That Hideous Strength 2: Development

Previous Posts:

Introduction

Part One: Setup

Almost all the main characters have been introduced and the potential conflicts are in place.  Now development: that phase of a novel that builds tension and raises the stakes.  All the major plot elements will be rounded up and herded in one direction, although the reader should feel that options are still open.  In that sense, a novel is like a conspiracy theory: it looks like the best conclusion from the facts, but the facts have been carefully selected.  Let’s look at how Lewis chooses incident to build tension and invest the reader in the story.  (I thought this post might be shorter than the last one, but oh well . . . .)  If you’re reading along, feel free to chime in with comments or questions.

CHAPTER FIVE: ELASTICITY

5.1 The Institute’s SOP is to keep underlings off-balance: this is what Wither calls flexibility and Miss Hardcastle calls elasticity.  Her advice to Mark is to get with the program, and understanding will come in time.  This should be a clue to Mark that the aims of the N.I.C.E. are more expansive than mere social reform, but of course it isn’t. ~ Note Miss Hardcastle’s cynical observation that “it’s the educated reader who can be gulled.”  What do you think? And what does that say about what’s commonly understood as “education”? ~ The paragraph beginning with, The confidential tone, solidifies what we already know about Mark’s main motivation.  In fact, his motivation is clearer than any other character’s, and it’s worth a closer look:

In an address called “The Inner Ring” (1944) Lewis expanded on the theme: “I don’t believe that the economic motive and the erotic motive account for everything that goes on in what we moralists call the World.  Even if you add Ambition I think the picture is still incomplete. . .”  He identified this missing factor as “the lust for the esoteric, the longing to be inside . . . [T]his desire is one of the great permanent mainsprings of human action.”  He experienced it, and so have I.  Every cult and every heresy springs from it.  It goes way back–all the way back.  When Eve’s hand finally reached out for the forbidden fruit, it was a lust for forbidden knowledge that drove her.  Mark is not precisely aware that the knowledge is forbidden, only that it’s presently denied to him.  In order to acquire it, he’ll have to stretch his principles, such as they are—and that’s where the real “elasticity” comes in.

5.2 Does he seem like a rat in a maze?  Or a mouse between a cat’s paws?  I almost feel sorry for him, especially when reading Curry’s letter.  Compare Curry’s praise of David Laird with the doubts expressed in 4.7—is he prevaricating or has he convinced himself that this mediocre scholar is really the best man for the position?  “He got a third” (Mark’s letter) refers to the lowest-degree university diploma. ~ “Nasty, poor, brutish, and short” is a slightly misquoted description of primitive man  from Thomas Hobbe’s Leviathan (1651).

5.3 Unlike Mark, Jane is defined more by what she doesn’t want than by what she wants (making her a weaker, i.e. less  memorable character, in the opinion of some critics).  What she doesn’t want is to be messed with; she’s defensive about her self-image as an independent modern woman.  Though sincerely drawn to the Dennistons, they make her angry in this conversation . . . and what else? ~ The Sura they mention is probably based on an actual Indian mystic, Sadhu Sundar Singh, who converted to Christianity in 1904 and lived as an itinerant evangelist until his disappearance in Tibet. ~ You may know Pendragon as King Arthur’s family name, but its earliest origin is in Wales, where it means Chief or Head (head dragon, actually).  According to legend, Merlin bestowed it as a surname on Arthur’s father. ~ In the paragraph beginning, You must see it from Mrs. Studdock’s point of view, notice how Arthur Denniston echoes Miss Hardcastle’s advice in 5.1: Jane must first commit to the organization before she can understand what it’s all about.  Jesus said something like this, too: “If anyone’s will is to do God’s will, he will know whether my teaching is from God” (John 7:17).  Matters of cosmic significance can only be understood from the inside.

CHAPTER SIX: FOG

6.1 In fiction, weather is often a metaphor.  Fog in this chapter is a metaphor for . . . what? ~ Feeling trapped, Mark finds his only recourse is to “do what he’s told” and maybe something will come of it.  Notice how he tries to feel better about it by blaming Jane.

6-2 Bracton College is totally out-maneuvered by the N.I.C.E.  The last vestige of grace and tradition that the University was founded to protect is destroyed, but the question remains: why do they want the wood, even that last little strip?  A growing crisis in Edgetow is clamoring for a response. It’s not explicitly stated that Mark wrote the first newspaper article suggesting something must be done (and isn’t that always the way government is invited to take more control?), but we’re meant to assume that he is. ~ How does Hingest’s funeral contribute to the mood of this chapter?

