Book Name: The Lord of the Rings
Author: J.R.R. Tolkien
First Published: 1954-1955
International Fantasy Award – 1957
Prometheus Hall of Fame Award 2009
Original Post Here
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was an English writer, poet, and university
professor. He was born in South Africa of English parents, but moved
back to England with his mother and brother when he was three years old.
Soon after, his father died of rheumatic fever, leaving the family
without income. His mother moved in with her parents and later moved
around to live with various relatives. Young Ronald spend his formative
years exploring Sarehole Mill and Moseley Bog and the Clent, Lickey and
Malvern Hills, which would become inspiration for scenes in his future
books, including his Aunt Jane’s farm of Bag End, the name of which he
would one day use for the home of his protagonist, Bilbo Baggins. His
mother Mabel taught her two children the basics of education and added
in a healthy portion of the study of botany and of Latin. Mabel Tolkien
converted to Catholicism in 1900 and was quickly cut off by her Baptist
family. Four years later, she would die of diabetes at the age of 34.
Ronald Tolkien was a boy of twelve and given into the guardianship of
his mother’s close friend, Fr. Francis Xavier Morgan of the Birmingham
Oratory, who was charged to bring Ronald and his brother Hilary up as
good Catholics.
When Tolkien was 16, he met Edith Mary Bratt, a woman three years his
senior, who lived in the boarding house where Ronald and his brother
Hilary lived. They started out as friends, meeting at teashops and
getting into mischief together. Both of them orphans, they found much
in common, and soon were very much in love. Father Morgan was not
pleased by the young romance. He felt that Edith was a distraction to
Ronald’s studies and did not care for the fact that Edith was
Protestant. Father Morgan made Ronald swear that he would not meet
with, talk to or even so much as send Edith a letter until he was 21
years of age. If he did not obey, Morgan threatened to cut off
Tolkien’s university career. Tolkien obeyed his guardian and threw
himself into his studies at the university, but he could not erase Edith
from his heart.
On Tolkien’s 21st birthday, he wrote to Edith, declared his love for
her, and asked her to marry him. Edith wrote back that she had agreed
to marry someone else because after all this time, she thought that he
had forgotten her. After a meeting at a railway station where the pair
renewed their feelings for each other, Edith cried off her engagement
and announced that she would marry Ronald Tolkien.
The United Kingdom joined World War I a year after Tolkien had
proposed to Edith. He did not immediately volunteer for service as the
other young men of his age, instead he entered a program that allowed
him to delay enlisting until he completed his degree and could enter the
war as an officer. In 1915 he was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant
in the Lancashire Fusiliers. After training as a signal officer, he was
transferred to the 11th Battalion with the British Expeditionary Force,
arriving in France in June of 1916. Tolkien served in several battles
as a signal officer.. During the Battle of Somme, he lost several of
his childhood friends in a single day. However, in the end, it was not
the Germans that took Tolkien out of the war, but lice. Tolkien came
down with trench fever which is carried by the vermin and was invalided
back to England in 1916. Tolkien married Edith in 1916, three years
after he had proposed to her.
Tolkien spent the remainder of World War I recovering in hospitals or
doing garrison duty. It was during this time that he began to work on
what he called The Book of Lost Tales, which was an early version of what would become The Silmarillion.
One day, while he and his wife went walking in the woods, Edith began
to dance for him in a clearing among the flowering hemlock trees. This
moment was the inspiration for the meeting of the characters of Beren
and Luthien of The Silmarillion. Tolkien remarked upon the incident years later stating:
“I never called Edith Luthien – but she was the source of the story that in time became the chief part of The Silmarillion.
It was first conceived in a small woodland glade filled with hemlocks
at Roos in Yorkshire (where I was for a brief time in command of an
outpost of the Humber Garrison in 1917, and she was able to live with me
for a while). In those days her hair was raven, her skin clear, her
eyes brighter than you have seen them, and she could sing – and dance.”
