Tolkien's Great War
-
0:09 - 0:16John Ronald Reuel Tolkien,
was born on the 3rd January, 1892. -
0:16 - 0:19He and his brother Hilary,
experienced a difficult childhood. -
0:19 - 0:22When Tolkien was just four,
they lost their father, Arthur, -
0:22 - 0:24to rheumatic fever.
-
0:24 - 0:27As a widow with low income,
his mother Mabel, -
0:27 - 0:31home schooled the brothers and played
a vital role in their early education -
0:31 - 0:32and development.
-
0:33 - 0:38Tolkien was a smart young boy, with
a fascination and thirst for languages. -
0:40 - 0:44Tolkien sat the entrance exam for King
Edward's School, Birmingham and passed. -
0:45 - 0:49From the Autumn of 1900,
for a fee of 12 pounds a year, -
0:49 - 0:52Tolkien would be educated
in an environment -
0:52 - 0:55that would help fulfil
his academic potential. -
0:55 - 0:57John Garth: Going to
King Edward's was -
0:57 - 1:00vitally important to Tolkien;
he was an exceptionally -
1:00 - 1:05talented boy. King Edward's offered him
a vast amount of scope -
1:05 - 1:10and also the company of other boys
who were similarly talented. -
1:10 - 1:13Which was probably quite
hard for Tolkien to find. -
1:15 - 1:19Simon Stacey: Not only did he play rugby
but he was a leading light -
1:19 - 1:23in the debating society
and the literary society. -
1:23 - 1:25He was the life and soul really,
-
1:25 - 1:30and he missed the school a great deal,
I think, when he finally had to leave. -
1:31 - 1:34VO: At the age of just 11, Tolkien
and his brother Hilary -
1:34 - 1:37lose their mother Mabel to diabetes.
-
1:37 - 1:40Grief stricken, he plunges
himself into school life -
1:40 - 1:44more energetically than before.
Academically he excels, -
1:44 - 1:49but in 1905 meets his intellectual rival,
Christopher Wiseman. -
1:51 - 1:54John Garth: Tolkien met his greatest
friend at King Edward's, -
1:54 - 1:56Christopher Wiseman on the rugby pitch.
-
1:57 - 2:00A musician, a mathematician;
quite different from Tolkien. -
2:01 - 2:04They developed such a strong
bond on the rugby field -
2:04 - 2:06that they called themselves;
"The Great Twin Brethren", -
2:06 - 2:11which was a phrase from
"Lays of Ancient Rome" by Lord Macauley. -
2:11 - 2:14Simon Stacey: They also were
friendly rivals in the school, -
2:14 - 2:18both being very academic boys.
Wiseman had a formidable intellect -
2:18 - 2:19and he was interested
in a lot of the things -
2:19 - 2:21that Tolkien was getting interested in;
-
2:21 - 2:27languages, I think he was looking at
Egyptian and was looking at hieroglyphics. -
2:27 - 2:29John Garth: Tolkien and Wiseman
must have helped define each other -
2:29 - 2:31through their teenage years
because they would argue; -
2:31 - 2:34they would argue strongly
about all their beliefs in life. -
2:35 - 2:38Simon Stacey: Wiseman was
a very talented musician; -
2:38 - 2:42Tolkien was supposed to be tone deaf
but that didn't stop them getting on! -
2:42 - 2:47VO: Tolkien also befriends,
son of the headmaster, Rob Gilson. -
2:47 - 2:51Tolkien, Wiseman and Gilson,
form a strong bond -
2:51 - 2:54which will last throughout
their school years and beyond. -
2:56 - 3:00Outside of King Edward's, Tolkien's life
is about to change, yet again. -
3:01 - 3:04John Garth: Tolkien was living
in lodgings with his brother, Hilary, -
3:04 - 3:11and when he was 16 he met fellow lodger,
Edith Bratt, who was 19 at the time. -
3:12 - 3:18And she was a beautiful young girl;
talented pianist and also an orphan. -
3:18 - 3:21And the two of them bonded
on their shared sadnesses -
3:21 - 3:24but also on their hopes and dreams.
-
3:24 - 3:29The difficulty for Ronald,
as she called him, and Edith, -
3:29 - 3:33was that he was a Roman Catholic
and she was an Anglican. -
3:33 - 3:37VO: Tolkien's Guardian, Father Francis
Morgan, a Catholic Priest, -
3:37 - 3:42feels this is major divide; and also
believes that Edith will distract Tolkien -
3:42 - 3:45from his attempts to get
into Oxford University. -
3:45 - 3:49John Garth: Father Francis Morgan,
forbade them from seeing each other, -
3:49 - 3:52or even from communicating.
