Showing posts with label C.S. Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C.S. Lewis. Show all posts

Saturday, April 21, 2018

SHOTOVER HILL, Oxon | Orangerie at Work, April 2018

Sunset, Good Wine and Good Food. Inauguration of the Orangerie
with Dinner. L to R: Alice, Chris. Photos by JT Marlin.
Edinburgh, April 21, 2018 – Earlier this week I was in Oxford and was the designated photographer at a celebration of the completion of an Orangerie at "Mouette" on Old Road, Shotover Hill.

My nephew Chris decided on an Orangerie (a cross between a gazebo, a conservatory and an observatory) to make better use of the hill behind his house. 

It is now an outstanding place to have a drink and a meal as the sun goes down.

Shotover Hill is a uniquely British wildlife preserve/park/hiking trail in the Headington area. It still doesn't have street numbers so good luck trying to find a house on the hill.

Headington Quarry at the base is where C. S. Lewis used to spend time. He is buried at the local Holy Trinity Church. Shotover Hill also has a brewery that produces craft beers.
Toast to Goal Completed.

I don't know whether this is allowed, but some of that craft beer sitting in that graveyard might be an alternative venue to the Orangerie. The graveyard is closer to sea level but it would certainly not be Low Church.

Levels 1-3, with two more in front of the house.



Looking Down (1)

Looking Down (2)



Looking Down (3)

Sunday, October 29, 2017

BIRTHDAYS | Oxonians, November 2017

Oxford Black Alumni Group Formed (2017)

November
09 | Noel Godfrey Chavasse (Trinity) 1884
09 | Francis Chavasse (Trinity and St. Peter's) 1884
15 William Pitt the Elder, 1st Earl of Chatham* (Trinity) 1708
21 | Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, "Q" (Trinity) 1863
29 | C. S. Lewis* (Univ.) 1898
December
18 | Charles Wesley (Ch.Ch.) 1707
22 | James Oglethorpe* (Corpus), 1st Gov. of Georgia 1696
January
03 | J.R.R. Tolkien, CBE (Exeter) 1892
27 Charles Dodgson, "Lewis Carroll" (Ch.Ch.) 1832
February
13 | Anna Watkins (rower for Cambridge against Oxford), 1983
21 John Henry Cardinal Newman (Trinity) 1801
21 | W. H. Auden
March
01 John Tepper Marlin (Trinity) 1942 😏
02 Dr Seuss (Lincoln), 1904
11 Rupert Murdoch, 1931
14 Stephen Hawking (Univ), death, 2018 (born in April)
24 William Morris (Exeter), 1834
26 Robert Frost, 1926
26 A. E. Housman, 1859
April
01 Rachel Maddow (Lincoln), 1973
03 Jane Goodall, 1934
April 23. St George's
Day
05 NYC Boat Race Dinner, University Club
13 Frederick Lord North (Trinity), 1732
13 Christopher Hitchens, 1949
14 Michael Maclagan (Ch.Ch. and Trinity), 1914
15 Emma Watson, 1990
15 Joseph Lister, 1827
19 Dudley Moore, 1935
23 St George's Day
28 Harper Lee, 1926
28 Elena Kagan, 1960
May
10 | James Viscount Bryce (Trinity) 1838
20 | Melvin "Dinghy" Young (Trinity), DFC & Bar 1915
29 Sir Basil "Gaffer" Blackwell (Merton) 1889
June 
04 Dan Topolski (New) 1945
05 | James Smithson (Pembroke) 1765
16 | Adam Smith (Balliol) 1723
17 | John Wesley (Ch.Ch.) 1703
July
09 | Oliver Sacks, 1933
10 | E. Clerihew Bentley (Merton) 1875
27 | Hilaire Belloc, 1870
28 | Senator Bill Bradley (Worcester) 1943
August
08 | Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore (Trinity) 1605
10 | George Goodman, "Adam Smith" (BNC) 1930
11 | Lawrence Binyon (Trinity)
16 | T. E. Lawrence (of Arabia) (Jesus) 1888
19 | President Bill Clinton (Univ.)
September
07 | Peter Darrow (Trinity) 1950
October 
02 | Graham Greene, 1904
23 | Denis Woodfield (Lincoln) 1933

Thursday, March 5, 2015

OBITS: Oxonians (Updated Nov. 27, 2015)

2015 - Sheila Kitzinger (St. Hugh's)
I once had a half-time job at the Harvard News Office writing stories about my fellow students for their hometown newspapers.

2015 - Dan Topolski (New College), Last
of the Great Amateur Rowing Coaches.

Since then I never got out of the habit of hunting for highlights in the time people spend on earth. Oxonians have interesting lives.

This list opened in March 2015. I'm working proactively on finding female Oxonians. They arrived in numbers so late and they have long lives.

