poliphilo: (Default)
poliphilo ([personal profile] poliphilo) wrote2005-10-26 11:17 am
Entry tags:

Narnia

The trailer for The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe makes it look just like LOTR.

Same gorgeous New Zealand landscapes.

I used to want to visit New Zealand. I don't any more. It's so fuckin' empty.

Somehow or other I've managed not to read the Narnia books. I don't quite understand how this happened. But I've dipped into them in adulthood and not noticed any stardust. Lewis talks down to kids, he's so goddam preachy...

...And he's very 1950s (see last entry.)

I've read other books by Lewis. I enjoyed The Great Divorce. But, as with other "religious" writers, he leaves me with a taste in my mouth like I've been sucking on a horseshoe- a sour, metallic taste. He doesn't trust his own perceptions and feelings, but dresses up in pretty images the cold, nasty, unfelt doctrines he's been showered with from some Northern Irish pulpit.

He says in his Autobiography that his favourite mythology was the Norse, followed by the Greek, with the Judaeo-Christian coming in a poor third, but because he believed, against his aesthetic instincts, that the Judaeo-Christian mythology was true, he opted to become a believer.

Keats would have set him right on that- "Beauty is truth, truth beauty...."

But Lewis was an establishment man through and through. He went where he perceived the power to be.

Traitor.
sovay: (Default)

[personal profile] sovay 2005-10-26 01:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Just think of the children's literature we could have gotten if C.S. Lewis had devoted himself to Norse mythology . . .

[identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com 2005-10-26 02:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Now there's a thought...

Tolkien was also a devout Christian- but he never let it stop him writing what was in his heart.