The not especially opaque reference Queen Lucy makes here is to the stable in Bethlehem in which Jesus the incarnate
Logos
lived as a newborn. Lewis is explaining in his story that the “inside greater than the outside” is the
Logos
within and beneath everything existent and the substance of minds; the universe as
Logos
is mental.
Hence Dumbledore’s response to Harry at King’s Cross. “Of course this is happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should that mean it is not real?” Harry’s Kings Cross is the
Logos
reality inside his head that is the substance of the lesser reality outside his head. Harry, as a symbol of
Logos
mind or our spiritual faculty, creates his robes and the palace of King’s Cross just by thinking of them and is able to answer every one of Dumbledore’s and his own questions there because he is in
Logos
-land and relatively omniscient.
Ms. Rowling prepared her readers for this meaning both in locating her Wizarding world within and behind Muggle reality, invisible for the most part, and the several times the “inside” of magical things is much “bigger than their outside.” Think of the magic cars, the Knight Bus, the Sorting Hat (with a Sword-in-Hat!), the tent that is a cabin, Hermione’s beaded bag holding more than a U-Haul truck, the veiled archway in the Department of Mysteries, and the Room of Requirement, which expands indefinitely as necessary. The Room of Hidden Things seems even larger than Hogwarts in the search for the Ravenclaw Diadem and consequent firestorm. That the palace of King’s Cross is inside Harry’s head
and
real is only confirmation of the hidden, greater reality we have been living in for seven books.
Ms. Rowling, in her commencement address at Harvard in June 2008, told the graduating class and their families (quoting Plutarch) that imagination is important because “what we achieve inwardly will change outward reality.” In the anagogical level, this refers to our experience of our spirit’s purification via our identification with Harry and love’s victory over death. By choosing to suspend disbelief and change our inner reality by identifying with the light within us, we are changed inside and out.
The use of a mirror and eye to see something beyond reality—onto a spiritual level—and to know our higher selves or
Logos
within isn’t something that begins with Ms. Rowling and
Deathly Hallows
. In
The Little White Horse
Maria twice sees her perfected image in a mirror, first in Loveday’s burnished silver glass where she has a halo and her hair is “silvery gold,” the color resolving all contraries (
Horse,
chapter seven, part four), and then in the well where she finds the pearls of the Moon Maiden (chapter ten, part five). When readers of fantasy literature read about Harry’s magic mirror and its connection to something more than just reflecting appearance, they are most likely reminded of Lewis’s
Narnia
and, most especially, of Tolkien’s magisterial
Lord of the Rings
. For mirrors, light, and seeing eyes, Galadriel alone is a virtual warehouse of magical objects; Tolkien lovers reading about the Mirror of Erised that reveals the heart’s desire, the Pensieve, and Sirius’s mirror fragment showing Dumbledore’s eye think of Galadriel’s reflecting pond that shows what might be and contains the light of the Evening Star. That is just the beginning of the Lewis and Tolkien correspondences and the echoes within Ms. Rowling’s
Harry Potter
. Her relationship to them, though, is a fitting place to close this discussion of her books’ anagogical meanings and her place in the pantheon of great English writers.
Lewis and Tolkien vs. Rowling: Traditional and Subversive Symbolists
When reporters ask the author about novels influencing her work, the only books and authors they routinely ask about by name are Lewis and his
Chronicles of Narnia
and Tolkien’s
Lord of the Rings
. It should be said that Ms. Rowling, however, embraces neither Tolkien nor Lewis as an influence. But because of Rowling’s place in the canon of great and widely read fantasy series as well as pop culture, the ties with her fantasy predecessors are unavoidable.
Both Lewis and Tolkien were enthusiastic Christians whose faith permeates their work, both are best known for the seven-part series of edifying fantasy each wrote,
9
and both are beloved if not worshipped by their loyal readers. Ms. Rowling’s series, as different from
Narnia
and
Lord of the Rings
as those series are from each other, also comes in seven parts, contains Christian parallels and symbolism that she has described as “obvious,”
10
and has a fan base at least as fervent and worshipful as any among Lewis and Tolkien idolaters.
