J. R. R. Tolkien entered my life on a dreary winter day early in 1966.
I will never forget the moment, even if I don't remember the exact date.
I had been fighting bronchitis, strep throat, and a high fever for a number of days,
and I was completely miserable.
My only comfort was my blue Sony transistor radio
that was sitting on my stomach as I lay in bed.
J. R. R. Tolkien
ca. 1925
CJFX Radio, 580 on the AM dial, broadcasted from Antigonish, Nova Scotia,
sending its welcome waves out to eastern Nova Scotia and beyond.
At that time CJFX played country, pop, jazz, rock, and Celtic music,
and I listened to it hour after hour, day after day, from my home 35 miles away in Stillwater.
I tuned in for rock; but, because of CJFX's variety format,
I was forced to develop an appreciation for Jim Reeves, the Clancy Brothers,
Eydie Gormé, and Steve Lawrence ~
not to mention John Allan Cameron and Winston "Scotty" Fitzgerald
thanks to the influence of legendary DJ and Scottish fiddle lover Gus MacKinnon.
But, the most important impact CJFX had on my life was introducing me to J. R. R. Tolkien.
That Saturday morning CJFX broadcast a program for teenagers
That Saturday morning CJFX broadcast a program for teenagers
that featured J. R. R. Tolkien and his book The Lord of the Rings.
I listened spellbound, and when I heard the following passage
from LOTR read aloud, I was caught for life.
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.
Tolkien, J. R. R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings, Vol. 1, "The Fellowship of the Ring," 2nd ed., Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1967.
Getting my hands on The Lord of the Rings in Stillwater was not an easy thing.
The nearest store that might carry the books was in Antigonish, and I had little money.
It was a long wait until the end of the school year when I won a prize
that covered the cost of the books and my mother had the time to drive me to Antigonish.
(I wish I hadn't worn my copies out. They'd be worth a lot now.)
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I read the trilogy nonstop for days, and then the hunt was on for The Hobbit.
I couldn't find it anywhere!
We moved over the summer to Freeport at the opposite end of Nova Scotia,
and a new neighbor, who had a teen-aged son visiting down in the States,
heard about my fruitless efforts to find The Hobbit.
The son returned home in the fall with the book for me in which
he had inscribed, "May the hair on your toes grow ever longer!"
The story did not disappoint!
I have been reading and studying Tolkien ever since.
One of the best courses that I have ever taken at university
was a course on Tolkien and the Inklings with
Dr. John J. Brugaletta at Cal State Fullerton in Fullerton, California.
This phenomenal professor immersed me
in the complexity and the depth of Tolkien's world and his mythology.
Tolkien and The Hobbit
Aurora, Colorado, USA
Date Unknown
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue. All Rights Reserved
Humphrey Carpenter, writing in his authorized biography of Tolkien, describes how
Tolkien's imagination followed two different tracks during the 1920s and early 1930s.
On the one hand Tolkien was writing entertaining stories for children;
and on the other, he was constructing his personal mythology
that was eventually published posthumously in The Silmarillion.
The two tracks did not meet until one summer's day
when Tolkien was marking exam papers.
Later in his life Tolkien could not remember the year this happened,
but, this is how he remembered the occasion:
"One of the candidates had mercifully left one of the pages with no writing on it (which is the best thing that can possibly happen to an examiner) and I wrote on it: "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit." Names always generate a story in my mind. Eventually I thought I'd better find out what hobbits were like. But that's only the beginning."
(Humphrey Carpenter, Tolkien, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1977, p. 172)
From a sentence written on a blank page in an exam paper almost ninety years ago
came the books that have captivated millions of readers and continue to do so today.
Citation: "J. R. R. Tolkien." AZQuotes.com. Wind and Fly LTD, 2024. 27 September 2024. https://www.azquotes.com/quote/354684
Tolkien went on to find out a whole lot about hobbits and much more about Middle-earth.
When I first read Tolkien's books and Carpenter's biography,
it did not take me long to recognize that Tolkien was the quintessential hobbit.
He recognized this himself and once wrote, "I am in fact a hobbit." (Carpenter, p. 176)
It is fascinating to read about Tolkien's childhood
and to speculate about what might have influenced his later writings.
