https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBwPw7ck4eU
Andrew Klavan, the Conservative Commentator, recently made a similar argument about Wicked, but his post is somewhat longer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9B37wPSuv0
Well, for a start, this shall be the home for my Biographical Inventory of Books. After that, who knows?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBwPw7ck4eU
Andrew Klavan, the Conservative Commentator, recently made a similar argument about Wicked, but his post is somewhat longer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9B37wPSuv0
The Tale
‘Now
all roads were running together to the East to meet the coming of war and the
onset of the Shadow. And even as Pippin stood at the Great Gate of the City and
saw the Prince of Dol Amroth ride in with his banners, the King of Rohan came
down out of the hills.’
The day is going down as they break out of the mountains
into hills and the sighing fir-woods below. They follow the falling water to
the bottom of the gorge and find the land of Harrowdale before them. The river
Snowbourne flows down towards Edoras; to the right is the mountain Starkhorn,
blue in the East but stained red in the West by the sunset.
Merry
gazes in wonder at this strange land. To him it seems skyless, with steep
tree-clad hills on either side. He always had liked the idea of mountains, at
least marching along the borders of old tales, ‘but now he was borne down by
the insupportable weight of Middle-earth.’ He wants to shut the immensity out
with a cozy little room with a fire.
Merry
is very tired; they have ridden for three days, slowly but with little rest. Sometimes,
when the road allowed, he had ridden at Theoden’s side, telling him tales about
the Shire, with the King telling him in turn tales of the Mark and its ‘mighty
men of old’ in exchange. But most of the time he has ridden behind Theoden in
silence, listening to the ‘slow sonorous speech’ of the Riders behind him,
trying to understand it. It seems to have many familiar words, spoken in
strange accents, but he cannot piece together the meaning. ‘At times some Rider
would lift up his clear voice in a stirring song, and Merry felt his heart
leap, though he did not know what it was about.’
But
here at the day’s end he feels lonelier than ever, and wonders what Pippin is
doing, or Aragorn and Gimli and Legolas. Then with a guilty start he remembers
Frodo and Sam as well. He started on this adventure to help Frodo! They are
more important than any of the rest, and they must be hundreds of miles away on
their journey, if they are even still alive. He shivers.
Notes
Only
a couple of pages of this chapter, but I think I must start slowly to position
myself again and begin cranking the machinery up after my vacation, as it were.
We are given a smooth transition from Pippin (who has had the last two
chapters) in the soon to be besieged City to Merry, who is riding with an army
to war.
Also
in contrast Merry certainly seems closer to his ‘liege-lord’ than Pippin is to
Denethor; Pippin’s dialogue with the Steward of Gondor has been to extract
information, while Merry and Theoden have been exchanging tales. Tolkien says
that some Riders are amused at the little figure of the Hobbit on his stubby
grey pony talking familiarly with the King on his great white horse.
It
is his contact with the Rohirrim that sparks a scholarly curiosity in Merry.
Elsewhere Tolkien states that the Hobbits’ speech bears the same relation to
Rohirric as our Modern English does to Anglo-Saxon; the ‘real’ languages are
transposed to those of our world. Tolkien clearly means that our reaction to
Anglo-Saxon should be like Merry’s: a recognition of ancient kinship, a dim but
stirring echo of the past. Perhaps he is even describing his own feelings on
being introduced to Anglo-Saxon. Merry’s interest and familiarity with the
language of Rohan leads him to writing (among other books) Old Words and
Names in the Shire, described as a ‘short treatise’, showing the
relationship between the two.
Merry’s
remembrance of Frodo not only shows his concern with his cousin and his quest,
but jogs our memory too, and places all the pieces on the board in relationship
to each other. Little touches like this keep us in mind of Frodo and Sam and
the greater mission amid the hurly-burly of war.
1/1/20: Woke up at midnight
from a dream to the sound of fireworks. Went to change my church calendar, and
as I did so found out (or was reminded) that it is a Holy Day of Obligation:
The Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God. Checked my Church
schedule and saw Mass was at 9 AM. That changes my plans a bit. Go to bed
again.
Up about 5:30 AM. Prayers,
catechism, and Bible. Record dream. Post on Power of Babel. Get dressed while
listening to a playthrough of Donkey Kong Country 2. Set to leave at 8 AM.
