Tolkien and the Great War: The Threshold of Middle-earth
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John Garth. Tolkien and the Great War: The Threshold of Middle-earth
Tolkien and the Great War. The Threshold of Middle-earth. John Garth
Copyright
Table of Contents
Chronology
Maps
Preface
Prologue
ONE Before
TWO A young man with too much imagination
THREE The Council of London
FOUR The shores of Faërie
FIVE Benighted wanderers
SIX Too long in slumber
SEVEN Larkspur and Canterbury-bells
EIGHT A bitter winnowing
NINE ‘Something has gone crack’
TEN In a hole in the ground
ELEVEN Castles in the air
TWELVE Tol Withernon and Fladweth Amrod
Epilogue. ‘A new light’
Postscript. ‘One who dreams alone’
Notes. Abbreviations and short titles used in notes
Prologue
ONE Before
TWO A young man with too much imagination
THREE The Council of London
FOUR The shores of Faërie
FIVE Benighted wanderers
SIX Too long in slumber
SEVEN Larkspur and Canterbury-bells
EIGHT A bitter winnowing
NINE ‘Something has gone crack’
TEN In a hole in the ground
ELEVEN Castles in the air
TWELVE Tol Withernon and Fladweth Amrod
EPILOGUE ‘a new light’
Bibliography. A: Private papers
B: Works by JRR Tolkien
C: Books and articles by others
D: Periodicals
E: Service records, war diaries and other official papers
F: Miscellaneous
Index
Tolkien and The Great War
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In memory of
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, 1892-1973
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At Exeter College, Tolkien had tried to recreate the TCBSian spirit by founding similar clubs, first the Apolausticks and then the Chequers, which substituted lavish dinners for secret snacks and consisted of his new undergraduate friends. He joined the Dialectical Society and the Essay Club, and enjoyed chin-wagging over a pipe. One visitor eyeing the cards on his mantelpiece wryly commented that he appeared to have signed up to every single college association. (Some of these cards were his own work, drawn with characteristic humour and stylish flair: among them an invitation to a ‘Smoker’, a popular social affair, depicting four students dancing – and falling over – in Turl Street under the disapproving airborne gaze of owls clad in the mortarboards and bowler-hats of the university authorities.) Tolkien was elected ‘deputy jester’ to the most important of these bodies, the Stapeldon Society, later becoming secretary and finally, at a noisy and anarchic meeting on 1 December 1913, president.
For the TCBS, however, the centre of gravity had shifted from Birmingham to Cambridge, where Wiseman was now at Peterhouse with a maths scholarship and Gilson was studying Classics at Trinity. The group’s numbers there were swelled in October 1913 by the arrival of Sidney Barrowclough and Ralph Payton (the Baby).
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