29 November 2005

Prisoner of Narnia

Via McWetboy came a link yesterday to this splendid essay in the New Yorker about C. S. Lewis. I enjoyed it very much. This part resonated with me especially (emphasis mine):

...[P]oetry and fantasy aren’t stimulants to a deeper spiritual appetite; they are what we have to fill the appetite. The experience of magic conveyed by poetry, landscape, light, and ritual, is . . . an experience of magic conveyed by poetry, landscape, light, and ritual. To hope that the conveyance will turn out to bring another message, beyond itself, is the futile hope of the mystic. Fairy stories are not rich because they are true, and they lose none of their light because someone lit the candle. It is here that the atheist and the believer meet, exactly in the realm of made-up magic. Atheists need ghosts and kings and magical uncles and strange coincidences, living fairies and thriving Lilliputians, just as much as the believers do, to register their understanding that a narrow material world, unlit by imagination, is inadequate to our experience, much less to our hopes.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

And that's why I lurves the New Yorker. Something of immeasurable value in every issue...

vMh