The Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis, Volume 1: Family Letters, 1905-1931Harper Collins, 2004 M06 29 - 1072 páginas The life and mind of C. S. Lewis have fascinated those who have read his works. This collection of his personal letters reveals a unique intellectual journey. The first of a three-volume collection, this volume contains letters from Lewis's boyhood, his army days in World War I, and his early academic life at Oxford. Here we encounter the creative, imaginative seeds that gave birth to some of his most famous works. At age sixteen, Lewis begins writing to Arthur Greeves, a boy his age in Belfast who later becomes one of his most treasured friends. Their correspondence would continue over the next fifty years. In his letters to Arthur, Lewis admits that he has abandoned the Christian faith. "I believe in no religion," he says. "There is absolutely no proof for any of them." Shortly after arriving at Oxford, Lewis is called away to war. Quickly wounded, he returns to Oxford, writing home to describe his thoughts and feelings about the horrors of war as well as the early joys of publication and academic success. In 1929 Lewis writes to Arthur of a friend ship that was to greatly influence his life and writing. "I was up till 2:30 on Monday talking to the Anglo-Saxon professor Tolkien who came back with me to College ... and sat discoursing of the gods and giants & Asgard for three hours ..." Gradually, as Lewis spends time with Tolkien and other friends, he admits in his letters to a change of view on religion. In 1930 he writes, "Whereas once I would have said, 'Shall I adopt Christianity', I now wait to see whether it will adopt me ..." The Collected Letters of C. S. Lewis, Volume I offers an inside perspective to Lewis's thinking during his formative years. Walter Hooper's insightful notes and biographical appendix of all the correspondents make this an irreplaceable reference for those curious about the life and work of one of the most creative minds of the modern era. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 8
... look into his case . 21 ' Sandycroft ' was the Belfast home of Albert's brother , Joseph Lewis ( 1856-1908 ) who died on 3 September 1908. He was a marine consulting engineer . In 1880 he married Mary Tegart , and they had five children ...
... look there ( pointing to a church across the road ) look how high the steeple is . And he didn't mean it as a joke either . Now as there is not much news I must stop . your loving son Jacks On 28 July 1909 Warnie won his release from ...
... look on any public school , and it has become rather a rooted idea . Then again , I know a good deal more of Malvern than I do of any where else , and it is in a sense familiar already . As well , I shall still be at the town of Malvern ...
... look out upon the hideously ugly garden of the San . And yet there is a homely 38 Jack already had the last two parts of Wagner's Ring cycle , Siegfried and the Twilight of the Gods , translated by Margaret Armour , with illustrations ...
... and ' plectrum . ( Look ' plectrum ' out in a diction- ary of classical terms ) . your loving son Jack . 42 Thomas Babington Macaulay , Lays of Ancient Rome , ' Horatius ' , LXVI , 6 . TO HIS FATHER ( LP IV : 115 ) : 43 1913.