A Hobbit, a Wardrobe, and a Great War: How J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis Rediscovered Faith, Friendship, and Heroism In the Cataclysm of 1914–1918

Home > Other > A Hobbit, a Wardrobe, and a Great War: How J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis Rediscovered Faith, Friendship, and Heroism In the Cataclysm of 1914–1918 > Page 23
A Hobbit, a Wardrobe, and a Great War: How J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis Rediscovered Faith, Friendship, and Heroism In the Cataclysm of 1914–1918 Page 23

by Joseph Loconte

Lewis, C.S. (Clive Staples),

  29–30. See also titles of

  works

  as advocate for Tolkien, 179–180

  after WWI, 109–110

  battle deaths of friends, 99

  birth, 7–8

  books influencing, xv, 82

  in British Expeditionary

  Force, xiii–xiv, 89

  and choices, 153

  and Christianity, xiv, 132–133, 134

  critics of, 172

  deployment for France, 91–94

  enlisting decision, 85

  expectation of return to

  battle, 217n20

  focus on academic

  career, 81

  friendships of, 175–176

  Great War impact on

  spiritual quest, xii–xiii

  hope for end to war, 84

  on human story, xviii

  influence on Tolkien, 135

  injury, 99

  late-night debate with

  Tolkien, 129

  “Learning in War

  Time,” xvi

  letter to father, 1914, 79

  Narnia stories planned

  for children, 167–168

  perspective on world, xvi

  postwar competing

  philosophies, 126

  and qualities of Jesus, 194–195

  rejection of martial

  culture of Malvern

  College, 30

  relationship with

  Moore, 95–96

  stories from war front, 41–42

  Tolkien’s role in

  conversion, 179

  understanding of evil, 147

  view on war, 31–32, 47

  views on myths, 130–131

  war impact, 50, 100–

  101, 144–145, 173

  war writings, 122–126

  Lewis, Warren, 81, 83

  The Lion, the Witch, and

  the Wardrobe, 22, 51

  grace in, 189–190

  Peter’s combat

  experience, 168

  Lipmann, Walter, xiv

  Loconte, Michele, xi, 95, 199–200

  London, German zeppelin

  attack, 84

  “The Lonely Isle,” 56

  The Lord of the Rings, xii, 139, 154, 195

  battle scenes, 60

  enemies of nature in, 7

  historical setting for, 121

  hobbits description, 63

  Lewis’s support for, 136–137

  on moral

  responsibility, 150–151

  popularity, 144

  prospects of final

  victory, xv

  realism of, 187

  scenes of parting, 56–57

  slavery in, 17

  victories without loss, 167

  Lyndsay, David, 145

  MacDonald, George, 102

  Phantastes, 82–83, 194

  Macmillan, Harold, 49–50

  MacMillan, Margaret, 104

  The Magician’s Nephew, 148, 153–154

  Maleldil, 149

  Matthews, W.R., 116

  McArthur, Kenneth, 19

  McFadzean, William, 86–87

  McGrath, Alister, 9, 93

  McKim, Randolph, 39

  medieval literature, motifs

  and ideals in, 170

  memorials, in Europe, 107

  Mere Christianity, 133

  Merry, 69, 151, 167, 177, 182

  Meyer, F.B., Religion and

  Race-Regeneration, 17

  Meyer, G.J., 64

  A World Undone, 186

  Middle-earth, 6–7, 121–122, 164

  battles for, 9

  evil in, 148

  mental outlook, 163–164

  militarism, rejection by

  Tolkien and Lewis, 173

  military planning, prior to

  WWI, 22

  military recruitment, 57, 79–80

  Military Service Act

  (Britain), 58

  military training, Lewis

  on, 91

  Miraz, 10

  modernization, as threat to

  human societies, 8–9

  Monchy-Le-Preux, 92

  Moore, Edward Francis

  “Paddy,” 91, 95, 175

  moral clarity, xviii

  moral imagination, 138–139

  moralistic idealism,

  cynicism about, 172

  Mordor, 7, 147, 164

  Morgoth, 118

  Morgul-knife, 156

  Mott, John, 46

  Murray, Gilbert,

  The Ordeal of This

  Generation, 115, 125

  muscular Christianity, 30

  Mussolini, Benito, 114

  Myer, G.J., 142

  myth

  as fact, 129–133, 190

  relationship to belief in

  God, 130–133

  Myth of Progress, 2, 13–14, 20, 24, 35

  and Christianity, 14

  result, 22

  mythology

  Christianity as, 88–89

  Tolkien on England’s, 119

  “Mythopoeia,” 18, 132

  Narnia, 101, 147. See

  also The Chronicles of

  Narnia

  battles for, 9

  evil in, 148

  mental outlook, 163–164

  “national” churches, 34

  National Institute for Co-ordinated Experiments

  (N.I.C.E.), 110, 149, 161

  National Peace Council

  (Britain), 4

  nationalism, 34

  natural beauty, Lewis

  belief in source, 101–102

  natural selection, 12–13

  Naumann, Gottfried, 40

  Nazism, 158

  neo-orthodoxy, 124

  New English Dictionary, 109

  Newman, George, 112

  Newton, Joseph Fort, The

  Sword of the Spirit, 46

  Nietzshe, Friedrich, 125

  Nikabrik, 157–158

  No Man’s Land, 67, 70

  vs. Pelennor Fields, 166–167

  “Ode for New Year’s Eve,”

