My battered and very old copy I'm reluctant to open.
I was eighteen when I first read
The Lord of the Rings and I haven’t read it since. I rarely read books twice,
but in this case I was/am scared about somehow tarnishing the memory. It coincided
with a time and place, a period of great happiness in my life, and the entire story
left behind a sense of something hard to define, a colour in the mind, a
glamour of the magical kind. And I’m
afraid a re-reading might wash it away.
I was reminded of this when my wife
was given a beautiful Christmas present from our son,
which in turn prompted
her to read the three books. One evening she looked up and remarked on how
good-hearted and noble most of the characters were.
I wondered then whether Tolkien was
idealising an aspect of his own culture, one that was fading but nevertheless
there. His period was not perfect but as in all things there is both darkness and
light.
This particular anecdote from Tolkien’s
life illustrates the point, in terms of nobility, generosity and endeavour.
Tolkien received a fan letter from
a young girl called Rosalind Ramage who had just read The Hobbit. He may have
remembered the name, I don’t know, but he wrote back and included a poem
dedicated to her. Rosalind, was in fact the daughter of a former Oxford porter.
The porter, James Ramage, then a single man, had volunteered to take on all the
Christmas shifts for those porters who had families. Hearing of this act of kindness,
Tolkien cycled down to the College with a bottle of wine for the then unknown porter and found him earnestly studying for admission into the University.
James Ramage went on to study English at Balliol between 1951-1954 and was a teacher at the Cathedral School in Wells, Somerset when his daughter wrote the letter. Jude The Obscure with a happy ending, you might say, and certainly a character you could envisage in Lord of the Rings.
James Ramage went on to study English at Balliol between 1951-1954 and was a teacher at the Cathedral School in Wells, Somerset when his daughter wrote the letter. Jude The Obscure with a happy ending, you might say, and certainly a character you could envisage in Lord of the Rings.