Read The Fellowship: The Literary Lives of the Inklings Online
Authors: Philip Zaleski,Carol Zaleski
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Literary, #Nonfiction, #Retail
“kicked a few ideas around”: Joy Gresham to William Gresham, quoted in Hooper,
C. S. Lewis: A Complete Guide,
247.
“when they are preparing”: C. S. Lewis,
Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold
(San Diego: Harcourt, Brace, 1984), 97.
“every nice, affectionate”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 590.
“I know now”: Lewis,
Till We Have Faces
, 308.
“Most reviewers”: Hooper,
C. S. Lewis: A Complete Guide
, 262.
“mumbo-jumbo”: T. H. White,
Time and Tide
37 (October 13, 1956): 1227–28.
libel risk: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 581.
“partly in answer”: Lewis, preface to
Surprised by Joy
, vii.
“long corridors”: Lewis,
Surprised by Joy
, 10.
“‘Do
you
like that?’”: Ibid., 130.
“as fascinating”: Ibid., 200.
“the most dejected”: Ibid., 228–29.
“latter stages”: Dorothy L. Sayers, “Christianity Regained,”
Time and Tide
36 (October 1, 1955): 1263.
“In a sense”: Lewis,
Surprised by Joy
, 17.
“God moves, indeed”: Norman Cornthwaite Nicholson, “Joy and Conversion,”
The Times Literary Supplement
2797 (October 7, 1955): 583.
“The limpidity of these waters”: Sayers, “Christianity Regained,” 1264.
“shimmering in the heat”: Davidman,
Out of My Bone
, 258.
“smelled marriage”: Eva Walsh, quoted in Dorsett,
And God Came In
, 128.
“it was now obvious”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 245.
“Joy, whose intentions … the gap between the end”: Ibid., 245.
“How did I get into this theology racket”: Davidman,
Out of My Bone
, 278.
“place of unearthly beauty”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 781.
“a v. fine, wild country … a ‘St. Luke’s summer’”: Ibid., 797.
“I have got something really hellish … The X-rays showed”: Davidman,
Out of My Bone
, 297.
“I never have loved her more”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 245.
“physical agony”: Davidman,
Out of My Bone
, 300.
“I am trying very hard”: Ibid., 306.
“a notable act of charity … I found it heartrending”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 246.
“a power which … Yes, in my legs”: Coghill, “Approach to English,” 63.
“gives me a wonderfully youthful figure”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 875.
“a spiritualist picture”: Ibid., 967.
“life-giving generosity”: Coghill, “Approach to English,” 63.
“One dreams of a Charles Williams substitution!”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 901.
“hardly any hope”: Ibid., 866.
“has improved”: Ibid., 884.
“the improvement in my wife’s condition”: Ibid., 894.
“almost miraculous”: Ibid., 903.
“by supposing Charles’s theory”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 232.
“My heart is breaking”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 862.
“wd. be surprised”: Ibid., 837.
“we are often … something which began in Agape”: Ibid., 884.
“naturally I shall want”: Quoted in Dorsett,
And God Came In
, 147.
“remember you as a man … If you do not relent”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 843–45.
“the center of his life”: Ladborough, “In Cambridge,” 103.
“for the unlearned”: C. S. Lewis,
Reflections on the Psalms
(New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1958), 1.
“Christians cry to God”: Ibid., 12.
“that typically Jewish prison”: Ibid., 17.
“are indebted”: Ibid., 28.
“Father of Lights … good work”: Ibid., 110.
“a little more technical equipment … only the most tenuous”: Joseph Bourke,
Blackfriars
40 (September 1959): 389–91.
“bring in nearly … Cartwheel”: C. S. Lewis Papers, Bodleian Library, MS Eng. Let. C. 220/4, fol. 28, quoted in Green and Hooper,
C. S. Lewis: A Biography
, 387.
“Today I want to discuss”: Joy Davidman, letter to Chad and Eva Walsh,
Out of My Bone
, 341.
“If people are already unlovable”: Lewis,
The Four Loves
, 41.
“hard day’s walking”: Ibid., 72.
“Love Himself”: Ibid., 128.
“vague and fluid … a novelist’s insights”: Martin D’Arcy, “These Things Called Love,”
The New York Times Book Review
(July 31, 1960): 4.
“more like resurrection”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1000.