-
3:52 - 3:55He was thrown back upon
his friendships at King Edward's -
3:55 - 4:02and it was this final phase of his time
here, that he began to flourish -
4:02 - 4:07and make the place his own;
he and his friends ruled the roost. -
4:08 - 4:10VO: Making the most of
his final year at King Edward's -
4:10 - 4:13and the friendships he has formed,
-
4:13 - 4:16Tolkien and his peers create
an informal society. -
4:20 - 4:22These young intellectuals gather
in the school library -
4:22 - 4:26and do what they are
forbidden to do: brew tea. -
4:26 - 4:31Outside of school hours, they meet
in a cafe at Barrow's Stores in Birmingham -
4:31 - 4:36and so, self-mockingly, they call themselves
the "Tea Club and Barrovean Society" -
4:36 - 4:38or the TCBS for short.
-
4:38 - 4:39(nostalgic music)
-
4:39 - 4:41John Garth: The core of the TCBS
was probably -
4:41 - 4:44Tolkien and Wiseman and the others
-
4:44 - 4:47gravitated around them. There was Robert
-
4:47 - 4:50Quilter Gilson, the son of the headmaster
-
4:50 - 4:54here; Rob was a cultured and sociable chap,
-
4:54 - 4:56he was perhaps the social glue of the group;
-
4:56 - 4:59he would welcome anyone and find common
-
4:59 - 5:03cause with them. A gentle artistic fellow
-
5:03 - 5:05who loved to sketch.
-
5:05 - 5:09Simon Stacey: He was a gifted artist and
-
5:09 - 5:10had ambitions to be an architect.
-
5:10 - 5:15There was a late arrival, Geoffrey Bache Smith,
-
5:15 - 5:19who was fascinated by mythology, Celtic
-
5:19 - 5:21mythology; so this gave him common ground
-
5:21 - 5:23with Tolkien;
it was another of -
5:23 - 5:23Tolkien's passions.
-
5:23 - 5:26Simon Stacey: Smith was quite an accomplished
-
5:26 - 5:29and advanced poet who recommended contemporary
-
5:29 - 5:31poetry to Tolkien. When he started writing
-
5:31 - 5:35poetry, Tolkien was to a certain extent,
-
5:35 - 5:37inspired by Smith and the wider group.
-
5:37 - 5:38And that was really the beginnings of
-
5:38 - 5:41Tolkien as a writer.
-
5:41 - 5:43John Garth: From the beginnings which were
-
5:43 - 5:47mostly about fun, later on, during the war years,
-
5:47 - 5:51this developed into a fellowship from which
-
5:51 - 5:53each of them drew tremendous strength and
-
5:53 - 5:55comfort.
-
5:55 - 5:57VO: Later that year, Tolkien's time at
-
5:57 - 5:59King Edward's comes to an end and he begins
-
5:59 - 6:02his first term at Oxford, having successfully
-
6:02 - 6:04gained entrance.
-
6:06 - 6:08On the eve of his 21st birthday, and his
-
6:08 - 6:10independence from Father Francis Morgan,
-
6:10 - 6:13Tolkien writes to Edith and less than a
-
6:13 - 6:15week later, they are re-united.
-
6:15 - 6:18Edith is engaged to marry another man,
-
6:18 - 6:20but despite almost certain ridicule,
-
6:20 - 6:22she agrees to break the engagement to be
-
6:22 - 6:23with her Ronald.
-
6:24 - 6:27Over the next few months, a growing sense of
-
6:27 - 6:30trouble brews across Europe and on the 28th
-
6:30 - 6:34of June, 1914, everything changes.
-
6:36 - 6:39(gun shot sound)
-
6:39 - 6:40(solemn music)
-
6:40 - 6:42Gavrillo Princip is arrested for the
-
6:42 - 6:47assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
-
6:47 - 6:50A diplomatic crisis ensues and within weeks,
-
6:50 - 6:54Europe's major powers are at war.
-
6:54 - 6:57Germany invades Belgium and Britain declares
-
6:57 - 7:01war on Germany. Parliament issues a call
-
7:01 - 7:03to arms from the British public.
-
7:03 - 7:05Paul Golightly: There isn't a rush to the
-
7:05 - 7:08colours straight away. It becomes much more
-
7:08 - 7:10obvious that people are willing to join
-
7:10 - 7:12up when atrocity stories start to emerge,
-
7:12 - 7:15then you get a much more concerted rush
-
7:15 - 7:16to join.
-
7:16 - 7:18John Garth: There was an air of excitement
-
7:18 - 7:20about the war, there was a naive sense that
-
7:20 - 7:23this would allow young men to fulfil their
-
7:23 - 7:25potential in a way that wasn't possible in
-
7:25 - 7:27peace time. There was a tremendous sense
-
7:27 - 7:31of patriotism and a sense of duty towards
-
7:31 - 7:34whatever England, or Britain, stood for.
