I
am at one of those junctions where I find my brain running in several
different directions, and I am not sure which one to follow. Several of
them could get very involved, and they are interrelated, so what order
do I go in? So, I’m just going to talk about movies for a couple of
posts, and then do my Thursday and Friday music reviews, and then we
will see. Punt!
Going
back to that night we went to see the movie, one thing our friend was
asking about was to try and figure out who were the good guys and the
bad guys. It’s not completely cut and dried. You are identifying with
the dwarves, and the one set of elves will be adversarial to them, even
if Elrond is helpful. I was explaining about how in the end you are
going to have the Battle of the Five Armies, and different groups
uniting together.
As
I told her that, I remembered something my father had said back when I
first read the book. This is going back many decades ago, and is about
disputed information, so I may not convey this exactly correctly. I
guess there was a school of thought that the books, and I was thinking
about The Hobbit specifically, but maybe it was more about The Lord of
the Rings, were an allegory for WWII.
As
far as I know, Tolkien specifically chose not to confirm that, but I
guess he didn’t deny it vehemently enough for some people. Anyway, my
father specifically said the hobbits were the English, all about being
cozy and keeping their meals regular. There was more to it. Apparently
the elves were going to Ireland, and yet I don’t think they were the
Irish, and the men were the Americans, who were more admirable and
heroic.
So,
even if the basic allegory works, about groups who would not normally
join together cooperating to fight dark forces, going into that level of
interpretation is probably overreaching, I would think, but I have had a
couple of thoughts related to that.
One
is that for a long time the Americans as the heroes made sense, because
both world wars ended after we got involved. I sometimes wondered if it
was irresponsible of us not to join in sooner. When we would get to
reading about the Holocaust and Anne Frank, it seems like so many people
died shortly before their camps were liberated, that you wonder how
many could have been saved.
At
the same time, perhaps it was not that the US addition was miraculous.
Maybe by coming in later, when everyone else has been wearing each other
down, you get the better deal. There would probably be more American
dead, a lot more, if we had gone in earlier.
And
you know, I’m not really going to get anywhere there. War should not be
entered into lightly, but sometimes it is necessary, and trying to make
good decisions just based on what is right, let alone all of the things
that leaders really have to end up thinking about, seems like a losing
proposition.
More
recently though, I have been thinking about what is heroic. Another
thing my father was fond of saying was that Italians fight with their
feet –meaning they are cowards who run away. (In case anyone isn’t
clear, the Italian is on my mother’s side.)
One
of the most beautiful places I have been to in Italy is Bassano. It is
physically pretty, but the reason it was so beautiful to me is that it
felt so peaceful. I remember standing on the old bridge and watching
trout in the water, and it felt very serene. Its history has not been
that.
There
is a plaque on one of the churches that maps out all of the places
where they were hit. There were many. There are some well-maintained
trees up on the hill; people who were caught working for the resistance
were hung from those trees. The bridge is an important symbol of the
town, but it has been destroyed and rebuilt many times. If the Italians
prefer peace to war, they’ve got some good reasons.
So
I was thinking about all of that and hobbits. One of the lines in the
movie, which I believe was added, was Gandalf explaining to Galadriel
that he recruited Bilbo because Bilbo gives Gandalf courage. That scene
was definitely not in the book, but the sentiment kind of was.
Yes,
hobbits like cozy homes and six meals a day, but they are pretty good
about rising to challenges. Doing the right thing, is very hobbit-like. I
don’t remember Bilbo in the book wanting to go home, but deciding to
stick with the dwarves so they could have their own home, but yes, I can
imagine hobbits relating to the plight of someone else and accepting
some personal sacrifice to help.
My
older sister said the real point of the trilogy was friendship, and you
can make arguments for that too. I think what Tolkien does say,
regardless of whether there is complex or simple allegory, is that those
are the people you count on. They aren’t going after riches and glory,
but they care about fairness, and loyalty, and good. Those are the
heroes.
And for what it’s worth, England did produce plenty of strength and courage at the time.
2 comments:
Tolkien did say, however, that he categorically despised allegory. I'd say he was influenced by the events in the world around him, but I doubt he purposefully set about to create an allegorical reference in his stories.
That sounds reasonable. Ultimately, all of his books are things I need to re-read as an adult, because I'm sure I missed a lot back then.
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