C S Lewis Centenary Group

Number 11, April 1998

Monthly from the C S Lewis Centenary Group

The great Christian writer, C S Lewis, was born in Belfast on 29th November 1898. The C S Lewis Centenary Group formed in 1994, so that Lewis’s native land might suitably celebrate his Centenary in 1998.

SCULPTURE TAKES SHAPE

The concept for the C. S. Lewis Centenary Statue in Belfast is now public knowledge.

The Belfast 'Sunday Life' has carried an interview with the artist, MR ROSS WILSON, and a colour photograph of Ross Wilson holding a scale model (or 'marquette') of his sculpture. [See our Web Site for this photograph.]

The dramatic sculpture in bronze will feature a life-size, standing, figure of C. S. Lewis. With his right hand Lewis is opening a large, Victorian wardrobe which stands nearly two feet above his head.

Ross Wilson, sculptor and artist, writes;

'The sculpture concept came from a letter that C. S. Lewis wrote to a little girl in 1961. I discovered this letter while in conversation with Douglas Gresham one day in his study…(The girl) was upset that Aslan had died, stopped reading and wrote to C. S. Lewis. He explained why Aslan had died and told her to read on, that Aslan came back to life.

I believe the letter was given to me...The letter was the trigger for a further image....I have traced and found (the girl who wrote the letter). Now almost 50 years old...she could not believe the events that are beginning to unfold. She plans to attend the sculpture unveiling in early November 1998.

The letter will be reproduced in bronze on the back of the wardrobe. People will be able...to read the words of Lewis explaining the need to find Aslan and the meaning behind the 'Chronicles of Narnia'; Lewis still speaking after all these years.'

Colour photograph of Ross Wilson with his model sculpture (85K)

PLAQUE AT BIRTHPLACE

One hundred years ago, C. S. Lewis was born at Dundela Villas, Belfast. The C S Lewis Centenary Group has agreed to co-operate with the ULSTERHISTORY CIRCLE in placing a memorial BLUE PLAQUE at the site, where Dundela Flats now stand. The plaque will be similar to that already in place at LITTLE LEA - there is a photograph on page 2 of our brochure 'The C S Lewis Trail in Belfast and North Down', and on our web site. The unveiling of the plaque will take place on JUNE 16TH 1998.

IRISH LINK TO LEWIS 'ESTATE'

DOUGLAS GRESHAM writes in MERELEWIS (e-mail Lewis Interest Group) on 25 March: 'The Estate' 'is actually a sort of slang term that people have used to describe the entity C.S.Lewis Pte. Ltd. which is a private company. The copyrights are managed by Curtis Brown Ltd. a literary agency in London, with consultation on creative and artistic matters from me and on other matters from a variety of specialists.'

KATHRYN LINDSKOOG adds (25 March): The Lewis literary estate (Lewis Pte) is a holding company owned by anonymous investors and based in Singapore. Its Managing Director is Melvin Adams, who lives in Greystones, a seaside resort about 20 miles south of Dublin. (Ireland is a tax haven for people connected with literature and films. I don't know if Lewis Pte employees fall into that category or not.) So Lewis's life began in N. Ireland and coincidentally the control of his books ended up (in) Ireland.'

DAVID R PATTERSON writes (28 March): 'Thanks to Kathryn and Doug for explanations on the meaning of the "Estate." Can I translate this into American commercial/legal usage as "The C. S. Lewis Corporation (Privately-held)", meaning that shareholders liability is limited to what they invested in their shares and that their identities are not made public. (Pte., I guess, is simply a British abbreviation for private?) On this side of the Atlantic -- or should I say of the Pacific -- we'd say Pvt., I think.) The further curiosity this arouses in me is why do the investors want to be anonymous?

If I understand, Doug, you consult then not for the "Estate" but for Curtis Brown, who have a contract with C.S.Lewis Pte. Ltd., presumably long-term, to administer the copyrights?'

COLLECTORS' LIMITED EDITION?

DOUGLAS GRESHAM writes in MERELEWIS about- 'the possibility of putting out a Collector's Limited Edition of the Chronicles of Narnia. This would be a numbered, single volume edition, incorporating all the original Pauline Baynes illustrations that she has just finished hand-colouring for us, richly bound, in top quality leather with gilt edges and so on and signed by Pauline herself if she is willing.

