I returned home treading on air...So at last dreams come to pass and I have sat in the sanctum of a publisher discussing my own book (Notice the hideous vulgarity of success already growing in me).
Yet - though it is very pleasant - you will understand me when I say that it has not the utter romance which the promise of it had a year ago. Once a dream has become a fact I suppose it loses something. This isn't affec-tation: we long & long for a thing and when it comes it turns out to be just a pleasant incident, very much like others.
C. S. Lewis (recounting to his friend Arthur Greeves how he felt after realizing his dream of becoming a published author)
The Collected Letters of C. S. Lewis, Vol 1. pg 413
Monday, November 11, 2024
Monday, October 07, 2024
Feelings
It is easy to explain a thought, but to explain a feeling is very hard.
- C. S. Lewis (in a letter to Arthur Greeves, 1914)
- C. S. Lewis (in a letter to Arthur Greeves, 1914)
Monday, September 23, 2024
As Well as We Can
It doesn't matter what we write (at least this is my view) at our age, so long as we write continually as well as we can. I feel that every time I write a page either of prose or of verse, with real effort, even if it's thrown into the fire next minute, I am so much further on. And you too who have been so disappointed at the technical difficulties of composing, won't you find it a relief to turn to writing where you can splash about, so to speak, as you like, and gradually get better and better by experience?
- C. S. Lewis (1916, age 17, in a letter to his friend Arthur Greeves)
- C. S. Lewis (1916, age 17, in a letter to his friend Arthur Greeves)
Writing as Curative
However, cheer up, and whenever you are fed up with life, start writing: ink is
the great cure for all human ills, as I have found out long ago.
- C. S. Lewis (1916 in a letter to his friend Arthur Greeves)
- C. S. Lewis (1916 in a letter to his friend Arthur Greeves)
Tuesday, August 06, 2024
Lewis on the Apostle Paul's Writing
Descending lower we find a somewhat similar difficulty [as we do with the elusive quality of the sayings of Christ in the Gospels] with St. Paul. I cannot be the only reader who has wondered why God, having given him so many gifts, withheld from him what would to us seem so necessary for the first Christian theologian: that of lucidity and orderly exposition.
- C. S. Lewis Reflections on the Psalms
- C. S. Lewis Reflections on the Psalms
Thursday, June 06, 2024
The Rewards of Reading the Old Testament
I shall never forget my surprise when I first discovered that St. Paul's "If thine enemy hunger, give him bread", etc., is a direct quotation from... (Proverbs 25, 21). But this is one of the rewards of reading the Old Testament regularly. You keep on discovering more and more what a tissue of quotations from it the New Testament is; how constantly Our Lord repeated, reinforced, continued, refined, and sublimated, the Judaic ethics, how very seldom He introduced a novelty.
- C. S. Lewis
Reflections on the Psalms
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