The Commons Spring 2017 | Page 15

STUDENT ESSAY with my siblings in a blue paddling pool shaped like a boat. The grass was the sea, and we imagined we were stranded in the middle of it: if you stepped out the sharks would get you, we said. So we stayed in the boat and sucked ice water through straws to stay alive. What is key to a child’s imagination is wonder. One could say that a child is living a lie when he or she makes a house out of a sofa, a blanket and a broom. It is a lie. Yet it can be more true than any house made out of brick or stone or wood. For its truth comes from the child’s delight and wonder in making it. As C.S.Lewis himself put it, Once in those very early days my brother brought into the nursery the lid of a biscuit tin which he had covered with moss and gar- nished with twigs and flowers so as to make it a toy garden or a toy forest. That was the first beauty I ever knew. What a real garden had failed to do, the toy garden did. It made me aware of nature—not, indeed, as a storehouse of forms and colours but as something cool, dewy, fresh, exuberant,…as long as I live in my imagination of Paradise will retain some- a table, they see a shelter or a den. A ta- ble is something that they can make into a home, and they’ll plead to be allowed to sleep in their “table-house.” An adult looks at a table and sees a table. So it is with puddles. To adults, puddles are for dodging. No more. It is a kind of madness to splash in puddle as an adult. Some will smile, some will look worried–creases of concern appearing as they wonder at the sanity of such a person. A child, however, enjoys a puddle for what it was made for. Indeed, what else would God have made puddles for? Each splash, each jet of water that springs forth from under bike wheels, spraying everywhere, is God saying, “I made rain, and I made it for you.” A child sees what puddles are, for he sees what puddles are for. Puddles are for splashing in; rain is for running in–face tipped up into it. On your cheeks and in your eyes and dripping off the end of your nose. Rain spells out God’s delight. Within all this we see that a child’s imagination is not confined to images in the mind: it is real. Indeed, it can be more thing of my brother’s toy garden. 3 that is crying. A child’s fantasy is often the adult’s everyday, the adult’s mundane Monday morning. And a child delights in it. A child imagines it again and again. But as they grow up, they slowly and sure- ly enter the real world; they stop living in their heads and start living in the world, until finally they reach the point when they are adults and houses are no longer the table in the dining room but rent to be paid. Yet the child’s imagination is a vision. It sparks missions and inspires real life. A child can make shoebox into treasure trove, or a paddling pool into a sail boat. I remember when I was maybe seven or eight, sailing round our garden 3 Through imagination the world is made new; for, imagination makes it exciting. We grow out of such imagination, such vision (for imagination is a way of seeing things). And it is then that the world be- comes mundane. We “grow up” and the world grows old and weary with us. Snow becomes a hazard, no longer an adven- ture. People will often say, “I wish I had a child’s imagination, their way of seeing the world.” That is because a child, in imag- ining their own world and copying the world, finds wonder and excitement in it. It is because of imagination that a child can look at even a puddle and be delight- ed. For a child when it sees a puddle, sees an opportunity, an opportunity to laugh at himself and the wetness and the splash: he sees a puddle for what it was made for. An adult sees an inconvenience. In the same way, when a child looks at Dragons might not be “real” in the way adults view reality, but we still fight dragons everyday; we employ shovels as swords against an enemy that is not of our imagination. real than an adult’s vision of the world. A child’s imagination is their vision, their dream, their ideal. In fighting a dragon, they wish to be strong, to be conquer- ors. Dragons might not be “real” in the way adults view reality, but we still fight dragons everyday; we employ shovels as Kevin Charles Belmonte, Defiant Joy: The Remarkable Life and Impact of G.k. Chesterton (Nashville, Tenn.: Thomas Nelson, ©2011), 4. SPRING 2017 15