To clarify- A one-time-only print run of a one-volume limited edition containing all the seven Chronicles of Narnia, arranged in Narnian Chronological order, each copy with its own identification number, and signed by Pauline Baynes (and for anyone who would like it, by myself as well). This would be the sort of book that has not been published at all for many years, bound in leather with gilt edgings and all the old fashioned long-lasting quality that we can put into it. If you can imaging a hand-made luxury sports car, custom-built for a specific customer, like a Morgan +8 for example, this would be the literary equivalent.'

The approximate price will be £300-350. If interested, please write to Douglas Gresham, Rathvinden House, Co Carlow, Eire, or email <dhg@iol.ie>.

REPORTS

ATTENDANCES AT RECENT IRISH TALKS:

21 Jan 1998 CRAWFORDSBURN, Mr James O'Fee - 90 people

2 March 1998 BANGOR, Rev Trevor Gillian, - 120 people

14 March 1998 QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY, BELFAST, Rt Hon David Bleakley - 60

MEMPHIS CONFERENCE March 26-27 "C. S. Lewis as Christian Professor," University of Memphis. DR BILL MARTY writes: Over the course of two days, some 135 people enjoyed 22 papers and much pleasant conversation focusing on C. S. Lewis. Kelly James Clark, professor of philosophy at Calvin College, presented the keynote address: "C. S. Lewis: Narrative Philosopher." Presenters from both coasts and from states from Wisconsin to Texas joined an equal number from local colleges and universities in easy informality in this, the third annual "Christianity in the Academy" conference. Those interested in being on the mailing list for next year's conference, or wishing to propose future themes of the conference, may contact Bill Marty at "wrmarty@memphis.edu".

C S LEWIS FILM EVENT, BELFAST Queen's Film Theatre has shown these films;

Richard Attenborough's SHADOWLANDS (Sun 12 April); and then the CHRONICLES OF NARNIA (BBC Version, each lasting 3 hours)- THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE (Tues 14 and Wed 15 April), PRINCE CASPIAN (Wed 15 April), THE VOYAGE OF THE DAWN TREADER (Thurs 16 April), THE SILVER CHAIR (Fri 17 April).

JOURNALIST Mrs Sally Varlow, an English freelance journalist, visited Northern Ireland over the weekend April 17-19, with a view to writing an article on C S Lewis and the Trail for airline and other magazines. The weather was kind.

FORTHCOMING EVENTS

1998 CENTENARY EDITION OF TRAIL BROCHURE The Centenary Group will launch its 1998, Centenary, issue of the brochure THE C. S. LEWIS TRAIL IN BELFAST AND NORTH DOWN before the end of April. Please get in touch if you would like a copy or copies sent to you, free of charge.

GUIDED TOUR OF C S LEWIS TRAIL Sat 2nd May. The Centenary Group launches its programme of Guided Tours around the C S Lewis Trail in Belfast. We hope to entertain a Special Guest from the USA, Ms Lynn Maudlin, Registrar of the MYTHOPOEIC SOCIETY. The Tour lasts 2 hours and there is no charge. Meet at the entrance of St Mark's Church, Holywood Road, at 10 am.

'C.S. LEWIS: A MAN FOR OUR CENTURY', VIRGINIA May 1-2. LARRY CLOUGH writes: A centennial conference on the life and works of CSL, will be held on May 1-2 1998 at Truro Episcopal Church in Fairfax, VA. Speakers will be Dr. Earl Palmer (pastor of University Presbyterian Church in Seattle, WA), and Dr. Art Lindsley (Scholar-in-residence at the CSL Institute in Annandale, VA).

For more details, contact the CSL Institute at 4208 Evergreen Lane, Suite 222, Annandale, VA 22003. Phone (703) 324-5517, messages to (703) 914-5602. Fax (703) 642 1075. Email lewisinstitute@erols.com. Their web site is at http://www.erols.com/lewisinstitute/

OXFORD CENTENARY STONE Wednesday 13 May. MR MICHAEL WARD of the Oxford University C. S. Lewis Society writes: 'The Stone will be unveiled at Magdalen College on Wednesday 13 May by the President of Magdalen, Mr Anthony Smith. Anyone who wants to may attend Evensong in Magdalen Chapel at 6.00 p.m. on the day in question, a service which will be geared to Lewis. After that service, the Stone will be unveiled: and again that is open to all comers. There will then be a drinks reception in the President's Lodgings, but I'm afraid that will have to be by invitation only.'

