J. R. R. Tolkien repeatedly uses dreams and visions in his Middle-earth writings to create literary effects, allowing the narrative to transition between everyday reality and awareness of other kinds of existence. He follows the conventions of the dream vision in early medieval literature, and the tradition of English visionary writing of Edmund Spenser and John Milton.
A large number of dreams are described in The Lord of the Rings . Scholars have identified multiple functions for these, including hinting at panpsychism—with mind as a reality throughout the world and guidance by the godlike Valar, providing glimpses of paradise, and suggesting that evil characters can place false images in men's minds. A special case is the otherworldly Elvish land of Lothlórien, which resembles the dreamland of the medieval poem Pearl .
The dream vision or visio is a major literary device in early medieval literature, especially but not only in the genre of visionary literature. [1] [2] Amy Amendt-Raduege writes that medieval dream visions, such as those of Geoffrey Chaucer, or those in the Chanson de Roland , the Roman de la Rose , and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight , are intensely visual. [3] Further, she writes, the dreamer often goes to sleep troubled by something, and the dream takes them to an ideal place where they meet a figure of authority, such as Virgil in Dante's Inferno, treated as a dream-story by scholars but not explicitly introduced as a dream. She comments that many dreams in The Lord of the Rings "follow the same conventions". [3]
Coming later in English literature is in Deirdre Greene's words "a tradition of visionary writing which strives toward national epic", from the early modern Edmund Spenser and John Milton, through to modern times with the rather different approach of William Blake and also Tolkien. [4]
J. R. R. Tolkien was an English author and philologist of ancient Germanic languages, specialising in Old English; he spent much of his career as a professor at the University of Oxford. [5] He is best known for his novels about his invented Middle-earth, The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings , and for the posthumously published The Silmarillion which provides a more mythical narrative about earlier ages. His books were influenced by ancient, medieval, and modern literature. [6]
In his essay "On Fairy-Stories", Tolkien discusses the function of dreams in fantasy, stating that [7] [T 1]
in dreams strange powers of the mind may be unlocked. In some of them a man may for a space wield the power of Faërie, that power which, even as it conceives the story, causes it to take living form and colour before the eyes.
— Tolkien, "On Fairy-Stories"
In the essay, Tolkien states further that if a writer uses a dream as the explanation for seemingly magical events, "he cheats deliberately the primal desire at the heart of Faerie: the realization, independent of the conceiving mind, of imagined wonder." [T 1] In other words, dreams can exist within fantasy, but they must not be used to explain away magical events. [8]
Before The Hobbit's protagonist Bilbo meets Gollum, Bilbo, sleeping in a cave in the Misty Mountains, has a frightening dream in which he sees a wall crack open, and he falls into an unknown subterranean world. He wakes up, and the dream is partly realized as he sees the group's ponies going away into a new gap at the back of the cave. Then goblins swarm out of the gap and seize Bilbo and the dwarves. [T 2]
Sean Lindsay, writing in Mythlore , lists the overt descriptions of dreams or mentions of dreamlike states in The Lord of the Rings (not including dreamlike or visionary passages). By volume, he identifies and quotes 25 dreams in The Fellowship of the Ring ; 10 in The Two Towers ; and 10 in The Return of the King . [9]
Thus for example in "The Council of Elrond", the protagonist Frodo exclaims "I saw you", explaining to the wizard Gandalf: "You were walking backwards and forwards. The moon shone in your hair." The narrative goes on "Gandalf paused astonished and looked at him. 'It was only a dream', said Frodo, 'but it suddenly came back to me. I had quite forgotten it...'" [9] [T 3]
At the end of the novel, Frodo has a different vision, one presaged in another dream [T 4] hundreds of pages earlier: [10] "until at last on a night of rain Frodo smelled a sweet fragrance on the air and heard the sound of singing that came over the water. And then it seemed to him that as in his dreams in the house of Bombadil, the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back, and he beheld white shores and beyond them a far green country under a swift sunrise." [9] [T 5]
Other beings have dreams; Tolkien's "Song of the Ents and Entwives" depicts the male Ents doing little in summer except dreaming, in contrast to the Entwives for whom summer was a busy time. [11]
