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In "The Great Divorce," authored by C. S. Lewis, explores the rigid divide between Heaven and Hell through a dream-like narrative. The story begins in a dismal, rainy Grey Town, where inhabitants live in perpetual isolation fueled by their own quarrelsomeness and self-centeredness. Residents are permitted to take a bus ride to the outskirts of a celestial realm, a place of immense solidity and vibrant reality that makes the visitors appear as mere ghosts. The central conflict involves the Solid People from the mountains attempting to persuade these phantoms to abandon their earthly vices and pride to remain in the light. However, most ghosts cling to their bitterness, intellectual vanity, or personal grievances, ultimately choosing the familiar misery of their shadowy existence over the agonizing process of becoming real. Lewis uses these encounters to argue that evil cannot develop into good and that the journey to joy requires a total surrender of the self.
By JamesIn "The Great Divorce," authored by C. S. Lewis, explores the rigid divide between Heaven and Hell through a dream-like narrative. The story begins in a dismal, rainy Grey Town, where inhabitants live in perpetual isolation fueled by their own quarrelsomeness and self-centeredness. Residents are permitted to take a bus ride to the outskirts of a celestial realm, a place of immense solidity and vibrant reality that makes the visitors appear as mere ghosts. The central conflict involves the Solid People from the mountains attempting to persuade these phantoms to abandon their earthly vices and pride to remain in the light. However, most ghosts cling to their bitterness, intellectual vanity, or personal grievances, ultimately choosing the familiar misery of their shadowy existence over the agonizing process of becoming real. Lewis uses these encounters to argue that evil cannot develop into good and that the journey to joy requires a total surrender of the self.