Edited from Chronologically Lewis by Joel Heck
http://www.joelheck.com/chronologically-lewis.php
My editorial remarks are in [square brackets] - excisions marked by (...)
February 22 1943,
Monday.
Jack
and
Warren
take the 8:40 a.m. train, going to Didcot and then to Paddington, where they take the District
Underground to King’s Cross.
At King’s Cross they check into a hotel.
Warren
has
a whiskey and soda. They arrange for tea
and a morning wake-up call, and then they go to bed.
The Socratic Club meets in the evening
without
Jack
on the topic
“Science and Faith” with speaker Frank Sherwood-Taylor.
February 23,
Tuesday.
Presumably, the Inklings meet at the Eagle and Child
at 11:30 a.m.
in the morning, but without
Jack
and
Warren.
Warren
and
Jack
awaken
to tea and biscuits, then they go down for a breakfast of sausage and scrambled eggs in the hotel
restaurant.
They catch the
Great
Northern
Railway
train, with
Warren
settling down to
read
Joseph
Conrad’s
Rover
and
with
Jack
reading Mandeville.
They leave the King’s Cross station at 10:00 a.m.
They eat their lunch of hard-boiled eggs and
sandwiches on the train, traveling through Huntingdon and crossing the Ouse River.
They pass Selby.
Warren
and
Jack
travel
through York and Darlington towards Durham.
At 4:00 p.m. they cross the Tyne River [actually, usually called the River Tyne] and come into Newcastle.
They check
into their hotel,
the Royal Station Hotel,
a couple hundred yards from the train station, and then
Jack
sets off to meet
his
university hosts for tea. Warren
has tea in the hotel lounge.
Warren
then unpacks and takes a stroll.
He sees Newcastle
Cathedral
and museum, then the Castle,
during
this stroll.
He stops at the
Douglas for a beer.
Jack’s first Riddell Memorial
lecture, “The Abolition of Man: or Reflections on Education”
takes
place at 5:30
p.m.
in the King’s Hall, King’s College [, the college being a large constituent division of the University of Durham - which was situated in Newcastle upon Tyne, about 20 miles north of Durham City where the Durham Division was located]. (...) An audience of around 500
is anticipated at each [lecture]. A speaker relay
is organized to the Electrical Engineering
Theatre and the Physics Lecture Theatre. There
was
quite a number of requests for tickets from individuals and local
organizations (like the Newcastle Education Society).
The host/chair is not recorded but it would
likely
have been the Rector [i.e. the senior academic administrator] of
King’s College, Lord Eustace Percy [at this time, Eustace Percy was the Vice-Chancellor of the whole University of Durham, both Newcastle and Durham divisions].
Warren
later takes
Jack
to
the Douglas for a beer before dinner.
After dinner,
Jack
and
Warren
find
the only comfortable sitting room in the hotel - a writing room downstairs - where
Warren
reads
Somerset
Maugham’s
Strictly Confidential, and then
they
go to bed early.
Jack
writes to
T.
S.
Eliot
about criticizing poetry as poetry,
A
Preface to Paradise Lost,
Charles Williams
getting them to meet, and agreeing about Virgil
.
February 24
Wednesday.
After breakfast at the hotel,
Warren
and
Jack
catch the 9:20 train for Durham
from Newcastle
[actually, this 'Durham' here means Durham City - as distinguished from County Durham].
Warren
and
Jack
arrive at Durham at 9:51 a.m. They
leave the train,
walk,
and cross a high stone bridge [perhaps Prebends Bridge] over the
Wear
River
[generally called the 'River Wear'] past the castle [also University College, Durham],
cathedral, university and Bishop's Palace [actually, the Bishop's palace was in Bishop Auckland, not Durham City].
They walk the entire length of the walled city [actually, Durham isn't a walled city - it was defensively-enclosed in a loop of the river; but there are bailey walls around the motte of the Castle], spending some time on
the
banks, the
wooded public
footpaths on either side of the river.
They climb the hill and pass
through an arch into the Cathedral Close [actually called The College of the Cathedral - this contains the Dean's residence, which may have been mistaken for the Bishop's Palace], with
a mixture of don’s houses and undergraduate hostels. The university is all around the cathedral.
They enter the cathedral and
spend some time there.
They go down into the steep narrow-streeted little town to
get
lunch, which
they do
at a pleasant pub,
The Castle,
in its upstairs bar
overlooking the river.
They wish they had stayed
in Durham
instead of
Newcastle. They discover
the university bookshop,
mostly with books of
theology, but with a fair selection of general reading. Here
Warren
purchases
a
new Olaf Stapleton
book, and
he gets
Jack
to look into the Century Bible, which
Warren
is thinking of
collecting.
