© Don W. King
This first appeared in The Christian Scholar's Review 27 (Summer 1998): 404-405.
C. S. Lewis: A
Centenary Retrospective
A retrospective should attempt to view its subject from as many angles as possible, bringing into sharp relief new or seldom noticed aspects. This issue of CSR celebrating the centenary of the birth of C. S. Lewis (1898-1998) is dedicated to that proposition. Consequently, there are no essays focusing upon Lewis as lay theologian, spiritual mentor, nor Christian apologist; we leave that worthy task to the many conferences, workshops, and other publications also appearing this year.[1] From the inception of this issue, the focus has been to extend and expand our perception of the literary accomplishments of this century’s most popular Christian writer.
While being viewed as a popular writer is frequently the death knell to being evaluated as a literary writer, Lewis has managed to overcome this stigma. This is due in no small part because of the depth of his formal education, his quick mind, his even-handed use of rhetoric, his sense of humor, his apt use of figurative language, especially analogy and metaphor, his fine ear for the sound of words, his turn of the phrase, and, finally, his intuitive ability to write clear, lucid prose. Beyond even these, however, Lewis’ success as a writer springs from his deeply held belief about the core values of civilized life, what he terms “stock responses.” Tracing these back to the Greek and Roman writers he so admired—Homer, Virgil, and Ovid—as well as the towering figures of western literature—Dante, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, and Yeats—Lewis infuses his work with passages promoting honor, courage, bravery, honesty, charity, respect, and related values.
For example, in the poem “Spartan Nactus” he feigns being unable to understand the nuances of modern literature. Instead he says he is
One whose doom
Retains him always in the class of dunces,
Compelled to offer Stock Responses,
Making the poor best that I can
Of dull things . . . peacocks, honey, the Great Wall, Aldebaran,
Silver streams, cowslip wine, wave on the beach, bright gem,
The shape of
trees and women, thunder,
In his address upon assuming the
Chair of Medieval and Renaissance English Literature at
The essays in this issue reflect upon Lewis’ faith in stock responses. Marsha Daigle-Williamson’s essay on Lewis as literary critic argues he is the exemplar of T. S. Eliot’s claim a writer establishes “a place in literature” when his work fits the “whole existing order” of previous writers involving “a perception, not only of the pastness of the past, but of its presence.” Given Lewis’ frequently noted denigration of Eliot’s influence upon modern literature, it is ironic Lewis fits Eliot’s description. However, Daigle-Williamson uses this description as the context wherein to explore Lewis’ literary criticism, addressing specifically what Lewis sees as the purpose of literature, his literary predecessors, and his view of the function of literary criticism. The essay by David Downing considers the influence of Lewis the scholar upon Lewis the novelist, especially as seen in his use of Merlin from Arthurian legend in That Hideous Strength. Downing briefly traces the literary appearance of Merlin, noting how Lewis’ knowledge as a scholar of medieval literature informs his work as a novelist in portraying a Merlin in need of spiritual redemption.
Dominic
Manganiello considers Lewis’ “answer” to William Blake’s objection to Dante’s
notion of hell; in brief, Blake rejects the idea hell is a place of retributive
justice. Manganiello deftly traces
through The Great Divorce Dantean
allusions, showing how Lewis attacks Blake’s antinomian ethics. In the end, Lewis validates an ethic grounded
in “the eternal verities of the Commedia.” Brett Foster shifts the focus to Lewis as
social critic in his discussion of The
Abolition of
Walter
Hooper provides us a fascinating glimpse into Lewis as a lecturer at
I began by saying a retrospective should help us see its subject from new vantage points. It is tempting as well to suggest how the subject will be viewed in another hundred years. Will Lewis still be as popular in 2098 as he is in 1998? Which of his works will endure? How will his work influence the next several generations? Almost certainly Lewis will not be as influential one hundred years from now; yet hopefully another equally gifted writer will emerge to speak the same truths in a format and context relevant to his or her twenty-first century audience. Also, works like The Chronicles of Narnia and his Christian apologetics will endure much longer than his scholarly work (regretfully). And Lewis’ influence will never completely fade; he may be remembered by future generations as a composite of John Milton, John Bunyan, and Dr. Samuel Johnson. Lofty comparisons, but deservedly so.
[1] As of the end of 1997, over thirty five events have been planned. For current information, see the “Newsletter of the C S Lewis Centenary Group” at coiace@iol.ie. It may be no exaggeration to say that Lewis’ centenary will be celebrated in one way or another somewhere in the world during every week of 1998.
[2] Punch 227 (December 1, 1954): 685. The title means “Spartan having obtained.” Revised and retitled “A Confession” in C. S. Lewis, Poems, ed. Walter Hooper (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1964), p. 1.
[3] “De Descriptione Temporum,” reprinted in Selected Literary Essays (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1969), p. 13.