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  1. The Great Divorce 1. I SEEMED to be standing in a bus queue by the side of a long, mean street. Evening was just closing in and it was raining. I had been wandering for hours in similar mean streets, always in the rain and always in evening twilight. Time seemed to have paused on that dismal moment when

  2. 16 de ago. de 2022 · Books. The Great Divorce. C. S. Lewis. DigiCat, Aug 16, 2022 - Fiction - 71 pages. DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "The Great Divorce" by C. S. Lewis. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format.

  3. The Great Divorce alludes to the First and Second World Wars, which occurred from 1914 to 1918 and 1939 to 1945, respectively. In both conflicts, European (and some non-European) countries fought against one another and millions of people were killed, challenging many people’s faith in a merciful, all-powerful God.

  4. Books. The Great Divorce. C. S. Lewis. Collins, 2012 - Fiction - 160 pages. C.S. Lewis's dazzling allegory about heaven and hell - and the chasm fixed between them - is one of his most brilliantly imaginative tales, as he takes issue with the ideas in William Blake's 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell'. In a dream, the narrator boards a bus on a ...

  5. Analysis. The bus flies onward, over a large cliff. Slowly the bus descends, until it lands on the cliff. The Narrator and his fellow passengers get off the bus, and find that they’re near a river, with green trees and thick grass. The Narrator has a sense of being in a “larger space” than he’s ever been in before.

  6. 1 de ene. de 1996 · The Great Divorce is C.S. Lewis's Divine Comedy: the narrator bears strong resemblance to Lewis (by way of Dante); his Virgil is the fantasy writer George MacDonald; and upon boarding a bus in a nondescript neighborhood, the narrator is taken to Heaven and Hell.The book's primary message is presented with almost oblique tidiness--"There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to ...

  7. 2 de abr. de 2018 · The Great Divorce is perhaps one of C. S. Lewis’s most creative works, but it remains also one of his lesser known books. Lewis, himself, in his preface to the book, calls The Great Divorce a “small book.” In spite of its brevity, The Great Divorce has several theological implications, especially with respect to heaven, hell, and the nature of sin.