CENTENARY PLAQUE AT BIRTHPLACE June 16th - see above

SEATTLE CONFERENCE June 19-21 DR JOHN WEST writes: 'Information about the conference on "C.S. Lewis's Legacy for the Twenty-First Century" is now available on the web at http://www.discovery.org/lewis/cslewisconf.html. The website includes information about conference speakers, the conference schedule, and a registration form that can be downloaded.

To be held on June 19-21 at Seattle Pacific University, this conference will feature Peter Kreeft, Thomas Howard, Phillip Johnson (author of *Darwin on Trial), Bruce Edwards, Earl Palmer, Richard Purtill, and many others. Special events include:

*** A full staging of Dorothy Sayers' mystery play, "Busman's Honeymoon" by Taproot Theatre.

*** A readers' theatre adaptation of Peter Kreeft's "Between Heaven and Hell" (an imaginary conversation between C.S. Lewis, John F. Kennedy, and Aldous Huxley just after their deaths).

*** The world premiere of a new one-man show based on Lewis's *The Great Divorce.*

*** A book party and traditional afternoon tea with the editors and Contributors of *The C.S. Lewis Reader's Encyclopedia*, a major new reference volume being published by Zondervan in June.

*** A traditional Anglican evensong service with choir.

The registration fee is $100, which includes two lunches and a traditional English banquet. Reduced cost lodging is available in dorms on campus. You can e-mail me at jwest@spu.edu if you want a copy of our 4-page brochure about the conference.'

CENTENARY POSTAGE STAMP 21 July

Royal Mail now has a web site http://www.royalmail.com, and email <british.philatelic.bureau@dial.pipex.com>. You can order copies of the C. S. Lewis Stamp by telephoning the Royal Mail orderline at the beginning of July to place your order. The number is (UK) 0345 641 641.

NOTE - US Orders: UK stamps can be bought from USPS, Stamp Fulfillment Services, PO Box 7247, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19101-9014, telephone number 1-800-STAMP-24 (no e-mail address). Payment can be by credit card, cheque, bank draft or a US Postal ServicMoney Order made payable to USPS.

BELFAST CIVIC SERVICE August 9 The planned Civic Service at St Anne's Cathedral, Belfast, on Sunday 9 August is cancelled.

BELFAST 'SHADOWLANDS', Lyric Theatre, September. RICHARD GASTON writes with some details: performances Tuesday 8th- Saturday 26th September at 8pm, previews on Friday 4th, Saturday 5th and Monday 7th September at 8 pm, Saturday matinee on 26th September at 2.30 pm. Booking open from 6th April on (01232) 381081.

ULSTER MUSEUM LECTURE, BELFAST November 8. Mr JAMES O'FEE will give the C. S. Lewis Centenary Lecture in the Ulster Museum, Belfast, on Sunday 8 November, 1998, at 3 pm. The title of the talk will be C. S. LEWIS: ULSTERMAN.

BELFAST CENTENARY SCULPTURE November. The unveiling is expected to be during the week of Monday 9 - Friday 13 November (see above).

RESEARCH

FOUR QUESTIONS

MMS JOANNE R BRETT of Bethesda, Maryland, USA has written to ask several questions about the early life of Lewis:

1. 'Was the road in front of Little Lea 'a dirt road'?'

Answer: Yes, it was unpaved.

2. 'Is a flowering currant a black currant or a red currant?' [ie the bush mentioned in Chapter 1 of 'Surprised by Joy']

Answer: Neither. It is 'ribes sanguineam', a popular decorative garden shrub, with pink flowers, and a small, black, inedible fruit.

3. 'Could Lewis see Belfast Harbour from Little Lea?

Answer: No, but he could see Belfast Lough with its shipping, as explained in 'Surprised by Joy'.

4. Was the 'rough brown soap' that he used to wash with made at LITTLE LEA?

Answer: Possibly, but we think it more likely that the Lewises would have bought the soap at Strandtown village, only 20 minutes walk away from LITTLE LEA, and where the servants would have lived.

LEWIS'S ACCENT - A DISCUSSION

MARIAN VAN TIL (Associate Editor, Christian Courier, St. Catharines, Ont./Lewiston, NY) writes in MERELEWIS: Long ago I saw a minute or two of a filmed version of him reading in a BBC studio but I didn't recall the voice. I expected him to sound slightly more Irish. It took some getting used to to match the voice and the face/personality that we've come to know.

