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The Inklings

Page 35

by Humphrey Carpenter


  The World’s Last Night and other essays New York, Harcourt, Brace & Co, 1960

  A Grief Observed Faber & Faber, 1961 (as N. W. Clerk; reprinted 1964 as by C. S. Lewis)

  An Experiment in Criticism Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1961

  They Asked for a Paper: Papers and Addresses Geoffrey Bles, 1962

  Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer Geoffrey Bles, 1964

  The Discarded Image: An Introduction to Medieval and Renaissance Literature Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1964

  Poems (edited by Walter Hooper) Geoffrey Bles, 1964

  Screwtape Proposes a Toast and Other Pieces Fontana Books, 1965

  Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature (collected by Walter Hooper) Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1966

  Letters of C. S. Lewis (edited with an introduction by W. H. Lewis) Geoffrey Bles, 1966 [Letters]

  Of Other Worlds: essays and stories (edited by Walter Hooper) Geoffrey Bles, 1966

  Christian Reflections (edited by Walter Hooper) Geoffrey Bles, 1967

  Spenser’s Images of Life (edited by Alistair Fowler) Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1967

  Letters to an American Lady (edited by Clyde S. Kilby) Hodder & Stoughton, 1969

  Narrative Poems (edited by Walter Hooper) Geoffrey Bles, 1969

  Selected Literary Essays (edited by Walter Hooper) Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1969

  Undeceptions: Essays on Theology and Ethics (edited by Walter Hooper) Geoffrey Bles, 1971 (Published in America as God in the Dock)

  Fern-seed and Elephants, and other essays on Christianity (edited by Walter Hooper) Fontana Books, 1976

  The Dark Tower and other stories (edited by Walter Hooper) Collins, 1977

  (In preparation: an edition of C. S. Lewis’s letters to Arthur Greeves, to be edited by Walter Hooper and published by Collins; see note in section D, below.)

  J. R. R. TOLKIEN

  A Middle English Vocabulary Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1922

  (co-edition with E. V. Gordon) Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1925

  ‘Ancrene Wisse and Hali Meiðhad’, Essays and Studies by members of the English Association, Volume XIV, pp. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1929

  ‘Beowulf: the Monsters and the Critics’, Proceedings of the British Academy, 22 (1936), pp. Oxford University Press, 1937

  The Hobbit: or There and Back Again Allen & Unwin, 1937

  Farmer Giles of Ham Allen & Unwin, 1949

  ‘The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm’s Son’, Essays and Studies by members of the English Association, New Series Volume VI, pp. John Murray, 1953

  The Fellowship of the Ring: being the first part of The Lord of the Rings Allen & Unwin, 1954

  The Two Towers: being the second part of The Lord of the Rings Allen & Unwin, 1954

  The Return of the King: being the third part of The Lord of the Rings Allen & Unwin, 1955

  The Adventures of Tom Bombadil and other verses from The Red Book Allen & Unwin, 1962

  Ancrene Wisse: the English Text of the Ancrene Riwle, edited from MS. Corpus Christi College Cambridge 402, Early English Text Society No. 249 Oxford University Press, 1962

  Tree and Leaf Allen & Unwin, 1964

  Smith of Wootton Major Allen & Unwin, 1967

  Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and Sir Orfeo translated into modern English (edited by Christopher Tolkien) Allen & Unwin, 1975

  The Father Christmas Letters (edited by Baillie Tolkien) Allen & Unwin, 1976

  The Silmarillion (edited by Christopher Tolkien) Allen & Unwin, 1977

  CHARLES WILLIAMS

  The Silver Stair Herbert & Daniel, 1912

  Poems of Conformity Oxford University Press, 1917

  Divorce Oxford University Press, 1920

  Windows of Night Oxford University Press, 1924

  The Masque of the Manuscript Privately printed by Henderson & Spalding, 1927

  A Myth of Shakespeare Oxford University Press, 1928

  The Masque of Perusal Privately printed by Henderson & Spalding, 1929

  War in Heaven Gollancz, 1930

  Heroes and Kings The Sylvan Press, 1930

  Poetry at Present Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1930 (edited) The Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins Oxford University Press, 1930

  Many Dimensions Gollancz, 1931

  Three Plays Oxford University Press, 1931

  The Place of the Lion Gollancz, 1931

  The Greater Trumps Gollancz, 1932

  The English Poetic Mind Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1932

  Shadows of Ecstasy Gollancz, 1933

  Bacon Arthur Barker, 1933

  Reason and Beauty in the Poetic Mind Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1933

