We associate C.S. Lewis with fiction, children’s stories, works on Christian living and life, and apologetics. But before he was any of those things, and while he was all of these things, he was a poet.
In fact, poetry was his first love. It was his ambition to become a poet, a great poet.
In 1964, the year after Lewis died, many his poems were assembled by Walter Hooper, his literary executor. Into a volume entitled, appropriately enough, “Poems.” It was reprinted in 1992 and again in 2002, and is still available in paperback (and ebook).
What “Poems” includes is largely formal poetry, with rhyme and meter and formal structure. It is poetry that includes both human and divine themes, pagan and Christian stories, natural and created imagery. It is what we know as traditional poetry, and it is good traditional poetry.
Lewis writes of a wide range of topics and themes: gnomes, planets, aging, a wedding, biblical characters like Adam and Solomon, evolution, Aristotle, the atomic bomb, mythical creatures like dragons, the nativity, prayer, love, desire, and more. He even has a poem on Narnia and science fiction. One of the most poignant poems in the collection is “To Charles Williams,” written
shortly after the fellow Inkling’s death in 1945,
The poems were also not something hidden or unpublished during Lewis’s lifetime. In an appendix, Hooper lists the various places where the poems were first published, including the Cambridge Review, Oxford Magazine, the Times Literary Supplement, the Spectator, Punch, and others.
“Poems” will likely be never as popular as his other writings, but they do add a dimension to understanding the man, his thought, and his work.
- Glenn Young, Amazon.com reviewer