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sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2009-03-11 10:07 pm

My health broke down in the end

I don't know when The Magician's Nephew (1955) became my favorite of the Chronicles of Narnia. I suspect it's because as unassilable as some of the other books are in their characters and imagery, this is the one that's stranger each time I re-read it. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe is a solstice ritual, to simplify drastically. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader is an odyssey. The Silver Chair is a northern quest. The Magician's Nephew is a weird tale detoured into a creation myth—it begins with a mad scientist in the attic1 reverse-engineering interdimensional travel from the dust of Atlantis, moves swiftly through classic science fiction like dying earths and post-apocalypse and time that runs differently in different worlds (and the place between worlds where there is no time at all) before zigzagging back for a comic interlude in Edwardian London, and then we are into the heart of myth: singing the sun up, the animals out of the earth; the boy who let death in. The first words of the story belong to metafiction, the last to self-delusion, as though to remind the reader never to take narrators for granted.2 And yet we're told of beautiful and terrible things, the dead sun of Charn and the growing silence of the Wood between the Worlds, the song of the stars, the phoenix in the garden, the silver apples of youth and the Witch's salt-white face, eternal life stained like blood around her mouth. Children who rescue their parents, a smuggler's cave in the rafters. Polly Plummer is working on a story. It's not a perfect book; I'm not sure any of the Chronicles are. But it's like nothing except itself, if only because it's such a chimera, and that has always worked very well for me.

[livejournal.com profile] fleurdelis28 arrives tonight. I think the last time we saw one another in person, there was snow on the ground and a holiday going on. Maybe I should get out more.

1. Andrew Ketterley thinks of himself as a magician and is acknowledged as such by the narrator, by Digory, and by the scornful Jadis—"a little, peddling Magician who works by rules and books. There is no real Magic in your blood and heart"—but between his experiments and his exploding guinea pigs, he's much more in line with the traditional mad scientists who practice at the boundaries of alchemy; think of the pentagrams in Rotwang's house or Dr. Pretorius' homunculi. He even looks the part, tall and thin and greyly shock-headed. He has the proper obsessed self-concern. Of course, the mechanical, empirical approach Uncle Andrew takes toward magic gets him in far more trouble than mysticism ever would have. "Ours, my boy, is a high and lonely destiny," meet "Who ever heard of a lion singing?"

2. Lewis-as-storyteller claims, "This is a story about something that happened long ago when your grandfather was a child . . . In those days Mr. Sherlock Holmes was still living in Baker Street and the Bastables were looking for treasure in the Lewisham Road," setting the timeline for fact with fiction. But it is Uncle Andrew, never really quite reformed, who gets in the last word: "But he always liked to get visitors alone in the billiard room and tell them stories about a mysterious lady, a foreign royalty, with whom he had driven about London. 'A devilish temper she had,' he would say. 'But she was a dem fine woman, sir, a dem fine woman.'"

[identity profile] timesygn.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 01:19 am (UTC)(link)
Moved by nought beyond mere instinct, I am moved to hope that all is well is your world.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 01:29 am (UTC)(link)
I love this post of yours.

It is a wonderful book; has some of the best moments in it--and caused me my first sincere anxiety for the world. "We don't really have something like the Deplorable Word, do we?" I asked my mother. And then she broke it to me that yes, in fact, we did.

And [livejournal.com profile] timesygn may have wise instincts. Take care of yourself. You know, I thought of you on Tuesday. One day I hope to walk around your town with you. I will show you the house that I thought was like Professor Kirk's.
Edited 2009-03-12 01:30 (UTC)
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)

[personal profile] eredien 2009-03-12 01:51 am (UTC)(link)
The last time I read The Magician's Nephew I didn't know that Lewis hadn't invented the Wood Beyond the World. Now I have to do a re-read.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
I've never thought of it quite that way, but you've made excellent points about TMN.

I wonder if Lewis actually invented the magician-as-mad-scientist trope?

I hope you and [livejournal.com profile] fleurdelis28 have an excellent time together. I also hope that things are well with you, or at least all right.

[identity profile] handful-ofdust.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 03:40 am (UTC)(link)
Holy Joe, I love that book. Sadly, I think it's had more influence on me than anything else I've ever read.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 04:52 am (UTC)(link)
I'd probably pick The Horse and His Boy, myself, simply because it was the one I loved best as a child*. But perhaps I ought to think about it more deeply, at some point.

I sort of liked That Hideous Strength, myself, but I don't think it was as strong a book as Out of the Silent Planet or Perelandra. There was an un-evenness to the Arthurian aspect, I think.

Its distinction between other planets and other worlds is one that I'm sure was an introduction to many readers. It might have been mine.

Good point.

Actually, this reminds me of a fanfic [livejournal.com profile] tree_and_leaf wrote, wherein Caspian, at home in Narnia after Voyage of the Dawn Treader, starts a fanfic about Chandler's Philip Marlowe, whom Edmund had told him about, being kidnapped on a space voyage, something like Ransome in Out of the Silent Planet.

I very much doubt it. It's an easily blurred line; Dr. Faustus, Frankenstein, and the two examples I cite all predate him.

I expect you're right, although Faustus is, in a sense, the product of a time predating the separation of magic and science, and I'm not sure that Frankenstein, much as his methods seem more magical than scientific through modern eyes, quite counts as an intentional case. Can't speak to Rotwang or Dr. Pretorius, I'm afraid, as I've not read the books they're in.

Thank you. I'm doing what I can.

