The Eric Metaxas Show - Walter Hooper (continued)
Episode Date: October 10, 2022Eric wraps up his extensive, in-depth interview with Walter Hooper in Oxford, England, for Socrates in the City. Hooper is an author, editor, and trustee of the literary estate of C.S. Lewis. ...
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Taxis show with your host, Eric Mettaxas.
I'm in Oxford, England right now, doing a special series of Socrates in the city events.
That's Socrates in the city.
And I wanted to share them with you, my radio audience.
So now let's listen.
listen in to the Socrates in the city event I did yesterday, or it may have been the day before
I'm getting confused with the jet lag, but very recently. I hope you enjoy it. Pip, Pip,
cheerio, and so on and so forth. Thank you. Welcome to Socrates in the city, Oxford Edition.
Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. I am, thank you. I cannot tell you, however,
excited I am about this, not just because we're here in Oxford, but particularly because for me
this is a dream come true. For years, I have wanted to interview Walter Hooper, and I never
wanted to interview him just once. I want to interview him in a series, Nixon, David Frost's
style, not quite, but to really get, you don't get that reference, you're all kids, to really
get into some depth, because he has such a wealth of information to share.
about his life and about C.S. Lewis and Lewis's works, there's no one who can compare.
So please, Socrates in the city, welcome for Walter Hooper.
It's in all of his fiction, this idea of embodying nobility, embodying vulgarity and baseness,
that these things are not what we say they are.
They're innate qualities that God has created a universe with these innate qualities.
of course the idea of maleness and femalness is being challenged today
as though anyone can be anything
as though there isn't even such a thing as maleness.
But the way Lewis portrays kings and queens,
they're very different in his world.
Maybe you can talk a bit about gender or that kind of thing in his books
because it seems to be so strong
and it's maybe why some people don't want to read him these days.
Well, they may not, but they're enough who do.
but I think it was natural that he called the king of the beast.
I mean, the king named the one who rules Narnia
after the king of the beast.
You can't have a platypus, you know?
But that's, I mean, the funny thing is we know that.
Most people would know that, but then you have to say, well, then, well, why?
And it's just because it's something innate that we know.
Platapus, that's very good.
That's a great contrast.
But he also, he was very, very fond of mice.
He really loved the beautiful little quadruplets.
So he said, if you may remember that scene in Battya's Strength,
where after he finished, Ransom had finished,
his tea, and the crumbs fell on the floor, the cake crumbs.
He blew a little whistle.
and these mice came out and consumed.
He said, we want to get rid of the crumbs.
The mice need food.
Why not do that?
And so remember, it's the mice who eat the ropes off Aslan
to help free him at the end.
So he gives them a very noble purpose.
And of course, one of his great characters is Reaper Cheap.
One of the greatest.
Yeah, Riebacheep is one of the greatest.
We were talking with Michael Ward the other day about
Reapacheep at the end of the dawn treader
getting into this little coracle
and rowing away nobly, beautifully, up the standing wave
and into Aslan's country.
Aslan's own country.
One of the most beautiful literary images
in the history of literature, I think.
and given to a mouse, a noble mouse named Riepeachee.
Now, Riepichiep is another one.
All these names, I could just talk for days about the names, Riepichita.
Where did he get the name Riepechip?
I think it just sounds exactly right for this noble and martial mouse, you know.
So, I mean, he must have just come up with something that sound exactly right.
Well, because Riepichip, we think of peep, you know, the way mice squeak, peep,
The only person I can think of who does the same kind of thing is, of course, Lewis's very dear friend, Tolkien.
Yeah, definitely.
Masterful.
And it also has something to do with the idea that both of them had a very deep sense of language and etymology.
The idea that Tolkien even invented a language that he would.
That's very interesting.
me that words, the roots
of words were important to them.
The names
of giants, I can't remember now, nimble
I don't remember the name,
but the giant's names, they're just perfect.
They're not forbidding.
They're friendly giants.
