Walter Hooper

Collected Letters Volume Three: Narnia, Cambridge and Joy 1950–1963


Скачать книгу

hope you haven’t thought I was being such a brute beast as to obey your ‘Don’t write’. I was more innocently employed in having my third dose of influenza this year–or rather, now that I look at the date of your letter, it must have been my second and third, for the flash of daylight between the two tunnels was almost too short to notice.

      When next term cd. you come down and lunch? There’s an extra reason: you have property to reclaim. Groping in the inn’ards of an old arm chair lately (a place which rivals the sea bed for lost treasure) I fished out a spectacle case which, being opened, revealed your golden name wrapped in your silver address. So come in May or June: preferably not a Tuesday. Let me know your ideas on this.

      I’m off to Northern Ireland after Easter to try my native air—half frightened at the thought. Very many thanks for the book: it has given me great pleasure already.

      Yours sincerely

      C. S. Lewis

      

       TO MARY VAN DEUSEN (W):

      Magdalen College

      Oxford 17/3/51

      Dear Mrs. Van Deusen

      No. Unless it attracts you as an amusement I wouldn’t advise you to start attending ‘classes’. My idea is that unless one has to qualify oneself for a job (which you haven’t) the only sensible reason for studying anything is that one has a strong curiosity about it. And if one has, one can’t help studying it. I don’t see any point in attending lectures etc with some general notion of ‘self-improvement’–unless, as I say, one finds it fun.

      I never see why we should do anything unless it is either a duty or a pleasure! Life’s short enough without filling up hours unnecessarily. And I think one usually learns more from a book than from a lecture.

      With all good wishes.

      Yours sincerely

      C. S. Lewis

      

      Magdalen etc

      22/3/51

      Dear Christian

      You shall prescribe me a book to read every Lent: a kind of literary hair shirt.

      You gave me a charming interlude on Tuesday—a bit of ‘contemporary scene’ quite omitted by W.!

      Yours

      Jack

      

       TO ARTHUR GREEVES (BOD):

      [The Kilns]

      23/3/51

      My dear Arthur