  122–123

  oppression, 17

  Osborne, Roger, 6, 25

  Ott, Nancy Marie, 73

  Out of the Silent Planet, 134, 148–149

  Overy, Richard, 108

  Ovillers campaign, 66

  Owen, Wilfred, 119–120, 182

  Oxford University, Tolkien

  and Lewis at, xiv

  pacifism, xviii, 117

  rejection by Tolkien

  and Lewis, 173

  paganism, 133

  patriotism, 49, 57

  Payton, Ralph Stuart, 72

  Peace Yearbook (1914), 4

  Pelennor Fields, vs. No

  Man’s Land, 166–167

  Peloponnesian War, 141–142

  Perelandra, 18, 149

  perpetual peace, 4

  Perrett, Frank Winter, 96

  perseverance, 156

  personal moral guilt, 162

  Pevensie children, 147

  Phantastes (MacDonald), 82–83, 102, 194

  Pico della Mirandola,

  Giovanni, Oration on the

  Dignity of Man, 2

  The Pilgrim’s Regress

  (Lewis), 220n101

  Pippin, xix, 151, 167, 177

  Plowden-Wardlaw, James, 43

  Plowman, Max, 93

  Poggin, 190

  pride, 160

  Prince Caspian, 10, 157–158, 169

  progress, 8, 25

  loss of, 123

  Protestant Reformation,

  sectarian violence from, 27–28

  Providence, 36

  psychoanalysis, 116

  Puddleglum, 174–175

  Queen Mary (battle cruiser), 53–54

  racial purity, 16

  Railton, David, 48

  Ransom, Elwin, 149

  realism of fantasy, 165–170


  Reepicheep, 50–51, 169, 171

  refugees, in WWI, 165–166

  Regina Trench, British

  attack on, 69–71

  religion

  abuse for perverse

  ends, 150

  academic view, 131

  and eugenics, 16–17

  political/military

  objectives and, 29, 33–35

  vs. science, 14–15

  Remarque, Erich, 193

  All Quiet on the

  Western Front, 107–108

  resilience, of British

  Expeditionary Force, 75

  The Return of the King, 61, 166, 182

  Riez du Vinage, 98–99, 168

  Ring, 145–147

  Council decision to

  destroy, 156

  destroying, 146–147

  Frodo’s use of, 155–156

  power of, 159, 160

  as weapon, 21–22

  Rivendell, 173

  romantic myth, xv

  Roonwit the Centaur, 187

  Root, Elihu, 44

  Rosebury, Brian, 167

  Rosen, Christine, Preaching

  Eugenics, 20

  Rossi, Lee, 172

  Russia, 94, 163

  sacrifice, in The Lord of the

  Rings, 119

  Sale, Roger, xi, 144

  Saruman the Wizard, 7, 157

  Sassoon, Siegfried, 120, 193

