Read Tolkien and the Great War Online
Authors: John Garth
Cynewulf's lines were about an angelic messenger or herald of Christ. The dictionary suggested the word meant a ray of light, or the illumination of dawn. Tolkien felt that it must be a survival from before Anglo-Saxon, even from before Christianity. (Cognate names such as
Aurvandil
and
Orendil
in other ancient records bear this out. According to the rules of comparative philology, they probably descended from a single name before Germanic split into its offspring languages. But the literal and metaphorical meanings of this name are obscure.) Drawing on the dictionary definitions and Cynewulf's reference to Ãarendel as being above our world, Tolkien was inspired with the idea that Ãarendel could be none other than the steersman of Venus, the planet that presages the dawn. At Phoenix Farm, on 24 September 1914, he began, with startling
éclat:
Ãarendel sprang up from the Ocean's cup
In the gloom of the mid-world's rim;
From the door of Night as a ray of light
Leapt over the twilight brim,
And launching his bark like a silver spark
From the golden-fading sand
Down the sunlit breath of Day's fiery Death
He sped from Westerland.
Tolkien embellished â
The Voyage of Ãarendel the Evening Star
' with a favourite phrase from
Beowulf, Ofer ýpa ful
,
âover the cup of the ocean'
, âover the ocean's goblet'. A further characteristic of Ãarendel may have been suggested to Tolkien by the similarity of his name to the Old English
Äar
âsea': though his element is the sky, he is a mariner. But these were mere beginnings. He sketched out a character and a cosmology in forty-eight lines of verse that are by turns sublime, vivacious, and sombre. All the heavenly bodies are ships that sail daily through gates at the East and West. The action is simple: Ãarendel launches his vessel from the sunset Westerland at the world's rim, skitters past the stars sailing their fixed courses, and escapes the hunting Moon, but dies in the light of the rising Sun.
And Ãarendel fled from that Shipman dread
Beyond the dark earth's pale,
Back under the rim of the Ocean dim,
And behind the world set sail;
And he heard the mirth of the folk of earth
And hearkened to their tears,
As the world dropped back in a cloudy wrack
On its journey down the years.
Then he glimmering passed to the starless vast
As an isléd lamp at sea,
And beyond the ken of mortal men
Set his lonely errantry,
Tracking the Sun in his galleon
And voyaging the skies
Till his splendour was shorn by the birth of Morn
And he died with the Dawn in his eyes.
It is the kind of myth an ancient people might make to explain celestial phenomena. Tolkien gave the title in Old English too (
Scipfæreld Earendeles Ãfensteorran
), as if the whole poem were a translation. He was imagining the story Cynewulf might have heard, as if a rival Anglo-Saxon poet had troubled to record it.
As he wrote, German and French armies clashed fiercely at the town of Albert, in the region named for the River Somme, which flows through it. But Ãarendel's is a solitary species of daring, driven by an unexplained desire. He is not (as in Cynewulf)
monnum sended
, âsent unto men' as a messenger or herald; nor is he a warrior. If Ãarendel embodies heroism at all, it is the maverick, elemental heroism of individuals such as Sir Ernest Shackleton, who that summer had sailed off on his voyage to traverse the Antarctic continent.
If the shadow of war touches Tolkien's poem at all, it is in a very oblique way. Though he flies from the mundane world, Ãarendel listens to its weeping, and while his ship speeds off on its own wayward course, the fixed stars take their appointed places on âthe gathering tide of darkness'. It is impossible to say
whether Tolkien meant this to equate in any way to his own situation at the time of writing; but it is interesting that, while he was under intense pressure to fight for King and Country, and while others were burnishing their martial couplets, he eulogized a âwandering spirit' at odds with the majority course, a fugitive in a lonely pursuit of some elusive ideal.
What is this ideal? Disregarding the later development of his story, we know little more about the Ãarendel of this poem than we do about the stick figure stepping into space in Tolkien's drawing
The End of the World.
Still less do we know what Ãarendel is thinking, despite his evident daring, eccentricity, and uncontainable curiosity. We might almost conclude that this is truly âan endless quest' not just without conclusion, but without purpose. If Tolkien had wanted to analyse the heart and mind of his mariner, he might have turned to the great Old English meditations on exile,
The Wanderer
and
The Seafarer.