But I think the differences, they would
have known between
Tolkien's
names and Lewis's
names and Narnia. Narnia is
really
a special
place where you like going.
It is not as
as serious a place
as Middle Earth. No. No.
And you would not find Lewis
using anything that is
I mean as powerful
as Nausegu.
As what?
Nozgoo. You know, the flying
kings.
I mean, that just sends shivers down
your mind, especially in the
context of the story.
But Lewis is a much
a life, I mean, a
world for children too.
Yeah.
And they, you know,
they're more happy endings
though I think
one of the things that they do share
in their different stories
is that they
unwind
the story upwards.
There are many places
in the Lord
of the rings where he could have ended just by something, you know, the ring is destroyed,
and that's it, and let's all, you know, they lived happily after. But he, you know, he knows
that's not the way the world wags. So Frodo goes home, and, you know, with Sam Camdee,
and they find things much changed to them. So they have to deal with it changed. But then,
it's still a good ending.
But not the quick ending.
And Lewis is even better than anybody, I think in fact.
He destroys in front of these children who love Narnia so much.
He destroys it at the end because he knows you cannot rely on anything in this world to last.
Not even Narnia.
And so they go through the stable door into the real Narnia that lasts forever.
But it's heartbreaking.
After reading it 50 times, my heart's broken every time.
Well, that's again, just to say it over and over again,
his power as a writer, the power of his imagination, it's simply without peer.
In my understanding, my estimation,
I didn't want to ask, forget to ask, you must have known J.R.R. Tolkien.
Yes.
Can you tell us a little bit about him? He died in 73.
You came here in 63 and then in 64 for good.
Did you, any memories of him?
This is a special Oxford edition of the Eric Mataxis show.
There is more of this conversation with Professor Walter Hooper coming up next.
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You're listening Kocha Bamba.
Take you for a ride that's quite a thrill.
This crazy little trains with you, chit-chia-cha.
You're listening to a special version of the Eric Mataxis show.
I'm doing a Socrates in the city event in Oxford, England.
Let's continue my conversation with Professor Walter Hooper.
You must have known J.R.R. Tolkien.
Yes.
Can you tell us a little bit about him?
He died in 73.
You came here in 63.
and then in 64 for good.
Did you,
any memories of him
and his estimation
of Lewis,
did it change at all
in his last years?
No, I don't think so.
I think Humphrey Carpenter is wrong.
And A.N. was wrong to talk about them
becoming cold towards one another.
I saw nothing of this at all.
I mean, when I first met him, he invited me to see him, and he was living at that time here in Oxford, still in Oxford.
And he was using his garage as a study.
And when you went in, he said, you've got 30 minutes, and he put up one of the big alarm clocks in front of me.
And, you know, you could see, hear, you could hear it in the way.
the next room was tick, tick, tick.
And so you've got 30 minutes.
And so he did most of the talking himself.
And at one point, he was talking still.
He left the, he said, say where you are.
And so I stay where I went and he came and threw another door.
So there's something what he said.
But anyway, I was so worried about the clock.
And tick, tick, tick.
So finally, he was in the middle of telling me something about Lewis
when I said, it's half an hour.
He said, sit still.
I am the lord of the clock.
I'll tell you when you can go.
Then when he led me to the door, he could not have been more tender.
He held my arm and he said, I'm so sorry.
you've lost your great friend.
And I said, but you've lost one
who you knew much longer.
He said, no, what makes your case
much sadder than mine
is you were just beginning to love him.
So he said,
I've had many years, but you
are to be pitted.
Anyway, I found that after that,
he could not have been nice
than talking about Lewis.
He, one time
when I was editing,
I showed him some of the letters I was editing from Lewis to Arthur Greaves.
1929, they were, he said to Arthur Greaves,
but he and Tolkien stayed up to very, very late as he was reading some of the Middle Earth documents, you know.
So I assume this was the Lord of the Rings.
So I asked Professor Tolkien, was this the Lord of the Rings that you read?
Oh, no, no.