-
7:34 - 7:36Paul Golightly: They are attracted to the
-
7:36 - 7:38idea of a settling of accounts with the Germans,
-
7:38 - 7:39or at least some of them will be. On the
-
7:39 - 7:41whole, they thought they were going to give
-
7:41 - 7:43the Germans a bloody nose.
-
7:43 - 7:45John Garth: "The Germans has been dastardly"
-
7:45 - 7:48and needed to dealt with and shown their place.
-
7:48 - 7:50Paul Golightly: Men join up out of economic
-
7:50 - 7:54necessity and you'll find that in any war.
-
7:54 - 7:57Life is not very exciting and the romance
-
7:57 - 8:00and colour of joining the army and being
-
8:00 - 8:03part of something very big indeed, I'm sure
-
8:03 - 8:04has some allure.
-
8:04 - 8:06(solemn music) And they see things
-
8:06 - 8:09in rather romantic ways, which of course is
-
8:09 - 8:11doomed to fail; we all know what the First
-
8:11 - 8:14World War turns into. It's not a war of
-
8:14 - 8:17movement, of dash and élan; it's not cavalry
-
8:17 - 8:20charges and distant trumpets; I'm afraid
-
8:20 - 8:23it's the pitter-patter of machine gun fire
-
8:23 - 8:24and the crump of artillery that's going to
-
8:24 - 8:26dominate.
-
8:29 - 8:32So they, I think, have expectations about what
-
8:32 - 8:34the war will be like, and I think their main
-
8:34 - 8:36emotion was, will it be over before I can
-
8:36 - 8:38get to France.
-
8:39 - 8:42John Garth: Tolkien, who's reading covered
-
8:42 - 8:46ancient heroic literature, that is surprisingly
-
8:46 - 8:50frank about what happens in war, went into
-
8:50 - 8:55the war much more open-eyed. He described
-
8:55 - 8:57himself as a "young man with too much
-
8:57 - 9:00imagination" and so he did not relish battle
-
9:00 - 9:01in any sense.
-
9:01 - 9:03Paul Golightly: And I think that applies
-
9:03 - 9:05to, not just men like Tolkien who fought in it,
-
9:05 - 9:08but also the politicians and generals who
-
9:08 - 9:10directed it; I think a lot of people
-
9:10 - 9:12understood that this war could be terrible.
-
9:13 - 9:16Simon Stacey: What you get in the letters
-
9:16 - 9:18between Gilson, Tolkien and Wiseman and
-
9:18 - 9:21then in Smith's poetry, is a serious
-
9:21 - 9:25determination to do their duty and that they
-
9:25 - 9:28should be prepared to give their lives.
-
9:28 - 9:31A realistic appreciation that this is a dark time
-
9:31 - 9:33and that they've got to come through it.
-
9:34 - 9:37VO: G.B. Smith and Rob Gilson both join
-
9:37 - 9:40the army in 1914, Tolkien's brother, Hilary,
-
9:40 - 9:44signs up as a bugler and Christopher Wiseman
-
9:44 - 9:48joins the navy. Tolkien however, faces a
-
9:48 - 9:49dilemma.
-
9:51 - 9:52Simon Stacey: Tolkien was in a difficult
-
9:52 - 9:54position when war broke out; he had a year
-
9:54 - 9:58of his degree at Oxford to run and Tolkien
-
9:58 - 10:00needed a degree badly because he wanted to
-
10:00 - 10:03pursue an academic career; he didn't have
-
10:03 - 10:08any money in his family unlike Gilson and
-
10:08 - 10:12therefore, having committed three years to
-
10:12 - 10:13the degree it was very important that he
-
10:13 - 10:16completed it. So he discovered a scheme
-
10:16 - 10:19whereby he could undergo some training
-
10:19 - 10:21in the Officer Training Core whilst
-
10:21 - 10:23completing his degree, which he did triumphantly
-
10:23 - 10:25with a first at Oxford.
-
10:25 - 10:28VO: He follows good friend, G.B.Smith, into
-
10:28 - 10:31the Lancashire Fusiliers in the hope of being
-
10:31 - 10:34posted to the same battalion.
-
10:34 - 10:35John Garth: Tolkien was looking for something
-
10:35 - 10:38in the army through which he could use his
-
10:38 - 10:40particular talents, and his particular talents
-
10:40 - 10:43were languages and writing systems; he was
-
10:43 - 10:45fascinated by codes and so forth. So it was
-
10:45 - 10:49only natural that he would train up as a
-
10:49 - 10:50signaller.
