Articles

MacPhee the Ulsterman

Lewis used the term Ulsterman only seven times in all his published writings, and five were in positive references to MacPhee, as if to emphasize that MacPhee was an Ulster Scot, not a real Scot. 1 “I am very’ glad to see you, Mrs. Studdock,” he said in what Jane took to be a Scotch accent, though it was really Read More ›

C. S. Lewis: The Roads

I stand on the windy uplands among the hills of DownWith all the world spread out beneath,meadow and sea and town,And ploughlands on the far-off hillsthat glow with friendly brown. And ever across the rolling landto the far horizon line,Where the blue hills border the misty west,I see the white roads twine,The rare roads and the fair roadsthat call this Read More ›

Scrabo the Ulsterman

C. S. Lewis wrote his excellent fragment “The Most Substantial People” in1927, 18 years before he wrote about MacPhee in That Hideous Strength. It is about the Easley family of Belfast. Warren Lewis willed the story to the Wade Center, but Walter Hooper and C S Lewis Pte have blocked its publication. On every side of me were thickset men Read More ›

Hooperian Persiflage?

The essay in Present Concerns titled “Modern Man and His Categories of Thought” is suspicious in several ways. One is its view of women. The writer laments the intellectual and spiritual damage done to men by “The Emancipation of Women.” He says the proper glory of the masculine mind is disinterested concern with truth for truth’s own sake and the Read More ›

Merelewis World Wide

MereLewis is a free e-mail listserve devoted to discussion of the life and writings of C. S. Lewis. (Douglas Gresham is a participant.) Subscribers vary widely in age, background, knowledge of Lewis, and location. The following list of subscriber locations is correct except for attributing to the U.S. global services like Hotmail. Country Subscribers Australia 24Austria 2Bermuda 1Brazil 6Canada 18China Read More ›

Mysterious Modern Man

The provenance of “Modern Man and His Categories of Thought” is as peculiar as its weak sentences and illogical content. Walter Hooper published it in 1986 without one word about where he got it. In two 1991 letters Jerry Daniel, an ordained Disciples minister who was then editor of the Bulletin of the New York C. S. Lewis Society, told Read More ›

“Anguish Over Unpaid Bills” What Would Lewis Think?

Stanley Mattson’s C. S. Lewis Foundation has some truly elegant prospectus packets (videotape and audiotape included) for wealthy prospective donors and has been known to send them by overnight mail. In contrast, his 9 July 1999 mass mailing was apparently designed to appeal to his least affluent and sophisticated donors. It has a relatively modest format, lacking the high-quality paper, Read More ›

Lamb’s Players Theatre: Till we Have Faces Drama

Till We Have Faces received an overwhelming response as a workshop production at the 1998 C. S. Lewis Centennial Celebration in Cambridge. That encouraged Lamb’s Players to mount it as a full production in its 1999 season, from 13 August to 19 September. The stage adaptation used a cast of 12 and a vivid and physical theatricality to bring the Read More ›

The Lewis Legacy-Issue 82, Autumn 1999 From the Mailbag

When I first read Screwtape Letters, I was studying sociology in graduate school. But something was missing. I knew something was missing, but I didn’t know what it was. Then I read Screwtape, and bingo, here was more understanding of what it means to be human in one slim volume than in all the great sociological tomes I had been Read More ›

In the Footsteps of Rigoberta

According to the April 1999 issue of World Press Review, the Guatemalan Quice Indian who won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1992 had fabricated the events in her 1983 book I, Rigoberta Menchu: An Indian Woman in Guatemala. Menchu’s coauthor, a Venezuelan anthropologist named Elisabeth Burgos, says she realized by 1990 that much of the story was fabricated. (For example, Read More ›