He said, that I had no story
had been written. I wasn't
really interested in writing stories.
I was interested
in creating a world
and so it was the language
and the genealogists
and the land that I was
interested, not stories.
But you know what our boy
Jack Lewis was.
He had to have a story
and that story, the Lord of the Rings, was written to keep him quiet.
Wow.
I think he meant it, too, you know, because our letters of his switch by the side.
But the very idea that the genesis of this juggernaut called the Lord of the Rings, L-O-T-R,
would have begun in that way.
It's extraordinary.
And what a strange thing that someone,
like Tolkien could be made in such a way
that he would desire to create a world?
What a strange thing. Most of us aren't that way,
but that led to all these other things
and to a billion-dollar industry.
Fascinating.
I gave him,
here's a telling thing about him.
In 1971, I had finished God of the Dark,
and I gave him a copy of that.
And that's the collection of essays.
A collection of essays.
God in the Dark collection of essays.
Lewis effectively defending the Christian faith.
That's right.
Anyway, Tolkien said,
Do you know,
Jack Lewis is the only friend
I've ever had
who's written more since he died
than before.
And I said, I know exactly what you mean
and exactly the same will happen to you.
He said, no it won't,
no it won't,
because I don't have that much material
and Christopher won't know what to do.
Wow, was he wrong?
He was stupendously wrong about that.
Had the Silmarillion been published before his death?
No, no.
He really worried a lot about that.
I heard him, I've got to get finished.
He really worried about that,
but I think he simply was just too old to get out.
the manuscripts and tried to do it.
But he loved Lewis
very much. And I think he would have been appalled
by what others said about this getting cold.
In fact,
his son, Father John Tolkien, told me
that he took his father up back to Louis
to see Lewis right before Lewis
died, a number of business he paid up after the kills
to see him. And I said
to John talking, do you know what they talked about?
He said, I remember they talked about Mallory's Mordaitha
and whether trees ever die.
Mallory's Mort DArthur.
That seems just what you'd imagine they would talk about
and whether trees ever die.
Not in their books, they don't.
Remind those of us who don't know who Arthur Greaves was
because you've mentioned him a number of times.
This is Lewis's boyhood friend.
They met when they were just teenagers.
They lived across the road from one another.
They built up not only friendship, but a correspondence,
which is one of the longest of all Lewis's correspondence.
It was a great pleasure at that time to have somebody
who is absolutely on your wavelength that you can correspond with.
Did he become Arthur Greaves a Christian?
He was a Christian already.
He was already.
Well, this brings me to when you mentioned, when we mentioned Tolkien,
it's not been told often enough, but what happened, Lewis had become somehow a reluctant believer in God,
but not a believer in Jesus, not a Christian by any means, but a believer in some kind of God.
And it was Tolkien specifically, who on Addison's walk behind Maudlin College right here,
who really led Lewis.
Can you tell us a bit about that?
Yes, you see, Lewis had become a theist, but then something like a year or more later.
He, one of the things that was holding him back for many years was something that happened
when he was really about 10 years old.
When he was reading the classics for the first time,
he noticed that the editors of the classics,
like Homer and the Ineim,
you know, assume that they assume that the beliefs of these ancient Greeks were wrong,
you know, but that Christianity was right.
Well, Lewis himself loved the old miss more than he like Christianity.
And so he concluded Christianity
it just happens to be the mythology that we've been brought up in
but other mythologies are in one way more interesting
like the Norse mythology he thought more interesting than Christianity
so it was still in the belief that it was a mythology
that that he believed that night that Tolkien and Hugo Dyson came to dying
Well, what they mainly showed him was, yes, it is a mythology like the others, but the others are incomplete.
They never lead anywhere.
But the thing that makes this less beautiful than the other North mythology, Greek mythology and all that, is true.
This is a case of myth becoming fact.
and he suddenly saw that.
It was a myth come true.
And because it is truth,
it cannot shine, you know,
the way Norse mythology does
or great mythology, you know,
with gods and giants of all of these wonderful things.