-
10:50 - 10:51Paul Golightly: It would have meant that
-
10:51 - 10:53Tolkien was exposed to the technology
-
10:53 - 10:55available at the time and it must have
-
10:55 - 10:59interested him; so the use of the radio, the
-
10:59 - 11:01use of signals, of semaphore.
-
11:02 - 11:04Simon Stacey: He learnt morse code,
-
11:04 - 11:08he learnt how to use signalling lamps, field
-
11:08 - 11:10telephones; which of course went on largely
-
11:10 - 11:13to be ineffective or not to work.
-
11:13 - 11:14John Garth: He became Battalion Signalling
-
11:14 - 11:18Officer for his Battalion. Tolkien had to
-
11:18 - 11:21oversee the communications of a Battalion
-
11:21 - 11:24of between 600 and 1,000 men depending on
-
11:24 - 11:26manpower at the time.
-
11:26 - 11:27Paul Golightly: His basic job of course
-
11:27 - 11:30was to act as a link between the various
-
11:30 - 11:33layers of command, and that he would be
-
11:33 - 11:36responsible for incoming orders and making sure
-
11:36 - 11:38that the right people got those and of course
-
11:38 - 11:40he'd be responsible for telling command further
-
11:40 - 11:43up the line about the situation on his sector.
-
11:43 - 11:45John Garth: So he was an absolute lynch pin
-
11:45 - 11:49in a war which depended absolutely on how
-
11:49 - 11:51much information you had about your enemies
-
11:51 - 11:52position.
-
11:52 - 11:55VO: In March of 1916 as his training nears
-
11:55 - 11:57its completion, both Tolkien and Edith
-
11:57 - 12:00become aware that he will soon be sent to
-
12:00 - 12:03the Front. They marry and just over two
-
12:03 - 12:07months later, Tolkien is shipped off to France.
-
12:07 - 12:10The two of them part, not knowing if they
-
12:10 - 12:13will ever see each other again.
-
12:20 - 12:24(Loud battle sounds, Guns Firing, Shouting)
-
12:37 - 12:39(ominous music)
-
12:39 - 12:42VO: When Tolkien arrives at the Front, the
-
12:42 - 12:44War has been raging for almost two years.
-
12:44 - 12:46The cost of the War is clear;
-
12:46 - 12:49the countryside is scarred and the casualties
-
12:49 - 12:51high.
-
12:51 - 12:54After a virtual stalemate of trench warfare
-
12:54 - 12:57throughout 1915, and with a new wave of
-
12:57 - 13:00thousands of freshly trained recruits, it is
-
13:00 - 13:02clear the Big Push is imminent.
-
13:02 - 13:04(marching feet)
-
13:04 - 13:07Tolkien's Battalion remains in reserve, but
-
13:07 - 13:08he fears for the lives of his old school
-
13:08 - 13:13friends who are at the Front.
-
13:13 - 13:15Within a month of his arrival in France
-
13:15 - 13:18the Allies launch the Somme Offensive.
-
13:18 - 13:22At 7.30am, on Saturday 1st of July,
-
13:22 - 13:24the troops in the British Frontline,
-
13:24 - 13:26go over the top.
-
13:26 - 13:30(whistle sound echoes)
-
13:46 - 13:48On the first day of the Offensive alone,
-
13:48 - 13:5220,000 men are killed, 35,000 are wounded
-
13:52 - 13:56and over 2,000 are reported missing.
-
13:58 - 14:00Paul Golightly:
The first casualty was the plan. -
14:00 - 14:03It started to fall apart very rapidly.
-
14:03 - 14:06Tragically for the men caught out in the open,
it was a death sentence. -
14:06 - 14:091 in 5 men who went into combat on the 1st of July was killed.
-
14:14 - 14:16John Garth: It was the most disastrous day
-
14:16 - 14:19in the history of the British Army, and
-
14:19 - 14:23a tragedy for the entire country. There were
-
14:23 - 14:27villages that had lost all their young men.
-
14:29 - 14:30Paul Golightly: It's marked as a loss of
-
14:30 - 14:35innocence, that the 20,000 that were killed
-
14:35 - 14:38represent a turning point in British
-
14:38 - 14:40consciousness and the relationship perhaps
-
14:40 - 14:43between those who make decisions and those
-
14:43 - 14:45who are forced to carry them out.
-
14:45 - 14:49(soft piano music)
-
14:53 - 14:55VO: Among the many men that are lost on that
-
14:55 - 15:00day, is dear friend and TCBS member,
-
15:00 - 15:03Robert Gilson.
-
15:03 - 15:08John Garth: He led his Platoon over the top
-
15:08 - 15:11took charge of his Company, but was shot
-
15:11 - 15:14in the middle of No Man's Land.