If you have obits to suggest or a link to a good one already written, please email me - jtmarlin@post.harvard.edu. Oxford birthdays here.

2015 | Dan Topolski (New) | Sheila Kitzinger (St. Hugh's)
2014 - George "Jerry" Goodman
(BNC), a.k.a. "Adam Smith".
2014 | George Goodman, "Adam Smith" (BNC)
2013Denis Woodfield (Lincoln) | Peter Darrow (Trinity)
2011 | Christopher Hitchens (Balliol)
1991 | "Dr. Seuss" (Theodor Giesel, Lincoln)
1984 | Basil "Gaffer" Blackwell (Merton)
1973 | J.R.R. Tolkien (Exeter)
1963 | C. S. Lewis (Univ.)
1956 | E. Clerihew Bentley (Merton)
1944 | Arthur Quiller-Couch, "Q" (Trinity)
1935 | T. E. Lawrence (of Arabia) (Trinity)
1922 | James Viscount Bryce (Trinity)
1917 | Noel Godfrey Chavasse (Trinity)
1778 - William Pitt the Elder
1898 | Charles Dodgson, "Lewis Carroll" (Ch.Ch.)
1890 | John Henry Cardinal Newman (Trinity)
1792 | Frederick Lord North (Trinity)
1791 | John Wesley (Ch.Ch.)
1790 | Adam Smith (Balliol)
1788 | Charles Wesley (Ch.Ch.)
1785 | James Oglethorpe (Corpus), 1st Gov. of Georgia
1778 | William Pitt the Elder, Lord Chatham (Trinity)
1653 | Rev. Lawrence Washington (BNC), GW's gggrandfather
1675 | Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore (Trinity)
1647 | Leonard Calvert (Trinity), 1st Gov. of Maryland
1632George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore (Trinity)

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

BIRTH | Nov. 29–C. S. Lewis

C.S. Lewis (1898-1963)
C[live] S[taples] Lewis was born this day in Belfast in 1898, the son of Albert Lewis, a lawyer, and Flora Hamilton Lewis. He had a brother, Warren Hamilton Lewis ("Warnie"), three years older.

C.S. Lewis was known as Jack in his personal life because when he was four, his dog Jacksie was run over by a car. Young Lewis announced he was changing his name to "Jacksie" and from then on, he was known as "Jack" to family and friends.

The two boys, Jack and Warnie, created a special world of adventure called "Boxen," in which animals talked.

Jack was home-schooled in Belfast by private tutors until he was ten. But his mother died of cancer and a month later Jack was sent to join his brother at boarding school in England – the Wynard School in Watford, Herts.

The school's attendance was dwindling under its  methodically mad headmaster, Robert "Oldie" Capron, who kept telling his students to "think!". While Lewis was there, Capron was removed to a mental institution and the school was closed. Jack was sent for a year to Malvern College, where he had a better experience. After that he studied privately with William T. Kirkpatrick, his father's one-time tutor and former headmaster of Lurgan College.

Two favorite books of young Jack Lewis were Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson and The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett, whose birthday is also this month (that author and book also a favorite of my mother, Hilda van Stockum). His happy early childhood followed the Burnett pattern of paradise lost and regained.

Lewis obtained a scholarship to University College, Oxford in 1916. He was conscripted into World War I and was sent home after being wounded in the back by friendly fire. He continued his studies and won first-class honors in Greats (1922) and then in English (1923) followed by a distinguished academic career at Oxford and Cambridge. For one year he was a tutor in philosophy at University College, then won a post at Magdalen College, where he was an English tutor from 1925 to 1954. From there he went on to another academic post at Cambridge (Magdalene College, 1954-63).

Raised in the Church of Ireland, he became an atheist in his teens but returned to the church after long theological arguments with his friend and Oxford English faculty colleague (and a fellow member of the "Inklings", who met in Lewis' home every week for tea and literary discussion for 16 years) J.R.R. Tolkien. Lewis said:
I gave up Christianity at about 14. Came back to it when getting on for 30. Not an emotional conversion; almost purely philosophical. I didn't want to. I'm not in the least a religious type. I want to be let alone, to feel I'm my own master; but since the facts seemed to be just the opposite, I had to give in.
Lewis is probably best known for the Chronicles of Narnia series, seven volumes of stories about young children who go to another world through an old wardrobe meet a lion named Aslan who asks for help to fight evil. Aslan says, "I never tell anyone any story except his own."

Lewis also once said:
I am the product of long corridors, empty sunlit rooms, upstairs indoor silences, attics explored in solitude, distant noises of gurgling cisterns and pipes, and the noise of wind under the tiles.
For more on C. S. Lewis, read our remembrance of his death one week ago or check out a timeline of his life.

More Oxford bios.