View Full Version : How Did He Die?
Lucy Fan
05-10-2008, 05:05 PM
I don't think I ever found out. I wish he was alive though. I'd love to sit on the floor and listen to him read one of his books. :)
Miss.SunFlower
05-10-2008, 05:40 PM
I think it was a number of sickness'. I remember one was a heart attack but I don't think tat killed him.
Lucy Fan
05-10-2008, 05:42 PM
I think it was a number of sickness'. I remember one was a heart attack but I don't think tat killed him.
Oh . Poor guy. :( I wish he was alive today.
Miss.SunFlower
05-10-2008, 05:53 PM
yeah that would be pretty amazing. The man was a genius. I've done many projects and biography's on him for school.
PrinceOfTheWest
05-10-2008, 06:13 PM
Lewis technically died of pneumonia, but it was more an overall breakdown of his health. He'd been rather sickly all his life, and was a smoker (most men were at that time), and had had heart troubles. He'd also been severely weakened by caring for his wife Joy.
Trivia: his death would have garnered more attention but for the fact that it occurred on Nov 22, 1963 - the day John Kennedy was shot.
tolkienlewisfan
05-10-2008, 06:38 PM
His health started going downhill after Joy died.
Eärendil the Mariner
05-10-2008, 07:50 PM
Trivia: his death would have garnered more attention but for the fact that it occurred on Nov 22, 1963 - the day John Kennedy was shot.
I always thought the date of his death seemed familiar, like something else important happened that day....
BarbarianKing
05-10-2008, 09:38 PM
Lewis technically died of pneumonia, but it was more an overall breakdown of his health. He'd been rather sickly all his life, and was a smoker (most men were at that time), and had had heart troubles. He'd also been severely weakened by caring for his wife Joy.
Trivia: his death would have garnered more attention but for the fact that it occurred on Nov 22, 1963 - the day John Kennedy was shot.
In a sense I think it was better that another event happened on this day. I think he would've disliked it if people began elevating him to a "hero" status or giving him honors in anyway. He spoke of the need to be humble and of the dangers of the "greatest sin" which was pride. I think he is glad that his death was kept "low profile" so to speak.
Elendil
05-14-2008, 05:56 AM
In a sense I think it was better that another event happened on this day. I think he would've disliked it if people began elevating him to a "hero" status or giving him honors in anyway. He spoke of the need to be humble and of the dangers of the "greatest sin" which was pride. I think he is glad that his death was kept "low profile" so to speak.
yeah, good point
PrinceOfTheWest
05-14-2008, 06:24 AM
Keep in mind that all those points about self-exultation and the danger of pride are only an issue for those of us still here on earth. Lewis was hardly in danger of being distracted by earthly glory after his death - his attention was fixed on things greater than any offered here. But for all that, I think that things played out as God intended. Perhaps if his death had been more noted, his works would have received a flare-up of interest as a "media event", and then died down. As it was, his effect on the world has been slow but growing - a "stealth" attack on the idolatry of the West.
inkspot
05-14-2008, 10:58 AM
I wish he were still alive, too. As a kid, I didn't think about it so much, but when I read the Space Trilogy I was in college, and I felt like I wanted to ring him up on the phone and discuss it; it seemed like he would have really had interesting stuff to tell me...of course, he was a bit of a grump and might not have wanted me ringing him up, even if he had been alive!
The humanist author Alduous Huxley also died on that day JFK and CSL died, and Lewis expert Peter Creeft (Kreeft?! I forget) has written a play about their simultaneous arrival in the afterlife which is quite insightful about the views of all three, as they discuss what happened to them and where they might be.
Seems like they are in utter darkness for most of the play as they discuss their lives and philosophies, then comes a moment when CS Lewis calls out for the others to look at the bright, beautiful light which is dawning -- the corrupted Catholic JFK says he believes he can see some sort of light barely flickering in the shadows, but sadly, atheist Huxley can see nothing but the darkness...
It reminds you of the dwarfs at the end of TLB who cannot see they are in Aslan's country, so it's a nice tribute to Lewis.
PrinceOfTheWest
05-14-2008, 11:00 AM
Did Kreeft really write such a play? I'll have to look that up!
Miss Freckles
05-14-2008, 12:35 PM
there is some detail on his death in "the inklings" by humphrey somebody.
he kinda just broke together, and his brother warnie found him.
i really wanna meet him one day :-) i think a lot of people do.
inkspot
05-14-2008, 01:59 PM
Did Kreeft really write such a play? I'll have to look that up!
I don't know that it was meant for performance, because, as I remember it, most of it happens in the dark. It is called "Between Heaven and Hell." It was really very interesting and insightful. Also, when I said "corrupted Catholic" above, I meant that JFK in this version of the play had sort of forgotten/neglected his faith, not that the faith itself is corrupt; clearly had the character in the play been more in tune with his faith, he would have seen, as Jack did, the wonderful light of Christ dawning -- but even with such familiarity with his faith as he had, he saw something and with time, would see more.
Yah, Miss Freckles, I was forgetting that I would be able to meet him some day! Also, I pray to him sometimes, that he would get Jesus to help me with my writing ... so maybe he already knows me a little.
BarbarianKing
05-14-2008, 11:14 PM
Keep in mind that all those points about self-exultation and the danger of pride are only an issue for those of us still here on earth. Lewis was hardly in danger of being distracted by earthly glory after his death - his attention was fixed on things greater than any offered here. But for all that, I think that things played out as God intended. Perhaps if his death had been more noted, his works would have received a flare-up of interest as a "media event", and then died down. As it was, his effect on the world has been slow but growing - a "stealth" attack on the idolatry of the West.
Good point. I agree with you.
Maxie_Baby<3
05-20-2008, 10:23 PM
what are you guys talking about??? C.S. Lewis isnt dead, he is in Narnia :)
inkspot
05-21-2008, 12:26 PM
what are you guys talking about??? C.S. Lewis isnt dead, he is in Narnia :)
Welcome, Maxie! I didn't see you post before. And you are right.
:)
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