This is part 5 of a series on Tolkien’s Letter 131, most of which is included in the preface materials of The Silmarillion. Begin reading at Part 1 — or visit the previous post in this series. * * * After discussing the earliest days of Middle-earth and the Fall of the Elves through Fëanor,... Continue Reading →
They got out their Pipes and blew Smoke-Rings
Like many who smoke pipes in the modern world, I was drawn to them by the works of Tolkien. Neither of my parents were smokers of any sort, and while my stepfather smoked cigarettes during the first year or two that I knew him, he quit and has remained tobacco free ever since, almost thirty... Continue Reading →
I dislike Allegory (Letter 131, pt.2)
This is part 2 of a series on Tolkien’s Letter 131, most of which is included in the preface materials of The Silmarillion. Read Part 1 here. * * * One of the more common claims about Tolkien when it comes to interpreting his writing is that he disliked Allegory. This claim has become such... Continue Reading →
Behind his chair stood a Woman clad in White
First impressions are important, and the line quoted in the title of this post is the very first look we get of Eowyn. The line is easy to miss, as it is buried between the description of King Theoden as we see him for the first time and the description of Grima Wormtongue, who is... Continue Reading →
Sam saw a White Star twinkle
The opening chapters of Book Six, the second part of Return of the King, have got to be some of the most oppressive and depressing pages I have ever read. Chapter Two especially, “The Land of Shadow,” is just overwhelming in the dreariness and bleakness and sameness of the landscape. "Across Gorgoroth" by Ted Nasmith... Continue Reading →
In the Sky far above the Shadows of Death
One of my absolute favourite passages in Lord of the Rings comes at the end of the chapter “The Siege of Gondor” in Return of the King. It is overwhelming in its darkness until, at the end, light and hope break in. It is a fantastic moment of eucatastrophe within the larger narrative, when all... Continue Reading →