-
15:16 - 15:19Paul Golightly: He was in the fourth wave.
-
15:19 - 15:21He saw the first wave go in and fail,
-
15:22 - 15:25the second wave go in and fail,
-
15:25 - 15:26the third wave go in and fail.
-
15:28 - 15:31And he, as a part of the fourth wave, had
-
15:31 - 15:34to go in; and they still went. And that
-
15:34 - 15:37I think is the most poignant and probably
-
15:37 - 15:39the most tragic thing about the 1st of July
-
15:39 - 15:451916. That this generation, had so much faith
-
15:45 - 15:48in their superiors, probably had so much
-
15:48 - 15:50commitment to their fellows that they were
-
15:50 - 15:53prepared to go, even though it meant certain
-
15:53 - 15:56death.
-
15:57 - 15:59John Garth: Tolkien heard about this
-
15:59 - 16:02after his first action on the Somme a couple
-
16:02 - 16:05of weeks later; and he was devastated.
-
16:06 - 16:08It shook him to the foundations of his
-
16:08 - 16:11beliefs. He had, as all of the members of
-
16:11 - 16:14the TCBS had, built up their group as a
-
16:14 - 16:19fellowship, with ideas and a spirit that had
-
16:19 - 16:21something to give to the World. In which
-
16:21 - 16:26all four of them were vital parts, and now
-
16:26 - 16:28one of them was dead. So what did that mean
-
16:28 - 16:31about their overall purpose? And also his
-
16:31 - 16:33purpose.
-
16:33 - 16:34Simon Stacey: Geoffrey Smith wrote him a
-
16:34 - 16:40letter in which, clearly Smith experiences
-
16:40 - 16:44feelings of devastation and a sense that the
-
16:44 - 16:47fellowship had been broken. Rob would never
-
16:47 - 16:52become an architect, he would never fulfil
-
16:52 - 16:55his part in whatever they dreamed of.
-
16:56 - 16:58John Garthm: And I think it took him quite
-
16:58 - 17:02some time to recover from that. The other
-
17:02 - 17:05two members, Wiseman and Smith, were
-
17:05 - 17:08determined to persuade him that, no, the TCBS
-
17:08 - 17:10purpose continued and I think eventually
-
17:10 - 17:13Tolkien took heart from that.
-
17:14 - 17:16VO: Tolkien writes to Rob's father, Headmaster
-
17:16 - 17:19at King Edward's school to offer his
-
17:19 - 17:22condolences. The TCBS lost a bright young
-
17:22 - 17:26man, a talented artist and most painfully
-
17:26 - 17:29of all; a dear friend.
-
17:34 - 17:37Tolkien's war has well and truly started and
-
17:37 - 17:38over the coming months he is subject to the
-
17:38 - 17:41many hardships of trench warfare.
-
17:41 - 17:43John Garth: He spent his time in and out
-
17:43 - 17:48of the trenches. Battalions would be rotated
-
17:48 - 17:50from the Frontline to the reserve trenches
-
17:50 - 17:54to rest, as they laughably called it, but
-
17:54 - 17:56it wasn't really rest, it was training.
-
17:56 - 17:59Tolkien talked about the universal weariness
-
17:59 - 18:01of all this war. But during this period he
-
18:01 - 18:04was involved in three attacks, he was
-
18:04 - 18:06very fortunate not to have to go through the
-
18:06 - 18:09first day of the Somme; he was a few miles
-
18:09 - 18:11back from the Frontline at that time.
-
18:11 - 18:14His Battalion moved forward for a second
-
18:14 - 18:16wave of attacks, they were launched against a
-
18:16 - 18:18village called Ovillers; which had been the
-
18:18 - 18:21German Frontline. One of the first things that
-
18:21 - 18:25he encountered was, complete chaos in the
-
18:25 - 18:28battlefield communications system. It was very
-
18:28 - 18:31primitive. It was only partly built; damaged
-
18:31 - 18:35by the fortunes of battle. He had signallers
-
18:35 - 18:39going across No Man's Land carrying flares
-
18:39 - 18:42to say, we have arrived. Further flares -
-
18:42 - 18:44"we have taken prisoners", they carried
-
18:44 - 18:46pigeons; pigeons were about the most reliable
-
18:46 - 18:49method of communication. One of Tolkien's
-
18:49 - 18:52signallers won a military medal for managing
-
18:52 - 18:56to get his pigeons across No Man's Land and
-
18:56 - 18:57do the job correctly.
-
18:57 - 19:00VO: The attack is a success and many
-
19:00 - 19:02prisoners are captured. Of all the combat
-
19:02 - 19:05Tolkien encounters, one of the most significant
-
19:05 - 19:09battles is also one of his last; an attack
-
19:09 - 19:10on Regina Trench.