And, but then it's true.
And so it offers hope for the world.
This is a special,
official Oxford edition of the Eric Metaxa show. There's more of this conversation with Professor Walter Hooper coming up next.
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Welcome back.
You're listening to a special British version of the Eric Metaxus show.
I hope you're enjoying it.
Here's more of my conversation with Professor Walter Hooper.
And remember, you know, people ask me why didn't Tolkien push hard for him to become a
capitalist?
Well, so he known him a long time.
He was happy for him to become a Christian at all.
Well, most people don't know that.
What an idea that these two giants of 20th century literature would have been walking with their third friend Hugo Dyson on Addison's walk having this conversation
because it would clearly take someone of such longstanding friendship as Tolkien and really of, I mean, it goes with the friendship,
but the idea that he respected him so deeply on these issues, that it would take someone like that.
to sort of tip him over.
It still took a number of days.
I guess this was germinating in his mind.
And then suddenly in the sidecar of Warnie's motorcycle on the way to the Whipsnade Zoo,
the penny drops.
And he says, I believe Jesus was the Son of God.
I don't know if it's nine days later or something.
But the idea that it was J.R.R. Tolkien, who brought it over.
It's one of those delightful stories of history.
It's one of the few of all these kinds of stories that's not apocor.
It's absolutely true.
Well, I think those two men of all the men I've ever known and of all the inklings,
I think they still had, they were very adult men, but they had a children's heart.
They still rejoice in beautiful, real, wonderful things.
I mean, Christianity still excited them in a way it ceases to excite most adult convert.
you know, they still
carve a lot, they still saw
things with the eyes
of a child.
They could see the beauty, it's what you were saying
about myths that why, I mean
I guess it's in surprise by Joy
Lewis talks about the line
from Longfellow,
Balder the beautiful is dead
is dead and how it
just touched his heart
and he felt this yearning
for northerness for something. I mean the idea
that he was in touch with those feelings
that's not some hyper materialist rationalist.
That's somebody who's in touch with his feelings,
with his own, with his inner child, to use that cliche.
And it's why I think he was able to re-enchant people with his stories.
Because we need that.
And if the Christian faith is just syllogisms and rational theological points,
then it's a reduced Christian.
faith. And I think it's, you know, one of the arguments for a more sacramental, incarnational,
liturgical understanding of the Christian faith. I'm not saying specifically Catholic.
But it's to me part of why Lewis is so multidimensional. Because he can write on the one hand
simple apologetics, but then he can give us the other side.
the stained glass and the beauty and the statuary.
So, well, I wanted to, before we finish,
just to go back to Lewis's use of language
and how he could use words and come up with words.
You were saying earlier that in the Narnia books,
it was mainly for children.
So he wanted to be this delightful, wonderful world.
And so he didn't create anything too horrific or forbidding.
or malevolent.
I mean, the white witch is malevolent enough,
but in the space trilogy, he does.
And there are things in that hideous strength,
which are chilling.
There are things in the other two books that are chilling,
really chilling.
And I thought, that's not often talked about
how Lewis was able to create evil,
not to create evil,
but to create a semblance of evil.
And his choice,
of names in
in
in in in in
is it Peralander or out of the
sign of planet where they see the sorens
the that's out of the sound
planet but when he describes the
soren and gives it the word
sorn I've never been so frightened
I thought it's amazing
that he has the power
but even to invent the name
soren so strange
horrifying name can we
guess where he got
that from, I don't know.
Just his
imagination. Yeah. Yeah, I guess
sometimes you do that. I mean, fiffletriji
as well. What's that?
Fiffletrija is one of the three
the three
species there. It's pronounced
fiftletrich. Fiffletrigy.
Now I can die because I've always
wondered. Fiffle tree g.
Yeah, that's right.
Fiffle tree G. Are there any vowels in there?
