Eight Children in Narnia. Jared Lodbell

Eight Children in Narnia - Jared Lodbell


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      Other Books by Jared Lobdell

      Seeking the Lord (2015, printing limited to 100 numbered copies)

      The Rise of Tolkienian Fantasy (2005)

      The World of the Rings: Language, Religion, and Adventure in Tolkien (2004)

      The Scientifiction Novels of C.S. Lewis: Space and Time in the Ransom Stories (2004)

      This Strange Illness: Alcoholism and Bill W. (2004)

      A Tolkien Compass (2003, 1975)

      The Detective Fiction Reviews of Charles Williams, 1930–1935 (2003)

      The Four Corners of the Tapestry: A Casebook of Palmer Hopkins (1999)

      Action at the Galudoghson, December 14, 1742 (1994)

      Further Materials on Lewis Wetzel and the Upper Ohio Frontier (1993)

      Recollections of Lewis Bonnett, Jr. (1778–1850) and the Bonnett and Wetzel Families (1991)

      Indian Warfare in Western Pennsylvania and North West Virginia at the Time of the American Revolution (1992)

      Sylvia Dubois: A Biography of the Slav Who Whipt Her Mistres and Gand Her Freedom (1988)

      England and Always: Tolkien’s World of the Kings (1981)

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      Copyright © 2016 by Carus Publishing Company, dba Cricket Media

      First printing 2016

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       Eight Children in Narnia: The Making of a Children’s Story

       ISBN: 978-0-8126-9910-4

      This book is also available as an e-book.

       Library of Congress Control Number: 2016949427

      For C.S.L.

       And underneath is written,

       In letters all of gold,

       How valiantly he kept the bridge

       In the brave days of old.

      and for my wife

      Jane Starke Lobdell

      Contents

      2. Creating Narnia: Background and Beginnings

      3. The House in the Country and the First Larger Life

      4. Writing the “Chronicles” and Realizing the World of Dragons

      5. First Things, Last Things: The Second Larger Life

      6. Child! I Tell No-One Any Story But His Own

      7. A Good Swift Kick toward Success

      Books Mentioned

      Index

       Introduction

      The seven years beginning with 1950 and ending with 1956 saw the publication of seven children’s books by the Ulster Irish (but Oxford, then Cambridge) scholar, essayist, literary historian, Christian apologist, versifier and occasional poet, novelist, science-fiction and fantasy writer, philosopher (though old-fashioned), satirist and controversialist, Clive Staples Lewis, known to his early friends and relations as Jacks, and later to many as Jack, and to the world at large as C.S. Lewis.

      I counted him as a friend by correspondence, in the last five years of his life, as I now count his younger stepson Douglas Gresham, and have counted his friends Ronald Tolkien, Lord David Cecil, Kenneth Hamilton Jenkin, Nevill Coghill, and two whom I have known also in person, Owen Barfield and Christopher Tolkien. I first read his seven children’s books, now known as the Chronicles of Narnia, as they came out—not because I was reading children’s books in general at that time, but because they were by C.S. Lewis—the same reason I read an old letter by him on The Kingis Quair published in the Times Literary Supplement in 1929, or the spoof law case he wrote up with Owen Barfield, Mark v. Tristram, later on. (I wish I still had the copy Owen gave me.) I read them for the mind of the maker (or, as Professor Tolkien might say, the sub-creator). I read them to be with C.S. Lewis.

      He might tell us that is not the best—or even a very good—reason to be reading children’s books (after all, he wrote a book—or half a book—The Personal Heresy, partly against mixing what is in a book with what is or was in the author, or at least in the author’s life). But then, on the other hand, I can recall his lament that there was no weather—no atmosphere, almost no real flavor—in The Three Musketeers, and along that line, I think of the flavor of Narnia as coming from his mind and I think of that flavor, in a way, as a major part of Narnia’s success. I am not reading—and I have not ever read—the Narnia books as a guide to the mind of C.S. Lewis (though perhaps as a connection), but I am looking at the mind and thought (and experience) of C.S. Lewis, as I understand them (and therefore to some extent my own mind and thought and experience), as something of a guide to his Narnia. And here I should mention there is one book on Narnia (some of it in fact from Lewis) that has contributed greatly to my thought—Walter Hooper’s Past Watchful Dragons (Collier Books paperback 1979, reprinted from Imagination and the Spirit, ed. Charles Huttar, Grand Rapids, 1971).

      In connection with my reason for reading the Narnia books (and in my defense), here is one thing Lewis said on the matter of writing for children. He told us, in effect, that if one is going to write a children’s story, it ought not to be written with a designed moral, because the only moral of any value comes not by specific design, but from the “whole cast of the author’s mind” (“On Three Ways of Writing for Children” given 1952, in On Stories, 1982, pp. 41–42), going on to say the story must come from what the author shares with the children in his (or her) audience, and its matter must be “part of the habitual furniture” of the author’s mind. And Lewis remarks that an author, to the child, is outside the difficult relations between child and parent or child and teacher, not even an uncle but “a freeman and an equal, like the postman, and the butcher, and the dog next door” (p. 43).

      And not only to the child but to any who reads as a child—and of such is the Kingdom—to anyone reading or trying to read as a child. One thing I should make clear. A couple of years ago (or is it a decade ago?) I published a book on C.S. Lewis’s “Scientifiction” novels, and was (perhaps predictably) criticized for not spending time summarizing what other writers had to say about those novels—particularly what had been said by David Downing, who teaches a few blocks down the street from where I live, at Elizabethtown College. And it is likely some reviewer of this book will comment that I should have put more in from David Downing’s book on Narnia (or from others of the half dozen books on Narnia out in the last few years, or from biographers of C.S. Lewis). But this book is what I have to say on Narnia and C.S. Lewis, from my coign of vantage (with Walter Hooper’s help back in 1971 and Lewis’s before), and that’s based on my experience and my reading and understanding of C.S. Lewis,


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