-
19:10 - 19:13John Garth: This was in October, by which
-
19:13 - 19:15time the battlefield had been reduced to mud.
-
19:16 - 19:19The attack had been delayed by heavy rain
-
19:19 - 19:22but on October 21st there was a cold snap
-
19:22 - 19:24so the ground was frozen hard and the
-
19:24 - 19:26attack was able to go ahead.
-
19:26 - 19:30(Deep boom. Loud Artillery Fire)
-
19:30 - 19:33(Gunfire, bullets zipping by)
-
19:33 - 19:48(solemn music)
-
19:48 - 19:52John Garth: He saw violent death, he also
-
19:52 - 19:55saw and felt extreme terror.
-
19:57 - 20:00He never, as far as we know, described at
-
20:00 - 20:03length what trench warfare was like but he
-
20:03 - 20:05summed it up in two words, in one of his
-
20:05 - 20:08letters, and this was; "animal horror".
-
20:09 - 20:13It would reduce you from humanity and
-
20:13 - 20:17turn you into a retched beast desperate only
-
20:17 - 20:20to cower and survive. And it's very
-
20:20 - 20:22interesting if you look in The Lord of The Rings
-
20:22 - 20:25whenever the characters are in situations of
-
20:25 - 20:28extreme fear, they're always described as
-
20:28 - 20:35stooping and stupefied, un-manned by terror.
-
20:35 - 20:37Paul Golightly: A lot of British trenches
-
20:37 - 20:39were deliberately uncomfortable because
-
20:39 - 20:41the Generals wanted the men to believe
-
20:41 - 20:42that they were only temporary, that they
-
20:42 - 20:44would be advancing beyond this, that this
-
20:44 - 20:46wasn't their home.
-
20:47 - 20:50VO: Out on the Western Front, Tolkien feels
-
20:50 - 20:53isolated from home and letters to, and from,
-
20:53 - 20:56Edith are a lifeline. For reasons of
-
20:56 - 20:59strategic importance Tolkien is forbidden
-
20:59 - 21:02from sharing his location in his letters, so
-
21:02 - 21:05he devises a code of dots to keep Edith
-
21:05 - 21:06informed of where he is.
-
21:06 - 21:09John Garth: He simply found the letters
-
21:09 - 21:12of the alphabet within what he wrote to her
-
21:12 - 21:14and put a dot above the relevant ones to
-
21:14 - 21:17spell out the name of the place where he was
-
21:17 - 21:21currently located. And Edith kept a map
-
21:21 - 21:25on her wall and pins to show where he was
-
21:25 - 21:27at that time.
-
21:27 - 21:30VO: After the successful attack on Regina
-
21:30 - 21:32Trench, the Battalion is withdrawn from the
-
21:32 - 21:35front and paraded in front of the top brass.
-
21:35 - 21:38Tolkien however, falls ill.
-
21:38 - 21:40John Garth: It was trench fever. And this
-
21:40 - 21:43was a louse born disease due to the unhygienic
-
21:43 - 21:44conditions in the trenches.
-
21:44 - 21:47Paul Golightly: It spread through contact
-
21:47 - 21:51with lice and it symptoms aren't very pleasant
-
21:51 - 21:54It gives you a headache, you can have stomach
-
21:54 - 21:57cramps, you can have pain in you joints
-
21:57 - 21:59and in your bones, you can get lesions on
-
21:59 - 22:03your skin; it's not fatal but it can become
-
22:03 - 22:06very debilitating. So debilitating you can't
-
22:06 - 22:08be an effective soldier. Tolkien got a very
-
22:08 - 22:11bad case, so bad that he had to be invalided
-
22:11 - 22:12"back to Blighty" as they put it.
-
22:12 - 22:14And in fact it was the end of his war.
-
22:14 - 22:16John Garth: It saved Tolkien's life, it took
-
22:16 - 22:20him out of the battlefield and back to Britain.
-
22:20 - 22:23He was shipped home to Birmingham, to
-
22:23 - 22:25The First Southern General Hospital as it
-
22:25 - 22:28was called at the time, which was actually set
-
22:28 - 22:30up in the grounds of Birmingham University.
-
22:30 - 22:33And it was there that Tolkien was re-united
-
22:33 - 22:37with his wife, Edith and where he began
-
22:37 - 22:40writing the first stories of Middle-Earth.
-
22:41 - 22:44His re-union with Edith was deeply emotional
-
22:44 - 22:47and was an inspiration for various pieces of
-
22:47 - 22:49writing in his mythology, notably the
-
22:49 - 22:53story of Luthien and Beren; which features
-
22:53 - 22:55in the Silmarillion and is mentioned in
-
22:55 - 22:58The Lord of The Rings. A love story between
-
22:58 - 23:01a mortal man and an immortal elf.