Tolkien's poem "The Sea-Bell" was published in the 1962 collection The Adventures of Tom Bombadil , sub-titled Frodos Dreme. Tolkien suggests that this enigmatic narrative poem represents the despairing dreams that visited Frodo in the Shire in the years after the destruction of the Ring. It relates the unnamed speaker's journey to a mysterious land across the sea, where he tries but fails to make contact with the people who dwell there. He descends into despair and near-madness, eventually returning to his own country, to find himself utterly alienated from those he once knew. [12]
Lindsay writes that in The Lord of the Rings a dream may simply indicate a mental state, such as of weariness; it may denote a dreamlike state, such as when Frodo listens to Elvish music in Rivendell; and it may mean a full-valued vision of some reality, distant in space or time. [13]
R. Cameron writes that Bilbo's dream in the cave can be given a psychoanalytic interpretation where, in Sigmund Freud's words, a dream "consists essentially in the transformation of thoughts into a hallucinatory experience". The dream sets out "motifs whose encoded meanings are repeated, expanded and increase in intensity during the ensuing (literal) encounter" of Bilbo and Gollum. The motifs combine "a mythical underworld journey; the psychic model of the unconscious; theological notions of the fall; and ... the infantile ... period of human development." [14]
Karl Schoor, in Mythlore , writes that dreams are not limited to the hobbits in The Lord of the Rings. Faramir, a son of the Steward of Gondor, repeatedly sees Númenor, the island kingdom that was Gondor's predecessor, drowning under a "great dark wave... coming on, darkness unescapable". [15] Tolkien stated that he personally had the recurring dream of the coming wave. [T 6] Faramir repeatedly has a different dream, one that Schoor calls the most important in the novel, where a voice declaims "Seek for the sword that was broken: In Imladris it dwells; ..." Schoor comments that Faramir's father Denethor, Steward of Gondor, correctly interprets this as a summons to a Council of Elrond at Imladris (Rivendell). [15] [16]
It seemed to Frodo that he was lifted up, and passing over he saw that the rock-wall was a circle of hills, and that within it was a plain, and in the midst of the plain stood a pinnacle of stone, like a vast tower but not made by hands. On its top stood the figure of a man. The moon as it rose seemed to hang for a moment above his head and glistened in his white hair as the wind stirred it. Up from the dark plain below came the crying of fell voices, and the howling of many wolves... A mighty eagle swept down and bore him away. The voices wailed and the wolves yammered.
Nick Groom comments in his book Tolkien in the Twenty-First Century that the descriptions of dreams in The Lord of the Rings take up a remarkable amount of space. He writes that the dreams at once create a feeling of "unreality and insecurity", and lend an additional dimension to the narrative. Taking the example of Frodo's seeing Gandalf atop Orthanc, he comments that the account implies that the vision is true, and that Middle-earth is home to something like panpsychism, more than just material reality. Descriptions of dreams provide hints of the guiding power of the godlike Valar, transcending ordinary reality. [17] [18] Paul Kocher writes that Frodo's visions "set him apart as unusual even before he leaves the Shire". [19] He dreams of the Misty Mountains,the direction he needs to take to begin his quest. He dreams of the sea, where he will one day take ship on his final journey. Kocher comments that some of the great, like Aragorn and the Elf-lords, have "true hunches about coming events"; but those are not in dreams. Frodo, then, "seems gifted with a power possessed only by the greatest among other races." [19]
Yvette Kisor states that Tolkien's poem "The Lay of Aotrou and Itroun", modelled on a Breton lai, has "resonances" with several of his other works, including The Lord of the Rings. She likens the imagery of Frodo's "dark dreams" after he has been wounded by the Nazgûl's Morgul-knife to Aotrou's dream where "he walked with children yet unborn / in gardens fair, until the morn / came slowly through the windows tall, / and shadows moved across the wall". Frodo dreams he is in his own garden, but he finds it "faint and dim", and "black shadows" appear behind the hedge. Both, she writes, "dream of gardens that represent a safety of enclosure, and both dreams are threatened by shadows." [20]
