Books

Why There Are Seven Chronicles of Narnia

A British scholar discovers the hidden design of C.S. Lewis’ perennially popular series.

Christianity Today April 1, 2003

In February, Michael Ward was reading Lewis’ poem, “The Planets,” published in 1935. A former president of the Oxford University C.S. Lewis Society, Ward lived in Lewis’ home, The Kilns, for three years as curator/warden. Now living in Cambridge and working on his doctorate from St. Andrews University—with a dissertation on Lewis—while preparing for the Anglican priesthood, he knows Lewis’ work inside-out. And as he read that poem, he noticed something that no previous reader had seen.

As Ward explains in an account of his discovery published today in the Times Literary Supplement, he was reading the section of “The Planets” that deals with Jove, or Jupiter, when he was struck by its resonance with The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. The poem speaks of “winter passed / And guilt forgiven,” and goes on to give what is, Ward says, “essentially a plot summary” of the first book in the Narnia Chronicles.

By the medieval reckoning, there were seven “planets”: Jupiter, Mars, the Sun, the Moon, Mercury, Venus, and Saturn. Was it possible, Ward wondered, that each of the seven Narnia books was written under the sign of a different planet? Looking closely at the Narnia Chronicles side-by-side with Lewis’ 1935 poem, and other of his writings that touch on the planets, especially his posthumously published book, The Discarded Image, a retrieval of the medieval worldview, Ward found that indeed there is such a correspondence: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe corresponds to Jupiter, Prince Caspian to Mars, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader to the Sun, The Silver Chair to the Moon, The Horse and His Boy to Mercury, The Magician’s Nephew to Venus, and The Last Battle to Saturn.

Each planet, in crude summary of the medieval understanding, represents a certain set of linked emotions and images, a temper, a disposition, along the spectrum. And these are reflected, Ward found, in the Narnia books, both in the big arc of each story and in countless fine touches throughout each volume.

We can imagine the reaction of the sort of Christians who have gone into a frenzy over Harry Potter. Astrology! But what Ward has discovered is entirely consistent with Lewis’ Christian humanism. The imaginative worldview embodied in the medieval lore of the planets speaks to something fundamental in our experience; it is not to be rejected but rather baptized, made harmonious with the underlying Christian vision that governs Narnia.

Ward’s discovery will send fellow-scholars and countless ordinary readers back to the books to evaluate the evidence for themselves. (Look for a piece by Ward in a forthcoming issue of Christianity Today sister publication Books & Culture.) In the long term, by situating the Narnia Chronicles in the context of Lewis’ lifetime fascination with the planets and showing the intricate patterning of the series, Ward will have laid to rest what he rightly calls A.N. Wilson’s “absurd suggestion that Lewis turned to children’s fiction as a retreat from apologetics after his clash with Elizabeth Anscombe at the Socratic Club.” And he will have added yet another layer of appreciation for books that have delighted generations of children and their parents.

John Wilson is the editor of Books & Culture.

Copyright © 2003 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

Previous Christianity Today articles on C.S. Lewis include:

The Dour Analyst and the Joyous Christian | In the realm of mental balance and personal peace, Sigmund Freud had nothing on C.S. Lewis. (April 19, 2002)

Two Cultural Giants | Both Sigmund Freud and C.S. Lewis were emotionally wounded as boys and struggled with depression as men. But a worldview can make a tremendous difference. An interview with Armand Nicholi Jr. (April 19, 2002)

Wisdom in a Time of War | What Oswald Chambers and C.S. Lewis teach us about living through the long battle with terrorism. (Jan. 4, 2002)

Forget ‘Normal’ | C.S. Lewis’s warning against panic during World War II resonates in our new crisis. (Oct. 19, 2001)

Aslan Is Still on the Move | There’s too little evidence to prove that anyone is ‘de-Christianizing’ C.S. Lewis. (July 31, 2001)

Mere Marketing? | Publisher, estate under fire for handling of C.S. Lewis’s identity. (July 31, 2001)

The War for Narnia Continues | Charles Colson, Andrew Greeley, Frederica Mathewes-Green, and Lauren Winner join the battle—and Doug Gresham comes out to reply. (June 20, 2001)

Narnia Will Return In New Books | As all of the Inklings’ publishers await record interest, HarperCollins seeks to “fill in the gaps” beyond the wardrobe. (May 15, 2001)

Myth Matters | C. S. Lewis bequeathed us a method and a language for sharing the gospel with the modern and postmodern world. (April 17, 2001)

Walking Where Lewis Walked | My reluctant entry into the world of pilgrimage. (Feb. 7, 2000)

Still Surprised by Lewis | Why this nonevangelical Oxford don has become our patron saint” (Sept. 7, 1998)

Jack Is Back | The search for the historical Lewis (Feb. 3, 1997)

Christianity Today sister publication Books & Culture recently looked at C. S. Lewis among the postmodernists.

Christian History, another Christianity Today sister publication, profiled Lewis for its issue on “The 10 Most Influential Christians of the Twentieth Century.”

If it’s Lewis you’re interested in, Into the Wardrobe should fill your every desire.

Beliefnet also has a series of Lewis-centric articles, including a C.S. Lewis essay contest.

The Discovery Institute’s C.S. Lewis and Public Life site is another wonderful resource of papers about and by Lewis.

Still hungry for more? You’ll probably never have the time to read everything linked at the C.S. Lewis Mega-Links page.

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