In this summary of his dissertation, Michael Ward presents a detailed explanation of his understanding that C. S. Lewis built the seven books of the Chronicles of Narnia on his scholarly and personal understanding of the seven planets of medieval and renaissance literature and culture. Ward uses the term donegality to describe the imaginative technique. This is explained in Chapter 3 as based on the attributes of Jupiter first shown in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. The Jovial spirit is communicated through the main events of the plot, points of ornamental detail, and the portrayal of Aslan. What is the Jovial spirit? Quoting from chapter three,
We
may say it is Kingly; but we must think of a King at peace, enthroned, taking
his leisure, serene. The Jovial character is cheerful, festive, yet temperate,
tranquil, magnanimous. When this planet dominates we may expect halcyon days
and prosperity. In Dante wise and just princes go to his sphere when they die.
He is the best planet, and is called The Greater Fortune, Fortuna Major.
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The Lion , the Witch, and the Wardrobe
- Jupiter - the cheerful, festive, peaceful, serene, generous king
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Prince Caspian - Mars - the god of war
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Voyage of the Dawn Treader - Sol - the gold metallurgist, bringing shining
light to make men wise
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The Silver Chair - Luna - ambiguity, instability, watery source of rain
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The Horse and His Boy - Mercury - quicksilver-like componendo et dividendo
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The Magician’s Nephew - Venus - the warrior goddess and infernal witch,
also the source of fertility
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The Last Battle - Saturn - the last
planet, old and ugly
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The gospel is certainly present in the
first of the books, but why seven? Because, we need to have our imaginations
stirred about the way God works, as this has the potential to birth in us the
attributes of God in ways that theology cannot. Ward mentions the impact that a
debate Lewis had on February 2, 1948 with Elizabeth Anscombe at the Socratic
Club had on his focus on writing the Chronicles. The debate apparently showed him the
insufficiency of the arguments he presented in the original publication of Miracles
for the existence of God. And we know that his own faith was based on personal
experience, not just apologetics or theology. So the Chronicles were written to
communicate on a level of human experience, a visceral appeal. This is well
received by children of all ages, far more than theological argumentation.
Seven dimensions of Middle Ages mythology provide insight into different
dimensions of the human psyche and its need for supernatural completion.
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The nature and character of God, as
displayed for us by Jesus on earth, are incomprehensibly transcendent. Yet they
are also simple and can be received by children, in the realm of
imagination. Imagine the creation of a
world filled with lush vegetation, a host of variegated animal species, and a
sky populated with a sun, moon, and multitude of other stars, all through the
singing of a lion. Imagine the incarnation of evil in a witch, who deceives,
entraps, tortures and kills whoever she wishes, and is ultimately defeated by
the voluntary offering of virtue incarnate, a gentle lion.
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The scientific revolution has provided a world
view which reduces everything to cause and effect, describable and predictable
by experimentation, measurement, and analysis. But this worldview of the
universe is incomplete. There is the unseen realm that is not accessible to
scientific measurement, which underlies that which we see and hear. We sense
itn vaguely in our hearts, our emotions, our sense of justice and morality - it
is our spirit. But although this reality is described in Scripture (e.g., The Unseen Realm),
it is often better coupled to our lives through imagination. The believer whose
worldview is informed by the portrayal of the mysteries of the supernatural
realm, writ large, may be in a better position than the theologian to deal with
temptation, opposition, and suffering because he or she can recognize God’s
hand at work by the nature and character of the things happening.
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