Greene writes that the evil characters in The Lord of the Rings are able to place "false images in the minds of men, or to cause men to perceive true images in a false structure". She gives two examples: Sauron's ability to deceive Denethor to despair by means of the visions he sees in the seeing stone, the Palantír; and the "visual scenario" created by the fallen wizard Saruman's voice as he paints a word-picture to Gandalf of how he and Gandalf could benefit by falling in with the evil of Sauron. She compares Tolkien's "angry distrust of the making of heterodox images" to that of Spenser in The Faerie Queene and Milton in Paradise Regained . [4]
A special case is the otherworldly Elvish land of Lothlórien, which resembles the dreamland of the medieval poem Pearl ; [21] [22] Tolkien was working with that text while he was writing The Lord of the Rings. Amy Amendt-Raduege notes that lórien indeed is the Quenya for 'dream'. [22] The place is dreamlike, with the "celestial colors" of its forest, accessible only "by crossing a river", and it is ruled by a female guide-figure, Galadriel. The land contains a fountain, the Mirror of Galadriel, which supplies visions to those permitted to look into it. Frodo's vision, of the demonic Eye of Sauron, is evidently evil, but under Galadriel's guidance is handled safely. Amendt-Raduege comments that "the vision gives Frodo the insight he needs to complete his quest: the ability to look inside another's heart and read its temptations". [22]
Kocher notes that Tolkien describes the extremely un-Mannish sleep and dreams of the Elf Legolas, as he and his companions follow the trail of the orcs: "he could sleep, if sleep it could be called by Men, resting his mind in the strange paths of elvish dreams, even as he walked open-eyed in the light of this world." [23] [T 7]
Verlyn Flieger notes in her 1997 book A Question of Time that Tolkien much preferred J. W. Dunne's dream mechanism for time travel to mere devices such as H. G. Wells's time machine. He attempted, twice, to write a time travel novel, but failed to complete either The Lost Road or The Notion Club Papers . [24] The idea of travelling back into the distant past survived, however, into The Lord of the Rings, with Dunne-like dreams for major characters, especially Frodo. [25] [26] Flieger further writes that some of the dreams in The Lord of the Rings "are so intertangled that we find ourselves participating in a kind of waking dream or a dream-memory without knowing which is which, when or how we got there." She gives as the prime example the episode in Lothlórien, which she notes Tolkien hints is "outside ordinary time" and "somehow outside ordinary consciousness". [27]
Keith Kelly and Michael Livingston write in Mythlore that descriptions of visions give "the clearest glimpse into Tolkien's depictions of Paradise." [10] They note that Frodo's two visions of the "far green country", near the start and again right at the end, suggest a kind of frame for the novel, bracketing the quest with hints of paradise. They comment that this view of Tolkien's plan is reinforced by a letter he wrote in 1944 while he was writing The Lord of the Rings. In it he stated that "the final scene will be the passage of Bilbo and Elrond and Galadriel through the woods of the Shire on their way to the Grey Havens. Frodo will join them and pass over the sea (linking with the vision he had of a far green country in the house of Tom Bombadil)". [10] [T 8]
The Finnish classical composer Aulis Sallinen's Seventh Symphony is named "The Dreams of Gandalf". The 1996 piece derives from music initially meant to accompany a ballet on the theme of The Hobbit . [28]
Howard Shore, composer of the Music of The Lord of the Rings film series, combined all three variations of his leitmotif "The Shire" in the end credits of The Fellowship of the Ring to create the song "In Dreams". [29] The song has lyrics by Fran Walsh, and the film version is sung by the boy soprano Edward Ross of the London Oratory School Schola. [30]
Gandalf is a protagonist in J. R. R. Tolkien's novels The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. He is a wizard, one of the Istari order, and the leader of the Fellowship of the Ring. Tolkien took the name "Gandalf" from the Old Norse "Catalogue of Dwarves" (Dvergatal) in the Völuspá.
Rivendell is a valley in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional world of Middle-earth, representing both a homely place of sanctuary and a magical Elvish otherworld. It is an important location in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, being the place where the quest to destroy the One Ring began.
The Return of the King is the third and final volume of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, following The Fellowship of the Ring and The Two Towers. It was published in 1955. The story begins in the kingdom of Gondor, which is soon to be attacked by the Dark Lord Sauron.
