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Tolkien Teaches Us to Take Courage
The Daily Telegraph via The National Post ^ | 1/6/03 | Tom Shippey

Posted on 01/09/2003 8:29:39 AM PST by ksen

Tolkien teaches us to take courage

Tom Shippey

The Daily Telegraph

Monday, January 06, 2003

J.R.R. Tolkien was not a professional author nor, for much of his life, even a much-published one. He had a certain success with The Hobbit in 1937, when he was 45 -- enough for his publisher, Stanley Unwin, to ask for a sequel. But though Tolkien dutifully began to write one almost immediately, it was 17 years before the first volume of The Lord of the Rings was published, by which time Tolkien had almost reached retirement.

For much of his life he was haunted by the fear of never finishing anything -- the theme of one of his few short stories, Leaf by Niggle. In The Notion Club Papers, not published until 20 years after his death, he imagines his own work as a manuscript discovered on a dusty shelf sometime far in the future, incomprehensible and anonymous.

Tolkien's fears have been proved false, but they were not unfounded. His work is now known to hundreds of millions of readers and viewers, but the non-professional nature of his writing still shows through.

An experienced professional author, writing to make a living and with a good sense of potential markets, would not have produced a 1,000-page romance with only vestigial love interests. Nor would he have added 100 pages of appendices about dates and scripts and languages. And he would have known not to stop the action dead with a 15,000-word account of a confused committee meeting, which is "The Council of Elrond."

Peter Jackson's first film had to take stern action to deal with that problem, and his second one has to deal equally sternly with Tolkien's decision -- how Jackson must have torn his hair! -- not to bother with the Ents' attack on Isengard, the stronghold of the corrupt wizard Saruman, but to have the junior hobbits Merry and Pippin report it in flashback.

At the end of one chapter, they are gazing down from the Ent Treebeard's shoulders on Saruman's valley, and then they disappear from the action until, 70 pages later, they turn up picnicking in the ruins. It was a dead certainty that Jackson could not allow his version of the story to go like that. It breaks a basic rule: "Show, don't tell."

But basic rules are made to be broken, at least by authors who are not writing for the market but for themselves. And if there is one thing that publishing history shows, it is that the market does not know what it wants -- except novelty, which is by nature unpredictable. Again and again, great writers of fantasy have been loners, starting off without agents and against sensible advice. Tolkien was not a professional author. He was a driven one, and one ought to ask what drove him because, whatever it was, it draws other people too.

Things like missing out the sack of Isengard perhaps provide a clue. Tolkien dropped a big action scene, yes. What he got in exchange, and what he clearly wanted to get, was a major surprise, as one plot strand --Aragorn, Legolas and Gimli, now mixed up with the Riders of Rohan -- quite unexpectedly runs across the results of another -- Merry and Pippin and Saruman and the Ents -- although the day has already been saved for the first group by the marching wood at Helm's Deep in Rohan. None of the characters, as Tolkien wrote the story, really understands the whole of what is going on.

Not even Gandalf. In fact, the only thing they do know is that their fate will not, in the end, be determined by visible events but by a mostly invisible one: the stealthy crawl of three insignificant-looking characters into the lion's mouth of Mordor. The great ones and the heroes are continually trying to see what is happening elsewhere, through the palantirs and the Mirror of Galadriel and the Eye of Sauron. The attempt is repeatedly disastrous. Denethor commits suicide because of what he sees in his palantir, but he has read it wrong. As Gandalf says, "Even the wise cannot see all ends," and the really wise remember that.

The moral is, to quote Gandalf again -- and Jackson picked out just these words to repeat in the first movie, varying the pronouns cunningly -- "That [the future] is not for us to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us."

Tolkien surely did not mean these words just for Frodo. They were a major part of his own conviction and a part of his own cure for the defeatism, the appeasement, the lack of will and the weary calculation of odds that he saw dogging the Western democracies as he was writing The Lord of the Rings and still after he had finished it. Tolkien's achievement, it may be, was to reintroduce a heroic world view, drawn from the ancient texts he taught as a professor, to a world gone ironic.

And this world view was put across not only by the obviously heroic figures such as Aragorn and Faramir and King Theoden, but by the hobbits -- and, most of all, by the very structure of the story. In this story, all the characters find themselves, literally as well as figuratively, bewildered: their bearings lost, not sure what's for the best, but slogging on regardless. The most important ones, moreover, the hobbits Frodo and Sam, think they're on their own. All the time, their friends are risking everything to distract the Eye of Sauron from them, but they don't know that. They go on anyway.