  Sauron, 7, 146

  Sayer, George, 30, 83, 126

  Schweitzer, Richard, The

  Cross and the Trenches, 49

  science

  abuse of, 100

  vs. religion, 14–15

  science fiction, 134

  The Screwtape Letters, 133, 161

  Seige of Gondor, 73–74

  Shasta, 154–155, 168, 175, 181

  Sheffield, Gary, Forgotten

  Victory, xii

  shell shock, 115, 142

  Shippey, Tom, 159

  Shire, 6. See also Middle-earth

  Siege of Gondor, 60

  The Silmarillion, 118, 121

  The Silver Chair, 171, 174, 194

  slavery, 17, 146

  Smaug, 166

  Smith, G.B., 68, 71

  Spring Harvest, 71–72

  Smith, Geoffrey, 66

  Smythe, Oswald, 80

  social gospel, 45

  soldiers, religious faith of, 210n69

  Somerset Light Infantry, 96, 97

  Somme, Battle of, xiii, 10, 61–63, 74

  soul, 21, 145

  The Space Trilogy, 143

  Spacks, Patricia Meyer, xv, 182

  Spanish influenza, (1918), 112, 114

  Spellman, W.M., 24

  Spencer, Herbert, 12–13, 20

  Spengler, Oswald, 108

  Spirits in Bondage (Lewis), 89, 122

  spiritual crisis, in 1920s

  and 1930s, xiv, 124

  spirituality, 18

  sportsmanship, 30

  Spurr, John, 36

  Stable, 190

  Star Wars, 188

  Steiner, Rudolf, 126

  sterilization, 19

  Stiles, Ezra, 38

  Straik, Mr., 50–51

  Studdert Kennedy, G.A., 43

  Studdock, Mark and Jane, 149, 161

  Sunday, Billy, 41

  Superb (HSS), 55

  Tarnas, Richard, The

  Passion of the Western

  Mind, 12

  Tash, 190

  Tea Club and Barrovian

  Society (TCBS), 54–55

  technology, 7, 23

  That Hideous Strength

  (Lewis), 100, 149, 158, 161

  Théoden, 119

  Thirty Years War, 27

  Thomas, C.F., 39

  Thucydides, 141

  Tirian (king), 190

  Tisroc, 163

  Todman, Dan, The Great

  War, 42

  Tolkien, Christopher, 160

  correspondence with

  father, 182–183

  Tolkien, J.R.R. (John

  Ronald Reuel), 117–122.

  See alsotitles of works

  on “animal horror” of

  war, 67–72

  attachment to nature, 6

  as battalion signals

  officer, 63–64

  in BEF, xiii, 29–30, 56, 65, 70

  at college, 31

  critics of, 172

  discussion on

  Christianity, 132–133

  early writings, 1915–

  1918, 60

  eugenics as assault on

  human dignity, 17

  “The Fall of Gondolin,”