“drunk with blue mountains”: Ibid., 967.
“like being recaptured by the giant”: Ibid., vol. 3, 1101.
“Joy was often in pain”: Green and Hooper,
C. S. Lewis: A Biography
, 396.
“in a
nunc dimittis
frame of mind”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1153.
“made an Amazon”: Ibid.
“Don’t get me a posh coffin”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 250.
“I shall survive, unembittered … it does often strike me as preposterous”: Owen Barfield letter, December 29, 1957, Barfield Papers, Bodleian Library, Dep. c. 1055.
“exist by virtue”: Owen Barfield,
What Coleridge Thought
(Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1971), 36.
“the subjectivity of the individual mind”: Owen Barfield, quoted in Sugerman,
Evolution of Consciousness: Studies in Polarity
, 18.
“basis of his whole way”: Barfield, quoted in ibid., 17.
“round box”: Owen Barfield,
Worlds Apart: A Dialogue of the 1960’s
(Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1971), 210.
“so exciting … Your language sometimes disgruntles”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1328.
“recently deceased … a fascinating link”: Thomas J. Altizer, review of
Worlds Apart
,
Journal of Bible and Religion
32, no. 4 (October 1964): 384–85.
“metaphor, symbol, language, and problems of communication”: Penciled note by Barfield recounting “Origin of U.S Connection,” dated August 30, 1963, Barfield Papers, Bodleian Library, Dep. c. 1054.
“like starting a new life”: Blaxland–de Lange,
Owen Barfield
, 39.
“now about 34 years behind … wide view”: Tolkien, “Valedictory Address to the University of Oxford,” 224.
“the foundation”: Ibid., 225.
“the B.Litt. sausage-machine … the degeneration”: Ibid., 226–27.
“the
dugu
ð
”: Ibid., 240.
“vigorous … crotchety”: “Tolkien’s Farewell,”
Oxford Mail
(June 6, 1969): 4.
“in many ways a melancholy”: Tolkien,
Letters
, 300.
“I am in fact utterly stuck”: Ibid., 301.
“ponderous silliness”: Ibid., 302.
“Forgive my chattiness”: Tolkien Papers, Bodleian Library, quoted in Scull and Hammond,
J.R.R. Tolkien Companion and Guide: Chronology
, 574.
“a very pretty book”: Quoted in Scull and Hammond,
J.R.R. Tolkien Companion and Guide: Chronology
, 599.
“I do not think … of course no dragon”: Quoted in ibid., 595, 596.
“ingenious … hurrying rhythm”: Alfred Duggan, “Middle Earth Verse,”
The Times Literary Supplement
3169 (November 23, 1962): 892.
“something close to genius”: Anthony Thwaite, “Hobbitry,”
The Listener
1756 (November 22, 1962): 881.
“sagging faith … men’s hearts”: Tolkien,
Letters
, 336–37.
“Faith is an act of will … demented megalomaniac”: Ibid., 337–38.
“fell in love … the greatest reform”: Ibid., 338–40.
“plausible English pseudonym”: Quoted in Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1201.
“not written with publication”: Hooper,
C. S Lewis: A Complete Guide
, 196.
“a defence … describe a
state
”: C. S. Lewis,
A Grief Observed
(New York: HarperOne, 2009), 71.
“there are a lot of things”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1174.
“For those few years”: Lewis,
Grief Observed
, 19–20.
“appall”: Ibid., 29.
“the most precious gift”: Ibid., 30.
“She is, like God”: Ibid., 36.
“Cosmic Sadist”: Ibid., 43.
“an instantaneous, unanswerable impression”: Ibid., 57.
“Turned to God”: Ibid., 73.
470–71
“Him as the giver”: Ibid., 74.
“Not my idea of God”: Ibid., 79.
“strange, firm magnetism … Religion—reassurance”: Sylva Norman, “Argument with Sorrow,”
The Times Literary Supplement
3115 (November 10, 1961): 803.
“easy tone … continually interesting”: William Empson, “Professor Lewis on Linguistics,”
The Times Literary Supplement
3057 (September 30, 1960): 627.
“unintelligible”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1202.
