Walter Hooper

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


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TO ROBERT LONGACRE (W):

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford June 19th 1952

      Dear Mr. Longacre–

      All opinions on new poetry are uncertain: especially on poetry read because one has been asked to read it and with the knowledge (which freezes up all the faculties) that one must express a view on it to the author.

      You must therefore not attach too much importance to my ‘re-action’. The truth is, these poems don’t work—with me: they might with other readers, and, I dare say, better readers than I. The poetic species to which they belong—which might be called the Rhapsodical—is one to which I am very insensitive: I can’t bear Walt Whitman.

      My feeling is that the more vast and supersensible a poem’s subject is, the more it needs to be fixed, founded, incarnated in regular metre and concrete images. Thus I is, for me, the worst. Ill is better: the line about the candle in God’s window, the best thing in it. But they are not my sort of poetry. You won’t take this too seriously: they might well suit some other reader. I can’t tell you how I wish I could write something more encouraging: but between Christians the truth must be spoken.

      With all good wishes.

      Yours sincerely

      C. S. Lewis

      

      [Magdalen College

      ? June 1952]

      Dear Monsignor Vandry,

      Please accept my sincere thanks for the great and unexpected honour offered me in your letter. I do not know whether in order to receive it, I must be present before the Special Convocation on September 22nd. If that is necessary then I am compelled, with great regret and undiminished gratitude, to refuse the Doctorate since my other engagements make it quite impossible for me to visit Quebec in September.

      Even if it is possible for me to receive the degree in absence, the question remains whether that would be held to imply any disrespect for Convocation or any insensibility to the great favour you are showing me. Naturally I would rather lose it than receive it under conditions which the University might consider as ungracious on my part.

      I await your kind advice on these points.

      Whatever the decision may be, I shall retain a vivid sense of the University’s kindness.

      Please convey to all concerned my most respectful and obliged greetings.

      

       TO GENIA GOELZ (L/P):

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford. 20 June 1952

      Dear Genia

      About confession, I take it that the view of our Church is that everyone may use it but none is obliged to. I don’t doubt that the Holy Spirit guides your decisions from within when you make them with the intention of pleasing God. The error wd. be to think that He speaks only within whereas, in reality, He speaks also through Scripture, the Church, Christian friends, books etc.

      God bless you.

      C. S. Lewis

       TO ARTHUR GREEVES (BOD):

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford. June 22nd 1952

      My dear Arthur

      Yours

      Jack

      P.S. But I’d forgotten. My room at the C’burn Inn is already booked for that period. I’m afraid I couldn’t manage to pay it and other ones as well. Can you decide on your dates at once & then see if the Inn will cancel my room for the period of our tour without charging? If not, then I’d better stick to my original plan & you take your motor trip after I’ve gone. But I hope not. I shall be a little anxious till I hear from you again.

      P.P.S. No sharing a room: but you’d hate it as much as I, so I’m safe!

      

       TO WILLIAM BORST (P):

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford. June 22nd 1952

      Dear Mr. Borst (or shall we stop mistering one another? Let’s)

      Dear Borst,

      Thanks for your most indulgent letter of the 17th which lifts a load from my mind. It occurs to me that the typist may understand perfectly easily the instructions that baffled me: if so, you shall get the MS. in the form you want. If she is as stupid as I (a pessimistic hypothesis) I shall avail myself of your concession.

      I’ve finished the introduction wh. seemed to write itself, so that I could hardly keep up with it. If it is as good as it seems to me at the moment it’s a corker: but of course things never are. You will find one or two allusions in it that your students will not quite understand, but these have been left in on purpose. If they are too carefully shielded from the rumour of worlds they have not yet broken into, what will ever drive them on. Now I shall get on with the scissors and paste work. At the end of the first day everything in the room (except the bits of Spenser, perhaps) will be pasted to everything else. All will be in the most literal sense CO-HERENT. But no palm without paste.

      Yours

      C. S. Lewis