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Smaug Is Not a Bookworm
I'm currently reading an interesting book about 'nerdy' topics like the title. It has a chapter devoted to Tolkien (at which I have yet to arrive), but there's another mention too.
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The author, Ryan Britt, goes on: Quote:
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'[...] I might find somewhere where I can finish my book. I have thought of a nice ending for it: and he lived happily ever after to the end of his days.' Gandalf laughed. I hope he will. But nobody will read the book, however it ends.' 'Oh, they may, in years to come. Frodo has read some already, as far as it has gone. [...]' This also comes to mind from the final chapter: '[...]you will read things out of the Red Book, and keep alive the memory of the age that is gone. so that people will remember the Great Danger and so love their beloved land all the more.' |
Maybe as an extension of the hobbitish obsession with genealogies? I think Merry wrote at least a couple of books as well. Many people write without great hope,] or expectation that others will read them. Many diary keepers (including perhaps Tolkien himself who used code at times if I remember rightly) go to great lengths to ensure their diaries are kept private. Some go as far as to want them destroyed after their own deaths.
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Bilbo is emulating the Elves of Imladris. He considers himself quite the writer, and even has the impertinence of reading The Song of Eärendil in the Hall of Fire.
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'They are proud and wilful, but they are true-hearted, generous in thought and deed; bold but not cruel; wise but unlearned, writing no books but singing many songs, after the manner of the children of Men before the Dark Years' , Aragorn's comments on the Rohirrim seems to suggest that writing books (if not reading once written!) was a feature of other cultures otherwise it wouldn't be noteworthy here.
However even in the cultures that in some ways are technologically advanced they don't seem to have developed a printing press - books seem to be copied as needed and the preserve of specialists. The book culture doesn't seem to be further on than the libraries of great or monastic houses in our own world. Gondor and Rivendell have archives, the main dwellings of the big hobbit families would have genealogies and perhaps other records but I guess the reading would more be reference than pleasure. |
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We know that Hugo Bracegirdle was "a great borrower of books, and worse than usual at returning them." I wonder what kinds of books he liked to borrow? |
Wasn't Lobelia S-B born a Bracegirdle? Maybe a tactic to obscure scandal or claim inheritances if the book were genealogies/family histories. Goodness knows family history is not to be delved in unless you are prepared to discover your family is not as respectable or renowned as you had been led to believe ... or that has been my experience anyway!!
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A Sampling of Potential Topics
Engaging in some mild extrapolation here, but Gondor has some parallels with Greco-Roman civilization and some distinct parallels with Byzantine (or later Roman) culture, a comparison of literary culture might be drawn.
The Greeks and Romans both developed rich literary traditions (indeed ours descends from theirs). There were, of course, variations in interest down through the centuries but from Herodotus and Thucydides on there was a keen interest in history. They both spawned generations of imitators or detractors down through the centuries. Then there were the lively philosophical debates (which in many instances were entwined with discussions of the physical sciences) to be replaced in later Roman times with theological debates. Up until approximately the Crisis of the Third Century and the changes to Roman society that wrough, poetry was very important, and it was still important even then. Additionally there were more specialized works on medicine, military tactics, rhetoric, travelogues (of a sort), even biographies. While this literary culture was, of physical necessity, the largely the preserve of those with leisure, it very much existed and was thriving. In the eastern Roman Empire it never stopped thriving although in many respects it became increasingly impoverished as things in the East...went south. I think the Gondorians and perhaps the elves to some extent (although I imagine the elves to have more of an oral tradition) could be imagined to have a similar literary culture. Quote:
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I don't know that tome. But I was thinking that literate hobbit families might well have the sort of books that some people get handed down from their foremothers - like practical commonplace books with herblore and recipes for dishes and simples. The sort of thing that would be passed down and maybe copied for a daughter getting married and gradually added to and amended.
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There certainly is a lack of pleasure reading in any of the ME cultures. There are people who take pleasure in reading - bookish hobbits and Gondor scholars among others - but no recreational literature as such. Any story for story's sake is passed down as oral tradition. Most cultures we meet have an abundance of tales, songs, ballads, lays, prose and poetry by whatever name it goes. These are sometimes based on historical events, but sometimes are made up or too muddled to trace directly to real history (especially hobbit stuff). It's interesting that Men and Elves (at least those that we see) tend to tell stories of legends of historical figures, and hobbits, while they can still tell some good hobbit history, seem to prefer the stuff of myth for their bedtime stories. Take two simple instances from LOTR - an Elf of Lorien climbing up a tree and Aragorn, Legolas, and Gilmi chasing after the hobbits - absurdly simple for any real story, but taken to make an example. A Man seems more likely to make a ballad of the three hunters and say a couple sentences about the magic ways of the Fair Folk. A hobbit would summarize the chase in a couple sentences and shrug it off, but pay much greater attention to any detail one can think of to stick onto the bare description of an Elf climbing a tree. Difference in attitude? Heroic versus mundane? Just skewed perspective and inaccurate representation of their respective lore? Is there really a difference, or am I just imagining it?
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It's also interesting that Frodo, when writing his part, almost completely loses touch with that part of his hobbit identity (again, assuming that LOTR is an accurate parallel). It's a good reflection of both of these hobbits' inner states at the end of their respective journeys. But then the question comes up: did the journey shape the authors, or did the authors shape the journey? :smokin: EDIT: As a less romanticized and more real-world answer, is it just possible that books were kind of hard to make, sometimes hard to keep safe, and for many folks hard to come by? Why would you waste the time and paper (parchment?) on some made-up gibberish? Or on a story that everyone knows by heart anyways? What's the point? It only makes sense to write down what you think is important to remember, what you otherwise would not remember. |
Nice topic Inziladun. :)
There is a clear difference between Boromir and Faramir. While I don't know of an instance where it's noted that Faramir is reading a book, it's clearly implied that he is a book reader. Afterall, Denethor calls him the "wizard's pupil." Quote:
I would also classify Denethor and Saruman as readers. Denethor delved into Gondor's archives to learn about the palantir. Saruman arguably knows more about Ring-lore than anyone else during this period in Middle-earth, save Sauron himself. However their studies and reading lead them down the wrong path. To Denethor and Saruman their studies into the palantir and ring-lore were to master and have power over such objects. Not to try to learn, understand, or respect the power and dangers of these objects they wanted to control. |
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Hobbits loved boasting about their ancestors, and I suppose that's as close to reading for pleasure as you can get.
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Interesting topic!
There's a short passage in the Note on the Shire records that touches this subject: Quote:
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