The voice, at first hearing, is one of those perennial snobbish-sounding, upper-crust British accents that everyone likes to imitate--I can understand why Lewis was apparently taken aback and said he didn't like the way he sounded when he heard himself on tape for the first time.

Very, very "Oxford." But then you begin to hear other nuances. In fact, I kept thinking: 'Who does he sound like?' There's an actor who pronounces some of his words like that, and has a similar vocal quality. I finally had it: that actor is Sean Connery. I can't explain that in terms of the origins of and influences on their accents, obviously, but there are some definite similarities. Another interesting tidbit: Lewis pronounces the word "supposed"/"supposal" (which he used frequently when speaking of Williams) with interior "b's" rather than "p's."

DOUGLAS GRESHAM responded: 'Its more of a subdued labial-stopped "p" than a "b", and it sounds more pronounced in recordings (particularly if the quality isn't the best) than it did in real life. It was almost the only shadow of Northern Ireland that years of Public School and Oxford had left in Jack's accent.'

JAMES O'FEE added: 'Ulster, and Belfast, speech is strongly influenced by Scottish patterns. (This might explain the resemblance with the speech of Scotsman Sean Connery.)

In James Como's C. S. LEWIS AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE (Harvest, Harcourt Brace, New York, 1982) we find;

a. (page 6) Leo Baker writes of CSL speaking, as an undergraduate after WW1, 'with the slight remains of a Belfast accent'; and

b. (page 440) Derek Brewer writes of Lewis, as a tutor at Oxford, rather later in life: "The plump cheerful man....who rolled his Rs".

The 'rolled', or 'trilled', R occurs in several varieties of British speech, notably Scots.

Yet I confess that I can find little Irish, or Ulster, in the recordings of Lewis that I've heard. Nor a rolled R.'

DOUGLAS GRESHAM replied: 'I never heard Jack roll or trill (not the same thing by the way) an "R" at all. And as you say there was barely a trace of Ulster left in his accent.

Though of course both he and Warnie could put it on when humour required.'

JAMES O'FEE again: For example, Derek Brewer writes [C. S. LEWIS AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE, ed. James Como, New York, 1982, page 50]:

[Lewis] 'was once on a committee with [T. S.] Eliot to revise the translation of the Psalms and referred to himself, in comparison with Eliot, as a "whippersnapper"-pronounced very Irish, with aspirated initial HW and strongly rolled Rs.'

'MOST INTERESTING OF MYSTERIES'

MR CHRIS SHELLEY of Culver City, California, writes (8 March 1998): Regarding the ownership of the Kilns.....

I have been reading "Brothers and Friends" and came across the following from WHL's diary 5th Sept 1931...

Cost of the Kilns $3300

Paid cash (I paid) $300

Mortgage held by J $1000

Mortgage held by me $500

Mortgage held by Askins trustees $1500

Thus the Lewis brothers invested £1800

The Askins only £1500...

Warnie states; "Minto is making a settlement whereby each of our shares is secured in the event of her death, she being the nominal owner of the property." So JKM was only "nominal" owner of the Kilns and CSL would have as much a right as any to build a cottage etc.

Chris has passed on a message from WALTER HOOPER on the subject of Chris Shelley's relation, Mrs Alice Moore. Walter Hooper writes:

'I've turned everything upside down, and I'm afraid I haven't come up with much information about your aunt. While I was engaged in editing CS Lewis's letters to Arthur Greeves, I wrote to Robert Lloyd-Davies about the two Mrs Moores. In my letter of 22 Nov. 1977, I said: ''As Greeves knew a good deal about life at the Kilns in the old days, Lewis naturally assumed he would understand his references to Mrs Janie King Moore...and another "Mrs Moore", who, though no relation to Janie King Moore, spent her last years at the Kilns and who, Owen Barfield tells me, made Mrs Janie King Moore the chief beneficiary of her will in return for looking after her.' I went on to ask for copies of the wills of the two Mrs Moores.

Mr Lloyd-Davies had someone in the firm reply, but it appears from our correspondence that he did not turn up any documents from Alice Moore, so my knowledge about your aunt, must have come mainly from Mr Barfield. Anyway, I see from the letter I've quoted that Mr Barfield believed that Alice Moore made Mrs J.K.Moore the 'chief beneficiary of her will in return for looking after her.' I think it must have been Mr Barfield who told me they weren't related. If any one in that firm knew about the relation between the two ladies it must surely have been Mr Barfield. Now, sadly, he is dead, and we can't learn more about this from him.

