Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Planet Narnia

This particular post may go down in history as a case study in “why one should not attempt to write sensible things while sick.” But then again, it may not, so we shall see how it turns out.

Let it be known in advance that virtually nothing I am about to say is original to me. All thoughts were called from Matthew Ward’s article in Touchstone entitled, “Narnia’s Secret: The Seven Heavens of the Chronicles Revealed.” If you want to read more by him, I suggest his book, Planet Narnia.

In his article, Ward is attempting to explain a question that has been puzzling Lewis critics for years—what is the central theme that ties all the Chronicles together? Lewis was a powerful and organized writer, more he was a medievalist, all things tie together in a universal system. Yet, he drew from all sorts of classical traditions and myths: Father Christmas, a snow queen, E. Nesbit, classical mythology, even a few Norse symbols. Critics have argued for several binding themes: an analysis of the seven deadly sins, the seven Roman Catholic sacraments, and a miniaturized version of the Faerie Queen. None of them have been particularly convincing. Lewis himself said that the entire series was about Christ –an assertion that has led to more than a little confusion. Ward argues for a different interpretation—that the theme that binds all seven books together is nothing more than and extension of the gods of the seven heavens of medieval cosmology.

“Wait,” one might ask, “how does a set of pagan gods show Christ?” Well, that gets a little complicated. One of the major extension of Lewis’ writing is the essentialness of God—his overlookability. To Lewis, Christ is in all things; Christ is the obvious center of the entire world, the element that allows us to enjoy anything, to think about God, to see any beauty. Christ is, in fact, so utterly obvious that we are oblivious to his presence. Add to this, his theory of what made excellent literature was not its characters or stories, but how successfully it wove its atmosphere. An essential part of this atmosphere, to him, was a hidden element, a kappa stone that binds the entire work together. This hidden element may be nothing, but it is everything to the work. Finally, Lewis wrote a treatise on how to convey Christianity in literature, one of the methods he argued for was a pattern of transferred classicism, in which Christ is portrayed in the manner of a mere god of classical tradition. Christ is God, above all gods, but can also be portrayed within the pattern of the classical deities. Hopefully, that was not excessively tangential.

Ward presents quite a compelling picture for viewing each of the Chronicles as manifesting a specific planetary deity. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe portrays Jupiter, or Jove. Prince Caspian personifies Mars, and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader is the Sun. The Silver Chair shows the Moon, while Horse and His Boy shows Mercury. Finally, the prequel and the sequel, The Magician’s Nephew and The Last Battle display Venus and Saturn respectively.

First, Jove. Jove is the king of all gods and from his name comes the English word “jovial.” He is a merry master of all. In The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, the line of Narnian kings is established once and for all. “Once a king or queen in Narnia, always a King or Queen of Narnia. Those that take the thrones reign eternally. Jupiter is also the god that punishes winter. Jove is the one that beats it back to its cage and brings the joy of spring. The way this motif manifests in the books should be fairly obvious.
There is also the concept of death and blood for redemption—namely Aslan’s death for Edmund. Jupiter is called “the bleeding planet” because winter and darkness are exiled through Jove’s giving of his own blood. Through his sacrifice, the world is redeemed. In the Arthurian cycle, Jove gave of his body to defend Pellets. It is in this spirit if Joviality that Lewis brings in Father Christmas, the sacrificial death of Aslan, and even Peter’s exclamation, “By Jove!” when he first enters Narnia.

Don’t worry, gentle reader, all seven won’t take quite that long. In Prince Caspian the story is about a rightful king taking his take back his kingdom by force—appropriately, Mars is the god of war. Also, Mars is Mars Silvanus the god of the woods, maybe even the woods that the children both appeared from and spent most of the book travelling through. Arboreal imagery appears throughout the novel. Silvans, a beast that appear in no other book, appear at the final battle, Miraz frets over his martial o policy, Reepicheep is the most martial of all creatures, and the object that proves that children are in Narnia? A knight.

Voyage of the Darn Treader is a quest towards the rising run: Aslan appears out of a sun to Lucy, Aslan as an albatross flies out of a sunbeam. God, the metal of the sun, appears throughout the story--a man turned into gold and Eustace trapped by a gold armband. Even the dying dragons are taken from Apollo, the sun god, and lizard slayer.