Instead he turned to Romance, the quest's native mode, in which motivation is either self-evident (love, ambition, greed) or supernatural. Ãarendel's motivation is both: after all, he is both a man and a celestial object. Supernaturally, this is an astronomy myth explaining planetary motions, but on a human scale it is also a paean to imagination. âHis heart afire with bright desire', Ãarendel is like Francis Thompson (in Tolkien's Stapeldon Society paper), filled with âa burning enthusiasm for the ethereally fair'. It is tempting to see analogies with Tolkien the writer bursting into creativity. The mariner's quest is that of the Romantic individual who has âtoo much imagination', who is not content with the Enlightenment project of examining the known world in ever greater detail. Ãarendel overleaps all conventional barriers in a search for self-realization in the face of the natural sublime. In an unspoken religious sense, he seeks to see the face of God.
The week before the start of the Cambridge term found Rob Gilson staying with Christopher Wiseman in Wandsworth, London, where his family had moved following his father's appointment as secretary of the Wesleyan Methodist Home
Mission Department in 1913. It was also the week of the fall of Antwerp. Gilson wrote: â
We are of course very mad
and hilarious. Last night we went to see Gerald du Maurier in
Outcast
â such a bad play. I don't know what we are going to do today and shall probably start to do it before we have decided.' At the same time, on 4 October, the last Sunday of the long vacation, Tolkien was back in Birmingham, staying at the Oratory with Father Francis Morgan. T. K. Barnsley, who had now been appointed the first subaltern in the 1st Birmingham Battalion, was leading the new unit in a church parade at the city's central parish church. On the Monday the recruits began training. Saturday's
Daily Post
had carried a list of men accepted to serve in the 3rd Birmingham Battalion. Hilary Tolkien was soon packed off without ceremony to train at a Methodist college in Moseley as a bugler.
Back in Oxford, Tolkien confided in a Catholic professor that the outbreak of war had come as a profound blow to him, â
the collapse of all my world
', as he later put it. Tolkien had been prone to fits of profound melancholy, even
despair
, ever since the death of his mother, though he kept them to himself. The new life he had slowly built up since her death was now in peril. Hearing his complaint, however, the Catholic professor responded that this war was no aberration: on the contrary, for the human race it was merely âback to normal'.
Yet âordinary life', as Tolkien had known it, was an immediate casualty of war, even in Oxford. The university was transformed into a citadel of refugees and war-readiness. The time-honoured flow of undergraduates had haemorrhaged: a committee to process student recruits had dealt with 2,000 by September. Only seventy-five remained at Exeter College, and in the evenings unlit windows loomed over the silent quad. Tolkien was stricken with severe second thoughts about staying and declared: â
It is awful
. I really don't think I shall be able to go on: work seems impossible.' The college had become part-barracks, with areas allocated to Oxfordshire Light Infantrymen and batteries of gunners, who came and went in a steady stream. Some of the younger dons had gone off to war, and so had many of the
college servants; older men had taken their place. Tolkien was glad to be living for the first time out of college, at 59 St John Street (an address which came to be known as â
the Johnner
'), where he shared âdigs' with his last remaining Exeter friend, Colin Cullis, who was not able to join up due to poor health.
The town was largely emptied of its younger men, but it was busier than ever. Women were stepping into men's civilian jobs. Exiled Belgians and Serbs appeared. Convalescent soldiers wandered the streets and the wounded were laid up in the Examination Schools. The troops who were being trained to replace them drilled in the University Parks in their temporary-issue blue uniforms. Quaintly, as it now seems, Farnell the Rector was giving lessons in the épée and the sabre. For the first time since the English Civil War, Oxford had become a military camp.
