I heard the audio recordings first and then read the book. When reading the book, I found myself missing favorite colorful expressions and helpful explanations C.S. Lewis gave in his mellifluous baritone, so I listened to the recordings again to learn if I remembered correctly. Thanks more to Lewis's memorable turn of phrase than to my memory, what I missed is there—and then some! I don't know why Lewis didn't include those gems from the 1958 recordings in the book that came out in 1960, but several reasonable explanations came to mind when thinking about the matter:
- In those days it was not a simple matter to transfer audio recordings into an accurate transcript a writer could adapt into book form. Even today, speech-recognition technology is still in its early stages. C.S. Lewis brought handwritten notes with him into the recording studio, and that is probably what he used when writing the book rather than word-for-word transcripts someone would have had to painstakingly type from the radio broadcasts.
- It wasn't always easy to get a copy of the audio recordings themselves because studio tapes were routinely copied over for other recordings since they were not inexpensive. That was true as late as the early 1990s, as I observed when working for Grace to You, a radio and publications ministry. Our recording engineer used to have mass mailings of tape reels to hundreds of radio stations that would return those reels. A major improvement was when GTY was able to mail disposable cassettes that did not need to be returned. Now, of course, new broadcasts are up and downloaded via the Internet. A complicating factor in C.S. Lewis's time was he lived in England while the Episcopalian ministry arranging The Four Loves broadcasts was in America. People were not as accessible to one another as they are in our times.
- Even if C.S. Lewis had the latest technological advantages of both audio recordings and accurate word-for-word transcripts, he was long accustomed to producing handwritten manuscripts. More important, he was busy caring for his beloved wife, Joy, in the final stage of her cancer at their Oxford home as a hospice setting. She passed away in 1960, the year The Four Loves was published. Lewis himself was in ill health at that time and followed her three years later.

Affection
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Diamond Gem |
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Ruby Gem |
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Sapphire Gem |
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Emerald Gem |
Friendship
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Topaz Gem |
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Jasper Gem |
"A life without it [same-sex camaraderie] would be crippled. And for my part I have the deepest suspicions of those wretched people who find no pleasure in the society of their own sex. Heaven protect me from a man who needs only women and a woman who needs only men!" This is strong medicine but if taken in the right spirit, it will promote friendship and avoid condescension toward either sex.
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Amethyst Gem |
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Tiger's Eye Gem |
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Rose Quartz Gem |
Sexual Love
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Carnelian Gem |
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Jacinth Gem |
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Zircon Gem |
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Beryl Gem |
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Onyx Gem |
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Sardius Gem |
Divine Love
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Carbuncle Gem |
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Chalcedony Gem |
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Chrysoprase Gem |
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Jade Gem |
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Crystal Gem |
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Emerald and Diamond Gems |
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Click Here to Order the Book for Yourself |
THanks for this Alacin! I hope it is okay that I have shared it here or there.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome and I'm delighted to have you do so, fellow pilgrim!
ReplyDelete