Tolkien was born on January 3, 1892 in Bloemfontein, South Africa.
When he was three he traveled with his mother and brother Hilary to Birmingham, England,
because South Africa's heat was impacting his health.
While they were in England, Tolkien's father Arthur, back in South Africa,
had a severe hemorrhage while recovering from rheumatic fever and died.
Suddenly, Tolkien's mother Mabel was faced with raising
Ronald and Hilary on her own and with very little money.
The Tolkien Family: Arthur (father), Mabel (mother), and JRR (baby)
Handwritten Christmas card with a colored photo of the Tolkien family,
sent by Mabel Tolkien from the Orange Free State to her relatives in Birmingham,
on November 15, 1892.
She finally found a place for them to rent in the hamlet of Sarehole
on the southern edge of Birmingham.
The hamlet, the Sarehole Mill, and the surrounding English countryside
were transformed by Tolkien's imagination into the village of Hobbiton
in his writing decades later. (Carpenter, p. 176)
Sarehole Mill
Moseley Bog, Close to Sarehole Mill
Mabel Tolkien began to teach her sons,
and, Ronald could read at four and write not long after.
Very quickly he demonstrated an interest in languages and drawing.
He loved to read, and his mother provided him with many books.
Ronald particularly liked The Red Fairy Book with tales collected by Andrew Lang
because it contained "The Story of Sigurd."
Sigurd is a hero from Norse Mythology known for slaying the dragon Fafnir.
From a this very early age, Tolkien desired dragons. (Carpenter, p. 22).
Around the time he was seven, Tolkien wrote a story about a dragon.
Humphrey Carpenter quoted Tolkien's recollection of his early story:
"I remember nothing about it except a philological fact. My mother said nothing about the dragon, but pointed out that one could not say a 'green great dragon', but had to say 'a great green dragon'. I wondered why, and still do. The fact that I remember this is possibly significant, as I do not think I ever tried to write a story again for many years and was taken up with language." (Carpenter, p. 23)
From these humble beginnings in his childhood, John Roland Reuel Tolkien
went on to become a world-renowned philologist, artist, and writer of high fantasy:
a hobbit who loved dragons.
I have no idea how many times I have read Tree and Leaf,
Farmer Giles of Ham, The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion.
And I have read many other books by Tolkien, the Inklings, scholars, and fans.
And then there is Peter Jackson's wonderful LOTR movies and all the spinoffs.
Last October 30th found me (and our cruise ship) blown into Wellington, New Zealand
instead of docking at our scheduled port of Auckland.
My husband Terry and I chanced upon a wonderful statue of Gandalf the Grey
in the Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington isite Visitor Information Centre.
Looking at Gandalf, I remembered that teen-aged girl
listening to CJFX Antigonish in Stillwater a lifetime ago.
What a reading adventure that broadcast started me on,
one that me made as familiar with the maps and landscapes of Middle-earth
as the lands and shores of my native Nova Scotia.
I still hope to see some of the movie locations in New Zealand.
Gandalf the Grey
Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington isite Visitor Information Centre
Wellington, New Zealand
October 30, 2023
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue. All Rights Reserved
Today I am joining the 2024 Tolkien Blog Party at Rachel Kovaciny's
The Edge of the Precipice blog, thanks to my friend Debra at She Who Seeks.
Debra introduced me to this event last year, and she reminded me with an email this year.
What would we do without thoughtful friends?
Rachel has had fun Tolkien related activities in her blog this week.
If you're a Tolkien fan, check out Rachel's Tolkien posts.
Courtesy of Rachel Kovaciny
I, of course, am behind. 😵💫
I'm still linking to Rain's Thursday Art and Dinner Date, Tom's Aloha Friday,
and Nicole's Friday Face Off, although I'm not posting photos related to them this week.
Have a great weekend!
I discovered Tolkien's work while I was still at school and read and reread The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings. I have read and enjoyed much of his other work too. Decades later I still mourn for the Entwives.
ReplyDeleteI mourn for the Entwines, too, Sue. The more I read Tolkien's books, the more I am in awe of his rare genius. Have a great weekend, my friend!
