C.S. Lewis on Sehnsucht
Surprised by Joy (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich: 1955), 168.
I smuggled in the assumption that what I wanted was a "thrill," a state
of my own mind. And there lies the deadly error. Only when your whole
attention and desire are fixed on something else — whether a distant
mountain, or the past, or the gods of Asgard — does the "thrill"
arise. It is a byproduct. Its very existence presupposes that you
desire not it but something other and outer. If by any perverse askesis
[asceticism or discipline] or the use of any drug it could be produced
from within, it would at once be seen to be of no value. For take away
the object, and what, after all, would be left? A whirl of images, a
fluttering sensation in the diaphragm, a momentary abstraction. And who
could want that? This, I say, is the first and deadly error, which
appears on every level of life and is equally deadly on all, turning
religion into a self-caressing luxury and love into auto-eroticism.
Longing for the Everlasting

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