  James I Arthur Barker, 1934

  Rochester Arthur Barker, 1935 (edited) The New Book of English Verse Gollancz, 1935

  Queen Elizabeth Duckworth, 1936

  Thomas Cranmer of Canterbury Oxford University Press, 1936

  Descent into Hell Faber & Faber, 1937

  Henry VII Arthur Barker, 1937

  He Came Down From Heaven Heinemann, 1938

  Taliessin Through Logres Oxford University Press, 1938

  Judgement at Chelmsford Oxford University Press, 1939

  The Descent of the Dove: A Short History of the Holy Spirit in the Church Longmans, 1939

  Witchcraft Faber & Faber, 1941

  The Forgiveness of Sins Geoffrey Bles, 1942

  The Figure of Beatrice: a study in Dante Faber & Faber, 1943

  The Region of the Summer Stars Poetry (London) Editions, 1944

  All Hallows’ Eve Faber & Faber, 1945

  The House of the Octopus Edinburgh House Press, 1945

  Flecker of Dean Close Canterbury Press, 1946

  Seed of Adam and other plays Oxford University Press, 1948

  Arthurian Torso (containing ‘The Figure of Arthur’ (unfinished) by Charles Williams and ‘Williams and the Arthuriad’ by C. S. Lewis) Oxford University Press, 1948

  The Image of the City and other essays (selected by Anne Ridler, with a critical introduction and bibliography) Oxford University Press, 1958

  Collected Plays of Charles Williams (edited by John Heath-Stubbs) Oxford University Press, 1963

  Taliessin Through Logres, The Region of the Summer Stars, and Arthurian Torso (qq.v. above) published in one volume by William B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1974 (introduction by Mary McDermott Shideler)

  B Biographical studies

  The following are the principal studies of the lives of Lewis, Tolkien and Williams:

  Roger Lancelyn Green and Walter Hooper, C. S. Lewis: a biography Collins, 1974 [Green & Hooper]

  Douglas Gilbert and Clyde S. Kilby, C. S. Lewis: Images of His World William B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1973

  Humphrey Carpenter, J. R. R. Tolkien: a biography Allen & Unwin, 1977

  A. M. Hadfield, An Introduction to Charles Williams Robert Hale, 1959 [Hadfield]

  Anne Ridler, critical introduction to The Image of the City and other essays by Charles Williams Oxford University Press, 1958

  Memoirs of Charles Williams are sometimes published in the Newsletter of the Charles Williams Society. Inquiries should be addressed to the Editor at 13 Princess Road, London NW1.

  C Other relevant books

  Light on C. S. Lewis (edited by Jocelyn Gibb, with contributions by Owen Barfield and others) Geoffrey Bles, 1965

  John Wain, Sprightly Running: Part of an Autobiography Macmillan, 1963

  D Unpublished material

  1 C. S. Lewis The two principal collections of letters and papers are in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and the Wade Collection, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. Each of these libraries also possess photocopies of most of the other’s holdings, so that the greater part of the material is accessible in each place. These are the principal items held in these institutions (some items are reserved, but the majority are available for public consultation):
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  The Lewis Papers The title generally given to eleven volumes of typescript, compiled by W. H. Lewis and actually titled ‘Memoirs of the Lewis Family’. A transcript of letters, diaries, and other family papers covering the early history of the family and also giving a detailed account of the lives of Jack, Warnie, and their father up to 1930. The originals are in the Wade Collection. [LP]

  Letters from C. S. Lewis to Arthur Greeves The originals are in the Wade Collection, and the Bodleian has photocopies. The letters are shortly to be published by Collins in an edition by Walter Hooper. [CSL to Greeves]

  The Great War Correspondence between C. S. Lewis and Owen Barfield during the nineteen-twenties. The originals are in the Wade Collection, and the Bodleian has photocopies.

  Letters from C. S. Lewis to W. H. Lewis The originals are in the Wade collection, and the Bodleian has photocopies. [CSL to WHL]

  Several hundred other letters from C. S. Lewis to miscellaneous correspondents are available for consultation in both the Wade Collection and the Bodleian. Because of this dual accessibility, I have not specified in my notes (Appendix C) which library houses the originals.

  2 W. H. Lewis The diaries of Warnie Lewis [WHL diary] are housed in the Wade Collection, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. At the present time they are not available for public consultation. The Wade Collection also houses a typescript by Warnie Lewis entitled ‘C. S. Lewis: A Biography’, which is in effect his first draft for Letters of C. S. Lewis, but which contains substantially more biographical information about his brother than appears in the printed volume [WHL biography of CSL].