They return
to the pub for a pint of beer.
Then they visit the cathedral a second time, seeing the tomb in which the Venerable Bede is
buried
(died 735 A.D.), a fine rose window, and beautiful cloisters.
They walk along the other side of the river and come to the
train station until the 3:08 train arrives, which they take to Newcastle.
They arrive in Newcastle at 3:31 p.m.
, and
Jack
goes off
to his
second
lecture
at 5:30 in King’s Hall
.
Warren
reads, walks, has a pint of beer at the Douglas, and visits the train
st
ation.
Jack’s
lecture takes place after a 4:00 p.m. tea.
Warren
later meets
Jack
and his dinner guest
W. L.
Renwick, a
professor
of English
at Newcastle.
February 25
Thursday.
After breakfast,
they walk
down to the bus terminus
in Newcastle
to
ask
about
buses
to Heddon [i.e. Heddon on the Wall, presumably hoping to see some of the remains of Hadrian's Wall], but
it doesn’t work
so
they
give
up
on
the idea.
They look at the castle again, then
try to find
Rogers, a bookseller and correspondent of
Jack’s.
This involves
seeing a good deal of Newcastle, and
they meet
Helen Munro in the street, who lives
in Newcastle.
They chat
with her.
They see the gate of the University, a bas relief called
The Call, 1914,
Eldon Place [actually this is likely the war memorial 'The Response'; not the 'Call', in Eldon Place],
then stop at the Douglas for a
beer and return to their hotel
for lunch.
Warren
reads in the afternoon,
Jack
goes to
give
his lecture,
Warren
has tea,
buys some
cigarettes,
and takes a long walk in the tower ['tower' may be a misprint for 'town'].
Warren
visits
the station bookstall, where
he purchases
a novel by E.V.L. to read
in the train tomorrow.
After
his
third and final
5:30 lecture,
Jack
dines with
the Rector, Lord E. Percy, tonight, so
Warren
dines alone.
Warren
also visits the bar at the Douglas.
As soon as
Warren
gets to bed,
Jack
comes in, full of a plan to catch an
early train to Oxford.
They arrange for an early call to start the day tomorrow.
February 26
Friday.
Warren’s
tea arrives at 6 a.m.
and then again later at the usual time.
Warren
packs, dresses, and walks to the train
station
to see
about
book
ing an earlier train that might get them to Oxford. He and
Jack
agree to take a noon train that should
get them
to Oxford at 9:40 p.m.
They take a walk to find a pastry shop to supplement the sandwiches provided by the hotel. They then walk to the Newcastle Station to await their train.
They go
to the refreshment room
at the train station for
sandwiches and beer.
The train leaves on time.
At York
they change trains for the first time
and have
sandwiches
and
tea in the
refreshment room.
They board an L.M.S. train.
Warren
finishes his book on the train, probably
Somerset Maugham’s
Strictly
Confidential.
They arrive at
New Street
in Birmingham
and have to walk to Snow Hill
because there are no taxis or buses.
They get in line at the booking office, get their tickets, and find
the
7:55 train to be on time.
They
arrive
in Oxford
at precisely
9:40
p.m.
Although they wired for a taxi, there was none waiting for them. They
walk
with their suitcases
from the station
by
way of
George Street
and the Broad.
They come to
Jack’s rooms at Magdalen College, where a supper has been laid out for
them, including a bottle of beer.
Warren
spends the night in
bed
room number 11.
F.
2 comments:
The newest book by Stapledon (if that's what's meant) would have been Darkness and the Light (1942), apparently now out of copyright in Australia and so available online in their Project Gutenberg.
There are various volumes of The Century Bible (in various editions) scanned in the Internet Archive, for example:
https://archive.org/details/centurybible09edinuoft
E.V.L. is presumably E.V. Lucas. (I know nothing about his novels, but thoroughly enjoyed Peter Yearsley's audiobook version of his Highways and Byways in Sussex for LibriVox.org)
Speaking of audiobooks, there is one of The Abolition of Man, for anyone who wants the experience of hearing it, which might be similar to attending it as a lecture series.
There are various interesting Abolition of Man links or references, here:
http://www.holytrinityutrecht.nl/christian-classics-study-group-c-s-lewis-abolition-man/
I'd be very interested to know what impressions the Lewis brothers had of the tombs of the Venerable Bede and St. Cuthbert. When I visited, I had loved Bede for years yet knew next to nothing about St. Cuthbert, and was grateful to visit the former but had an astonishing, powerful experience of the latter!
David Llewellyn Dodds
Thanks for that, David.
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