After the war, Tolkien’s first civilian job was with the Oxford
English Dictionary where he worked on the history of words of Germanic
origin beginning with the letter W. By 1920, he had taken a post as
Reader in Leeds and was the youngest professor at the university. In
1925 he returned to Oxford with a fellowship at Pembroke College. It
was at Pembroke where Tolkien wrote The Hobbit and the first two volumes of The Lord of the Rings.
In 1945, Tolkien took a post at Merton College and he became a
professor of English Language and Literature. He fit in well at Oxford
and in the ivy tower world of teaching and research.
Tolkien’s family life was normal enough where he and his family made
their home in North Oxford. Edith bore the last of their four children
in 1929. Tolkien would write the four children annual illustrated
letters as if from Father Christmas in addition to his usual bedtime
stories. A selection of these were published in 1976 as The Father Christmas Letters.
In adulthood, his son John would enter the priesthood, sons Michael
and Christopher would serve in the Royal Air Force and his daughter
Priscilla would become a social worker.
It was during this time in Oxford when Tolkien became one of the
founding members of a group of friends with similar interests in
writing. They were known as The Inklings. Other members were
Mr. Coghill, Mr. Dyson, Own Barfield, Charles Williams and his closest
friend, C.S. Lewis. Tolkien was responsible for returning C.S. Lewis to
Christianity, although he was disappointed that he could not convince
the man to convert to Catholicism. The Inklings met for
conversation, drink, and to read and critique their works-in-progress,
much as a modern writing group meets in present day. It was during this
time period that Tolkien completed The Lord of the Rings. The book would publish in 1954 under his author name of J.R.R. Tolkien.
In 1959, Ronald Tolkien retired from Oxford. During his time in retirement the sales of The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit
steadily increased and gained him much public attention and literary
fame. The fan attention grew intense and to escape it, Tolkien and his
wife moved to Bournemouth, a seaside resort. There his status as a
best-selling author gave he and Edith entry into polite society. Edith
loved Bournemouth, but Ronald missed his old Inklings friends at Oxford.
An old family friend wrote:
“Those friends who knew Ronald and Edith Tolkien over the
years never doubted that there was deep affection between them. It was
visible in the small things, the almost absurd degree in which each
worried about the other’s health, and the care in which they chose and
wrapped each other’s birthday presents’; and in the large matters, the
way in which Ronald willingly abandoned such a large part of his life in
retirement to give Edith the last years in Bournemouth that he felt she
deserved, and the degree in which she showed pride in his fame as an
author. A principal source of happiness to them was their shared love of
their family. This bound them together until the end of their lives,
and it was perhaps the strongest force in the marriage. They delighted
to discuss and mull over every detail of the lives of their children,
and later their grandchildren.”
Edith was the first to pass in 1971. She was 82 years of age. She
would miss seeing Queen Elizabeth II appoint her husband a Commander of
the Order of the British Empire and receive the insignia of the Order at
Buckingham Palace later in 1972. That same year, Oxford University
gave him an honorary Doctorate of Letters. Twenty one months after her
death, Tolkien died at the age of 81. Tolkien had the name Luthien
engraved under Edith’s name on their shared tombstone. He had the name
Beren carved under his own name when he joined her.
Three Rings for the Elven-kings under the sky,
Seven for the Dwarf-lords in their halls of stone,
Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die,
One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.
The Lord of the Rings begins in the land of the Hobbits,
known as The Shire. A land of verdant innocence, peopled by people
that do not look beyond their borders. A young hobbit by the name of
Frodo Baggins inherits the One Ring from his uncle, Bilbo Baggins when
the elder hobbit disappears at his birthday party. Gandalf the Grey, a
powerful human wizard, advises Frodo to remove the ring from the Shire.
The young hobbit takes off with only his gardener, Samwise (Sam)
Gamgee, but they are joined later by two of Frodo’s hobbit cousins
Meridoc (Merry) Brandybuck and Peregrin (Pippin) Took.