“as a substitute”: C. S. Lewis, “Undergraduate Criticism,”
Broadsheet
(Cambridge) 8, no. 17 (March 9, 1960): [1,] quoted by Walter Hooper in Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1230. Discussed in an editorial, “Professor C. S. Lewis and the English Faculty,” ibid., no. 22 (October 1960): 6–17.
“Pecksniffian disingenuousness”:
Delta: The Cambridge Literary Magazine
22 (October 1960): 6–17.
“Do not misunderstand”: Lewis, letter to the editor,
Delta: The Cambridge Literary Magazine
23 (February 1961): 4–7, reprinted in Lewis,
Collected Letters,
vol. 3, 1230–35.
“shrinking a little”: Frank Kermode, “Against Vigilants,”
New Statesman
62, 1599 (November 3, 1961): 658–59. Kermode, who had also incurred the wrath of
Scrutiny
, was impressed by the artful way in which Lewis suggests, without naming names, the particular school of critics he has in mind; moreover, Kermode says, “there is no specific mention of that dreadful Vigilant arrogance which corrupts pleasure and judgment, and which is now available in paperback…”
“Tell me the date”: C. S. Lewis,
An Experiment in Criticism
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1961, 2004), 105.
“No poem will give”: Ibid., 94.
“permits, invites”: Ibid., 104.
“an enlargement of our being … In reading great literature”: Ibid., 137–41.
“The saner and greater”: I. A. Richards,
Coleridge on Imagination
(London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Tr
ü
bner, 1934; Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1960), 171.
“not to ‘think about’”: F. R. Leavis, “Literary Criticism and Philosophy,”
The Common Pursuit
, 213.
“Professor Lewis’s own credo”: Reginald P. C. Mutter, “The Function of Criticism,”
The Times Literary Supplement
3114 (November 3, 1961): 790.
“The actual history of Eng. Lit.”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1371.
“a perfectly sincere, disinterested, fearless, ruthless fanatic”: Ibid., 1372.
“C. S. Lewis is dead”: Leavis’s remark was recorded by D. Keith Mano, quoted in James E. Person, Jr., “The Legacy of C. S. Lewis,”
Modern Age
(Summer 1991): 409.
“whether we were his pupils”: Helen Gardner, review of
The Discarded Image
,
The Listener
1842 (July 16, 1964): 97.
“(a.) Having educated Betjeman”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1251.
“I never liked Eliot’s poetry”: Green and Hooper,
C. S. Lewis: A Biography
, 390.
“It was a quiet morning”: Donald Swann,
Swann’s Way: A Life in Song
, quoted in Green and Hooper,
C. S. Lewis: A Biography
, 403.
“During the year … I drank from”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 252–53.
“a dipsomaniac retired major”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1312.
“I wear a catheter”: Ibid., 1382.
If Lewis had taken a leave: See W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 272.
“But oh Arthur”: Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 3, 1456.
“By early October”: W. H. Lewis, “Memoir of C. S. Lewis,” 45.
John F. Kennedy: Kennedy died first, being shot at 12:30 Central Time (USA) and declared dead at 1:00 p.m.; Huxley died at 5:20 Pacific Time (having received two one-hundred milligram injections of LSD during his last hours, administered by his wife, Laura Huxley); Lewis, as noted, died at about 5:30 p.m. Greenwich Mean Time in Oxford.
19. INKLINGS FIRST AND LAST
“time of close communion … So far I have felt”: Tolkien,
Letters
, 341.
“My life continues”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 254.
“SPB”: Warnie’s curious sobriquet for his brother. The letters stand for Smallpiggiebotham (Warnie was the Archpiggiebotham), nicknames ultimately derived from their childhood nurse, Lizzie Endicott. A humorous “Pigiebotian” philosophy evolved between the two brothers, devoted to studied appreciation of inactivity. See Lewis’s letter to Warnie, August 2, 1928 (Lewis,
Collected Letters
, vol. 1, 776).
“I forget quite important”: W. H. Lewis,
Brothers and Friends
, 255.
“the absolutely unforgettable”: Owen Barfield, “C. S. Lewis,”
Owen Barfield on C. S. Lewis
, 3.
“You came to him”: Owen Barfield, “Moira,”
Owen Barfield on C. S. Lewis
, 163.
“I find the prospect exciting … 2 lectures a week”: Letter, Owen Barfield to Philip Mairet, March 28, 1964, Barfield Papers, Bodleian Library, Dep. c. 1074.