Collected Letters Volume Three: Narnia, Cambridge and Joy 1950–1963. Walter Hooper
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      Magdalen College,

      Oxford May 21st 1952

      Dear Mrs. Pile

      What a horrible business! Of course neither I nor anyone who knows you could believe the allegations for a moment. I don’t think I cd. do much good by writing to Ld. Nuffield, though I am prepared to try it if nothing better can be done. Have you tried your M.P. I mean, not about the expenses of the case but about the injustice of being forced to answer questions on oath and then accused of slander for answering them? In the meantime I am writing to a legal friend of my own for advice. I can’t tell you how sorry I am for you in this trouble. I will write again as soon as I have anything to report.

      Yours sincerely

      C. S. Lewis

      

       TO VERA GEBBERT (W):

      Magdalen etc.

      May 23rd 1952

      Dear Vera Gebbert

      Nor can I quite believe that an avid expectation of my next book makes a very large part of your present experience. Anyway, it won’t be fulfilled. I’m busy at present finishing the heavy, academic work on 16th. Century literature wh. has occupied me (it has been the top tune—all the other books were only its little twiddly bits) for the last 15 years. When it is actually done I expect my whole moral character will collapse. I shall go up like a balloon that has chucked out the last sandbag.

      My brother is away for a few days but wd. certainly join in all my felicitations if he were here. I hope you will both live happily ever afterwards and tell stories to your great-grandchildren, travelling in donkey carriages along the mountain roads with hair as white as the snows. God bless you both.

      Yours ever

      C. S. Lewis

      

      [Magdalen College]

      28/5/52

      My dear Dom Bede–

      It isn’t chiefly men I am kept in touch with by my huge mail: it is women. The female, happy or unhappy, agreeing or disagreeing, is by nature a much more epistolary animal than the male.

      The stories you tell about two perverts belong to a terribly familiar pattern: the man of good will, saddled with an abnormal desire wh. he never chose, fighting hard and time after time defeated. But I question whether in such a life the successful operation of Grace is so tiny as we think. Is not this continued avoidance either of presumption or despair, this ever renewed struggle, itself a great triumph of Grace? Perhaps more so than (to human eyes) equable virtue of some who are psychologically sound.

      I am glad you think J. Austen a sound moralist. I agree. And not platitudinous, but subtle as well as firm.

      I’ll write to Skinner. Merlin was excellent. I haven’t written yet because someone has had my copy, till a day or two ago, almost ever since my first reading.

      Yours

      C. S. Lewis

      P. S. Is the Elgin address going to be permanent?

       TO SHELDON VANAUKEN (BOD): TS

      Yours

      C. S. Lewis

      

      As from Magdalen

      June 10th 1952

      Dear Mrs. Farrer–