They make, you know, useless
things. I said, what kind of useless things would you think they would make? He said, back
scratches. Lewis said this. So you heard Lewis pronounced the word fitful treat. There you have it,
the horse's mouth. That's, that is amazing. And then the mal-eldil, I mean, the, well, all of that,
his ability to imagine these levels of being.
And there is something medieval Catholic about it,
this idea that it's not just us and Jesus.
No, there are these intermediaries,
there are angels, there are thrones and dominions.
He creates that in the world, specifically of perilandra.
This is a special Oxford edition of the Eric Mataxis show.
There is more of this conversation with Professor Walter Hooper coming up next.
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This is the Eric Mataxis show.
Today you're hearing a special Socrates
in the city version of the show
drawn from a number of events
that I hosted in Oxford, England.
Here's more of my conversation
with Professor Walter Hooper.
I can't think of anyone else,
literally anyone who's done anything like that.
Can you think of anyone who moves in those directions?
I don't think so.
I think what Lewis did is he said,
himself, he said, what I tried to do
in my three
cosmic trilogy, the interplanet restorers,
was to pull the rug out from under all of the
former writers who, when they get
to a foreign planet, you always
find that we are the good people and
everybody else on that planet are monsters.
But in his case, he reversed it.
We really turn out to be sort of the monsters because they are planets filled with unfallen being.
He liked the idea of trying to create an unfallen being.
He knew it was very, very difficult.
But, I mean, nowhere did he work harder than the Tenidreau, the Lady of Perel,
to try to make her interesting but unfallum.
It's an accomplishment absolutely unparalleled in literature.
I cannot think.
This is why it seems to me to say that Lewis doesn't get his due is a great understatement.
I mean, he has done some things to create.
I mean, there are a number of literary images and images that he creates that are peerless.
The idea of the floating islands to do that plausibly, the idea of creating these characters,
the sorens, the fifteufel trigae.
Fifthal trige.
Guzinhite.
just masterful, absolutely masterful.
And yet, it goes so far beyond that.
He's doing things to create an unfallen world
and to try to pull that off in a way that doesn't make them sound boring.
I mean, even Dante couldn't make the Paradiso interesting
or a tenth as interesting as the inferno.
It's very difficult to portray goodness
in a way that's interesting.
The idea that Lewis could begin to pull it off
puts him in the first rank.
I've never heard of anything like it,
and I think the world should read Perilandra,
as I say, alongside the greatest works in the canon.
What he was aware,
but it's very hard to create good characters.
And if he discusses this in his preface to Paradise Laws,
why is it so difficult to create good characters?
Simply because the bad characters survive in us.
All we have to do to create a bad character,
he said, is let loose from our own souls and bodies
all the itching and horrible thoughts that we are,
the in us waiting, you know, just to get out.
But to be, to create better characters,
people who are really good,
we have to be good ourselves, you know,
because you can't express much goodness
unless you have a very good idea of it
or unless you are yourself good, you know.
But anyway, Lewis himself,
delighted in good,
and he was able to create characters
who really were good,
and interesting as well.
Well, it's
maybe as I get sanctified,
I'll appreciate the Paradiso more.
But it is interesting that Paradise Lost,
everyone says,
and it becomes a hackneyed,
kind of apocryphal,
self-fulfilling half-truth,
that Satan is the romantic hero
and the compelling figure of Paradise Lost.
it over and over and over again. I think people say it because they sort of want it to be true.
There's a truth there. But it shows that, you know, Milton, I don't think, had the imaginative
power, you know, the horse power that Lewis had. It is much more difficult to do that.
And anyway, we just got a few more moments. The screw tape letters.
where do you
you said
in our previous session
that Lewis
didn't conceive of this as a book
or at least he didn't write it as a book
he wrote it as a series of letters to be published
in the
starts with the C
it was the Guardian
oh the Guardian
not the newspaper
this is our church magazine
okay
where did this idea come from
Was it his idea?
Well, no, he was actually in church.
He writes to Warnie in 1941 about being in church and headed to quarry.
When there occurred to him the idea of a devil writing letters about temptation.
And he said, what a pity that I thought of it in church.