Yowch. Even as I wrote, a bulb just blew at 7:44 AM, the first in a long time.
Left at 8 AM and was the 2nd person in the pews. Fr. Dennis was a little rushed in the end as he had to go say Mass elsewhere at 10 AM, but it was still good. When it was done, I walked over and bought a TX Lotto and went into Dollar General and got some Dobie pads, hydrogen peroxide, ramen, sugar wafers, and Peach Crush (which I just had to try). Found a Star Wars(?) action figure in the park. Home about 10:30 AM.
Never did get a nap. Kam
called about 2 PM, and I grassed the Chis. Then S&A asked if I could go
ahead and make the cookies from the mix Kam’s class sold, and mixed the dip
from the mix they sold, then made the hot cheese dip, and they ordered pizza and
put stuff they’d cleaned out of Kam’s room away. We ate at 4 PM, then it was
out at 5 PM to watch The Flintstones and at 6 PM I hope to finally get a wee
bit of sleep.
But at 6:30 PM I prayed the
rosary. Now I mean to lay down at 7 PM. So, I laid down and started to listen
to music, and John called me! We talked a lot about time and Star Wars and pop
culture, and the talk was good; and now it’s 8:20 PM, and I’m going to try to
sleep again.
1/2/20: Up at about 4:30 AM.
Prayers, catechism, Bible. Tried to track down a quote, something like:
“Creation is imagination checked by physics.” Couldn’t find it. Puttered around
on YouTube. Now listening to Gilbert Gottfried’s Amazing Colossal Podcast,
which I missed when Kam was staying here to recuperate. Making some ramen but
can’t wait to go in and see if there’s any chicken soup left.
I went in at 9 AM and got
some chicken soup and a piece of pizza. Came back and puttered around some
more, then took a nap at 11 AM or so. Woke up at 1 PM and wrote down a dream,
then went inside to thaw some chicken thighs and make rice for supper. Ate some
more pizza and the last of the soup. Finally got the thighs separated and
cooking. It’s now about 3:30 PM, and I mean to go in at 4 PM to do the pets’
thing and check the chicken (which was separated but still frozen). Feel
sleepy, and the right side of my head still feels clogged.
I put the rice and broccoli
together with the thighs on top and finished cooking at 5 PM. Sun came out for
a while at the end of the day. Andy came a little before 7 PM and asked me to
save the last thigh for him tomorrow. I went in at 7:30 PM to clean up, made
Kam 2 pieces of pizza, grabbed the last slice and a couple of cookies. S&A
came home from the store (off to get some presents – belated Christmas or New
Year) as I was throwing the box out, and Susan asked me to make stir-fry for
supper tomorrow. Finished up, came back, prayed rosary, and hit the hay.
1/3/20: Up a little before 4
AM and wrote down dream, checked e-mail, and looked at illustrator sites.
Almost 5 AM, and I think I’ll lay down again and see what happens. Tolkien’s
Birthday.
Up again about 6:30 AM, from
another dream. Prayers, catechism, Bible, and rosary. Now almost 7:40 AM. Have
decided to not go to Walmart today, but instead wait to see how things go. A
weekend of semi-fasting wouldn’t be amiss.
A little after 9 AM, just after I had gotten my breakfast ramen and a cheese dip sandwich, and I was watching the latter half of The Thief of Bagdad (I always seem to catch it just when Abu is stealing the All-Seeing Eye), the workmen finally come bringing in the screens, and the first one they attach is the one on my kitchen window.
At 3:30 PM I go out to sweep the porches and pick up some sticks. I gave Kam that action figure I found New Year’s Day; I think it is from ‘Black Panther’. At 4 PM I go to feed the animals and start supper. The stir-fry has shrimp, stir-fry vegetables, and extra broccoli, with cauliflower on the side. I run in and out putting the bags in the bin and rounding up the Chis. Eat my supper, but don’t feel like watching The Flintstones today. Thinking about writing all day, and what to do, but it doesn’t look like I’ll produce yet. Thinking about Dan Harmon’s ‘story circle’. Now 5:27 PM. Bed about 10 PM.