6-3 The scene in the library represents Mark’s full conversion to the dark side.  His pleasure at being received is so intense it dulls any twinge of conscience about what he’s asked to do.  This is how even decent men are corrupted–step by step. We will learn later that Rev. Straik was a much better man than Mark until led astray by bad theology, demonstrated here by his understanding of the resurrection. (Lewis hinted earlier that he was driven to fanaticism by the death of his young daughter.) ~ Ovid was a Roman poet; Ad metam properate  means “Hurry on to the finish.”  Originally used, like much of Ovid, in a sexual context, which may be the main reason why Feverstone remembers it. ~ Professor Frost is one of the inner Inner Circle, and alert readers will recognize him from the description as someone we’ve met before.

6-4 Mark’s two editorials are very long (hard to imagine any newspaper that would publish them today). They can be skimmed, but it’s worth noting what audience he’s aiming at in in each and the different means he uses to reach them.

6-5 Jane has another dream and soon after meets a nightmare in real life.  No more question of holding herself aloof; one way or another, someone is going to mess with her, and she’d rather it be people she knows and likes.  Notice the weather again . . .

CHAPTER SEVEN: THE PENDRAGON

7-1 The Fisher-King is a mysterious figure in Arthurian legend, associated with gentle, naïve Sir Percival during the Grail quest.  Percival first meets the Fisher-King as an old fisherman who directs him to the right path.  Later, the knight encounters him as a king with an incurable wound attended by keepers of the Grail itself.  Our “Mr. Fisher-King” is none other than Dr. Ransom, who traveled to Mars and Venus and returned from the latter with an incurable wound in his heel.  Meeting him marks Jane’s conversion: “Her world was unmade” (note the repetition).  Ransom is obviously meant to represent Christ (though, unlike Aslan, he is not Christ in another form).  How many resemblances do you see?

7-2 His conversation with Jane seems to touch on several issues but it’s really only one: love.  That’s what all the talk about equality is about, though expressed more succinctly in Lewis’s essay “Membership” (from The Weight of Glory): “Equality is a quantitative term and therefore love knows nothing of it.”  Equality is about giving everyone a “fair share”; love’s chief concern is not fairness, or even sharing.  Otherwise any couple will fall into the tired routine of blaming each other for their problems, as Mark earlier blamed Jane and now she wants to blame him. ~  I was once shaken to the core by Ransom’s observation that “Those who are enjoying something, or suffering something together, are companions [i.e., equals].  Those who enjoy or suffer each other are not [emphasis mine].”  Marriage has no place for keeping tabs or trading favors; each is totally in debt to the other.  And (as the mice demonstrate) it’s not meant to be a lifelong burden, but more like a dance. ~ The sensual trance that steals over Jane as he’s talking (“Stop it!” said the Director, sharply) is not explained but we’ll get some idea later of what it means.  I think. ~ Brobdingnag, mentioned at the end of the section, is the land of giants visited by Gulliver.

7-3 This is the part where my husband bailed (see Introduction).  Why does Lewis have to examine all of Jane’s feelings in such detail?  Well, he probably doesn’t.  He means to show her divided state of mind, and perhaps he got carried away.  But “the state of joy” that is Jane’s overarching emotion is central to Lewis’s religious thought (see Surprised by Joy), and is headed toward a rude, though temporary, shock.

7-4 Lewis may lay it on a little heavy in this section (such things as Rubens might have seen in delirium? Not going there!), but thankfully he curtails the torture scene, like most contemporary writers wouldn’t do.  The segment accomplishes at least three purposes: ramps up the tension, shows the real violence and destruction of the Institute’s “engineered” riot, and provides excellent justification for Jane to flee to St. Anne’s. ~ It’s weirdly relevant to be posting this at about the time (August 2011) when real riots are breaking out all over England.  Might there be any parallels?

CHAPTER EIGHT: MOONLIGHT AT BELBURY

8-1 We’re getting close to the heart of the matter at Belbury—the real Inner Ring.  Readers may guess who “the Head” is, but Lewis is not going to spring it just yet.  The conversation between Wither and Hardcastle hints that Mark was invited to the Institute not for his writing ability but for his wife—certainly the last thing he would have expected, and we’re rather surprised, too.

8-2 Jane’s introduction to the full circle at St. Anne’s.  It’s an “equal” society, in the way discussed in 7-2, but note how Jane’s bland defense of equality to the Director doesn’t extend to her attitude toward Ivy Maggs.  As for Mr. Bultitude—he may seem like comic relief, but he’ll serve a purpose later on (he takes his name from a central character in the classic 1880s school story, Vice Versa).  MacPhee is the “resident skeptic,” a hard-headed agnostic of the sort Lewis seems to have had great affection for.  William Hingest, who was bumped off in Chapter 4, is cut from the same cloth.  You can grasp the drift of MacPhee’s conversation without understanding all his references—I certainly don’t.  Most of this section can be skipped as not essential to the plot, though interesting in its ideas.