The group travels on to the town of Bree where they meet a man named
Strider. He becomes their guide and protector, and later is revealed to
be Aragorn, Isildur’s heir. The evil Nazgul attack the hobbits several
times, in the end wounding Frodo with a Morgul blade. Aragorn leads
the group to the Elven refuge of Rivendell where Frodo might be healed
by Elrond, the leader of the Rivendell elves. As Frodo recovers, the
hobbits learn the history of the ring, of Sauron and about how Sauron
had corrupted Gandalf’s friend and fellow wizard, Saruman. The elven
council declares that the ring that Frodo carries must be destroyed, but
that can only be done where it was forged, in the fires of Mount Doom
in the land of Mordor. Frodo offers to bear the ring to the mountain
and to destroy it. A fellowship of the ring is then formed to protect
him. It consists of Merry, Pippin, Sam, Gandalf the Wizard, Aragorn,
Gimli the Dwarf, Legolas the Elf, and the human Boromir, who is the son
of the ruling steward of Gondor.
The Fellowship face many challenges on their way to Mordor. They
fail to cross the Misty Mountains via the pass and are forced to take a
more dangerous path through the dwarven Mines of Moria. There they face
the Watcher in the water and later a monster known as a Balrog.
Gandalf manages to defeat the Balrog, but in the struggle with the
beast, both fall into a deep chasm. Gandalf is presumed dead. The rest
of the Fellowship leave Moria and take refuge in the Elven forest of
Lothlorien.
Frodo is counselled by Galadriel, one of the elder elves of
Lothlorien, and the Fellowship are gifted with boats to take them down
the River Anduin to the hills of Amon Hen. It is there that Boromir
falls for the siren song of the One Ring and tries to steal it from
Frodo. The attempt convinces Frodo that he should continue on his quest
along. Only Sam guesses what is on Frodo’s mind and forces Frodo to
take him along. The Fellowship of the Ring is now broken.
After Frodo leaves, a group of Orcs sent by Saruman and Sauron to
capture Frodo, kill Boromir and kidnap Merry and Pippin. As the orcs
travel though Rohan, a kingdom of horsemen, they are ambushed and killed
by the Rohirrim. Merry and Pippin flee into Fangorn Forest where they
befriend Treebeard, the oldest of the tree-like and powerful Ents.
Aragorn, Gimli and Legolas track the hobbits to Fangorn, and it is there
they discover the resurrected wizard of their fellowship, now known as
Gandalf the White.
The Ents, stirred from their normally peaceful and slow ways by the
two hobbits, are convinced to attack Isengard, Saruman’s stronghold and
to trap the wizard. Gandalf and Rohirrim reinforcements arrive in time
to scatter Saruman’s army. Gandalf faces Saruman and strips him of his
wizard’s rank and powers.
Meanwhile, Frodo and Sam capture Gollum, who was following them all
the way from Moria. Gollum agrees to guide the hobbits through Mordor
to Mount Doom, hoping to catch Frodo off guard and steal back the One
Ring. The One Ring had once belonged to him before Frodo’s uncle, Bilbo
Baggins, had taken it decades ago. Instead of leading the hobbits to
Mount Doom as promised, Gollum leads the pair to the great spider Shelob
in the tunnels in Mordor. Frodo falls to Shelob’s sting, but Sam
manages to free himself from the giant spider. Frodo lies so still from
the spider’s poison, that Sam believes his friend is dead. He takes
the One Ring and takes on Frodo’s quest as his own. He continues on
toward Mount Doom. However, when he is near a group of orcs, he
overhears that Frodo was merely unconscious and the ever faithful
servant and friend follows the orcs in the hope that he can rescue his
friend.
Sauron and his army attack the Kingdom of Gondor. As the city is
under siege, the Regent is fooled by Sauron and commits suicide, almost
taking his last son Faramir (Boromir’s brother) with him. Aragorn feels
that he has little options left. He and the rest of the fellowship go
to raise and army of oath-breaker ghosts that had been bound by and
ancient curse. In exchange for doing battle with Sauron, they will be
freed of their curse and able to go to their rest. With the help of the
ghost army, the forces of Gondor and Rohan do real damage to Sauron’s
orc army. They push back the enemy forces and defeat them. With the end
of the war of the ring, Aragorn is crowned Elessar, King of Arnor and
Gondor. He marries his love interest, Arwen the daughter of Elrond,
leader of the elves of Rivendell. Saruman escapes from Isengard and
seeks to re-establish himself in a new land. He chooses to invade the
hobbit homeland, The Shire.