I'm afraid I just don't have any further knowledge to pass on. Except that is, that Mrs Moore's daughter, Lady Dunbar, was Alice Moore's Trustee. Lady Dunbar is dead, but I imagine the one who would almost certainly know anything is her son, Sir Richard Dunbar. He would not remember your aunt because he wasn't born until 1945, but he may have heard his mother talk about her…. I am very sorry I can't be of more help. I do hope you resolve this most interesting of mysteries.'

PROFESSOR CLYDE KILBY

Several recent contributors to MERELEWIS have paid moving tributes to Professor Clyde Kilby, the founder of the world's foremost collection of Lewisian, 'The Marion E. Wade Collection', at Wheaton College, Illinois, USA.

DONALD WILLIAMS: 'In the afternoons, I take an hour off from working in the (Lewis) Collection to audit Kilby's seminar on Modern Myth. He is ancient, stooped, slightly palsied, even in the early 70's. His head nods as he speaks, but his mind is still razor sharp, and he speaks with the profoundest love and respect for his subject. Forever after, when I think of Bilbo at Rivendell in his old age, it will be this face that will come into my mind.'

RON TROUP: 'as a student at Wheaton during that same time, and having taken the "Modern Mythology" course, Donald's portrait of Clyde Kilby rings true. Many students thought that Dr. Kilby was metamorphosing into a hobbit as he aged! He was a very gracious teacher, very beloved by all. I do remember his frustration, as the bells for class changes would ring, cutting short his comments; he was not the sort who ran his day by a clock.

KATHRYN LINDSKOOG: Dr. Clyde Kilby died on October 18, 1986. From what I hear, his wonderful wife Martha is still alive in Mississippi. They were so much loved that in his lifetime six babies and one dog were named after him. Warren Lewis wrote in his diary how much he liked Clyde Kilby, and Len and Mollie Miller told my husband and me how extremely fond they were of him. (I don't think they ever got to meet her.) Kilbys were very small people with a huge amount of love and integrity.

I would have loved to attend Wheaton College (1952-1956), or to accept Clyde Kilby's 1956 invitation to teach there on an assistantship while pursuing a doctorate at the U of Chicago. (All his idea.) For reasons beyond my control, both were impossible. When I met the Kilbys in 1956 I had already devoted 1 1/2 years to intense independent academic study of Lewis, whom I had discovered independently. I last talked to Clyde Kilby just two weeks before his 1986 death. He came in from his garden to talk to me and was feeling fine. I'm so glad we had that last talk.

NANCY YOUNG: I was a student at Wheaton College from 1961 to 1965 and _Mere Christianity_ was required reading. I remember not liking the book at first, thinking CSL argued too much to defend the obvious. (Later when great intellectual doubt overwhelmed me, Lewis and his books became my best friends.) But when I got to the chapter on The Great Sin (pride) I was suddenly smitten by this writer. He cut right to the heart of the matter. How straight an arrow he can shoot. Since that day I have been reading everything of Lewis I can find. Some books I read over and over are 'Narnia', 'Screwtape Letters', 'The Great Divorce' and 'A Grief Observed'.

Lewis was so popular on campus that one professor (not too kindly) called him "the patron saint of Wheaton College"! The bookstore was filled with everything of Lewis. I bought my first copy of 'The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe' there. It was a Puffin paperback that said plainly on the cover, "not for sale in the U.S.A."! I still have the book with its beautiful cover picture of Susan and Lucy and Aslan dancing round the Stone Table. That scene with the green mountains of Narnia in the background created such a longing in me to go there. And one of the most magical moments of my life was when I read the part where Lucy could not find the back of the wardrobe. "Then she saw that there was a light ahead of her..... Something cold and soft was falling on her. A moment later she found that she was standing in the middle of a wood at night-time with snow under her feet and snowflakes falling through the air."

About that time I also bought 'A Grief Observed' by N.W. Clerk. The pen name was used because Lewis was still living when it was published.