8/3 Mark’s dinner conversation with Filostrato goes on too long as well, but it’s more directly related to Lewis’s theme.  The “Italian eunuch” finds organic life distasteful: his ideal is the clean, white moon.  Note that he is a physicist rather than a biologist, which doesn’t seem to jibe with his experimental tinkering with animals and plants.  Physics is the science of “elegant” theories and big pictures, such as the post-organic dream that Filostrato is sketching here.  It’s not an appealing dream, but nobody at the table can find a reason to refute him.  We can: he is calling good evil, and evil good (Is. 5:20; cf. Gen. 1:31) ~ The moon, bringer of madness, bears down hard on Belbury.  Filostrato’s discussion of life there sounds like fanatical raving, but we’ll hear more of it. ~  Finally, Mark comes close to the secret: compare his approach to the “Head” with Jane’s introduction to the “Head” of St. Anne’s in the last chapter.

Go on to Part Three: Climax.

 

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Janie Cheaney

Janie is the VERY senior staff writer for Redeemed Reader, as well as a long-time contributor to WORLD Magazine and an author of nine books for children. The rest of the time she's long-distance smooching on her four grandchildren (not an easy task). She lives with her equally senior husband of almost-fifty years in the Ozarks of Missouri.

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4 Comments

  1. Melinda on August 10, 2011 at 9:16 am

    I disagree again here with skipping sections and with the offhand comments that Lewis wrote “too much” or that certain scenes are not worth reading because they are obscure or too long. Lewis wrote every word and meant every word he wrote. I don’t think any of the sections are too long, I also don’t think that any of the scenes are needless. I think we have a very short attention span now, and we don’t understand or are unused to having to dig and think in the same way that Lewis thought. I, for one, would rather wade in and read and dig and spend time, instead of skimming and skipping.

    If we are raising young readers, don’t we want them to really READ and not skim?

    • Janie Cheaney on August 10, 2011 at 12:22 pm

      Melinda: Point taken about skipping. However (you know there has to be a “however,” right?) it may sometimes be a good strategy. I personally enjoy reading every word of THS (at least I did the second time–the first time was a bit much), but I wouldn’t want other readers to be put off a great story by getting bogged down. The ideas being discussed are germaine to the story and worth thinking about, but someone who’s coming in from the flash and speed of contemporary culture may need to become acclimated to a millieu that’s very foreign to them. Of course that’s true of every work of fiction that doesn’t perfectly accord with our own time and place–Tolstoy is even more of a challenge (and a better novelist, in my opinion, than Lewis). When introducing someone to Tolstoy, I wouldn’t have any problem with skipping some sections of War and Peace or Anna Karenina, while focusing intently on others. There’s no question that the best way to read a novel is to read all of it, but I’d rather a reader skim or skip certain parts than skip the whole thing.
      Thanks for the diary recommendation: that’s fascinating!

  2. Melinda on August 10, 2011 at 9:16 am

    I disagree again here with skipping sections and with the offhand comments that Lewis wrote “too much” or that certain scenes are not worth reading because they are obscure or too long. Lewis wrote every word and meant every word he wrote. I don’t think any of the sections are too long, I also don’t think that any of the scenes are needless. I think we have a very short attention span now, and we don’t understand or are unused to having to dig and think in the same way that Lewis thought. I, for one, would rather wade in and read and dig and spend time, instead of skimming and skipping.

    If we are raising young readers, don’t we want them to really READ and not skim?

    • Janie Cheaney on August 10, 2011 at 12:22 pm

      Melinda: Point taken about skipping. However (you know there has to be a “however,” right?) it may sometimes be a good strategy. I personally enjoy reading every word of THS (at least I did the second time–the first time was a bit much), but I wouldn’t want other readers to be put off a great story by getting bogged down. The ideas being discussed are germaine to the story and worth thinking about, but someone who’s coming in from the flash and speed of contemporary culture may need to become acclimated to a millieu that’s very foreign to them. Of course that’s true of every work of fiction that doesn’t perfectly accord with our own time and place–Tolstoy is even more of a challenge (and a better novelist, in my opinion, than Lewis). When introducing someone to Tolstoy, I wouldn’t have any problem with skipping some sections of War and Peace or Anna Karenina, while focusing intently on others. There’s no question that the best way to read a novel is to read all of it, but I’d rather a reader skim or skip certain parts than skip the whole thing.
      Thanks for the diary recommendation: that’s fascinating!

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