If the similarities weren’t enough of a connection, Ms. Rowling has included significant echoes and direct allusions to Narnia and Middle Earth. Harry’s journeys are “portal-quest fantasies,”
11
like those of Tolkien’s and Lewis’s heroes. The books sometimes even seem stocked with Lewis’s taste in food and Tolkien’s Hall of Monsters and characters. This goes beyond Butterbur/Butterbeer and Wormtongue/ Wormtail assonances. The mere presence of Ms. Rowling’s dementors has the same effect on people as Tolkien’s Ring Wraiths. The effect of the One Ring on the Ring Bearer is much like that of the locket Horcrux on the trio in
Deathly Hallows
. Sauron cannot be killed, in fact, because so much of his power is invested in the One Ring, which is reflected in Voldemort’s faux immortality achieved by investing parts of his soul into Horcrux objects. Not to mention that many readers visualized Tolkien’s Gandalf the White when they first met Albus Dumbledore, whose name means “white.”
And there are more connections: Old Man Willow and the Whomping Willow, the Mirror of Galadriel’s reflection in both the Mirror of Erised and the Pensieve, and the great spiders Shelob and Aragog the Acromantula.
12
Tolkien scholar Dr. Amy H. Sturgis of Belmont University notes that the similarities between
The Lord of the Rings
were more than superficial plot points; they touched on the core meaning of each series of books—that Harry Potter is Tolkienesque fantasy, pure and simple.
13
Ms. Rowling, though, over the years, despite the testimony of those who knew her in college and when she began writing
Harry Potter
that she was a serious reader of
Lord of the Rings
, has increasingly distanced herself from Tolkien. Each individual report of Ms. Rowling’s thoughts on Tolkien and the progression of her memory about the importance of
Lord of the Rings
in understanding Harry only becomes louder and clearer with time; this author is not a Tolkien reader or fan and thinks it would be best to shelve the Shire as a place of great influence on her creative imagination. Dumbledore is no Gandalf shadow, etc. As Maureen Lamson has explained, given the obvious story echoes in
Potter
that strike any Tolkien reader, these denials are mind-boggling.
14
The situation with Lewis is, if anything, even more bizarre. Ms. Rowling before the year 2000 confesses only unbridled admiration of Lewis and his
Chronicles of Narnia
. In 1997, she said she “reveled in Narnia” as a child.
15
He is a “genius” to whom she is flattered to be compared;
16
she cannot be in the same room with a
Chronicles
novel and not rush over and pick it up;
17
she loves the series, especially Eustace Scrubb.
18
Voyage of the Dawn Treader
is her favorite
Chronicle
.
19
But in 2005 she said that she never read the
Chronicles’
last book.
20
That same year, Lev Grossman, of
Time
magazine, reported:
There’s something about Lewis’s sentimentality about children that gets on [Rowling’s] nerves. “There comes a point where Susan, who was the older girl, is lost to Narnia because she becomes interested in lipstick. She’s become irreligious basically because she found sex,” Rowling says. “I have a big problem with that.”
21
Lewis readers scratch their heads over these comments. Beyond the contradiction with Ms. Rowling’s previously stated admiration for Lewis, it would be difficult for her to take issue with this particular plot point because it is only mentioned in the end pages of
The Last Battle
, the series finale, a book she has said she has not read.
Why does she embrace the hermetic writing of Burnett and Nesbit and exalt in the “direct influence” of Goudge but balk at acknowledging the popular fantasies of Lewis and Tolkien that are obvious influences on her writing? For me, the way to come to some understanding of Ms. Rowling’s simultaneous discomfort with and admiration for Lewis and Tolkien is in Colin Manlove’s essay “Parent or Associate? George MacDonald and the Inklings.”