  3 J. R. R. Tolkien The majority of Tolkien’s unpublished papers are in the keeping of his Estate and are not available for public consultation. In this book, quotations from his letters (except those to Christopher Tolkien) have generally been taken from carbons retained by him or from first drafts which he retained.

  Letters from J. R. R. Tolkien to Christopher Tolkien [JRRT to CRT]

  The Ulsterior Motive An unpublished essay by Tolkien written in 1964, which originated as a critique of Lewis’s Letters to Malcolm [UM]

  4 Charles Williams The principal collections of unpublished papers relating to Williams are housed as follows:

  Williams’s letters to his wife, 1939 to 1945 Wade Collection, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. [CW to MW] Williams’s letters to Raymond Hunt Wade Collection. [CW to RH]

  Williams’s letters to Thelma Shuttleworth Bodleian. [CW to TS]

  Williams’s letters to Anne Ridler [CW to AR] are in the possession of Anne Ridler, and I am particularly grateful to her for allowing me to consult them.

  APPENDIX C

  Sources of quotations

  The quotations used in the text are identified in this list by the number of the page on which they appear, and by the first few words quoted. When two or more quotations from the same source follow each other in a brief space, I have generally only used the first words of the first quotation for identification. Abbreviations refer to the Bibliography (Appendix B) where the full title of the work or source is given.

  Except on rare occasions, I have not indicated elisions within quotations, and have omitted the row of dots customary in such circumstances.

  In cases where a number of different editions of a work are available, I have given a reference to a chapter number or title rather than to a page number.

  page 3

  ‘My Life during …’, LP iii, p. 80 ff.

  page 4

  ‘It was sea and islands …’, SBJ chapter 1.

  page 5

  ‘Pure “Northernness” engulfed me’, SBJ chapter 5. ‘Not only does this persecution …’, LP iv, p. 152.

  page 6

  ‘Please take me out of this …’, LP iv, p. 152. ‘Stop! What do you mean …’, SBJ chapter 9.

  page 7

  ‘I have no opinions. …’, SBJ chapter 9. ‘I had thought that you were …’, LP v, p. 130. ‘How one does want to read everything’, CSL to Greeves, 15 February 1917.

  page 8

  ‘Those mystic parts …’, LP v, p. 127. ‘a great literary experience’, Letters, p. 27. ‘While admirably adapted …’, LP v, p. 74. ‘Lewis and Moore …’, WHL diary, 16 February 1934. ‘I don’t think …’, CSL to Greeves, 15 February 1917.

  page 9

  ‘hadn’t got on at all well’, WHL diary, 29 April 1950. ‘to look after me …’, LP vi, p. 45. ‘the horribly smashed men …’, SBJ chapter 12. ‘What, brother, brother …’, ‘Dymer’, Narrative Poems, p. 39.

  page 10

  ‘It is too cut off …’ and ‘At that moment …’, SBJ chapter 12. ‘the Beast’, LP vii, p. 116. ‘our hired house’ and ‘After lunch …’, CSL to Greeves, 26 January 1919.

  page 11

  ‘He is as good …’, Letters, p. 16. ‘The hopeless business …’, LP viii, p. 152. ‘He has read more classics …’ and ‘He is a student …’, LP v, p. 74.

  page 12

  ‘Jack’s affair’, Green & Hooper, p. 62. ‘most of them vile’, LP viii, p. 134. ‘she was quite convinced …’, LP vii, p. 284. ‘I’m afraid I shall …’, CSL to Greeves, 15 October 1918.

  page 13

  ‘it really made no difference …’, Green & Hooper, p. 67. ‘the exclusive subject …’ and ‘I do not blame D …’, LP viii, p. 142.

  page 14

  ‘Minto’s mares’ nests’, LP x, p. 231. ‘the perpetual interruptions …’ and ‘This sounds as if …’, LP x, p. 231. ‘The atmosphere of the English school …’, LP vii, p. 254. ‘Very good stuff …’, LP vii, p. 267.

  page 15

  ‘In spite of many …’ and ‘We were neither of us …’-LP viii, pp. 74–5. ‘Hige sceal …’, The Battle of Maldon, 312-3. (The translation is taken from Tolkien’s Homecoming of Beorhtnotb.)

  page 16

  ‘Everyone may allegorise …’, Narrative Poems, p. 3. ‘old, old, matriarchal dreadfulness’, ibid. p. 32.

  page 17

  ‘Several Univ. people …’, Letters, p. 87. ‘beautiful beyond compare’, ibid. p. 104. ‘I am beginning to be rather disillusioned …’, LP x, p. 75.