Another vivid memory of those days was November 22, l963. We were on our way to (or from) chapel for a memorial service for the late John F. Kennedy, Jr. who had been shot and killed that day. A friend approached me and asked, "Did you hear that C.S.Lewis died today?" I didn't believe her. She had to be mistaken. Later when I arrived at my afternoon Children's Lit. class I asked the professor if it was true. He

had not heard but immediately dispatched someone to the office of Dr. Clyde Kilby to find out. When the report was confirmed, my first thought was, "Lewis is in that place that he talked about so much". As the nation mourned the president I was mourning an even greater loss.

I appreciate those of you who have been sharing your memories of Clyde Kilby. He was one of my teachers and a dear friend. I remember how he challenged us with questions like, "Can anyone be totally evil?" When I suggested the devil, he replied, "What about the devil's intelligence?" An experience I will never forget happened in Philosophy of Art class. We were down in one of those awful rooms with no windows. Dr. Kilby turned out the lights and had us listen to a recording of "The Happy Wanderer" (I think that's the title.) I sat there with the others in the pitch dark experiencing music in a way I never had before.

Dr. Kilby was teaching when my mother was a student at Wheaton. He sometimes called me Eleanor by mistake. A quarter of a century later he still remembered her!

In my senior year I found out that Dr. Kilby was going to conduct a seminar on C.S.Lewis. I was told that the class was full but was urged by my roommate to go ahead and ask to be let in anyway. Kilby said, okay, one more! I was so excited I could hardly stand it. I felt so privileged. I think this class was the very first of any at the college directly related to Lewis. (brag, brag!). We met in the Dr. Kilby's home and sat in a circle around the living room while his wife, Martha, served us hot beverages and snacks.

When Dona asked about the date of Kilby's death tears came to my eyes. I miss writing to him. I became too busy as years went by and never did tell him how I finally got into reading George MacDonald. He had urged me to many times. Kilby always answered letters immediately. I still have them all. They are among my treasures. Especially the ones he wrote from England - "Prof. T. and I are getting along fine so far."

- "Have spent many hours with the Tolkiens. Last Thursday I had dinner with them...." - In several letters he wrote with great excitement about the miracle of the Wade Collection which was then just beginning to be. I noted that he was not too careful about grammar and spelling in his letters. But when we wrote term papers for him, we had an entire letter grade deducted if we had ONE misspelled word!! )

Clyde Kilby was a person who REALLY listened to you and really thought about what you said to him. I was awed and a little frightened that he would take my ideas so seriously. About a year after I graduated I wrote to tell him that I was reading Tolkien's _Lord of the Rings_. He wrote back and said, "You will never be the same again, for which give thanks!"

'WHAT C. S. LEWIS HAS MEANT TO ME'

This will be a series in which readers of 'C S Lewis News' explain what C. S. Lewis has meant in their lives. MME IRENE FERNANDEZ of Paris, France, begins:

'I am French, with a remote Mexican ancestry, and I have read, and am still reading, CSL, in English. I am an academic of sorts, a teacher of philosophy, now retired, and my "Doctorat d'Etat" was on CSL's thought (something on the relation of myth to reality, or of imagination to truth). Not only do I find him one of the most nourishing (so to speak) Christians of our or any time, but I think he is not sufficiently appreciated as a thinker; The 'Abolition of Man' for instance (which I translated into French some years ago) is a truly prophetic book, but you see a very good mind at work everywhere in his whole oeuvre-a much needed one to-day.

I especially love 'Till We Have Faces' (I have written the preface for the French translation), because that neglected book is an impressive testimony to the depth of his thought and art blended together, clearly defining "the shape of that gap where our love of God ought to be" (as he puts it at the end of the 'Four Loves') & which shows that he knew more about that love than a lot of more effusive people. Sometimes I apply to CSL what Chesterton said of Thomas Aquinas and think of him as a "pearl in a very tightly closed oyster"! Happily he was such a gifted writer that the pearl shines through. Thank you one more for the work you are doing in the CSL Centenary Group.'

OUR CONTEMPORARIES

CANADIAN C. S. LEWIS JOURNAL The Autumn 1997 issue of this journal features Dorothy Sayers. Subscriptions- $15 (Canada), $12 (US), £6 (UK). Mr Roger Stronstad c/o Western Pentecostal Bible College, Box 1700, Abbotsford, B. C. V2S 7E7, Canada.

THE LEWIS LEGACY 75th Issue (quarterly), Winter 1998 available. $10 annual donation towards cost suggested. Kathryn Lindskoog, 1344 E. Mayfair Avenue, Orange, California 92867, USA.

ENDS


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