3, 19n, 28, 29n, 138, 163, 171, 185 Shelley, Percy B., 7n Sibelius, Jan, 90 Sidney, Sir Philip, 171 Similes, 7980, 85, 9596, 99n, 111 Sims, Sue, 180n Skiapods, 140n Smith, Barbara Herrnstein, 9n Smith, Robert Houston, 122n Socrates, 27 Songs: in Narnia, 8081, 97, 100, 101, 107, 109; in Pilgrims Regress, 99 Sorcery. See Magic: black Sophocles, 27 Spenser, Edmund, 16n, 47n, 87n, 96, 171 Stanford, Sir Charles Villiers, 94 Steege, David, 180n Stewart, Ian, 5n Story: the Great Story, 109; taste for, in children and adults, 5354, 62, 68, 116n, 168; value of, 169
214
Index
Tolkien, J. R. R., 3031, 32n, 98n, 147n, 184 Tolstoy, Count Leo, 169n Trinity, 119, 120 Trollope, Anthony, 28n, 120 Truth, 4, 910, 11, 20, 65, 121, 122, 171. See also Paradox; Story: truth to life Turin, Shroud of, 143 Valkenburg, Patti M., 3n Van Allsburg, Chris, 33 van der Voort, T. H. A., 3n Van Dyck, Sir Anthony, 142 Van Nattan, Mary, 173 Viewpoint: rst-person, 7072, 74; omniscient, 72; third-person, 70, 71, 72, 74, 82n. See also Perspective; Storyteller(s) Virgil, 96n Visual art, 5, 14, 13738, 162; Lewiss theory of, 14647; reception of, 148, 149n; tapestries, in Cair Paravel, 145; works of, owned by Lewis, 141n, 14244. See also Architecture; Clothing; Drawing(s); Film; Painting(s); Sculpture Wagner, Richard, 16, 89, 90, 94, 96n, 137, 146 Wallace, Catherine M., 185, 186n Watts, George Frederic, 126, 142 Webb, Kaye, 44n Wells Cathedral, 130, 148, 149n Weyland, Margaret, 91n Whitehead, Jane, 180n White Witch. See Jadis Wicca, 173n Williams, Charles, 116n, 11819, 122n Wilton Diptych, 143 Wind, Edgar, 144 Witchcraft, 56n, 101, 173, 17879, 181. See also Jadis; Lewis, C. S.: writings: Silver Chair; Rowling, J. K.: Harry Potter stories Wordsworth, William, 8n, 14n, 17, 19n, 96n Worship, 17; music in, 89, 94, 99n. See also Hymns; Liturgy Wynyard School, 6, 138, 155 Xenophon, 27
aspects of: atmosphere, 55, 5761, 68, 102; blending of childhood and adult experience, 61; blending of familiar and unfamiliar, 59; mythopoesis, 6268, 182; suspense and excitement, 5455, 68; suspensefulness, 5657, 68 as genre: vs. argument, 49, 67; vs. realistic narrative, 53, 70, 146, 168; truth to life, 68, 175, 186 Storyteller(s) in Lewiss ction, 27, 7088; addressing readers directly, 27, 38, 7072, 73, 75, 7779, 83, 8485, 87, 108; art of, 77n; authority of, 71, 72, 7576, 7879, 88; control of how story is told, 75, 7677, 8182; omniscient or not? 76, 81n; perceived personality of, 7274, 7576, 77, 7879, 8283, 8788; sources of his information, 7677, 8081, 8384; voice, oral quality of, 74, 79; ways of relating to readers, 76, 7879, 83, 88. See also Humor; Lewis, C. S.: as a character in his ction; Viewpoint Strong, A. P., 143, 144n Subjectivism, 18, 20; in evaluation of literature, 11; in responding to art, 13, 16, 21, 40. See also Selfhood Suffern, Lily (Lewiss aunt), 142 Surprise, 16, 49, 54, 55, 57 Swann, Donald, 9798n Swetcharnik, William, 137n Swift, Jonathan: Gullivers Travels, 137n Symbol, 4, 11, 53. See also Metaphor Tanis, Elliot, 130 Taylor, Mr. (schoolmaster), 139 Teisias Stesichorus, 27, 28 Television, 23, 183, 184 Temptation, 95, 98, 105, 107, 146, 147, 153, 167. See also Imagination: dangers in; Music: as temptation Tenniel, Sir John, 137n Thomson, Sarah E., 113n Thorson, Stephen, 911, 12 Time, 122n; end of, 64, 10910; Father Time, 109. See also Chronicles of Narnia: handling of time in Timmerman, John H., 118n Tintoretto, Jacopo, 143