During this time, Sam rescues Frodo, and they set out across Mordor.
Reaching the lip of the fires of the volcano, Frodo is overwhelmed by
the power of the One Ring and claims it for himself. It is at this
moment that Gollum returns, and fights to reclaim the ring. Gollum
bites off Frodo’s finger, ring and all. As their twisted guide
celebrates his victory, he stumbles and falls into the lava, taking the
One Ring with him. The destruction of the One Ring has removed Sauron’s
power for good. The Nazgul die and Sauron’s army becomes easy prey for
Aragorn’s forces at the Black Gate of Mordor.
Frodo and Sam are reunited with Merry and Pippin in Gondor. They
long to return home to The Shire. To their horror, they find their home
has been transformed by Saruman. Together, the four lead the hobbit
people in rebellion against the former wizard, removing his threat from
their homeland. Merry and Pippin are declared heroes for saving The
Shire. Samwise spots a comely young hobbit lass and decides to get
married. He uses his gifts from Galadriel the elf to help heal The
Shire. Frodo never seems to recover from his wounds and from the burden
of having to carry the One Ring for as long as he had. A few years
later, he sails on to the western isles of the elves, in the hope to
find peace for his soul at long last.
The Lord of the Rings was originally intended to be a two-volume set, the other volume to be The Silmarillion,
but the author’s idea was dismissed by his publisher. Instead, he was
asked for “more hobbit stories” due to the success of his first novel, The Hobbit. After 12 years of writing, Tolkien delivered The Lord of the Rings, a six part volume, which the publisher broke up into three parts. The first book is The Fellowship of the Ring, followed by The Two Towers, and The Return of the King. It can also be found as a single book. The Lord of the Rings
is in the top five highest selling books of all time and has been
translated into many languages. The story has been turned into the now
famous trilogy of feature films created by Peter Jackson. Eventually, The Silmarillion
would be published after the author’s death along with other assorted
writings, the guiding force behind this action being one of Tolkien’s
sons. At last, the volumes that Tolkien had originally envisioned are
available to the world.
Like many people, I embarked on the journey of Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings
when I was fairly young and still in middle school. I remember being
caught up in the adventure of the tale, but didn’t care for the poetry.
I also did not understand many of the nuances that are part of this
novel as I now do as an adult. It is subtle, but once you understand
the depth of what the author has created, you simply feel amazed. There
are shifts in the tone and style of the book that are deliberate echoes
of the different mythic and language forms that the author used as a
basis for the many cultures of Middle Earth and even for the pattern of
naming his characters and locations. This is part of what makes the
book special, the characters live in their own mythos, as intricate and
complex as our own. There is also a shift in the voice of the novel,
depending on the point of view. The chapters that focus on the hobbits
have more dialogue and detail. The chapters showcasing the Rohirrim
have a poetic rhythm echoing Middle English works. The elven chapters
have a mystical quality that is hard to get a clear picture of, distant
and beautiful as the elves that the author writes about. These shifts
in style and tone are not the work of a novice writer, but are
intentional characterizations of races and groups through language.
Tolkien perhaps was not the greatest writer of dialogue, but he
substitutes this lack for style and action.
Lord of the Rings is the founding corner stone of the high
fantasy genre as we know it today. His ideas have been copied many
times, but there is only one great original. Lord of the Rings
will always have a place on my bookshelf and hopefully on yours as well.
The novel has become the second best-selling novel ever written, with
only A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens selling more. The Hobbit
comes in as the fourth best-selling novel of all time. It is said that
there are two different types of people in the world. One type has read
The Lord of the Rings, the other is waiting to do so. Which are you?
The Hobbit
The Fellowship of the Ring
The Two Towers
The Return of the King
The Silmarillion