1/4/20: Woke up about 4 AM,
and prayed and read catechism, then back to sleep. Then at 5:30 AM read Bible
and laid down again. At 6:30 AM got up, got dressed, and made ramen. Spent much
of the day finishing reading Gogol and then Turgenev short stories. About 12:30
PM had ramen for lunch. About 2 PM Susan came to tell me about a leak that
they’d found in the back yard. She said that I could have the rest of the sour
cream dip and later tamales. She and Andy worked on the yard for some hours,
and I had the pleasure of smelling a cold mowing.
Spent much of the day
pondering the best way to expend the rest of my resources; more or less decided
on the roll of a die to wait until Monday and go to Walmart. I do have stuff to
eat, if not the tastiest of stuff, which will get me through.
I went in at 5:30 PM and got
some tamales with cheese dip. These were very good tamales, lots of meat. I
spilled some watery cheese (I put water on the plate with my tamales to help
‘steam’ them) on my old grey sweater and had to take it and my shirt off. Felt
sleepy by 7 PM. Prayed my rosary and conked out.
1/5/20: Up about 5:30 AM,
after a night of up and down, with some dreams, including a very
straightforward dream that I had a hard time getting out of my mind, but which
I will not record. I only mention it because it was the most powerful one I’ve
had in quite a while, but it’s fading as I apply myself to real life. Right
side of my head still stopped up; I wonder if all these dreams are a result of
fever? Anyway, took a shower and dressed, and on to the rest of my prayers,
catechism, Bible.
Off to church at 7 AM; Fr.
Tony (our ‘substitute’ priest) presiding. A pretty nippy morning. Home and then
some ramen for breakfast, and later, ramen for lunch. Thinking about how to get
to the Coliseum next Sunday.
About 2 PM S&A came in
with the box from Kam’s room to store in here and we put it on the ‘room
divider’ pile of bins. As they were heading for Walmart, I asked them if they
could take my gift card and get me a box of ramen (not for now, but next weekend)
and 3 jugs of Big Red Zero, and they very kindly said yes. As I thought there
was another bin coming, I made room in the kitchen closet.
Later I found out no, there wasn’t another bin, so Andy moved the one off the divider and into the closet. I didn’t mind it, but it’s semi-transparent and doesn’t go with the other bins. Later they brought me part of chicken (back, a little breast, and a wing) with dipping sauce and that (with some ramen, that I went ahead and broke into) made my supper. Continued reading Turgenev most of the day, and even made a quote from Prose Poems my daily blog on Power of Babel. Bed at nearly 11 PM.
1/6/2020: Up about 5:30 AM, dress, prayers, catechism, and Bible. I’m pretty sure school starts today again, so planning on that, along with laundry. Write one paragraph of “Philo”.
Andy knocks at the door
about 7:45 AM and tells me that the plumber is coming this morning, and not to
run water. I say okay. This sets my wash back a few hours, and I boil the eggs
for egg salad (and the ten Susan asked me to make yesterday) using jug water.
It takes surprisingly little. Listen to GGACP. S&A come at 11:30 AM and
tell me the water is on, so I start my laundry. For tomorrow, they want turkey
chili and gumbo, as well as the broccoli salad I make today.
My right leg still in
shooting pain, my right arm weak, the right side of my head still plugged up
and ringing (infection?). Am I on the way out? What could I do if I am?
Well, at 1 PM I started
making broccoli salad (having the kitchen table clear certainly helped),
finished, and about 2 PM let the Chis out. My first load was done, and I put it
in the dryer and started my second load in the washer. Something is going on
with the washer, which has further added to my hump today. And such a beautiful
day, warm and clear and blue. Please God I get to the end of it.
Also ate Pumpkin Delights,
which I’d forgotten I still had.
So at 4 PM I started supper
(fish rings and couscous), let the Chis out again, and checked my uncooperative
wash. Finished cooking supper, ate my portion (Kam also gave me a taco of his
from Saturday; I used some of the salsa in my ramen/couscous). Susan had gone
off walking but was back at 6 PM. I told her what was going on with my wash,
and apparently, it’s something that happens when the water’s been shut off, so
no reprisals there. Andy gets home soon thereafter and helps me with the
machine. A little later I help Kameron with his Thank You cards, clear away
after supper, and at 8:40 PM my wash is at last finished. I go in, hang it up,
and feel sleepy, but not without first praying my rosary. Then I crash, a
little after 10 PM.