The film version, adapted to the limited attention span of the modern viewer, can't handle all of this, but it handles a surprising amount. Tolkien himself, commenting on the first of several attempted film scripts back in 1957, remarked that he had no objection to people cutting things out, but he disliked compression, trying to jam everything into three hours. It loses the uncertainty, the false trails and the fog of war that link The Lord of the Rings and the battle of the Somme, where Tolkien fought with the Lancashire Fusiliers.

Peter Jackson has inevitably built up the action scenes and straightened the tangled threads, but the message survives the change of medium. Courage is what you need after you've lost hope: Things may not be as bad as they seem. Tolkien learned that nearly 90 years ago, but it isn't obsolete yet.


TOPICS: Books/Literature; TV/Movies; The Hobbit Hole
KEYWORDS: emoryuniversity; lotr; tolkien; ttt
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To: carton253
I agree with your interpretation of SC. I was devastated by his decision but I did find him noble and tragic.
21 posted on 01/09/2003 1:32:54 PM PST by Elenya
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To: carton253; Sam Cree
I would add the last Gollum-Smeagol scene when Smeagol shivers with excitement at Gollum's plot about Shelob. The look of admiration in his eyes for Gollum and his feverish anticipation was priceless!
22 posted on 01/09/2003 1:36:47 PM PST by Elenya
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To: Elenya
was = were
23 posted on 01/09/2003 1:54:39 PM PST by Elenya
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To: ksen; 2Jedismom; Alkhin; Anitius Severinus Boethius; artios; AUsome Joy; austinTparty; ...

Ring Ping!!

24 posted on 01/09/2003 2:32:10 PM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: HairOfTheDog
junior hobbits Merry and Pippin

ROFL!!!

25 posted on 01/09/2003 2:42:29 PM PST by Alkhin (One thing you have not found in your hunting and that's brighter wits!)
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To: HairOfTheDog
Yes, sometimes it is surely difficult to keep going.
26 posted on 01/09/2003 2:50:23 PM PST by Cap'n Crunch
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To: carton253
carton! There you are!! I was wondering in the Hobbit Hole where you were...(do you think Elijah Wood would make a great Sydney Carton????)...

you hit upon the very reason why I like the character of Pippin so much. If you read up on Tolkien discussing what he was trying to do with Frodo and the others in FOTR, you find that Pippin originally wasnt there...that it was a Bolger type character who was just going to go with them until Crickhollow...and then it was just to Bree, and somehow ended up in Rivendell; and by that time had evovled into Peregrin Took (after he decided upon the name of Frodo Baggins) and had Gandalf arguing with Elrond over letting Pippin and Merry go along.

I got the distinct feeling from reading of Tolkien's account that Pippin was a character (regardless of the many name changes he underwent) that would NOT go away/shut up.

I LOVE characters like that!!!

In trying to write myself, there are a few characters I have come up with that won't go away...that tend to take over...then the writer has to decide what he is going to do...ignore the character, or give in to it.

I LOVE SYDNEY CARTON AS WELL.

27 posted on 01/09/2003 2:51:56 PM PST by Alkhin (One thing you have not found in your hunting and that's brighter wits!)
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To: HairOfTheDog
I enjoyed it. Thanks!

Dan
28 posted on 01/09/2003 2:57:42 PM PST by BibChr
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To: ksen
Something occurred to me, that Darth Vader is, in essence, a Gollum-Smeagol made central to the story arc. In Empire Strikes Back we see Vader's inner conflict, though he believes he can turn Luke to the Dark Side and overthrow the Emperor(still using power to "achieve good") He also goes soft on his son, and doesn't kill any officers when the Millenium Falcon escapes, he just strides off.

Anyways, it occurred to me that at the end Anakin/Smeagol wins out, unlike LotR, and he throws the Emperor and his love of the Dark Side down the reactor shaft. In LotR, Smeagol loses the internal battle, and falls into the lava, taking the Dark Side/Ring with him, though not intentionally.

