see also: A Modest Literary Biography by Dr. Bruce Edwards
|
1898 |
Born Clive Staples Lewis November |
|
1905 |
The Lewis family moved to their new home, "Little Lea," on
the outskirts of |
|
1908 |
Mother died of cancer on August 23, Albert Lewis' (her husband's)
birthday; C. S. Lewis (nicknamed "Jack") and Warren sent to |
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|
1910 |
Attends Campbell College Belfast for one term due to serious
respiratory difficulties. |
|
1911- |
Studied at |
|
1914- |
In April, Lewis met Arthur Greeves (1895-1966), of whom he said, in
1933, "After my brother, my oldest and most intimate friend."
Extensive literary and philosophical studies (Latin, Greek, French, German,
and Italian) under the private tuition of W. T. Kirkpatrick ("The Great
Knock"). |
|
1916 |
Won scholarship to |
|
1917 |
From April 26 until September, Lewis was a student at |
|
1918 |
On April 15 Lewis was wounded on |
|
1919 |
The February issue of Reveille contained "Death in |
|
1920 |
During the summer, Paddy Moore's mother, Mrs. Janie King Moore
(1873-1951) and her daughter, Maureen, moved to |
|
1924 |
From October 1924 until May 1925, Lewis served as philosophy tutor at |
|
1925 |
On May 20, Lewis was elected a Fellow of Magdalen College, |
|
1926 |
"Dymer," a book-length narrative poem, published under the
pseudonym of Clive Hamilton. |
|
1929 |
Lewis became a theist: "In the Trinity Term of 1929 I gave in,
and admitted that God was God, and knelt and prayed..." Albert Lewis died on
September 24. |
|
1931 |
Lewis became a Christian: One evening in September, Lewis had a long
talk on Christianity with J.R.R. Tolkien (a devout Roman Catholic) and Hugo
Dyson. That evening's discussion was important in bringing about the
following day's event that Lewis recorded in Surprised by Joy: "When we
[Warnie and Jack] set out [by motorcycle to the Whipsnade Zoo] I did not
believe that Jesus Christ was the Son of God, and when we reached the zoo I
did." |
|
1933 |
"The Pilgrim's Regress : An Allegorical Apology for Christianity,
Reason, and Romanticism" was published. The fall term marked the
beginning of Lewis' convening of a circle of friends dubbed "The
Inklings." For the next 16 years, on through 1949, they continued to
meet in Jack's rooms at |
|
1935 |
At the suggestion of Prof. F.P. Wilson, Lewis agreed to write the volume
on 16th Century English Literature for the Oxford History of English
Literature series. Published in 1954, it became a classic. |
|
1936 |
"The Allegory of Love: A Study in Medieval Tradition" was
published, for which he receives the Gollancz Memorial Prize for Literature
in 1937. |
|
1938 |
"Out of the Silent Planet," the first novel in the Space
Trilogy. |
|
1939 |
At the outbreak of World War II in September, Charles Williams moved
from |
|
1941 |
From May 2 until November 28, The Guardian published 31
"Screwtape Letters" in weekly installments. Lewis was paid |
|
1942 |
The first meeting of the "Socratic Club" was held in |
|
1943 |
"Perelandra," the second novel in the Space Trilogy, was
published. In February, at the |
|
1944 |
On seven consecutive Tuesdays, from February 22 to April 4 at 10:15 to
10:30 p.m., Lewis gave the pre-recorded talks known as "Beyond
Personality." Taken together, all of Lewis' BBC radio broadcast talks
were eventually published under the title Mere Christianity. From November
10, 1944 to April 14, 1945, "The Great Divorce" was published in
weekly installments in The Guardian. |
|
1945 |
Charles Williams, one of Lewis' very closest of friends, died on May
15. "That Hideous Strength," the last novel in the Space Trilogy,
was published. |
|
1946 |
Passed over for Merton professorship of English Literature at |
|
1947 |
"Miracles: A Preliminary Study" was published |
|
1950 |
"The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe," the first of the
seven Chronicles of Narnia, was published. |
|
1951 |
"Prince Caspian," the second of the seven Chronicles of
Narnia, was published. Mrs. Moore died on January 12. Since the previous
April, she had been confined to a nursing home in |
|
1952 |
"The Voyage of the 'Dawn Treader'," the third of the seven
Chronicles of Narnia, was published. In September, he met Joy Davidman
Gresham, seventeen years his junior (b. April 18, 1915 - d. July 13, 1960),
for the first time. |
|
1953 |
"The Silver Chair," the fourth of the seven Chronicles of
Narnia, was published. |
|
1954 |
"The Horse and His Boy," the fifth of the seven Chronicles
of Narnia, was published. In June, Lewis accepted the Chair of Medieval and
Renaissance Literature at |
|
1955 |
"The Magician's Nephew," the sixth of the seven Chronicles
of Narnia, was published, as was his biography "Surprised by Joy: The
Shape of My Early Life." |
|
1956 |
"The Last Battle," the seventh and final book in the
Chronicles of Narnia, was published (he receives the Carnegie Medal in
recognition of it), as was "Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold." On
April 23, he entered into a civil marriage with Joy at the Oxford Registry
Office for the purpose of conferring upon her the status of British
citizenship in order to prevent her threatened deportation by British
migration authorities. In December, a bedside marriage was performed in
accordance with the rites of the Church of England in |
|
1956 |
Married Joy Davidman Gresham in secret civil ceremony when British
Home Office denied continuance of her residency permit. Davidman had
converted to Christianity from Judaism in 1948 partly under the influence of
Lewis's books, met Lewis in 1952, divorced in 1953 due to her husband's
desertion and later developed bone cancer. |
|
1957 |
Married Joy in church ceremony at her hospital bed. |
|
1958 |
Throughout 1957, Joy had experienced an extraordinary recovery from
her near terminal bout with cancer. In July of 1958, Jack and Joy went to |
|
1960 |
Subsequent to learning of the return of Joy's cancer, Jack and Joy,
together with Roger Lancelyn Green and his wife, Joy, went to |
|
1961 |
"A Grief Observed," an account of his suffering caused by
his wife's death in 1960, published under the pseudonym of N. W. Clerk. "An Experiment
in Criticism" was also published. |
|
1962 |
"They Asked for a Paper: Papers and Addresses" was
published. |
|
1963 |
Lewis died at 5:30 p.m. at The Kilns,
one week before his 65th birthday on Friday, November 22, after a variety of
illnesses, including a heart attack and kidney problems. This same day,
American president John F. Kennedy was assassinated and Aldous Huxley died.
He had resigned his position at |
another
creation by John Visser of Blue Moon Designcopyright
http://cslewis.drzeus.net/bio/