-
23:01 - 23:02(Gentle Piano Music)
-
23:02 - 23:05VO: However, Tolkien's respite is short lived.
-
23:05 - 23:08Shortly after returning to Birmingham, Tolkien
-
23:08 - 23:10learns from Christopher Wiseman, that
-
23:10 - 23:14good friend G.B.Smith has been killed.
-
23:17 - 23:19John Garth: The Battle of the Somme was
-
23:19 - 23:23over, and Smith had been organising a
-
23:23 - 23:26football match for his men about four miles
-
23:26 - 23:28behind the Frontline, when a stray shell
-
23:28 - 23:31exploded near him.
-
23:31 - 23:35He was hit by shrapnel and developed what
-
23:35 - 23:38they called Gas Gangrene, which killed
-
23:38 - 23:42him within a few days. Early in 1916, while
-
23:42 - 23:45Tolkien was still in training, he had a letter
-
23:45 - 23:48G.B.Smith, who by that time was in the trenches
-
23:48 - 23:49in France.
-
23:49 - 23:52VO: Smith was about to go out on Night Patrol.
-
23:52 - 23:54The officer who had led the patrol the night before
-
23:54 - 23:57had been captured and most likely killed.
-
23:57 - 24:00John Garth: It was about the most dangerous
-
24:00 - 24:02activity that you could do on the Western Front
-
24:02 - 24:04and Smith was about to go into it and he took
-
24:04 - 24:08the opportunity to write to Tolkien, and
-
24:08 - 24:16tell him; "I'm about to go out on Night Patrol,
-
24:16 - 24:18I am a wild and wholehearted admirer of
-
24:18 - 24:23what you've written and what you will write"
-
24:23 - 24:29He told Tolkien, "you I'm sure are chosen,
-
24:29 - 24:33and you must publish."
-
24:33 - 24:36Smith was essentially the first Middle-Earth
-
24:36 - 24:37fan.
-
24:37 - 24:39Simon Stacey: Smith says in the letter that
-
24:41 - 24:45death couldn't put an end to the TCBS, to
-
24:45 - 24:49the "immortal four" as he put it, that Tolkien
-
24:49 - 24:53may say the things that he had wanted to
-
24:53 - 24:57say, long after he is there to say them.
-
24:57 - 25:01That's very moving because Tolkien, although
-
25:01 - 25:05very much his own individual artistic self,
-
25:06 - 25:09I think did see his later career as an
-
25:09 - 25:12attempt to fulfil the artistic dreams that
-
25:12 - 25:13they'd shared.
-
25:13 - 25:17John Garth: He was able to gather his strength
-
25:17 - 25:23and perhaps see Smith as an ideal to be lived up to.
-
25:25 - 25:28VO: In the summer of 1918, Tolkien and
-
25:28 - 25:30Wiseman gather some of Smith's poems and
-
25:30 - 25:32have them published in a small volume,
-
25:32 - 25:37entitled; "A Spring Harvest".
-
25:37 - 25:40Tolkien's war is over, but the impact of his
-
25:40 - 25:43experiences will stay with him forever, and
-
25:43 - 25:46will even feature in his future writings.
-
25:46 - 25:48John Garth: The whole experience of the War
-
25:48 - 25:52had an ongoing affect on much of Tolkien's
-
25:52 - 25:54mythology. As soon as Tolkien returned from
-
25:54 - 25:56the Somme he started writing a story called,
-
25:56 - 25:58"The Fall of Gondolin" which was the first
-
25:58 - 26:01element of his mythology that dealt with battle.
-
26:02 - 26:04And the fascinating thing about it is that the
-
26:04 - 26:08attacking forces use things that are termed
-
26:08 - 26:10by Tolkien, "dragons" or "beasts" or "monsters"
-
26:10 - 26:14but they're described as metallic and rolling
-
26:14 - 26:16and they spout fire and some of them have
-
26:16 - 26:19troops inside them, and it's pretty clear that
-
26:19 - 26:22this is a kind of mythologising of the Tank.
-
26:22 - 26:24Which was Britains secret weapon, which
-
26:24 - 26:26had just been launched on the Somme while
-
26:26 - 26:27Tolkien was there.
-
26:27 - 26:31The Lord of The Rings focusses on a fellowship,
-
26:31 - 26:34they're separated on different battlefronts,
-
26:34 - 26:35much like the TCBS were.
-
26:35 - 26:37Simon Stacey: It's almost unimaginable that,
-
26:37 - 26:40in writing of the breaking of the fellowship,
-
26:40 - 26:42in The Lord of The Rings, that Tolkien wouldn't
-
26:42 - 26:45have been influenced by his own loss during
-
26:45 - 26:48the First World War and the breaking of the
-
26:48 - 26:49TCBS fellowship.
