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Charles Williams - Letters to Lalage: The Letters of Charles Williams to Lois Lang-Sims

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Letters to Lalage: The Letters of Charles Williams to Lois Lang-Sims: summary, description and annotation

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The short-lived but remarkable correspondence presented in Letters to Lalage took place toward the end of Charles Williams life. Louis Lang-Sims was not the first young woman to seek his help or to fall beneath his spell. When she wrote to him in September 1943 L. Williams had already had numerous admirers, pupils, and disciples who looked to him for counsel, for advice, and most especially, for encouragement. His affinity with Louis Lang-Sims was not surprising. Some thirty years younger than he was, she was in due course herself to become a forceful and individual writer whose literary output, though relatively small, was almost as varied as Williams own. In Lois Lang-Sims writings, as in those of Charles Williams, a variety of literary forms embody a singleness of imaginative vision. But at the time of their first meeting she was only twenty-six years old and, according to her autobiographical a Time to be Born, in a state of great mental and emotional confusion. Now, nearly fifty years later, she presents the letters Williams wrote to her, together with her own comments on a relationship that was to come to such an abrupt, and in some respects disturbing, end. The intense demands of Williams mental and imaginative life did not permit him to be readily or relaxingly gregarious, though in whatever company he happened to be, for example as part of the Inklings group at Oxford, he was a powerful presence. Letters to Lalage enables us to study his involvement in one particular relationship with one particular person. As such they form an invaluable supplement to the more general accounts of Williams life supplied by his biographers. As a writer Williams blends to a remarkable degree those seemingly contradictory characteristics of impersonality and mannered idiosyncrasy which were features of his daily bearing. We see here something of the hypnotic quality of Charles Williams character and may obtain from it a deep if glancing insight into his extremely vulnerable humanity. At times a painful document, Letters to Lalage is of the greatest value in illuminating some of the more troubled aspects of a Christian writer and teacher who, more convincingly than most, could evoke the nature of joy--and who could induce joy in other people, however precariously he may have been aware of it himself. Most especially this book gives one an insight into the price Charles Williams paid (and unwittingly exacted) for his particular gifts and vision.

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title Letters to Lalage The Letters of Charles Williams to Lois - photo 1

title:Letters to Lalage : The Letters of Charles Williams to Lois Lang-Sims
author:Williams, Charles.; Lang-Sims, Lois.; Cavaliero, Glen
publisher:Kent State University Press
isbn10 | asin:0873383982
print isbn13:9780873383981
ebook isbn13:9780585292052
language:English
subjectWilliams, Charles,--1886-1945--Correspondence, Authors, English--20th century--Correspondence, Lang-Sims, Lois--Correspondence.
publication date:1989
lcc:PR6045.I5Z487 1989eb
ddc:828/.91209
subject:Williams, Charles,--1886-1945--Correspondence, Authors, English--20th century--Correspondence, Lang-Sims, Lois--Correspondence.
Page iii
Letters to Lalage
The Letters of Charles Williams to Lois Lang-Sims
with Commentary by Lois Lang-Sims
Introduction and Notes by Glen Cavaliero
Page iv 1989 by The Kent State University Press Kent Ohio 44242 All - photo 2
Page iv
1989 by The Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio 44242
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 89-33241
ISBN 0-87338-398-2
Manufactured in the United States of America
The originals of the Lois Lang-Sims letters are part of the Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois, USA. Researchers may consult them there.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Williams, Charles, 18861945.
Letters to Lalage : the letters of Charles Williams to Lois Lang-Sims / with
commentary by Lois Lang-Sims ; introduction and notes by Glen Cavaliero.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-87338-398-2 (alk. paper Picture 3 )
1. Williams, Charles, 18861945Correspondence. 2. Authors,
English20th centuryCorrespondence. 3. Lang-Sims, Lois
Correspondence. I. Lang-Sims, Lois. II. Cavaliero, Glen, 1927
III. Title.
PR6045.15Z487 1989
828'.91209dc20
[B] 89-33241
CIP
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication data are available.
Page v
To Joan Wallis
in memory of Charles
and in gratitude for
forty years of mutual
affection and respect
Page vii
Contents
Introduction
1
The Letters with Commentary
15
Notes
87

Page viii
A Note on the Text
Charles Williams used some unusual punctuation in his letters. The marks ".." and "..." are reproduced as they appear in the original letters and do not represent any omission from the text. Quotation marks are reproduced as used in the originals as well.
Page 1
Introduction
The short-lived but remarkable correspondence presented in the following pages took place toward the end of Charles Williams' life. He was at this time lodging in Oxford, where the London branch of the University Press had taken up residence on the outbreak of the Second World War. He acted for them as an editor and literary adviser, and it was the first time he had worked outside the capital city which had provided him with so much inspiration. Williams was a man of exceptional intellectual energy, for in addition to his work at the Press and as a teacher of evening classes in English literature he was a prolific author. By the time these letters were written he had published over thirty books in a number of different fields.
Lois Lang-Sims was not the first young woman to seek his help or to fall beneath his spell. When she wrote to him in September 1943 Williams already had numerous admirers, pupils, and disciples who looked to him for counsel, for advice and, most especially, for encouragement. He possessed enormous personal magnetism, not least because his appearance and behaviour could be strange and disconcerting. But this power to attract people was balanced by a sharp, incisive intellect, the rhapsodic utterance of his lectures and personal correspondence being matched by a consistency of thought that was embodied in his novels, poems, plays, biographies, and books of literary criticism and theology. Above all, his personal and professional activities were informed by a profound awareness of the metaphysical dimension in which they had their being.
In this respect his affinity with Lois Lang-Sims was not surprising. Some thirty years younger than he was, she was in due course herself to
Page 2
become a forceful and individual writer whose literary output, though relatively small, was almost as varied as Williams' own. Her novel, The Contrite Heart (1968), has a hallucinatory, haunting quality; it takes the form of a nineteenth-century English pastoral, with a piercing sense of good and evil reminiscent in places of the novels of another writer with an unfashionable consciousness of unseen forces, Phyllis Paul. In a different genre, the descriptive history Canterbury Cathedral (1979) is, like Williams' The Descent of the Dove, as much concerned with the metaphysical dimension of its subject matter as with chronological progression. Her first book, The Presence of Tibet (1963), is a plea for that country's religious culture in the context of its takeover by the forces of Communist China; while A Time to be Born (1971) and Flower in a Teacup (1973) are searching exercises in self-analytical autobiography, the former containing a brief but trenchant account of the author's friendship with Charles Williams. Still more indebted to him is her exposition of esoteric Christianity, The Christian Mystery (1980). This is a book so alien to contemporary theological fashion as to have slipped out of sight almost unnoticed; yet it remains one which any admirer of Williams would find congenial, for it definitively refutes the literal-mindedness against which he himself so frequently protested. In Lois Lang-Sims' writings, as in those of Charles Williams, a variety of literary forms embody a singleness of imaginative vision. But at the time of their first meeting she was only twenty-six years old and, according to
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