  118

  friendship with Lewis, 129, 179–180

  Great War impact

  on spiritual quest, xii–xiii

  on myths, 131

  perspective on world, xvi

  praise of Lewis’s work, 134–135

  religious framework

  absent in writing, 164

  resentment of

  technology in rural

  life, 6

  respect for ordinary

  soldier, xvi–xvii

  view on war, 31–32, 47

  war impact, 50, 108–

  109, 144–145, 173

  on waste of war, 121

  writing of The Hobbit, 135

  Tolkien, Michael, 160

  tragedy, and hope, 143

  Treaty of Versailles (1919), 104

  Treaty of Westphalia

  (1648), 28–29

  Treebeard, 9

  trees, spirits of, 10

  trench fever

  Lewis ill with, 93

  Tolkien ill with, 71, 72

  trenches, 59–61, 115, 142

  bodies of dead soldiers, 67

  casualties in, 85

  faith in, 47–49

  Lewis description, 92

  Troeltsch, Ernst, 40

  Trotsky, Leon, 113

  Trufflehunter, 10

  Tsarist Russia, collapse, 123

  Tuchman, Barbara, xii

  The Guns of August, 105

  Turner, James, 14

  Ulster Volunteer Force, 86–87

  United States, clergy

  against Germany, 43

  University College, Oxford,

  Lewis scholarship to, 89–90

  Verdun, Battle of, 55–56

  Victoria (Queen of

  England), 208n7

  violence, Tolkien coping

  with, 118

  Virgil, Aeneid, xv

  Volksgeist, vs. Holy Spirit, 40

  The Voyage of the Dawn

  Treader (Lewis), 8

  war

  as cleansing, 45

  cruelty and

  senselessness of, 105

  destructiveness of, 124

  early 20th century view

  of, 3–4

  expectation of benefits

  from, 47

  Great War vs. ancient, 192

  human costs of, 22–23

  inspiration from, xiv

  literature on, 105

  machinery of, 21–25

  as necessity, 168–169, 181

  Tolkien on “animal

  horror” of, 67–72

  war novels, 120

  War of the Ring, struggle

  for freedom, 17

  Wedgwood, C.V., 27

  Wells, H.G., 4, 104

  Wenzl, Josef, x

  West Midlands, 6

  Weston, Dr., 18, 149

  White Witch, 161–162, 169, 189–190

  Will to Power, 159

  Wilson, Peter, The Thirty

  Years War: Europe’s

  Tragedy, 28

  Wilson, Woodrow, 38–39, 95

  Fourteen Points, 45–46, 103–104

  Winnington-Ingram, Arthur, 29, 37, 57–58

  Wiseman, Christopher, 54–55, 71

  Woolf, Virginia, 125

  World War I. See Great

  War

&nb
sp; World War II, 182

  World’s Fair (London, 1851), 5

  Wright, Joseph, Primer of

  the Gothic Language, 31

  Ypres, first Battle of, xi

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Joseph Loconte is an Associate Professor of History at the King’s College in New York City, where he teaches courses on Western Civilization and American Foreign Policy. His commentary on international human rights and religious freedom has appeared in the nation’s leading media outlets, including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the New Republic, the Weekly Standard, and National Public Radio. He is a regular contributor to the Huffington Post and the London-based Standpoint magazine. He serves as a senior fellow at the Trinity Forum and as an affiliated scholar at the John Jay Institute. A native of Brooklyn, New York, he divides his time between New York City and Washington DC.

  PHOTOS

  Douglas R. Gilbert photograph © 1973.

  Even before arriving at Oxford, Tolkien had discovered his gift for languages and a love for old English myths. Intending to give the English people a new epic tradition, he produced The Hobbit and, after many years of toil, The Lord of the Rings. His famous hobbits, he explained, reflected the grit and courage of the British soldiers he knew during the First World War.

  Used by permission of The Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL.

  Soon after his conversion to Christianity, Lewis embraced a new calling on his life. “Any amount of theology,” he said, “can be smuggled into people’s minds under cover of romance without their knowing it.” During his long career at Oxford, Lewis became one of the twentieth century’s most formidable defenders of the Christian faith, writing more than thirty books, including The Screwtape Letters, Mere Christianity, and The Chronicles of Narnia.

  The Master and Fellows of University College, Oxford.

  Enrollment at Oxford plummeted during the war years. In 1917, C. S. Lewis (standing in the back row, far right) was among the small cohort of undergraduates at University College. After joining the Officer’s Training Corps, Lewis was sent to Keble College, where he got minimal training before being shipped to the front later that year. “I remember five of us at Keble,” he wrote later, “and I am the only survivor.”

  Second Lieutenant J. R. R. Tolkien arrived on the Western Front in June 1916 and was soon caught up in the Battle of the Somme, one of the fiercest concentrations of killing in the history of warfare. The fight raged on for nearly five months, claiming more than 1.2 million dead and wounded. Trench fever took Tolkien out of the war—and probably saved his life. “By 1918,” he wrote, “all but one of my close friends were dead.”

  When the Germans launched their massive spring offensive in March 1918, Second Lieutenant C. S. Lewis was part of the British Expeditionary Force that staged a counteroffensive at the French town of Riez du Vinage, near Arras. A shell exploded close by, killing Lewis’s sergeant and wounding him in three places. His injuries kept him off the front lines for the remainder of the war.

 

‹ Prev