Lord of the Rings
This part of my page is not going to be on the movies, which
were well done, but on the truly great masterpieces: the books. I love reading
and I also love fantasy, so naturally I love Lord of the Rings. I am going to be
putting up several of my essays which I did for a teacher at my school on this
topic. I was lucky enough to have a course for English which was based on LoTR!
:-) I was very happy, and it is taught by a good teacher too. I highly recommend
that you go and buy the books: The Hobbit, The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two
Towers, and The Return of the King. There are separate books which go into small
details on the world of Middle-Earth, but they are not for a casual reader, they
are not stories but more information oriented. I will also
be trying to either rip off someone's Tolkien Biography or something along the
lines of that. Great fun, I don't particularly care considering whenever I host
a file 50 people steal my bloody links. Bastard. So I have degenerated into a
bitter robber who steals other things from people, but whatever :-)
Anyhow, check these shits out :-)
J.R.R.
Tolkien - A Biography
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, as he was christened,
was born in Bloemfontein, South Africa in 1892. His early and barely memorable
years were spent divided between the city and a country farm. His father, an
English banker, was making efforts to establish a branch in that country. Many
of Tolkien's early memories of South Africa, including an incident when he was
bitten by a tarantula while visiting a rural district, are reported to have
influenced his later works.
He left South Africa to return to England with his mother and his brother,
Hilary. His father, Arthur, was supposed also to return to England within the
next few months. However, Arthur Tolkien died of rheumatic fever while still in
South Africa. This left the grieving family in relatively dire straights and on
a very limited income.
They soon moved to Birmingham, England, so that young Tolkien could attend
King Edward VI school. His mother, Mabel, converted to Catholicism and the
religion would have a long lasting effect on young Tolkien. The family was
befriended by the Parish Priest, Father Francis Morgan, who would see the
Tolkiens through some troubled times.
An avid reader, Tolkien was influenced by some of the great writers of his
day including G.K. Chesterton and H.G. Wells. It was during this period of
financial hardship, but intellectual stimulation that Tolkien suffered the loss
of his devoted mother. She succumbed to diabetes in 1904 when Tolkien was only
12 years of age.
Father Morgan took over as his guardian, placing him first with an aunt and
then at a boarding house for orphans. It was at this boarding house, at the age
of 16 that he would meet and fall in love with Edith Bratt. Naturally, their
relationship was frowned upon. Tolkien and Edith were caught in affectionate
circumstances - they bicycled together out to the countryside surrounding the
city and had a picnic.
Edith became somewhat of an obsession for Tolkien, and his guardian, Father
Morgan, determined to separate the young couple. For, it seemed that their
relationship was interfering with Tolkien's studies and leaving him ill-prepared
to take exams to enter college. This was driven home to him when he failed to
enter the college on his first try. Tolkien temporarily swore off the love of
his life an knuckled down to the work at hand. On his second try he succeeded in
obtaining a scholarship to Oxford.
Throughout his life, Tolkien had cultivated a love of language, especially
ancient languages. At Oxford he would major in philology, which is the study of
words and language. He would be much influenced by Icelandic, Norse and Gothic
mythology. Even some of the characters and place names he would later develop
would be drawn from the names from ancient sagas. The forest of Mirkwood, which
played a prominent roll in both "The Hobbit" and in "The Lord of the Rings" was
borrowed from Icelandic mythology. The names of many of the dwarves in "The
Hobbit" were actual placenames in the myths.
Having reached the age of maturity in 1914, while still attending college, he
looked up his lost love, Edith Bratt, and proposed marriage. She had accepted a
proposal from another quarter, but in the end was persuaded to return to
Tolkien. They would marry in 1916.
World War I, the war to end all wars, came in 1914. It would forever mark the
end of many of the Empires of Europe and would unleash death across the European
Continent. Tolkien lost many of his friends in the war, and he himself would
serve as an officer on the front lines at the Battle of the Somme. He caught
trench fever in 1917 and was sent back to England to recuperate. He would not
see front line service again.
Throughout his schooldays he had been a determined poet and scholar. His
interest in language was such that he had even developed his own languages based
loosely on Finnish and Welsh. It was while recuperating in Birmingham, with his
wife at his side, that he began to create a mythology behind his languages. This
work would one day result in his famous books.
It was about this time that Tolkien was blessed with the first of his four
children. After the war he was offered a professorship at the University of
Leeds. Besides lecturing, he continued work on his mythology. He felt that he,
in a sense, was creating England's mythology.
In 1925 Tolkien with a colleague published a translation and analysis of "Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight." It was a turning point in his career. It brought
him notice at Oxford where he was offered the professorship of Anglo-Saxon.
"The Hobbit", the work that would make him famous, came out in 1936. He began
it one evening while grading exam papers. Seated at his desk, he opened up an
exam booklet to find the first page blank. He was surprised and pleased that the
student had somehow entirely skipped the page. It seemed an invitation to write,
and in that space he began his work on "The Hobbit".
The finished manuscript of "The Hobbit" fell into the hands of George Allen
and Unwin, Publishers. Unwin paid his ten year old son a shilling to read the
story and report on its publishability. The young man lavished praise on the
book, and Unwin decided to take a risk on it.
"The Hobbit" soon became a best seller and made Professor Tolkien famous. He
was already well-known as a scholar for his work in Philology, and he was also
part of a group of friends who called themselves the Inklings. The center of
this group was
C.S. Lewis who would long be one of Tolkien's best friends and admirers.
In the late 1930's Tolkien began writing the "Lord of the Rings". Work on the
story would go on for ten and a half years. He gave first chance at publication
to Allen & Unwin, the publishers of "The Hobbit". But it was rejected by a staff
editor when Unwin was away on business in France. The younger "Unwin" was now in
the family publishing business. He found out about the rejected manuscript,
wrote to his father in France, requesting permission to take on the project.
Recalling the success of "The Hobbit", but skeptical about a "hobbit book"
written for adults, he acquiesced to his son's request reluctantly.
"The Lord of the Rings" was published in three parts and would become a huge
publishing success.
Fame and fortune were both a blessing and a bane for Tolkien. He enjoyed the
popularity of his work. Yet, he was burdened with work responding to his adoring
public. After his retirement at Oxford, he and his wife Edith moved to
Bournemouth in 1966. Edith died in 1971. The loss of his life's companion did
not sit well with Tolkien; yet he struggled on for some two years till his death
of Pneumonia on 2 September 1973.
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