22
Manlove distinguishes between two types of fantasy or symbolist writers: the subversive and the conservative. The subversive writer “aims to undermine his reader’s assumptions and ways of seeing the world” either “for the sake of broadening our perspective on life” or “for the purpose of leading us toward God. His or her fantasies are full of paradoxes, riddles, and other reverses to point us to a new and transcendent level of discourse.”
Speaking about MacDonald as a subversive, Manlove says his fantasies “are founded on words, scenes, and events that continually reverse one another, pushing a deeper knowledge beneath a shallower one; and characters frequently change shape, according to their inner natures, or the spiritual nature of the person looking at them.” He could, of course, be describing Ms. Rowling’s work here.
Conservative fantasy writers, in contrast, “seek to preserve something, to keep things as they are.” Manlove says this is especially true of Lewis’s Space Trilogy and
Narnia.
Rowling and the Inklings Lewis and Tolkien are all Christian symbolist writers, but as “subversive” and “conservative” authors, their works differ in tone and posture. Perhaps Rowling is hesitant to claim a connection to Tolkien and Lewis because she sees those books as being so fundamentally different from hers.
All of the writers that we’ve discussed share a worldview and an argument against the empiricism and materialist perspective of our times. A group including Swift, Shakespeare, Austen, Sayers, Shelley, Nesbit, Stoker, Goudge, Dante, Homer, Dickens, Burnett, Hughes, Lewis, and Tolkien couldn’t be much different from one another. They wrote in different ages in genres and styles as diverse as epic poetry, alchemical drama, ribald satire, and detective fiction. Many of them are Christians, certainly, but, more to the point, all of them who write on an allegorical and anagogical level share an understanding of the human person as essentially spiritual, or, as Barfield, Lewis, and Ron Weasley would have it, “mental.”
Whether on the subversive or conservative bank of this symbolist stream of writing, all these writers, like Austen and Shelley, are arguing against the scientists and secularists that would restrict reality to the world we know and measure. Each points to a greater, invisible reality, beneath, behind, and within the surfaces of things known by us via that same metaphysical reality that is in us, our
Logos
spirit.
Ms. Rowling writes in a tradition that works to Apparate readers out of the cavernous Shadowlands for an experience of the sunlight and the light that is in them and all things. Her special accomplishment is not her popularity so much as it is in the artistry of anagogical alchemy and allegory that created
Potter
mania. She has sewn a seamless garment of ten genres on four levels of meaning combining the best of hero’s journey, mystery, schoolboy fiction, gothic settings, postmodern morality, and Christian fantasy her readers wrap themselves in as we would Harry’s Invisibility Cloak. Transcending ourselves and having an imaginative experience of what is most real, we are transformed, the greater “inner reality” changing the outer. Her books serve as a gateway to the great books, certainly, but, more important, to the world outside our egotistic selves and Plato’s Cave that these books all call us to. Pepperdine professor and
Repotting Harry Potter
author James Thomas says Ms. Rowling’s books seem “too juvenile, too current, and too popular” to many academics for them to qualify as works of art that will be read and savored for generations. In addressing and offering some experience of truly human life, however, I have no doubt of her inclusion among the greats. Whatever the judgments of academics or literati, however, Harry has won his sure place in that divine part of the hearts of Rowling’s readers that is the still point of King’s Cross and the origin and center of all that is.
Notes
Introduction
3
“Magic, Mystery, and Mayhem: An Interview with J. K. Rowling.”
Amazon.com
, early spring 1999.
4
Crawford, Brad. “J. K. Rowling: On Setting Priorities—J. K. Rowling Discusses Her Influences, Secrets About Harry Potter, and How She Makes Writing a Priority.”
Writer’s Digest
, February 2000.
5
“Magic, Mystery, Mayhem.”
Chapter One: Narrative Drive and Genre: Why We Keep Turning the Pages