21 January 2012
from Surprised by Joy, chapter 12, Guns and Good Company (C.S. Lewis)
My first taste of Oxford was comical enough. I had made no arrangements about quarters and, having no more luggage than I could carry in my hand, I sallied out of the railway station on foot to find either a
lodging-house or a cheap hotel; all agog for 'dreaming spires' and 'last
enchantments'. My first disappointment at what I saw could be dealt with.
Towns always show their worst face to the railway. But as I walked on
and on I became more bewildered. Could this succession of mean shops
really be Oxford? But I still went on, always expecting the next turn to
reveal the beauties, and reflecting that it was a much larger town than
I had been led to suppose. Only when it became obvious that there was
very little town left ahead of me, that I was in fact getting to open
country, did I turn round and look. There behind me, far away, never
more beautiful since, was the fabled cluster of spires and towers. I had
come out of the station on the wrong side and been all this time
walking into what was even then the mean and sprawling suburb of Botley. I did not see to what extent this little adventure was an allegory of my whole life.
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