E-mail from John: He [Mike] has been showing up a lot in my
dreams lately as well. He's a busy man for someone who hasn't walked the
face of the earth for over thirteen years. The weather has been perfect lately,
but of course, there is grumbling room still- the lack of cold or especially
moisture bodes ill for certain aspects of the future- but, in the face of such
perfection one feels churlish to harbor such grumbles. We had a nice weekend, M
and I went to a few spots in San Marcos on Saturday for our Daddy/Daughter Day,
and Amy and I had our "first Sunday of the month " lunch date at one
of our favorite restaurants in Lockhart. I investigated a nearby record store
which had such an amazingly Babel-ish stock of CD's at rock bottom prices that
I had to confirm that it was reality and not one of those "perfect
store" dreams- I ended up with six CD's for less than $25, and all amazing
finds! Just crazy. There was lots there still for future raids, if, God willing,
the store persists for a while. I have been reading Gulag still, but
also the writings of Marcus Aurelius on the side. I have really been getting a
lot out of his work- have you ever read it?
Notes
The Flintstones had only
recently returned to locally available TV, and as I had not seen it for many
years, I was interested in watching it again. It is strange to look back at the
time Kameron was still going to school and how absolutely regimented my
schedule was to that. Also, strange to see how attuned the time was to Russian literature
just it is this year: John was reading Gulag by Solzhenitsyn and now I
am reading Cancer Ward. I notice I wasn’t writing very much then
either; probably has to do with the holiday season and recovering from it. Despite
all my handwringing I’m still here, plugging away. Seems to be part of my perennial
bouts of self-pity. I had read some of Marcus Aurelius, but rather spottily. Man, I miss listening to Gilbert Gottfried and his guests.
Well, even though today is Jan. 4, I actually began my resolutions Dec. 31, so this is my fifth day. I’m glad to report that I have been keeping my resolves in this short period of time. The one to read has been the easiest, as I have Cancer Ward by Alexander Solzhenitsyn to read. One drawback there is that I inevitably had a dream about having to check into the hospital, in which the word ‘cancer’ was never said, but the implications were hanging in the atmosphere. There was only one Holy Day of Obligation during this short period, January First, The Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God. It was a little strange for me, being in church on a weekday, at a later hour. I got my one book from Amazon for the month, The Wood at Midwinter. I’m doing fairly well on diet, showers, cleaning shelves, and playing a daily DVD (one disc of Invader Zim, My Neighbors the Yamadas, Peter’s Friends, The Brothers Grimm). The only one I’m sort of fudging on is the hour of writing; I’ve been including posts and diary entries to help plump out my quota, kind of like offering carbon offsets to cover fossil fuel use. Dr Henke’s office (my foot guy) was helping me keep track of my medical schedule, sending me a reminder I have an appointment on Monday for a check-up. People say that the second Friday in January is the day most people give up on New Year’s resolutions; let’s see how long I can hold out. Time to put on today’s DVD. I think I’ll put on the animated The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (thanks, Jack, for that unwieldy title). I should be back on my regular irregular posting schedule on Monday.
Well,
today is the 133rd anniversary of J. R. R. Tolkien’s birthday, and
as usual I like to note the date in some way, and perhaps meditate a bit on
what the Professor means to me and on the state of his legacy.
This
year I’d like to especially think about what he means to what they call my ‘faith
life’. While a lot of people take Middle-earth to be a pagan place, or at least
a pre-Christian place, deep reading reveals the profound religious bones that
underlie the work, implicitly in The Lord of the Rings and more
explicitly in The Silmarillion. Tolkien always makes sure his ‘legendarium’
never directly contradicts the Christian faith, and even went to some pains to
make sure it would dovetail with the Bible, perhaps an account of Genesis from
another point of view. A lot of recreational readers (especially of The
Hobbit or The Lord of the Rings) take the religious aspect as
just so much chin-wagging or window-dressing, a bit of verisimilitude to help
sell the story, no more than a piece of colorful mythology like Crom or
Cthulhu. I think this attitude might be what is leading (in part) to the
inadequacies of things like The Rings of Power.