Urged on by Farnell, Tolkien and his few fellow undergraduates strove to keep the college societies going. The Stapeldon Society, a shadow of its former self under âlowering clouds of Armageddon', did its trivial best by passing a rousing vote of confidence in all Exonians in the armed forces and sending letters of support to King Albert of Belgium and Winston Churchill (then First Lord of the Admiralty). But the first duty imposed upon Tolkien was to pursue the question of the redecoration of the Junior Common Room, the undergraduates' meeting place. The students were warned that war would mean going short on such luxuries. The sub-rector told Tolkien that student entertainments were unduly wasteful and must be banned. Tolkien turned to humour, poking fun at the first-year intake for not taking baths, âno doubt,' he said, because they were âeconomising with the best of intentions in this time of stress'. The society debated the motion that âThis House disapproves a system of stringent economy in the present crisis.' Tolkien spoke in a debate on âthe Superman and International Law', but his own proposal, that âThis House approves of spelling reform,' suggests an urge to turn aside from the war. It was a necessary appeal to non-martial life, but a puny one as more and more of the globe became entangled in war. At the end of October German forces in Belgium were driven back from the
River Yser by flooding after the Belgians opened the seaward sluices at high tide, but at nearby Ypres British forces were succumbing to exhaustion in the mud, the new enemy. The opposing armies had failed to outflank each other and now began hunkering down in trenches: the Western Front had been established. Meanwhile, a mine sank Britain's super-Dreadnought
Audacious
north of Scotland. Turkey entered the war and became Britain's enemy. Far afield, the Boers of the Orange Free State, whose sympathies were pro-German, were now staging an uprising against British rule.
In lieu of enlisting in Kitchener's army, at the start of term Tolkien had immediately enrolled in the university OTC. There were two courses: one for those hoping for a commission imminently, the other for those who wished to delay enlistment. Tolkien was one of twenty-five Exeter College men on the latter, which meant about six and a half hours' drill and one military lecture per week. â
We had a drill
all afternoon and got soaked several times and our rifles got all filthy and took ages to clean afterwards,' Tolkien wrote to Edith at the end of his first week. For those of a more sensitive nature, any military training could be sufficiently unpleasant: Rob Gilson, who loathed militarism, had taken
Paradise Lost
to read at the OTC summer camp at Aldershot the year before, and found that a like-minded friend (Frederick Scopes) had brought Dante's
Inferno.
For Tolkien, though, years of playing rugby meant that the physical discomforts, at least, held no horror. The university corps were remote from real soldiering, with no field days or route marches, and rifles were soon taken away for the real war, but the active physical life banished the notorious
âOxford “sleepies”'
and brought fresh energy. âDrill is a godsend,' he told Edith.
Reinvigorated, he worked on his
Story of Kullervo
, a dark tale for dark times, and enthused about the Finnish
Kalevala
to T. W. Earp, a member of the Exeter College literati. This epic poem was the work of Elias Lönnrot, collated from folk songs passed down orally by generations of ârune singers' in the
Karelian region of Finland. Fragmentary and lyrical though these songs were, many referred tantalizingly to an apparently pre-Christian cast of heroic or divine figures headed by the sage Väinamöinen, the smith Ilmarinen, and the boastful rogue Lemminkäinen. Lönnrot had seen his chance to create a Finnish equivalent of what contemporary Iceland and Greece had inherited, a mythological literature; and he did so at a time when the Finns were struggling to find a voice. Finland, ruled by Sweden since the twelfth century but entirely distinct in language, culture, and ethnic history, had become a personal grand duchy of the Tsar of Russia in 1809. Just then the notion that ancient literature expressed the ancestral voice of a people was sweeping through Europe's academies and salons. When the
Kalevala
arrived in 1835, it had been embraced by Finnish nationalists, whose goal of independence was still unachieved in 1914.
Tolkien spoke in
defence of nationalism
at a college debate that November, even as the pride of nations was plunging Europe into catastrophe. Nationalism has carried even sourer connotations since the 1930s, but Tolkien's version had nothing to do with vaunting one nation above others. To him the nation's greatest goal was cultural self-realisation, not power over others; but essential to this were patriotism and a community of belief. â
I don't defend “Deutschland über alles”
but certainly do in Norwegian “Alt for Norge” [All for Norway],' he told Wiseman on the eve of the debate. By his own admission, therefore, Tolkien was both an English patriot and a supporter of Home Rule for the Irish. He could appreciate the Romantic notion of language as an ancestral voice, but he went further: he felt he had actually inherited from his maternal ancestors a taste and an aptitude for the Middle English of the West Midlands, a dialect he was studying for his English course in the religious text
Ancrene Riwle.
Writing about his life and influences much later, he declared: