![]() ![]() ![]() In it, Lewis fictionally traces his own intellectual and faith journey. Lewis” who would soon become so famous as the world’s foremost Christian apologist. One may find the second version of Lewis’s conversion in his fascinating but somewhat erratic allegory, The Pilgrim’s Regress (1933), the book that really began Lewis’s career as recognizably “the C.S. The first, the fulfillment of his paganism-and paganism in general. Critically, too, the three stories overlapped and played off one another. Lewis practiced Christianity, he offered three stories-or variations on a single story, depending on the angle one wishes to take-regarding the reason for his conversion. As Lewis wrote ten years after the book’s first publication, “All good allegory exists not to hide but to reveal: to make the inner world more palpable by giving it an (imagined) concrete embodiment.”ĭuring the thirty-one years that C.S. Lewis fictionally traces his own intellectual and faith journey. ![]()
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