  page 18

  ‘He thinks of himself …’, LP ix, p. 125. ‘He has great abilities …’, ibid. p. 123. ‘He practises what …’, CSL to Owen Barfield, 27 May 1928. ‘A country club …’ and ‘I really don’t know …’, LP x, p. 95.

  page 19

  ‘Balkan Sobranies …’, John Betjeman, Summoned by Bells, John Murray, 1960, p. 93. ‘Betjeman and Valentin …’, Letters, p. 108. ‘Thus Æ to E …’, Letters, p. 164.

  page 20

  ‘I cut tutorials …’, Summoned by Bells (see above), p. 93. ‘While in College …’, LP ix, p. 144. ‘in his arid room’ and ‘You’d have only …’, Summoned by Bells, p. 109. ‘indebted to Mr. C. S. Lewis …’, John Betjeman, Continual Dew, John Murray, 1937, preface.

  page 21

  ‘Objectively our Common Room …’, ibid. p. 20. ‘Bridget is the elder …’, LP ix, p. 110.

  page 22

  ‘only real line’, Green & Hooper, p. 89. ‘I wish there was …’, CSL to A. K. H. Jenkin, 4 November 1925. ‘Tolkien managed to get …’, LP ix, pp. 89–90.

  page 26

  ‘jettisoning certainly …’, ‘The Oxford English School’, Oxford Magazine, 29 May 1930, pp. 778–82.

  page 28

  ‘When we were enrolled …’, conversation with the author, 10 December 1975. ‘Spent the morning …’, LP ix, p. 155. ‘One week I …’, CSL to Greeves, 3 December 1929. ‘What? You too? …’, The Four Loves, chapter 4.

  page 29

  ‘the nameless North’ and ‘desired dragons …’, EPCW p. 63.

  page 30

  Quotations from Tolkien’s poem, from Lewis’s letter to Tolkien, and Lewis’s suggested emendations: MSS, Estate of J. R. R. Tolkien.

  page 32

  ‘Tolkien is the man …’, CSL to Greeves, 30 January 1930. ‘The unpayable debt …’, JRRT to Dick Plotz, 12 September 1965. �
��Friendship with Lewis …’, diary of J. R. R. Tolkien, 1 October 1933.

  page 33

  ‘one of my friends …’, CSL to Greeves, 22 September 1931.

  page 34

  ‘given tea by a postmistress …’ and ‘ham and eggs’, LP ix, p. 229. This time we …’, LP x, p. 40 ff.

  page 35

  ‘Some of the others …’, CSL to Greeves, 29 April 1930. ‘We had a long, tiresome …’, WHL diary, 11 August 1933. ‘Owen’s dark …’, CSL to W. O. Field, 10 May 1943.

  page 36

  ‘got through the serious …’, LP ix, p. 126. ‘a re-assuring Germanic …’SBJ chapter 13.

  page 37

  ‘Imaginative vision …’, ‘The Great War’ (correspondence between CSL and Barfield).

  page 38

  ‘I wonder can you …’, Letters, p. 152. ‘Dear Warnie …’, CSL to Greeves, 27 December 1940. ‘To-day, I got up …’, WHL diary, 21 December 1932.

  page 39

  ‘I reviewed …’, LP xi, p. 179. ‘to postulate …’, CSL to Leo Baker, September 1920. ‘our ideas are …’, LP viii, p. 172. Quotations referring to Lewis’s developing philosophical ideas are from SBJ chapter 14.

  page 40

  ‘Joy was not …’, SBJ chapter 14. ‘All my ideas …’, LP ix, pp. 96–7. ‘One needn’t be …’, LP ix, p. 109. ‘the danger of …’, LP ix, p. 144. ‘showing an alarming tendency …’, Letters, p. 141. ‘became aware that …’, SBJ chapter 14. ‘admitted that God was God’, ibid.

  page 41

  ‘gave in and knelt and prayed’, ibid. ‘My outlook is now …’, CSL to A. K. H. Jenkin, 21 March 1930.

  page 42

  ‘You might like to know …’, CSL to Barfield, undated (? 1928). ‘Languages are a disease of mythology’, EPCW, p. 50. ‘liked him so much …’, CSL to Greeves, 29 July 1930. ‘a man who really …’, ibid. The account of the conversation between Lewis, Tolkien and Dyson is based on Lewis’s letter to Greeves of 22 September 1931 and on Tolkien’s poem ‘Mythopoeia’ (MS., Estate of J. R. R. Tolkien), which was written to commemorate the conversation.

 

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