But anyway, he did.
And so once he thought of it,
It just poured out.
And, you know, over the years, I've seen many, many people have written new screw tape letters, so to speak.
And, you know, they've all been found really pretty dull.
They try to be very, very up-the-day.
But Lewis, in the end, when you read that, you go back to the real screw-taped letters,
and you find that what makes them up to date
is that they're always universal truths
which he's talking about, like jealousy.
And worries, you know, the sort of things like in humility.
And he introduces certain things which are very humorous too
like the lady who came the tea who was not a glutton
in the usual sense.
but a glutton of delicacy.
And I remember Lewis's sort of sister,
Lady Dunbar, saying,
when we saw that on stage,
she said, oh, I remember the woman who came to tea
and said, oh, no, oh, no, that's far too much.
All I want is just a tiny wee bit of taste.
No, that's far too much butter.
It's just a little tiny bit of it.
And Maureen said, she gave us
more trouble than if she'd eaten six large cakes.
This is a special Oxford edition of the Eric Metaxus show.
There is more of this conversation with Professor Walter Hooper coming up next.
You're listening to a special Socrates in the City edition of the Eric Metaxus show from Oxford, England.
Let's continue my conversation with Professor Walter Hooper.
When I was thinking about writing a contemporary version of the Scrooge.
tape letters, I was, I realized that, of course, I can't call it screw tape or something,
so I should come up with something which is maybe an homage, you know, a tip of the hat.
But that is in the same spirit.
And I was maybe deconstructing the word screw tape and trying to figure out what screw tape.
Why is that so outrageously apt?
It's perfect.
Screw tape.
What is that?
Well, there are two syllables, both of which are really quite ugly to think about.
Yeah. But you think, again, why ugly? Why do we say they're ugly? They are. But what is it about those words? There's something innate about them. I came up with this. I don't know if anyone's come up with this. As I was deconstructing wormwood and screw tape tape and thinking about these words, I realized that we think of a tapeworm and a wood screw.
Yes.
there's nothing more horrific than a tapeworm
and a wood screw
that's obviously just a screw
but I thought wormwood screw tape
the idea that they could be broken apart
into tape worm
he enjoyed I think when he was writing it
but he said afterwards
he said almost by the time I got to
then I was almost suffocated by
you know the story itself
about the devils you know
He said, you know, I mean, it's not something you really enjoy thinking about, you know, putting everything in reverse.
So what actually lifted his spirits was occasionally, you see, they talk about the enemy, that's God.
And Scoot tape, for instance, points out to Wormwood, don't be foolish, he said, we are not the ones.
who create pleasures, the enemy is the only one who can create a pleasure. What we do is
a battle is to turn it around, twist it, so it ceases to be a pleasure. But we can't create
anything good. He does that. You've done so much over the course of now 50 years. How do you want
to be remembered? A few years ago, I went to Radaslava in the
Slovakia to the Seas Lewis High School. I stayed there for several days. I gave some talks,
but then they like to ask questions. And the last question put to me was by a young girl of about
17, something like that. She said, how does it feel to have lived a whole life under the shadow of
someone else? I said, wonderful.
I wish I could do it again and again and again.
I think I've been the most fortunate man on earth without writing anything interesting myself.
All I push forward is my apostolip is to push C.S. Lewis, who wrote all the things that I love.
And I've been allowed to just keep on celebrating his works and bringing out more and more of them as I find him.
So, yes, I've lived under his shadow.
What a shadow, though.
I love that shadow.
I am beyond grateful.
Cannot express my gratitude for this on so many levels.
Thank you for sharing yourself so freely and tremendously generously generously.
We see it.
We appreciate it.
So, folks, maybe a final, extremely warm round.
Coming to Socrates in the City, Oxford Edition.
Folks, you've been listening to a special Socrates in the City event from Oxford, England.
And it's my privilege to share these events, these conversations with you, my radio audience.
I hope you've been enjoying them.
This is a special English version of the Eric Metaxus show.
