Friday, July 03, 2009

C.S. Lewis is Alive and Well

In reading a mere twenty pages of Lewis's A Preface to Paradise Lost, I have discovered two rhetorical gems that are, today, as true and relevant as when he wrote them.

The first regards a recent debate in the literary world as to whether Shakespeare ought to be translated into Present Day English just as Beowulf and Chaucer have been. John McWhorter fired the first ghastly salvo, D.H. Lawrence fired eloquently back, and Alan Jacobs called in the air support. Both replies are well worth your time, but it appears that Lewis had seen it all before and planted this delightful time-bomb in his defense of the lost art of solemnity: "The desire for simplicity is a late and sophisticated one. We moderns may like dances which are hardly distinguishable from walking and poetry which sounds as if it might be uttered ex tempore. Our ancestors did not. They liked a dance which was a dance, and fine clothes which no one could mistake for working clothes, and feasts that no one could mistake for ordinary dinners, and poetry that unblushingly proclaimed itself to be poetry. What is the point of having a poet, inspired by the Muse, if he tells stories just as you or I would have told them?"

The second struck me because it explicates in a sentence what Charlie Kaufman demonstrates in his brilliant two-hour mind-scrump, Synecdoche, New York. "The attempt to be oneself," Lewis writes, "often brings out only the more conscious and superficial parts of a man's mind." Indeed, that one line comes close to summing up the thematic and artifactual whole of Kaufman's work; the thread of superficial self- and consciousness-feedback runs through all the films of his that I've seen. And yet I wonder whether Kaufman also understands what Lewis says immediately following: "working to produce a given kind of poem [or in the case of Synecdoche's Adele, a given kind of painting] which will present a given theme as justly, delightfully, and lucidly as possible, he is more likely to bring out all that was really in him, and much of which he himself had no suspicion."

4 comments:

Sasha said...

Brilliant.

Youssef Sleiman said...

The word verification just prompted me to write "pun rump." Epic.

Love the article. I find myself often remembering snippets of arguments Lewis wrote. They're timeless in their reason; Lewis wasn't 'ahead of his time.' We're behind ours..

Seems like being smart and well-published is another way to achieve that "Ode on a Grecian Urn" immortality.

Bagger said...

Dude, greatness...

Pilgrim said...

Are you familiar with Dr. Peter Kreeft? You can find some recorded lectures online for free download. He has one, "The Cosmic Dance", that includes these thoughts of Lewis'. He is wonderful. If you are interested, definitely check out his lecture on "Identity" and "Language of Beauty". Everything he says is very Lewis-ey

We don't really know each other, by the way, but through the Blogbargers we are connected....cheers.