For
myself, Tolkien’s work is what led me obliquely to my own Roman Catholic faith.
I say obliquely, because Tolkien led me to C. S. Lewis and his apologetic work
(not to mention G. K. Chesterton), and Lewis, though an Anglican, through his
orthodoxy, helped lead me to be a Catholic (it’s funny how often that happens
to Lewis’s readers). Further delving into Tolkien’s personal life confirmed him
as an admirable paradigm and did not hurt my decision to become Catholic. This
was further deepened by Holly Ordway’s Tolkien’s Faith last year, which
finally solidified my understanding of Tolkien as a person.
Tolkien
has often been jestingly proposed as a candidate for sainthood, even to the
point of having devotional candles sold on Etsy. Although certainly not a
recognized saint (yet) in the Catholic Church, there is no stricture against
asking any blessed soul (whether in Heaven or still in Purgatory) for help and
intercession. That might be superfluous for me, considering how much he already
gives me with what he left here on Earth.
What
can we expect from Tolkien in 2025? I really don’t know. I have not heard any
rumors about publication for any ‘new’ unpublished works; I would certainly
welcome another edition of The Old English Exodus (not Middle-earth
related, but the most unavailable of his scholarly works) even if only in
paperback. Perhaps the most we can hope for are ‘repotted’ volumes, collecting
various strands of the ‘Great Tales’, like the books Christopher Tolkien edited
together for Beren and Luthien or The Children of Hurin. Or
perhaps an anthology volume, gathering several shorter works together, a book
like A Tolkien Miscellany or Tales from the Perilous Realm.
What is almost certain is that there will be a dozen or so mediocre-to-poor books
‘about’ Tolkien and Middle-earth and maybe one or two with real insight, with
perhaps a useful ‘technical’ volume somewhere in the mix. Only time will tell.
In
the meantime, Middle-earth exists in that same timeless bright, shadowy realm
glimpsed from afar as if through deeps of time, that can never be stained by
the dirty devices of marketing or modernity. And it is for this ‘birthday gift’
from J. R. R. Tolkien that I raise a glass in remembrance to him, on
this, his birthday. Peace and honor and thanks to you, Professor!
The Wood at Midwinter, by
Susanna Clarke [Bloomsbury. October 2024]
“From the bestselling and prize-winning author of Piranesi and Jonathan
Strange & Mr. Norrell, an enchanting, beautifully illustrated short
story set in the world of Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell.
'A church is a sort of wood. A wood is a sort of church. They're the
same thing really.'
“Nineteen-year-old Merowdis Scot is an unusual girl. She can talk to animals
and trees-and she is only ever happy when she is walking in the woods.
“One snowy afternoon, out with her dogs and Apple the
pig, Merowdis encounters a blackbird and a fox. As darkness falls, a strange
figure enters in their midst-and the path of her life is changed forever.
“Featuring gorgeous illustrations [by Victoria Sawdon] truly worthy of the
magic of this story and an afterword by Susanna Clarke explaining how she came
to write it, this is a mesmerizing, must-have addition to any fantasy reader's
bookshelf.”
-Amazon
I didn’t even know this book existed until the last day
of December, and I knew when I saw it that it was my one book for January. I
sent off for it then, and it came today. It is a beautiful little book; the
picture does not do it justice. The blue and white is wonderfully accented by
the gilt lettering and figures, giving it the look of a wintery medieval manuscript.
It is listed at 64 pages; of those, only 50 of those are
dedicated to the story, and those are generously illustrated, so the text is
really shorter. The afterword is 8 pages long. Clarke explains how the short
story was written in 2020 for Christmas broadcast on BBC 4, and how it was
influenced by the work of Jorge Luis Borges and Kate Bush.
Though it takes place as the same world as Jonathan
Strange & Mr. Norrell, it can be described in one way as
the exact opposite of that work; while the other book is a thick tome, this is a
wafer-thin little volume. My copy arrived with thin scratches on the cover, not
immediately noticeable, just slightly marring its beauty. The shipping and
handling cost almost as much as the book itself. Clarke is supposed to be
working on a novel-length sequel to JS&MN; I’m beginning to wonder.