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J R R Tolkien [1892-1973] ENG
Ranked #152 in the top 380 poets

Narrative, alliterative, mythology, fantastic, fairy.

John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was born of British parents in Bloemfontein, South Africa in January of 1892, but moved with his mother, Mabel Tolkien, to England, at the age of  three. Tolkien lost his father when he was very young. In 1904 Tolkien`s mother died, and the young John Ronald Reuel moved with his brother Hilary to his aunt`s home in England (the West Midlands). Then they moved to the Birmingham suburb of Edgbaston. Mabel and her children became estranged from both sides of the family in 1900 when she was received into the Roman Catholic Church. From then on, both Ronald and Hilary were brought up in the faith of Pio Nono, and remained devout Catholics throughout their lives. The parish priest who visited the family regularly was the half-Spanish half-Welsh Father Francis Morgan.  In 1904 Mabel Tolkien was diagnosed as having diabetes, incurable at that time. She died on 15 October of that year leaving the two orphaned boys effectively destitute. At this point Father Francis took over, and made sure of the boys` material as well as spiritual welfare, although in the short term they were boarded with an unsympathetic aunt-by-marriage, Beatrice Suffield, and then with a Mrs Faulkner.

In 1908 Tolkien attended Oxford. In 1915 he was awarded First Class Honours degree in English Language and Literature. Next year Tolkien married Edith Bratt, whom he had met in 1908. During WW I Tolkien served in the army and saw action on the Somme. He returned home suffering from shell shock, and while convalescing he started to study early forms of language and work on Silmarillion (published 1977). For the rest of his life, Tolkien expanded the mythology of his fantasy worlds. 

In 1918 Tolkien joined the staff of New English Dictionary and in 1919 he became a freelance tutor in Oxford. Tolkien then worked as a teacher and professor at the University of Leeds. In 1925 he became Professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University. He was appointed Merton Professor of English at Oxford in 1945, retiring in 1959. His scholarly works included studies on Chaucher (1934) and an edition of Beowulf (1937). He was also interested in the Finnish national epos Kalevala, from which he found ideas for his imaginary language Quenya and which influenced several of his stories. Most of the inhabitants of Tolkien`s imaginary Middle-Earth are derived from English folklore and mythology, or from an idealized Anglo-Saxon past. 

With C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams and other friends, Tolkien formed an informal literary group called The Inklings, which took shape in the 1930s. They all had an interest in storytelling and their Tuesday lunchtime sessions in the Bird and Baby public house became  a well known part of Oxford social life. At their meetings the Inklings read aloud drafts of fiction and other work. Williams died in 1945 and the meetings faded out in 1949. - Other members of the club included Christopher Tolkien, JRR`s son. 

In the mid-1960s American paperback editions of The Lord of the Rings started to gain cult fame. The Tolkiens moved in 1968 to Poole near Bournemouth but after the death of his wife in 1971, Tolkien returned to Oxford. In 1972 he received CBE from the Queen. Tolkien died on September 2, 1973. 

The Hobbit was published when the author was 45 years old (1937). He developed further the history of Middle-Earth in The Lord of the Rings. It was published when Tolkien was over 60. His motivation for creating a new mythical world arose from his fascination in myths and folklore. Another motivation was his rejection of modern England. He rarely watched a film, busied himself with the early English dialects of the West Midlands, and enjoyed the company of other professors. 

Tolkien`s epic world is populated by elves, dwarves, magicians, and evil monsters. He saw himself as a Hobbit: "I like gardens, trees and unmechanized farmlands; I smoke a pipe, and like good plain food...." Tolkien made up languages for the races that inhabit his Middle-earth. for the background of his stories he created a complex history, geography, and society. But he also wished, that the stories leave scope for other minds to develop his ideas further. Since the publication of The Lord of the Rings, a whole industry of fantasy literature, computer games, and other by-products, have been created by a worldwide community of Tolkien`s fans to continue his work.

Published works: 

A Middle English Vocabulary, 1922 

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, 1925 

Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics, 1936 

Songs for the Philologist, 1936 (collection, with E.V. Gordon and others) 

The Hobbit 1937 

Farmer Gill of Ham, 1949 

The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm`s Son, 1954 (radio play) 

The Fellowship of the Ring 1954

The Two Towers(1954) 

The Adventures of Tom Bombardil and Other Verses from the Red Book, 1962 

Ancrene Wisse, 1962 (ed.) 