Unfinished Tales of Númenor and Middle-earth is a collection of stories and essays by J. R. R. Tolkien that were never completed during his lifetime, but were edited by his son Christopher Tolkien and published in 1980. Many of the tales within are retold in The Silmarillion, albeit in modified forms; the work also contains a summary of the events of The Lord of the Rings told from a less personal perspective.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the real-world history and notable fictional elements of J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy universe. It covers materials created by Tolkien; the works on his unpublished manuscripts, by his son Christopher Tolkien; and films, games and other media created by other people.
Scholars and critics have identified many themes of The Lord of the Rings, a major fantasy novel by J. R. R. Tolkien, including a reversed quest, the struggle of good and evil, death and immortality, fate and free will, the danger of power, and various aspects of Christianity such as the presence of three Christ figures, for prophet, priest, and king, as well as elements like hope and redemptive suffering. There is also a strong thread throughout the work of language, its sound, and its relationship to peoples and places, along with moralisation from descriptions of landscape. Out of these, Tolkien stated that the central theme is death and immortality.
"The Council of Elrond" is the second chapter of Book 2 of J. R. R. Tolkien's bestselling fantasy work, The Lord of the Rings, which was published in 1954–1955. It is the longest chapter in that book at some 15,000 words, and critical for explaining the power and threat of the One Ring, for introducing the final members of the Fellowship of the Ring, and for defining the planned quest to destroy it. Contrary to the maxim "Show, don't tell", the chapter consists mainly of people talking; the action is, as in an earlier chapter "The Shadow of the Past", narrated, largely by the Wizard Gandalf, in flashback. The chapter parallels the far simpler Beorn chapter in The Hobbit, which similarly presents a culture-clash of modern with ancient. The Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey calls the chapter "a largely unappreciated tour de force". The Episcopal priest Fleming Rutledge writes that the chapter brings the hidden narrative of Christianity in The Lord of the Rings close to the surface.
Aragorn is a fictional character and a protagonist in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. Aragorn is a Ranger of the North, first introduced with the name Strider and later revealed to be the heir of Isildur, an ancient King of Arnor and Gondor. Aragorn is a confidant of the wizard Gandalf and plays a part in the quest to destroy the One Ring and defeat the Dark Lord Sauron. As a young man, Aragorn falls in love with the immortal elf Arwen, as told in "The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen". Arwen's father, Elrond Half-elven, forbids them to marry unless Aragorn becomes King of both Arnor and Gondor.
Elrond Half-elven is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium. Both of his parents, Eärendil and Elwing, were half-elven, having both Men and Elves as ancestors. He is the bearer of the elven-ring Vilya, the Ring of Air, and master of Rivendell, where he has lived for thousands of years through the Second and Third Ages of Middle-earth. He was the Elf-king Gil-galad's herald at the end of the Second Age, saw Gil-galad and king Elendil fight the dark lord Sauron for the One Ring, and Elendil's son Isildur take it rather than destroy it.
Frodo Baggins is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's writings and one of the protagonists in The Lord of the Rings. Frodo is a hobbit of the Shire who inherits the One Ring from his cousin Bilbo Baggins, described familiarly as "uncle", and undertakes the quest to destroy it in the fires of Mount Doom in Mordor. He is mentioned in Tolkien's posthumously published works, The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales.
The One Ring, also called the Ruling Ring and Isildur's Bane, is a central plot element in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings (1954–55). It first appeared in the earlier story The Hobbit (1937) as a magic ring that grants the wearer invisibility. Tolkien changed it into a malevolent Ring of Power and re-wrote parts of The Hobbit to fit in with the expanded narrative. The Lord of the Rings describes the hobbit Frodo Baggins's quest to destroy the Ring and save Middle-earth.
Sauron is the title character and the primary antagonist, through the forging of the One Ring, of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, where he rules the land of Mordor and has the ambition of ruling the whole of Middle-earth. In the same work, he is identified as the "Necromancer" of Tolkien's earlier novel The Hobbit. The Silmarillion describes him as the chief lieutenant of the first Dark Lord, Morgoth. Tolkien noted that the Ainur, the "angelic" powers of his constructed myth, "were capable of many degrees of error and failing", but by far the worst was "the absolute Satanic rebellion and evil of Morgoth and his satellite Sauron". Sauron appears most often as "the Eye", as if disembodied.
The Fellowship of the Ring is the first of three volumes of the epic novel The Lord of the Rings by the English author J. R. R. Tolkien. It is followed by The Two Towers and The Return of the King. The action takes place in the fictional universe of Middle-earth. The book was first published on 29 July 1954 in the United Kingdom. The volume consists of a foreword, in which the author discusses his writing of The Lord of the Rings, a prologue titled "Concerning Hobbits, and other matters", and the main narrative in Book I and Book II.
The poetry in The Lord of the Rings consists of the poems and songs written by J. R. R. Tolkien, interspersed with the prose of his high fantasy novel of Middle-earth, The Lord of the Rings. The book contains over 60 pieces of verse of many kinds; some poems related to the book were published separately. Seven of Tolkien's songs, all but one from The Lord of the Rings, were made into a song-cycle, The Road Goes Ever On, set to music by Donald Swann. All the poems in The Lord of the Rings were set to music and published on CDs by The Tolkien Ensemble.
Christianity is a central theme in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional works about Middle-earth, but the specifics are always kept hidden. This allows for the books' meaning to be personally interpreted by the reader, instead of the author detailing a strict, set meaning.
"The Shadow of the Past" is the second chapter of J. R. R. Tolkien's bestselling fantasy work, The Lord of the Rings, which was published in 1954–1955. Tolkien called it "the crucial chapter"; the Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey labelled it "the vital chapter". This is because it represents both the moment that Tolkien devised the central plot of the book, and the point in the story where the protagonist, Frodo Baggins, and the reader realise that there will be a quest to destroy the Ring. A sketch of it was among the first parts of the book to be written, early in 1938; later that year, it was one of three chapters of the book that he drafted. In 1944, he returned to the chapter, adding descriptions of Gollum, the Ring, and the hunt for Gollum.
The theme of addiction to power in The Lord of the Rings is central, as the Ring, made by the Dark Lord Sauron to enable him to take over the whole of Middle-earth, progressively corrupts the mind of its owner to use the Ring for evil.
Tolkien's monsters are the evil beings, such as Orcs, Trolls, and giant spiders, who oppose and sometimes fight the protagonists in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium. Tolkien was an expert on Old English, especially Beowulf, and several of his monsters share aspects of the Beowulf monsters; his Trolls have been likened to Grendel, the Orcs' name harks back to the poem's orcneas, and the dragon Smaug has multiple attributes of the Beowulf dragon. The European medieval tradition of monsters makes them either humanoid but distorted, or like wild beasts, but very large and malevolent; Tolkien follows both traditions, with monsters like Orcs of the first kind and Wargs of the second. Some scholars add Tolkien's immensely powerful Dark Lords Morgoth and Sauron to the list, as monstrous enemies in spirit as well as in body. Scholars have noted that the monsters' evil nature reflects Tolkien's Roman Catholicism, a religion which has a clear conception of good and evil.
Scholars, including psychoanalysts, have commented that J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth stories about both Bilbo Baggins, protagonist of The Hobbit, and Frodo Baggins, protagonist of The Lord of the Rings, constitute psychological journeys. Bilbo returns from his journey to help recover the Dwarves' treasure from Smaug the dragon's lair in the Lonely Mountain changed, but wiser and more experienced. Frodo returns from his journey to destroy the One Ring in the fires of Mount Doom scarred by multiple weapons, and is unable to settle back into the normal life of his home, the Shire.
Storytelling is explored in multiple ways in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, with stories told in different styles, attributed to many different characters with limited knowledge of events, as well as an omniscient narrator. Tolkien weaves together a complex story in the style of an interlaced medieval tapestry romance. Much dialogue and many stories and poems are embedded in the narrative. Alongside the main narrative are many other elements such as genealogies and footnotes, giving the impression that Tolkien was the editor and translator of the work, forming an editorial frame that includes a figure of himself in the story.