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on snow shoes.

      With all best wishes and thanks

      Yours sincerely,

      C. S. Lewis

      

      RER50/81.

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford. 30th January 1950.

      Dear Miss Mathews,

      I was very sorry to hear about the miserable fiasco of your New York holiday. ‘Flu itself I don’t mind so much, especially in its later stages when the temperature has gone down, but the getting back to normality afterwards is beastly. I hope that by this time you are over the ‘wet rag’ stage, and feeling yourself once more.

      Need I say how much we look forward to the parcel which you so kindly promise? It sounds most exciting, and will be very welcome: because, whether it blows fair and warm politically or not, it is anything but fair and warm in the literal sense. I suspect that in California you are exempt from such a day as we are having here—frost, followed by rain, followed by frost—every side walk converted by delighted small boys into an improvised skating rink—splendid opportunities of giving the passers by a good laugh every time you venture out!

      With all best wishes for your health, and many thanks,

      Yours sincerely,

      C. S. Lewis

      

      REF.50/79

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford. 30th January 1950.

      Dear Mr. Dell,

      Yours sincerely,

      C. S. Lewis

      

      [January 1950]

      I am sorry if I misunderstood your letter: and I think that you misunderstood mine. What I meant was that if I replied to your original question (why I am not a member of the Roman Church) I shd. have to write a v. long letter. It would of course be answerable: and your answer would be answerable by me…and so on. The resulting correspondence would certainly not, of course, be in excess of the importance of the subject: but haven’t you and I both probably more pressing duties? For a real correspondence on such a subject wd. be nearly a wholetime job. I thought we cd. both discuss the matter more usefully with people nearer at hand. Even the two letters which we have exchanged have already revealed the pitfalls of argument by letter. With all good wishes.

      

      [Magdalen College]

      3/2/50

      Dear Zernov

      Yours

      C.S.L.

      

      REE 50/18.

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford. 7th February 1950.

      My dear Mrs. Jones,

      Many thanks for your long and interesting letter of the 24th of January. (‘And’ says my secretary-brother, ‘don’t forget to give her my grateful thanks for being one of the few people who quotes the number on your letter when she writes’).

      Your husband may well be proud of his school chapel, a beautiful building, which–to pay a typically English compliment—would rank high amongst school chapels over here!

      No indeed, there is no question of my not wanting you to send anything, though there are times when I am more than a little ashamed at the amount you do send. And I note with great pleasure what you say about the tea: also about specially marked parcels.

      I stand appalled at the list of your activities. I thought myself a busy man, but…

      Now for an attempt at answering some of your questions:–

      (1) Why was Christ always talking over people’s heads?

      Since all we know of his teachings is derived from the disciples and St. Paul, we are not in a position to say that they did finally misunderstand Him. With what other account of His teaching can we check theirs? That He was often temporarily over their heads, I agree. That is the way to get a class on, as every teacher knows.

      (2) About God being Truth and Justice, and nevertheless creating this world.

      (3) Why did God make most people stupid?

      Have you any evidence that He did? Some people are stupid through their own choice–laziness, and even fear of the truth—so have made themselves stupid. Others, through bad education etc., which is the fault of other humans, not of God.

      (4) Neurotic.

      My dictionary defines neurotic as one ‘having disordered nerves’. This would often mean in effect that the patient, with little or no moral guilt, does as the result of his disease the same things which would imply great guilt if a person in health did them—e.g. acts of cowardice, ill temper etc. (We all make the distinction in ordinary life when we excuse someone for being peevish because he is very tired, and therefore temporarily in bad nervous health). But no doubt f[r]iends and even doctors often flatter healthy but wicked people by attributing to neurosis what is really just wickedness. There is a great temptation to excuse oneself on the same grounds!

      (5) What is a soul?

      I am. (This is the only possible answer: or expanded, ‘A soul is that which can say I am’).

      With best wishes.

      Yours sincerely.

      C. S. Lewis

      

       TO MR LAKE (T):

      Magdalen College

      Oxford 8/2/50

      Dear Mr Lake

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