Dr. Malcolm Guite was passionate and engaging. He lacked the crisp, precise speech McGrath
had presented, but his lecture was far more organic and personable. At one point during the lecture, in his zeal,
Guite knocked over his glass of water—but the mild distraction did not halt his
speech once. He made a joke about the
“cup runneth over” and carried on.
Guite began
his lecture by quoting a poem C.S. Lewis had written before his
conversion. His American clerk, Walter
Hooper, had posthumously entitled the poem, “Reason”, and it was this poem that
fluidly connected both McGrath and Guite’s lectures.
Reason
Set on the soul’s acropolis the reason stands
A virgin, arm’d, commercing with celestial light,
And he who sins against her has defiled his own
Virginity: no cleansing makes his garment white;
So clear is reason. But how dark, imagining,
Warm, dark, obscure and infinite, daughter of Night:
Dark is her brow, the beauty of her eyes with sleep
Is loaded, and her pains are long, and her delight.
Tempt not Athene. Wound not in her fertile pains
Demeter, nor rebel against her mother-right.
Oh who will reconcile in me both maid and mother,
Who make in me a cocord of the depth and hight?
Who make imagination’s dim exploring touch
Ever report the same as intellectual sight?
Then could I truly say, and not deceive,
Then wholly say, that I believe.
Athene is
representative of Reason, the goddess Lewis could openly profess to venerate,
while Demeter symbolized the allure and warmth of imagination. In Guite’s words, “Basically, Lewis was
saying, ‘My problem is that I can’t get my inner goddesses together!’”
Through a
Christian lens, it seems an obvious and poignant foreshadowing of ‘who will
reconcile in me both maid and mother’. Guite
agreed with McGrath, that Christianity fully accepted and even expected such
paradoxes of ‘maid and mother’, ‘reason and imagination’. Lewis was searching, as so many do, for the
reconciliation of these paradoxes. He
sought not just a rationally plausible worldview, but a meaningful
worldview.
Guite
quoted the old phrase, “Happiness writes white”, meaning that writing goodness
in creative fiction was strikingly difficult to do so. And yet, Guite reminded us that after Lewis’
conversion, he became a master at just that.
The inherent goodness in his heroes of Narnia had the power to
re-enchant and captivate us into the wardrobe and into magic. Just as so many other fantasy
worlds—Fairyland, Middle Earth, the wizarding world of Harry Potter, even Storybrooke,
Maine—all of these are more invitations into beauty. Just as Christianity is an invitation to
truth reliant on imagination.
Guite cited
a section of Voyage of the Dawntreader, where Lucy read a spell from the
magician’s book called, “For Refreshment of the Spirit.” It was not so much a spell, but a story, “the
loveliest story I’ve ever read or shall read.”
Part of the enchantment meant that Lucy could not turn the pages of the
book backwards to reread it, nor could she remember the story when she had
finished. When Lucy asked Aslan later if
He would tell her the story, he told her, “Indeed, yes, I will tell it to you
for years and years.”
There would
be so many stories, so many enchantments and worlds that would invite our
spirits and refresh our souls, an allegory of Christianity, whether intentional
or unintentional. Guite quoted from
Dawntreader, Aslan’s farewell to Edmund and Lucy, telling them, “That by
knowing me here, you may know me better there.”
It is through imaginative fiction that we truly begin to understand and
accept Christianity.
Guite ended
his lecture with one of his own sonnets honoring C.S. Lewis, which can be found
on his blog at
http://malcolmguite.wordpress.com/2013/11/20/off-to-the-westminster-lewisfest/.