DeleteGreetings, Louise. You paint a picture of Tolkien very well, one that I was unaware of. You have enlightened me! I am not a great reader, but you have tempted me to read his works. I had the trilogy of the 'Lord Of The Rings' on DVD, and watched them on occasion, and still have not seen any better movies to this day. Peter Jackson did a very good job. You are very knowledgeable on his works and life, and I am glad you found him to see you through some of your childhood. I can remember times with just a radio, as usually back then there was only one TV in each, or most, households, being in the lounge. I can also remember a cartoon film by Tolkien, was it the hobbit, in the 70s-80s?
ReplyDeleteTake good care, my Friend. Love love, Andrew.
Happy weekend, Andrew! Peter's Jackson's movie trilogy of LOTR is brilliant, and they remain my favorite movies of all time. I remember the cartoon movie and that it was an inspiration for Peter Jackson. I loved my transistor radio. Today I have a YouTube music subscription and can listen to almost anything ever recorded. But any song today will never match the thrill of hoping and praying your favorite song would play on the radio. Take care, my friend! ❤️
DeleteI have those exact books you featured, very worn of course.
ReplyDeleteInteresting how Hobbits began. The Hobbit was actually the first one I read, finding the trilogy later on.
I am not surprised to hear that you have the books and that they are very worn, Alex! Tolkien inspired many writers. I hope that you are safe from the effects of Hurricane Helene. My heart goes out to all of those caught in its path. Take care, my friend!
DeleteThank you for posting the photo of the Gandalf statue!
ReplyDeleteMaybe you can help me. Someone in LOTR said this:
"There are other forces at work in this world, Frodo, besides the forces of evil."
I thought it was Gandalf, but is may be Samwise. Do you know?
Hi, Sandi! I'm glad that you enjoyed the statue. Your quote is definitely ringing a bell. I want to say that it was Galadriel, but I'm going to check my books later. I did a brief search on Google, but couldn't find it. However, I absolutely remember the words. One interesting way to approach the books is with Tolkien's deep faith in mind. Happy weekend, my friend!
DeleteYes, Tolkien was a believer. He was also friends with C.S. Lewis.
DeleteWhat a marvelous post, Louise! I'm so glad you joined this year's Tolkien Blog Party! I enjoyed reading your reminiscences very much. Isn't it wonderful how some small reference or chance exposure somewhere or another can trigger a lifelong fascination for us about a mythology or story! It truly does enrich our lives.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad that you enjoyed my post, Debra! And that you reminded me of the Tolkien Blogs Party. I've marked my calendar for next year. Part of the fun at looking back at life is recognizing small things that sent your life off on a new passion or course. Chance is a powerful and unpredictable course. Have a great weekend, my friend! ❤️
DeleteYikes, I just realized that I forgot to give a shout out to you for reminding me of this. That I will fix right now! (My brain was tired by the time I reached the end of my post.)
Delete...having learning disabilities, J. R. R. Tolkien never entered my life! Louise, take crae and be well.
ReplyDeleteIf you'd like to experience the adventure, Tom, I recommend Peter Jackson's movie trilogy. It is marvelous and captures the wonder of the books. The series is epic! You are the perfect example of how learning disabilities can be overcome, my friend! You are an inspiration!
DeleteGood thing you listened to that station. Don't forget, he was good friends with C.S. Lewis, another great fantasy writer.
ReplyDeleteHi, Diane! I hope that you are safe and okay as Hurricane Helene continues on its path. I have a number of friends in the storm-affected areas, and I'm worried about everyone. I thought about including C. S. Lewis in my post, but it was already long. Lewis is one of my favorite writers, and his books on Christianity are excellent, as is his Narnia series which I have also read a number of times. Take care! ❤️
DeleteI remember listening to the old transistor radio. Down In Massachusetts where I grew up we had a lot of stations, but at my grandmother's camp in New Hampshire I had to pick up whatever station I could find. I don't remember any great books being read to me though. That would have been fantastic. Have a great weekend and rest of September.
ReplyDeleteHi, Erica! Thanks for sharing your memories! It was a different world today. Did you ever hear WLS in Chicago? That's what my transistor radio picked up inland from James Bay in Northern Ontario. I really loved listening to Dick Biondi. I couldn't get WLS in Nova Scotia, but I enjoyed CJFX as much. There isn't much left of September, a month I love. Enjoy your weekend! Hugs to you!
