Introduction, by C. A. Huttar.
Language, symbol, and truth, by A. F. Holmes.
Either: or, by O. Barfield.
Mimesis and incarnation, by T. Howard.
Forms of spirituality in the Middle English lyric, by D. L. Jeffrey.
Chaucer's precarious Knight, by D. Ebner.
Samson's identity crisis and Milton's, by C. A. Huttar.
The serpent and the dove: Christabel and the problem of evil, by R. H. Siegel.
The joy of the absolute: a comparative study of the romantic visions of William Wordsworth and C. S. Lewis, by D. K. Kuhn.
The fantastic imagination in George MacDonald, by G. E. Sadler.
Coinherence, substitution, and exchange in Charles Williams' poetry and poetry-making, by A. M. Hadfield.
The vision of cosmic order in the Oxford mythmakers, by M. E. Wright.
Past watchful dragons: the fairy tales of C. S. Lewis, by W. Hooper.
C. S. Lewis on eros as a means of grace, by C. S. Carnell.
The classical revival in contemporary British poetry, by C. D. Linton.
Such stuff as dreams: the poetry of Howard Nemerov, by D. H. Olsen.
Fantasy and the fiction of Bernard Malamud, by R. Warburton.
A good writer is hard to find, by M. E. Lorentzen.
The writer that is to be, by W. S. Miller.
Clyde S. Kilby: a sketch, by P. M. Bechtel.
Bibliography of Clyde S. Kilby (p. 479-485)