Yeah, the more I think of it, the more Vader is Smeagol, if he HAD been redeemed and become the central focus of the story. It was one of the few genius elements of Lucas' story, though he's ruined the franchise with the prequels.
29 posted on 01/09/2003 3:25:21 PM PST by Skywalk
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To: Elenya
I am thinking about the ending speech from Sam, in TTT, as it relates to your question about Smeagol/Gollum, and I think that yes, he might. Smeagol was greatly moved by the speech I think. Even all the hideousness of what he had become over the long years with the ring -- and maybe because he becomes more Smeaglish than Gollumish the longer they are not in possession of prreecciouss -- Smeagol is possibly able to be more powerful. I love questions like that. 8^) And the character Sam in the books has always been a favorite of mine too.
30 posted on 01/09/2003 4:58:12 PM PST by My back yard
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To: My back yard
Yes, Sam's speech was very moving. But by the time Smeagol heard it, Gollum had already taken over. The alleged betrayal of Frodo wouldn't allow Smeagol to ever win out over Gollum. Frodo's love was Smeagol's only hope at redemption as it allowed him to transfer his love for the ring to another human being.

But when he felt betrayed by his new love (something close to filial love, with Sam and Smeagol being the rival siblings), he had no other choice but to transfer his love back to the ring.

31 posted on 01/09/2003 5:55:14 PM PST by Elenya
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32 posted on 01/09/2003 6:14:00 PM PST by Anti-Bubba182
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To: Elenya
as it allowed him to transfer his love for the ring to another human being.

Well, another hobbit anyway. ;^)

33 posted on 01/09/2003 7:11:36 PM PST by My back yard
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To: Sam Cree
Actually, Shippey has Tolkien's old job before Tolkien went to Oxford....Leeds University, I think? If you check out one of the FOTR documentaries (I forget which) they mention that; also the Tolkien bio that has been on PBS recently.
34 posted on 01/09/2003 8:20:02 PM PST by Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
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To: Alkhin
No, I don't think Elijah Wood would make a good Sydney Carton, and I don't say that because I think Elijah Wood is not a good actor. He's good.

One, he's not old enough. Carton is in his 40's... Wood barely in his '20's.

There is a hardness/bitterness/ruin in Sydney Carton. I don't think Wood could pull that off. If I would cast anyone from FOTR, I would use either Sean Bean or Viggo.

And the actor who played Carton would have to play Darnay (or I would have to find the Carton's actor identical twin). I don't Elijah would make a good Darnay either. Darnay is a haunted man. So, I don't know who I would cast but I would take a hard look at Roger Howarth. He could do both. But, I would probably see lots of actors.

35 posted on 01/10/2003 5:01:30 AM PST by carton253
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To: Skywalk
Those are good abservations about Smeagol/Anakin and Gollum/Darth. Oh, and I agree with you about the prequels. ;^)
36 posted on 01/10/2003 5:24:18 AM PST by ksen (HHD - Third viewing tonight.....)
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To: My back yard
Well, another hobbit anyway. ;^)

I guess "hobbit" didn't seem charged enough to carry conviction, LOL!

37 posted on 01/10/2003 5:56:08 AM PST by Elenya
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To: mtngrl@vrwc
ping!
38 posted on 01/10/2003 5:56:44 AM PST by Elenya
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To: Elenya
" ...in the books, Sam ended up being my favorite character (after Gollum and for different reasons) because he is in my mind the real hero of the quest. I remember being so moved by his purity of soul and his extraordinary courage. I have a feeling Astin will be up to the task."

Sam's my favorite character too. His total devotion to his best friend, Frodo, is what we need more of in this world. He knowingly walks into danger and what he is certain will lead to his death, all because he cares more about Frodo than himself. He never once asks himself if following Frodo is a good idea in the light of the fact that they are headed straight into Mordor, the most evil place in Middle Earth. If Frodo had turned aside from his task I doubt if Sam would have taken the ring and gone into Mordor alone, but he darn sure was not going to allow Frodo to face this terrible challenge alone.
39 posted on 01/10/2003 7:32:38 AM PST by mtngrl@vrwc
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To: Sam Cree
I think my favorite Smeagol scene in the movie is in the forbidden pool.

Mine is the scene when Faramir is questioning Smeagol/Gollum after capturing him. That whole argument between Smeagol and Gollum is brilliant. When he looks towards the audience at the end of it and hisses "My precious", .... fabulous!

40 posted on 01/10/2003 7:38:43 AM PST by mtngrl@vrwc
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