Perhaps there is another kind of inner crisis, not recognised as such, when a "soul" (person) needs but blocks out contact with reality. When CS Lewis as fictional character involuntarily enters the mental landscape of a former student's fiancee, he hears a soft but heavy knocking and:
"...a voice at whose sound my bones turned to water, 'Child, child, let me in before the night comes.'"
-CS Lewis, "The Shoddy Lands" IN Lewis, The Dark Tower and other stories (London, 1983), p. 110.
The speaker wants to start a dialogue. This single sentence has affected me more than any other passage in Lewis' works. Lewis personified reality and wrote this story from within his own Christian belief.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI never did find the Ythrian New Faith very plausible, however. And, in strictly intellectual ways, we see more about what Ivanhoans thought about theological issues in "The Three-Cornered Wheel" and "The Season of Forgiveness." Compared to Ivanhoans the Ythrians struck me as rather shallow and superficial.
Ad astra! Sean