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Article: "Deep lies the sea-longing": inklings of home (1).
- Article from:
- Mythlore
- Article date:
- September 22, 2007
- Author:
CopyrightCOPYRIGHT 2007 Mythopoeic Society. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)
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WHEN ELWIN RANSOM takes the name Fisher-King and the office of Pendragon, when England becomes Logres and a remote part of Venus becomes Avalon, we realize that the Arthurian myth has come to resonate more deeply in C.S. Lewis's creative work than it had before. The first two novels of the Ransom trilogy contain nothing of this sort. Some attribute the change to Lewis's closer association with Charles Williams, and they could be right. It may have been around the same time that Lewis requested from Williams, and received, the explanatory notes that are quoted so extensively in his commentary on Williams's Arthurian poems. Yet having identified the Arthurian element in ...
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... ... Muhammed is very befitting of the Rev. Charles Williams, the late president of the Indiana ... the greatness of our brother, Rev. Charles Williams. In the opening of his book it explains ... Allah blesses the soul of our brother Charles Williams. Forgive him his faults and grant ...
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