Fittingly, the book that shows the Moon follows on the heels of the book on the Sun. In The Silver Chair, Aslan only appears in his own country, on earth he can only be known by signs and dreams, automatically making the night mistress of the day for a time. The moon in Latin is luna root of our word “lunatic.” Prince Rilian is a lunatic who must be freed from silver chair—silver being the metal of the moon. Even the names of the horses, Coalblack and Snowflake, are drawn from the names of the horses that pull the Moon’s chariot in Spenser’s Faerie Queen. Even more complicated, the whole book portrays the medieval model of the great divide between the realm of certainty and the realm of confusion, a divide shown in their travels in the overland and the underworld.

The Horse and His Boy is Mercury, the messenger of the gods. It concerns a tale of two twins, “meeting selves, same but sundered.” Twins who is recognizable as Castor and Pollux, the Horseman and the Boxer of Homer’s Iliad and The Twins, a constellation in the house of Mercury. Lewis even takes the time to let us know that the helmet of one of the Narnian lord’s helmet is marked with the sign Mercury, a metal helmet with wings on either side.

As the only lady of the deific constellation, Venus is the goddess over the book of life, The Magician’s Nephew. The book speaks of laughter and joy in the creation of the world and the fun of “The First Joke.” Motherhood, as Digory fights to save his mother, and Helen is the first queen, and in some ways, the mother of Narnia. Even her name, Helen, harkens back to Helen of Troy, whose troubles began with Venus. Warmth and beauty are in the Wood Between the Worlds and the new-born Narnia. Also, the apples that give life hearken back to the Apple of Hesperides. More ominously, Jadis is the anti-Venus, she is in the model of Ishtar, a goddess who reigned by a powerful use of her sex and pride. Charn in described as “the great city” an allusion to Nineveh, the stronghold of Ishtar’s worship.

Finally, there is The Last Battle and if you are still reading, my hat is off to you. The Last Battle is ruled by Saturn, the god of ill-chance, treachery, and death. Aslan does not appear until all the main characters are dead. Here, God is portrayed as the God who is seen most clearly in abandonment and loss. In this story, Father Time, who was originally based on Saturn, is the great leveler. In this book, loyalty costs life, and betrayal brings madness. In this book, righteousness bears the ultimate price.

Whether it is a true analysis or not, I do not know, I am re-reading the series to find out. But in any case, it fits the medieval pattern that C.S. Lewis both knew, and was known to respect. It is in any case, very interesting and illuminating.

7 comments:

  1. Has it ever occurred to you how often things come by sevens in the medieval world? Besides the seven heavens and the seven deadly sins that you mention, there are also the seven virtues, the seven liberal arts, and the seven mechanical arts.

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  2. Virtues and sins I know, but what are the mechanical arts?

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  3. It's an interesting hypothesis. One of my classmates has met the author, and apparently Planet Narnia is making waves (and getting some positive feedback) in scholarly circles.

    Arguments for The Horse and His Boy as Mercury and The Magician's Nephew as Venus seem a bit strained, to me. But I haven't read the book.

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  4. Oh! I am reminded of why I like the medieval model so much--I love how things connect together. Did you see my senior testimony?

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  5. According to Hugh of St. Victor, the seven mechanical arts are: fabric-making, armament, commerce, agriculture, hunting, medicine, and theatrics. I don't know much more than that - if I get to his Didascalion this summer, maybe I'll know more about it.

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  6. Jonathan: I still need to read the book, this was gleaned from an article. The Mercury connections I buy, just the nature (and nicknames) of the boys seems a little too coincidental, also the constant theme of travelling (are there any stationary characters?! Everyone is always rushing somewhere). Venus....I didn't buy until I re-read it. The whole book seems more "feminine" than the rest of the series. If you make interested noises I shall expound more. :-)

    Hobbit: You need to send me your Senior testimony. :)

    Amata: I need to find research on the 7 mechanical arts...I am now all manner of curious. Expound?

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  7. I agree that the feminine flavor runs through the Magician's Nephew. The connection could explain why the villain is an evil woman (instead of a man or animal or something else). With that device, Lewis can comment on perverse femininity while playing with the vibrancy and nurturing power of true womanhood. The book also reminds me of the vibrancy of life in Perelandra and the amazing ladies of That Hideous Strength. With Lewis's clear bent toward planets and gods in the Space Trilogy, the thesis of Planet Narnia seems even more fitting.

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