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In Short

Summer Reading: There and Back Again with Tolkien

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Breck Wills

This is the first entry in Summer Reading, a seasonal series by 国产视频 staff and fellows about the book that changed the way in which they see the world off the page.

My favorite book began with a disappointment: The hero disappeared at the end of its first chapter. This felt like a betrayal, as if the author was deliberately misleading me. I was about nine years old, and I very much wanted to follow Bilbo Baggins鈥檚 next adventure. I鈥檇 taken to him slowly. A friend of my parents鈥 had given me The Hobbit as a gift. The word 鈥渉obbit鈥 sounded funny to me鈥攊nfantile, even. I started the book out of obligation and without excitement. But somewhere in his journey to a lonely mountain and back, Bilbo, himself a reluctant hero, won me over. Then, at the outset of 鈥淭he Fellowship of the Ring鈥, Bilbo threw a birthday party for himself and walked off 鈥渋nto the night like a rustle of wind in the grass.鈥 It took several hundred pages for me to forgive JRR Tolkien.

By then, Bilbo鈥檚 nephew Frodo had taken Bilbo鈥檚 place in my imaginings. I won鈥檛 recount the plot of the book here, other than to say that Frodo sets out to destroy a ring of great power that Bilbo had found after it had been lost for a very long time. This ring is a crucial implement in a struggle for domination and control of the world in which a major war breaks out, provoked in part by Bilbo鈥檚 rediscovery of the ring.

The switch from Bilbo to Frodo was part of a profound shift in tone on Tolkien鈥檚 part. 鈥淭he Hobbit鈥 is a well-wrought tale for children, something charming in a small way, but the three books that followed achieve a lasting, intimate majesty. 鈥淭he Hobbit鈥 would have remained, for me, a treasured book of childhood, right there with 鈥淭he Phantom Tollbooth.鈥 But the Lord of the Rings trilogy鈥 “The Fellowship of the Ring” and its companions, “The Two Towers” and 鈥淭he Return of the King”鈥攈ave lasted me half a lifetime, and I have no doubt they鈥檒l last me the second half, too.

The books take place in Middle Earth, a world of Tolkien鈥檚 conception. Part of what I love so much about the books is his audacity. He created languages; he studied the novel world he had created in the style of a disinterested academic historian. This had of course been done before, but as a framing device, and never with Tolkien鈥檚 scope and authority. He would admit in a letter decades later to having 鈥渃onstructed an imaginary time鈥 but maintained, in a response to a review of the trilogy by W.H. Auden, that: 鈥淚 am historically minded. Middle-earth is not an imaginary world. The name is the modern form 鈥 [of] an ancient name for the聽辞颈办辞耻尘别苍脓, the abiding place of Men,聽the objectively real world.鈥

Tolkien鈥檚 ambition allowed him to write in a register of original grandeur that I鈥檝e never seen equaled. He found his way into that register after a short and enigmatic detour through an old forest. Frodo and his companions arrive in Bree, a small but cosmopolitan town just beyond the borders of the Shire, a sort of rosy stand-in for England that is the hobbits鈥 home. Frodo reads a letter from a friend after he arrives in Bree:

All that is gold does not glitter

聽 聽 聽 聽Not all those who wander are lost

The old that is strong does not wither

聽 聽 聽 聽Deep roots are not reached by the frost.

The poem is in reference to a man whose name at birth was Aragorn (one suspects the echoes of 鈥減aragon鈥 must be deliberate), who goes by Strider, as a sort of semi-clandestine protector of the weak. Sam, one of Frodo鈥檚 friends, suspects that the man they meet might be an imposter. He replies to Sam鈥檚 accusation:

鈥淚 am afraid my only answer to you, Sam Gamgee, is this. If I had killed the real Strider, I could kill you. And I should have killed you already without so much talk. If I was after the Ring, I could have it – NOW!’鈥

He stood up, and seemed suddenly to grow taller. In his eyes gleamed a light, keen and commanding. Throwing back his cloak, he laid his hand on the hilt of a sword that had hung concealed by his side. They did not dare to move. Sam sat wide-mouthed staring at him dumbly.

鈥淏ut I am the real Strider, fortunately,鈥 he said, looking down at them with his face softened by a sudden smile. 鈥淚 am Aragorn son of Arathorn; and if by life or death I can save you, I will.鈥

Reading these books as a kid, one of the great frustrations was that the magic was never very apparent. Gandalf, another of the books鈥 protagonists, is a magician of great power. But unlike the wizards in the video games popular at the time, he doesn鈥檛 often actually cast any spells as such. Rather Gandalf鈥檚 power rests on the moral authority of his wisdom, which gives him fortitude. (This seems like a good point to note that the five movies based on these books are a tremendous waste of talent鈥攁 very good cast and lush cinematography that almost entirely miss the subtle greatness of the books.) At one point, Gandalf gets in a fight with another wizard, formerly his superior, who used to wear white robes, but traded them in for multi-coloured robes in a sort of disruptive innovation:

鈥淲hite鈥erves as a beginning. White cloth may be dyed. The white page can be overwritten; and the white light can be broken,” Saruman, the rival wizard, says. Gandalf鈥檚 reply is one of my favourite rejoinders of the book: 鈥淚n which case it is no longer white鈥nd he that breaks a thing to find out what it is has left the path of wisdom.鈥

Like Shakespeare, Tolkien often drops aphorisms in passing. At another point, Gandalf says: 鈥淢any that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in judgement. For even the very wise cannot see all ends.鈥 I don鈥檛 love these books for their aphorisms though, or for Tolkien鈥檚 mythopoetic historiography. I love them for their emotional texture.

Towards the beginning of the books, the texture is that of a gathering together of friends, a mixture of anticipation and apprehension. In the middle, it鈥檚 the flow of adventure itself: the joy of being in the midst of a difficult thing. And at the end, it鈥檚 the way in which Tolkien joins the reader in savouring triumph and in an awareness of its inherent futility: 鈥淚t must often be so,鈥 Frodo tells Sam, 鈥渨hen things are in danger: some one has to give them up, lose them, so that others may keep them.鈥 As Sam tells his love interest on returning to the Shire, explaining just how well Tolkien engenders these emotions would take 鈥渁 week鈥檚 answer, or none.鈥

At one point Aragorn befriends a horseman in the South, far from the Shire, who doubts the existence of hobbits. 鈥淸T]hey are only a little people in old songs and children’s tales out of the North. Do we walk in legends or on the green earth in the daylight?鈥 he asks Aragorn. 鈥淎 man may do both,鈥 Aragorn replies. 鈥淔or not we but those who come after will make the legends of our time. The green earth, say you? That is a mighty matter of legend, though you tread it under the light of day!鈥

This is, of course, mostly true鈥攂ut now and again there are exceptions, and the legends of our time are made by our coevals, like JRR Tolkien. Part of me never entirely got over Bilbo鈥檚 marginalization in the 鈥淟ord of the Rings.鈥 But I鈥檝e learned from Tolkien in the decades since I first read him that life鈥檚 disappointments are also worth savoring. As Anthony Lane of PG Wodehouse, I鈥檇 rather re-read Tolkien than read anything else.

More 国产视频 the Authors

Konstantin Kakaes
Konstantin Kakaes

Future Tense Fellow; International Security Program Fellow; National Fellow, 2013

Fellowships

Summer Reading: There and Back Again with Tolkien