Thursday, January 1, 2004

As The Ruin Falls Comments

Rating: 3.8

All this is flashy rhetoric about loving you.
I never had a selfless thought since I was born.
I am mercenary and self-seeking through and through:
I want God, you, all friends, merely to serve my turn.
...
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Clive Staples Lewis
COMMENTS
Rose Marie Juan-austin 29 September 2021

A beautiful poem on love and life. Powerful and touching lines so wonderfully woven and expressed.

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Lisa Causey 12 September 2021

about the devistation he felt at her death and the realization of how she had helped him learn how to truly love unconditionally.

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Lisa Causey 12 September 2021

amongst his belongings until after he died. It is not about unrequited love but

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Lisa Causey 12 September 2021

C.S. Lewis wrote this poem for his wife after she died. It was not discovered amongst his belongings until after C.S Lewis himself died. It is NOT about just 2 lovers, or unrequited love. It is about the devistation he fe

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Chinedu Dike 19 October 2019

A well articulated piece of poetry nicely embellished with poetic rhyme and rhythm.

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Practicing Poetess 14 January 2018

Great to see a poem by one of my favourite writers, C.S. Lewis (I'm a devoted fan of all the Narnia books and films.) No doubt he wrote this poem about his poetess wife, Joy. The bridge breaking, and the ruin falling, most likely refer to her death by cancer. Were you still alive, Dear Jack, I'd give you a '10' for this poem!

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Joshua Adeyemi 14 January 2018

So moistured with irony.... For this I bless you as the ruin falls. The pains You give me are more precious than all other gains. Good lines. Great pen!

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Glen Kappy 14 January 2018

My first time reading this Shakespearian sonnet by Lewis I think. How well he pictures the inescapability of our self-seeking, how everything we do has some taint or stain of it. I wonder to whom he is addressing this. At first I thought a woman. But God perhaps? Does it matter? —since all love has its source in God. -GK

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Zaklog the Great 08 February 2018

Look at line four: He says, I want God, you, all friends. God is clearly not the person being addressed. I don't know when this poem was written, but based on his biography, my best bet is his wife Joy.

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Carl DiVirgilio 06 June 2018

The you in question could just be you (the reader) , meaning everybody, not a particular you.

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Bernard F. Asuncion 14 January 2018

Such an interesting poem by Clive Staples Lewis👍👍👍

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Deepak Kumar Pattanayak 14 January 2018

It matters when feelings are of mercenary, selfish, ignorant and flashy nature to serve only one's end not unlike what is popularly denominated a swell that may invite ruin in love and life........very well composed......thanks for sharing

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No doubt it is a great poem and lot of meanings and more thorough topics.

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Savita Tyagi 02 July 2014

This poem writes about a reality that always looks in eyes no matter how much we want to cover it. A beautiful poem.

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John Young 21 June 2014

Really points out that until someone has truly loved they will never truly know themselves. I loved it!

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John Hardesty 02 July 2013

Man's exile, as Napoleon, John of Patmos, Dante, and Aristotle, always an alienated being in the third sense, pure selfishness of a mortal god, indeed! ! !

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'As the Ruin Falls' by Clive Staples Lewis is a wonderful contrast between the uninhibited declaration of the speaker being not just a hedonist, 'through and through', but the ultimate 'mercenary and self-seeking' hedonist. The juxtaposition of the irony and reverse satire of the lines immediately before and after this glorious confession is quite delightful. 'I never had a selfless thought since I was born' is wonderfully pious and in reality impossible, setting up the character of utter selfishness 'I am mercenary and self-seeking through and through: ' before the incredible line 'I want God, you, all friends, merely to serve my turn.' 'Peace, re-assurance, pleasure, ' are normal human goals; yet the line 'I cannot crawl one inch outside my proper skin: ' is an ultimate refusal to compromise with others. Great love is supposed to be selfless thus 'I talk of love -a scholar's parrot may talk Greek-' highlights hollow meaningless words spoken as false declarations of love, as meaningless as a parrot, which could be taught to speak Greek but without real wisdom and understanding. 'Love is not self seeking' is an appropriate Bible reference reinforcing this line in western literature. This concept of being unable to love in sincerity enfolds the entire poem, 'All this is flashy rhetoric about loving you' spoken in the first line implies false words of love. This theme continues in the second stanza and develops into 'Peace, re-assurance, pleasure, are the goals I seek, ' not love. An unexpected love is born and stated with 'Only that now you have taught me (but how late) my lack' in the third stanza. The speaker has learned some imperfect lessons from love yet is still incapable of committing to true love. The title 'As the Ruin Falls' beautifully encapsulates the theme of love causing ruin to lovers, and in the fourth stanza, the speaker thankfully says to his lover 'For this I bless you as the ruin falls. The pains/ You give me are more precious than all other gains.' This is the entire content of the concluding stanza and nothing more needs to be said. The chasm is upon him. Examine the last lines of the third stanza. 'I see the chasm. And everything you are was making/ My heart into a bridge by which I might get back/ From exile, and grow man. And now the bridge is breaking.' No he will not grow into the man, despite everything she is, because this bridge of love 'is breaking.' Such a beautiful clever insightful endearing poem, wonderfully written.

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Karen Sinclair 02 July 2012

I love the silence i felt when reading this piece... there seems to be a need of the writer to return full circle and i wonder the significance of that... is it a hope to return to younger innocence and belief before the ruins collapse... not sure... You, all friends merely to serve my turn is intriguing to me.. perhaps i should re-read at another time and it will all slot happily into place... Enjoyable and just wish i was a bit brighter :)

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Paul Brookes 02 July 2012

Great poem about life and self.

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Phillip Freebourn 08 February 2008

I learned this poem through Phil Keaggy when he put a tune to it and placed it on his Love Broke Thru album back in the early 70's. I was in love with Lewis (and Keaggy's) work ever since. What a profound ability to capture our spiritual struggle and place it in words that resound through ages.

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Jan How 03 November 2005

How true is this. It's a really honest way to pray. Seeing myself as i really am actually draws me closer to God. CS Lewis had such insight.

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