The Return of the Shadow. Christopher Tolkien

The Return of the Shadow - Christopher  Tolkien


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I can do a few things – like carpentry and gardening: I did not feel inclined somehow to make other people’s chairs, or grow other people’s vegetables for a living. I suppose some tiny touch of dragon-curse came to me. I am gold-lazy.’

      ‘Then Gandalf did not tell you anything? You were not actually escaping.’

      ‘What do you mean? What from?’

      ‘Well, this black rider,’ they said.

      ‘I don’t understand them at all.’

      ‘Then Gandalf told you nothing?’

      ‘I seldom saw Gandalf after Bilbo went away. But about a year ago he came one night, and I told him of the plan I was beginning to make for leaving Bag-end. “What about the Ring?” he asked. “Are you being careful? Do be careful: otherwise you will be overcome by it.” I had as a matter of fact hardly ever used it – and I did not use it again after that talk until my birthday party.’

      ‘Does anyone else know about it?’

      ‘I cannot say; but I don’t think so. Bilbo kept it very secret. He always told me that I was the only one who knew about it (in the Shire).2 I never told anyone else except Odo and Frodo who are my best friends. I have tried to be to them what Bilbo was to me. But even to them I never spoke of the Ring until they agreed to come with me on this Journey a few months ago. They would not tell anyone – though we often speak of it among ourselves. – Well, what do you make of it all? I can see you are bursting with secrets, but I cannot guess any of them.’

      ‘Is that bad or good?’

      ‘Who are they?’

      This ends a sheet, and the following sheet is not continuous with what precedes; but as found among my father’s papers they were placed together, and on both of them he wrote (later) ‘About Ring-wraiths’. The second passage is also part of a conversation, but there is no indication of who the speaker is (whoever it is, he is obviously speaking to Bingo). It was written at great speed and is extremely difficult to make out.

      I expect that one (or more) of these Ringwraiths have been sent to get the ring away from hobbits.

      Of course Gollum himself may have heard news – all the mountains were full of it after the battle – and tried to get back the ring, or told the Lord.

      At this point the manuscript stops. Here is a first glimpse of an earlier history of Gollum; a suggestion of how the hunt for the Ring originated; and a first sketching of the idea that the Dark Lord gave out Rings among the peoples of Middle-earth. The Rings conferred invisibility, and (it is at least implied) this invisibility was associated with the fate (or at least the peril) of the bearers of the Rings: that they become ‘wraiths’ and – in the case of goblins and men – servants of the Dark Lord.

      Subsequently my father referred to it as a ‘foreword’ (see p. 224), and it is clear that it was written as a possible new beginning for the book, in which Gandalf tells Bingo at Bag End, not long before the Party, something of the history and nature of his Ring, of his danger, and of the need for him to leave his home. It was composed very rapidly and is hard to read. I have introduced punctuation where needed, and occasionally put in silently necessary connective words. There are many pencilled alterations and additions which are here ignored, for they are anticipations of a later version of the chapter; but changes belonging to the time of composition are adopted into the text. There is no title.

      One day long ago two people were sitting talking in a small room. One was a wizard and the other was a hobbit, and the room was the sitting-room of the comfortable and well-furnished hobbit-hole known as Bag-end, Underhill, on the outskirts of Hobbiton in the middle of the Shire. The wizard was of course Gandalf and he looked much the same as he had


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