You're welcome. I reckon that's all any of us can do.

*Because it had talking horses, of course. In a sense, it may've shaped some of my attitudes about romance, as I think about it, although perhaps I would've been like that in any event.

[identity profile] handful-ofdust.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 05:10 am (UTC)(link)
Have you ever read my poem "The Deplorable Word"? I can't remember if I posted it after I wrote it.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 05:24 am (UTC)(link)
Didn't he study alchemy as well as chemistry?

He may well have done, as I think about it. I have to confess it's been a very long time since I read that book.

His obsession with life—created, resurrected, prolonged—begins with figures like Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa and Paracelsus, who must be classified more on the side of the occult than the rigorously rational.

This is true, although I'm thinking it's also couched in terms of things that were going on in science at the time--Galvanic force, Volta's experiments with the battery and the severed frog's leg, and all of that. But yes, Frankenstein is probably late enough that he can be called well more than half a magician and less than that a scientist.

Films.

Oh, I see. Thanks. More films that I probably ought to see, at some point.

I'd somehow realised whence came the text of your icon, but I'd not realised the image's source. Thanks.

It's slightly off topic, but this made me think of it: did you ever read Melissa Scott's Roads of Heaven trilogy? A lot of standard space opera-esque tropes--energy weapons, planetary bombardment, FTL--but all of it explained by alchemy and a sort of Paracelsian ritual magic.

[identity profile] handful-ofdust.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 05:33 am (UTC)(link)
Sent it over. Enjoy!

[identity profile] ookpik.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 05:55 am (UTC)(link)
I think The Silver Chair is still my favorite, mostly because Jill is the only one of the Earth-kids I ever liked. But yes, so much that's wonderful about The Magician's Nephew.

And I will part company with almost everybody and say that I love That Hideous Strength. Well, I have a love-hate relationship with it. The Head imagery works very well for me (mostly because that whole aspect of the plot is an essential working-out of CSL's theology as I understand it), but the stuff on women and their role...no, no, no.

But the Descent of the Eldils sequence...ah, that's magnificent, perhaps my favorite of all CSL's fiction.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 07:36 am (UTC)(link)
Why sad? What an awesome influence!

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 07:50 am (UTC)(link)
I did NOT know about nuclear holocaust at the time. I was seven or eight; my mother was reading the stories to me. Can you imagine it? To discover that there was something that could Charnify our world; that it actually existed, that no one was going to say, all comforting, "don't worry; that's just in stories." What a moment that was.

Well as for my favorites, you picked out some of them: the attic between houses, where Polly was writing her stories, the wood between the worlds and figuring out how to work the rings, Digory's false claim to be being driven mad as an excuse for hitting the bell (and his confession of same, later), the humor of Jadis in London, the glorious song of creation, with the different qualities of music for the different things sung into being (and the contrast between the old, dying sun of Charn and the young, joyful sun of Narnia), the transformation of Strawberry, the scene in the Garden with Jadis, the scene with Aslan afterward --man, I can't think of that without crying. I don't think I've ever read truer sacrifice than Digory's giving up what he believes to be the only hope for his mother, and then when Aslan weeps for him, and it says that he had the impression that Aslan knew his sorrow better than he did himself... wow.

My mother's mother died of cancer when my mother was eight, and I had a strong sense of empathy and imagination as a kid, so I felt really strongly for Digory in those scenes.

And then, when the apple does heal his mother...

And the cabby being the first king of England--that was wonderful. Talk about seeing the basic dignity and goodness in a person.

And the resonance between the tree in England--the future wardrobe--and the tree in Narnia. Nice.

You know, I once saw The Magician's Nephew performed as a ballet, by a ballet school in Amherst. It's a work that inspires, it really is.

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 10:12 am (UTC)(link)
I've always been a Dawn Treader kid myself, but your post is making me look at MN afresh. I've fought shy of it in the past, though mostly for a reason that has little to with the book itself. My mother worked for Geoffrey Bles in the '50s, when they were publishing the first Narnia books. When one of her colleagues left for the Bodley Head, she managed to lure CSL with her, which caused much tooth-gnashing at Bles - and The Magician's Nephew was the first of the Bodley Head publications. I've long nurtured a private conspiracy theory that the subsequent reordering of the Chronicles of Narnia (soi-disant) to put that book first was really motivated by a wish to boost BH's sales, whatever the aesthetic damage to the series. But I have no evidence, admittedly, and either way it's not the book's fault!
eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)

[personal profile] eredien 2009-03-12 12:01 pm (UTC)(link)
No--it's Morris. But when I last read Lewis, I hadn't read Morris or even knew he existed.

[identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 12:19 pm (UTC)(link)
The Silver Chair was my favourite when I was five, and it's still my favourite.

The Edwardian bits of TMN seem to me to be derivative of E. Nesbit's The Story of the Amulet, and even Jadis in London seems that way. When I think of that book, I think of Charn.

[identity profile] gaudynight78.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't hate all of That Hideous Strength, but boy howdy could I do without the gratuitous slams at contraception. Lewis's weakest point is definitely anything having to do with women. From a psychoanalytical point of view one can hardly blame him, but still.

I will have to step up as the lonely defender of The Last Battle, though. What can I say, I have a New Jerusalem complex. It probably goes with being a priest.

[identity profile] clarionj.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 01:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, I've missed out on something apparently grand and important. I'll have to remedy that. Your summation alone has stirred me.

(Are you okay? I wish you all you need for wellness and anything tender or strong that I can give, as you need.)

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