Tree and Leaf, 1964 

The Tolkien Reader, 1966 

The Road Goes Ever On, 1967 

Smith of Wootton Major, 1967 

Bilbo`s Last Song, 1974 

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 1975 (translator, ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

Tree and Leaf, Smith of Wootton Major, The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm`s Son, 1975 

The Father Christmas Letters, 1976 

Bilbo`s Last Song, 1977 

Silmarillion, 1977  

Pictures by J.R.R. Tolkien, 1979 

Unfinished Tales of Númenor and Middle-earth, 1980 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

Poems and Stories, 1980 

The Letters of J.R.R. Tokien: A Selection, 1981 

The Old English Exodus, 1981 (translator) 

Mr Bliss, 1982 

Finn and Hengest, 1983 

The History of Middle-Earth, 1983 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien - publication of posthumous works continues) 

The Book of Lost Tales 1-2, 1983-84 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

The Monster and the Critics and Other Essays, 1984 

Lays of Beleriand, 1985 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

The Shaping of Middle-Earth, 1986 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

The Lost Road and Other Writings, 1987 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

The Return of the Shadow, 1988 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

The Treason of Isengard, 1989 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

The War of the Ring, 1990 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

Sauron Defeated, 1991 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

Morgoth`s Ring: The Later Silmarillion Part 1, 1993 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien) 

The War of the Jewels: The Later Silmarillion Part 2, 1994 (ed. by Christopher Tolkien)\

Bibliography and image source: Books and Writers

Children, Fantasy, Myth

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1824-1905
SCO
George MacDonald
→ influenced J R R Tolkien
1834-1896
ENG
William Morris
→ influenced J R R Tolkien
1844-1912
SCO
Andrew Lang
→ influenced J R R Tolkien
1859-1907
ENG
Francis Thompson
→ influenced J R R Tolkien
1832-1898
ENG
Lewis Carroll
← (amusing but disturbing) disliked by J R R Tolkien


WorkLangRating
I Sit And Think
eng
77
Song Of Aragorn
eng
51
The Road Goes Ever On
eng
50
Over The Misty Mountains Cold
eng
24
Bilbo`s Last Song (At the Grey Havens)
eng
21
Luthien Tinuviel
eng
17
One Ring
eng
13
The Drinking Song
eng
13
Three Rings For The Elven Kings
eng
12
Bath-Song
eng
11
Gandalf`s Song Of Lorien
eng
9
All Woods Must Fail
eng
7
Journey`s End
eng
7
The World Was Young, The Mountains Green
eng
7
Cat
eng
6
He Chanted A Song Of Wizardry
eng
6
Roads Go Ever On
eng
6
The King
eng
6
Lament For Boromir
eng
4
Tom Bombadil`s Song
eng
4
All Ye Joyful
eng
3
Athelas
eng
3
Frodo`s Lament For Gandalf
eng
3
O! Where Are You Going?
eng
3
The Man In The Moon Came Down Too Soon
eng
3
Bregalad`s Lament
eng
2
Finrod`s Song
eng
2
Gil-galad
eng
2
Lament For Eorl The Young
eng
2
Namárië
eng
2
The Sea
eng
2
Durin
eng
1
Earendil
eng
1
Eärendil The Mariner
eng
1
Elbereth
eng
1
Fish Riddle
eng
1
Galadriel`s Song
eng
1
Nimrodel
eng
1
The Fall Of Gil-galad
eng
1
The Lay Of The Children Of Húrin: II. Beleg
eng
1
The Lay Of The Children Of Húrin: III. Failivrin
eng
1
The Little House Of Lost Play (Mar Vanwa Tyalieva)
eng
1
Theoden
eng
1
There Is An Inn, A Merry Old Inn
eng
1
Troll Sat Alone On His Seat Of Stone
eng
1
Bilbo`s Adventure Song
eng
0
Boromir`s call
eng
0
Fair Lady Goldberry
eng
0
Fragment Of An Alliterative Lay Of Eärendel
eng
0
Galadriel`s Song Of Eldamar
eng
0
Gandalf The Grey Pilgrim
eng
0
Gondor, Gondor!
eng
0
Lebennin
eng
0
Legolas` Song Of The Sea
eng
0
Oliphaunt
eng
0
One White Tree
eng
0
Pearl
eng
0
Seasons
eng
0
Sing All Ye People!
eng
0
Sir Orfeo
eng
0
Song Of Beren And Lúthien
eng
0
Song Of The Maiden Nimrodel
eng
0
Tall Ships And Tall Kings
eng
0
The Flight Of The Noldoli From Valinor
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 1, 2.
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 11, 12
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 13, 14
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 3, 4.
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 5, 6
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 7, 8
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian : Cantos 9, 10
eng
0
The Lay Of Leithian Recommenced
eng
0
The Lay Of The Children Of Húrin: I. Túrin`s Fostering
eng
0
The Message Gandalf Brought From Galadriel To Aragorn
eng
0
The Message Gandalf Brought From Galadriel To Legolas
eng
0
The Second Version Of The Children Of Húrin : I. The Children Of Húrin
eng
0
The Second Version Of The Children Of Húrin : II. Túrin`s Fostering
eng
0
The Verse Of The Ring
eng
0
Theoden`s Fall
eng
0
Túrin`s Fostering
eng
0
Winter Comes To Nargothrond
eng
0

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