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The Red Lizard
of Lust
C.S. Lewis
From The
Great Divorce
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Editor’s note:
C.S. Lewis wrote
The Great
Divorce
to demonstrate the differences between Hell and Heaven. The people
in this story travel to the bright borders of Heaven, and as such,
appear as ghosts as they near it. This excerpt metaphorically and
poignantly shows how challenging it can be for some people to let go
of lust, but it also shows how we are strengthened and advanced once
we muster the courage to finally do so.
I saw coming
towards us a Ghost who carried something on his shoulder. Like all
the Ghosts, he was unsubstantial, but they differed from one another
as smokes differ. Some had been whitish; this one was dark and oily.
What sat on his shoulder was a little red lizard, and it was
twitching its tail like a whip and whispering things in his ear. As
we caught sight of him he turned his head to the reptile with a
snarl of impatience. “Shut up, I tell you!” he said. It wagged its
tail and continued to whisper to him. He ceased snarling, and
presently began to smile. Then be turned and started to limp
westward, away from the mountains.
“Off so soon?”
said a voice.
The speaker
was more or less human in shape but larger than a man, and so bright
that I could hardly look at him. His presence smote on my eyes and
on my body too (for there was heat coming from him as well as light)
like the morning sun at the beginning of a tyrannous summer day.
“Yes. I’m
off,” said the Ghost. “Thanks for all your hospitality. But it’s no
good, you see. I told this little chap,” (here he indicated the
lizard), “that he’d have to be quiet if he came -which he insisted
on doing. Of course his stuff won’t do here: I realise that. But he
won’t stop. I shall just have to go home.”
‘Would you
like me to make him quiet?” said the flaming Spirit—an angel, as I
now understood.
“Of course I
would,” said the Ghost.
“Then I will
kill him,” said the Angel, taking a step forward.
“Oh—ah—look
out! You’re burning me. Keep away,” said the Ghost, retreating.
“Don’t you
want him killed?”
“You didn’t
say anything about killing him at first. I hardly meant to bother
you with anything so drastic as that.”
“It’s the only
way,” said the Angel, whose burning hands were now very close to the
lizard. “Shall I kill it?”
“Well, that’s
a further question. I’m quite open to consider it, but it’s a new
point, isn’t it? I mean, for the moment I was only thinking about
silencing it because up here—well, it’s so damned embarrassing.”
“May I kill
it?”
“Well, there’s
time to discuss that later.”
“There is no
time. May I kill it?”
“Please, I
never meant to be such a nuisance. Please—really—don’t bother. Look!
It’s gone to sleep of its own accord. I’m sure it’ll be all right
now. Thanks ever so much.”
“May I kill
it?”
“Honestly, I
don’t think there’s the slightest necessity for that. I’m sure I
shall be able to keep it in order now. I think the gradual process
would be far better than killing it.”
“The gradual
process is of no use at all.”
“Don’t you
think so? Well, I’ll think over what you’ve said very carefully. I
honestly will. In fact I’d let you kill it now, but as a matter of
fact I’m not feeling frightfully well today. It would be silly to do
it now. I’d need to be in good health for the operation. Some other
day, perhaps.”
“There is no
other day. All days are present now.”
“Get back!
You’re burning me. How can I tell you to kill it? You’d kill me if
you did.”
“It is not
so.”
“Why, you’re
hurting me now.”
“I never said
it wouldn’t hurt you. I said it wouldn’t kill you.”
“Oh, I know.
You think I’m a coward. But it isn’t that. Really it isn’t. I say!
Let me run back by tonight’s bus and get an opinion from my own
doctor. I’ll come again the first moment I can.”
“This moment
contains all moments.”
“Why are you
torturing me? You are jeering at me. How can I let you tear me to
pieces? If you wanted to help me, why didn’t you kill the damned
thing without asking me—before I knew? It would be all over by now
if you had.”
“I cannot kill
it against your will. It is impossible. Have I your permission?”
The Angel’s
hands were almost closed on the Lizard, but not quite. Then the
Lizard began chattering to the Ghost so loud that even I could hear
what it was saying.
“Be careful,”
it said. “He can do what he says. He can kill me. One fatal word
from you and he will! Then you’ll be without me for ever and ever.
It’s not natural. How could you live? You’d be only a sort of ghost,
not a real man as you are now. He doesn’t understand. He’s only a
cold, bloodless abstract thing. It may be natural for him, but it
isn’t for us. Yes, yes. I know there are no real pleasures now, only
dreams. But aren’t they better than nothing? And I’ll be so good. I
admit I’ve sometimes gone too far in the past, but I promise I won’t
do it again. I’ll give you nothing but really nice dreams—all sweet
and fresh and almost innocent. You might say, quite innocent …”
“Have I your
permission?” said the Angel to the Ghost.
“I know it
will kill me.”
“It won’t. But
supposing it did?”
“You’re right.
It would be better to be dead than to live with this creature.”
“Then I may?”
“Damn and
blast you! Go on can’t you? Get it over. Do what you like,” bellowed
the Ghost: but ended, whimpering, “God help me. God help me.”
Next moment
the Ghost gave a scream of agony such as I never heard on Earth. The
Burning One closed his crimson grip on the reptile: twisted it,
while it bit and writhed, and then flung it, broken backed, on the
turf.
“Ow! That’s
done for me,” gasped the Ghost, reeling backwards.
For a moment I
could make out nothing distinctly. Then I saw, between me and the
nearest bush, unmistakably solid but growing every moment solider,
the upper arm and the shoulder of a man. Then, brighter still and
stronger, the legs and hands. The neck and golden head materialised
while I watched, and if my attention had not wavered I should have
seen the actual completing of a man—an immense man, naked, not much
smaller than the Angel. What distracted me was the fact that at the
same moment something seemed to be happening to the Lizard. At first
I thought the operation had failed. So far from dying, the creature
was still struggling and even growing bigger as it struggled. And as
it grew it changed. Its hinder parts grew rounder. The tail, still
flickering, became a tail of hair that flickered between huge and
glossy buttocks. Suddenly I started back, rubbing my eyes. What
stood before me was the greatest stallion I have ever seen, silvery
white but with mane and tail of gold. It was smooth and shining,
rippled with swells of flesh and muscle, whinneying and stamping
with its hoofs. At each stamp the land shook and the trees dindled.
The new-made
man turned and clapped the new horse’s neck. It nosed his bright
body. Horse and master breathed each into the other’s nostrils. The
man turned from it, flung himself at the feet of the Burning One,
and embraced them. When he rose I thought his face shone with tears,
but it may have been only the liquid love and brightness (one cannot
distinguish them in that country) which flowed from him. I had not
long to think about it. In joyous haste the young man leaped upon
the horse’s back. Turning in his seat he waved a farewell, then
nudged the stallion with his heels. They were off before I well knew
what was happening. There was riding if you like! I came out as
quickly as I could from among the bushes to follow them with my
eyes; but already they were only like a shooting star far off on the
green plain, and soon among the foothills of the mountains. Then,
still like a star, I saw them winding up, scaling what seemed
impossible steeps, and quicker every moment, till near the dim brow
of the landscape, so high that I must strain my neck to see them,
they vanished, bright themselves, into the rose-brightness of that
everlasting morning…
“Do ye
understand all this, my Son?” said my Teacher.
“I don’t know
about all, Sir,” said I. “Am I right in thinking that the
lizard really did turn into a Horse?”
“Aye. But it
was killed first. Ye’ll not forget that part of the story?”
“I’ll try not
to, Sir. But does it mean that everything—everything—that is in us
can go to the Mountains?”
“Nothing, even
the best and noblest, can go on as it now is. Nothing, not even what
is lowest and most bestial, will not be raised again if it submits
to death. It is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.
Flesh and blood cannot come to the Mountains. Not because they are
too rank, but because they are too weak. What is a Lizard compared
to a stallion? Lust is a poor, weak, whimpering, whispering thing
compared with that richness and energy of desire which will arise
when lust has been killed.”
Excerpted from
The Great Divorce (1946), New York: The Macmillan Company,
pp. 98-106.
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