DeleteI loved my old radio! I don't remember what it was called or where it was from now, but I'll always remember how much fun and entertainment it gave during my moments of boredom. I've long wanted to visit New Zealand and the sites where The Hobbit was filmed. Not only that, but New Zealand looks like it has such gorgeous landscapes and scenery. My copies of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings are very, very well-read -- they make up two of the building blocks which formed my love of books and fantasy, and I don't think I'll ever get tired of reading them.
ReplyDeleteHi, Damyanti! I'm sorry that I'm just replying now. I'm traveling. I hope that you do get to visit New Zealand. I only spent a few hours in the Wellington area, and I long to return. I have read so many wonderful fantasies over the years, but LOTR remains my favorite. Thanks for visiting! Happy writing, and take care!
DeleteI've always thought it lovely that Tolkien and C.S. Lewis were friends--two major talents.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Hi, Janie! I've been thinking of you and everyone I know in the SE USA. I'm glad that you came through relatively well. It's tragic to think of all that people are dealing with there. I always enjoyed hearing about the friendship between Tolkien and Lewis. I agree, major talents. I especially like Lewis's religious writing, and of course, the Narnia books. Please take care! Hugs to you!
DeleteI haven't read Tolkien, but I have seen the movies and loved every minute of them. My FH and I occasionally go back and rewatch them (one of the advantages of being old is that you forget the story lines of good movies and can repeat them with the same enthusiasm as the original watch :) Your love for Tolkien's work is a gift that you carry with you and reuse over and over ... a blessing for sure.
ReplyDeleteAs for radio's ... I grew up in the time of radio's, even before the transistor radio's came out. Before TV was available in our home my sister and I would listen to "The Lone Ranger", "Roy Rogers", "Inner sanctum", "Jack Benny" and on and on. We loved it and it was plenty to entertain ourselves with. Back in the day when kids went outside and created their own make believe games or played baseball or built forts ... in other words, used our imaginations to entertain ourselves with. Today is a bit scary to me as I see kids walking around with their faces in cell phones talking or gaming instead of interacting with their peers or, like you, reading a good book. I can't help but think that this will effect the future and probably not in a good way. I enjoyed your post today and you probably have inspired me to pick up the Tolkien books and read them. I am a reader, mostly of mysteries, but I think I will enjoy a change ... Thank you for that :)
Andrea @ F rom the Sol
Hi, Andrea! Sorry, I'm just answering now, because I'm traveling. It was lovely to read your comment and share your memories. I do worry about today's kiddos. I had a special childhood, sometimes living in very isolated places, but my brother, sisters, and I had so much fun. We had such big imaginations and a lot of freedom to roam everywhere. Fortunately, we survived our adventures! There are so many scary things going on right now. I worry that perhaps none of us will have a future, especially with the latest saber rattling in the Middle East. I hope that you do pick up the books. I need to myself, as well as watch the movies again. Please take care. ❤️
DeleteNever knew it started from a blank page in an exam.
ReplyDeleteI read the books as a kid. I never had those old copies though. Wish I did too because $$$ lol enjoyed them very much indeed like many others. The one that always stands out for me is the hobbit cartoon movie as it always freaked my sister out. Not sure exactly why. Enjoyed all the movies too, except found the hobbit ones way overbloated.
The statue is very life like too.
Hi, Pat! It's surprising how so much can come from so little ~ kind of like a mini big bang. I agree that the hobbit movies were way over bloated. The statue of Gandalf was amazing. I wish I could have seen more of the LOTR things in New Zealand. I always want more ~ lol! It keeps me jumping out of bed everyday. Take care, my friend!
DeleteNice tribute to Tolkien
ReplyDeleteYou and I certainly share the same love for Tolkien. I perhaps have way too many copies of the books, and have managed to collect some of his other books from used book stores over the years. The BBC radio dramatisation of Lord of the Rings is one of our favourites. So wonderful that you found him as well.
ReplyDelete-Soma
Tolkien really is THE fantasy author of our time. I hope he would be proud of the genre he gave life to.
ReplyDelete