-
26:50 - 26:53There is a late letter in which he mentions
-
26:53 - 26:56that the dead marshes, through which Frodo,
-
26:56 - 27:00Sam and Gollum travel, owe something to
-
27:00 - 27:02northern France, in the area of the Somme
-
27:02 - 27:03where he fought.
-
27:03 - 27:07John Garth: Frodo and Sam are very much
-
27:07 - 27:10the equivalent of an officer and his batman; his
-
27:10 - 27:13servant. And Tolkien actually said that, "my
-
27:13 - 27:18Sam Gamgee is inspired by the Privates and
-
27:18 - 27:22Batmen I knew in the First World War".
-
27:22 - 27:25Frodo represents really, the feelings of a young
-
27:25 - 27:28man like Tolkien himself, thrown into a war
-
27:28 - 27:31unwillingly and having to shoulder a terrible
-
27:31 - 27:35burden; a burden of duty. You can see that
-
27:35 - 27:39Frodo develops symptoms of what we would now
-
27:40 - 27:43call Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or
-
27:43 - 27:45War Trauma, or what they called then,
-
27:45 - 27:49Shell Shock. He becomes withdrawn from
-
27:49 - 27:52the World, increasingly enclosed within himself
-
27:52 - 27:55he says he can't remember what grass was like,
-
27:55 - 27:57what sunlight was like.
-
27:58 - 28:01When the war is over in The Lord of The Rings,
-
28:01 - 28:04Frodo does not strut his stuff as a hero,
-
28:04 - 28:06he is visibly traumatised by the whole
-
28:06 - 28:09experience. This was very true of many of the
-
28:09 - 28:12soldiers who returned from the Western
-
28:12 - 28:15Front, unable to talk about the experiences
-
28:15 - 28:18that had affected them so deeply.
-
28:18 - 28:22(retrospective piano music)
-
28:22 - 28:24Paul Golightly: The generation that fights
-
28:24 - 28:27the First World War, should be called courageous.
-
28:27 - 28:30Simon Stacey: The sacrifice of that generation
-
28:30 - 28:31was extraordinary.
-
28:31 - 28:35John Garth: It was a tragic loss not only for
-
28:35 - 28:39families, for friends, but for civilisation as
-
28:39 - 28:45a whole. It shook long-held beliefs and
-
28:45 - 28:48assumptions in honour and glory.
-
28:48 - 28:52Simon Stacey: It is the first thorough
-
28:52 - 28:57going war of the machines. So many
-
28:57 - 29:00thousands and ultimately millions of men
-
29:00 - 29:04could be wiped out, could be destroyed without
-
29:04 - 29:06necessarily facing their individual enemy.
-
29:06 - 29:08Paul Golightly: These men don't have
-
29:08 - 29:12the privilege of dying one at a time, they die
-
29:12 - 29:14on mass; and it's those numbers that I think
-
29:14 - 29:17traumatise us so much. That's why we have
-
29:17 - 29:21the memorials at Thiepval and Menin Gate;
-
29:21 - 29:24where it's just one long list of names.
-
29:24 - 29:27These bodies have simply disappeared, and
-
29:27 - 29:29they're all separate lives but they've all
-
29:29 - 29:30vanished at once.
-
29:31 - 29:33John Garth: When you read the King Edward's
-
29:33 - 29:38School Chronicle, as I have to research
-
29:38 - 29:43Tolkien's life here, you get to know the boys
-
29:43 - 29:45with whom he grew up and you see their
-
29:45 - 29:47achievements, you see what they were learning,
-
29:47 - 29:50you see how wonderfully intelligent, potentially
-
29:50 - 29:55creative and brilliant they were. And then
-
29:55 - 29:57the First World War; and you see that they're
-
29:57 - 29:59heading for this.
-
29:59 - 30:01Paul Golightly: These young men, with their
-
30:01 - 30:04whole lives in front of them, have, yes it's
-
30:04 - 30:06a phrase that we all know, have been cut off
-
30:06 - 30:08in their prime. They were full of potential,
-
30:08 - 30:10full of life, full of vigour, full of plans,
-
30:10 - 30:12full of ambition; wanting to do all kinds of
-
30:12 - 30:14things with their professional lives and
-
30:14 - 30:16their personal lives, and denied that opportunity.
-
30:16 - 30:19John Garth: When you look at the fortunes
-
30:19 - 30:21of war, it's quite astonishing that Tolkien
-
30:21 - 30:24survived and went on to produce the great
-
30:24 - 30:26works of literature that he did; works that
-
30:26 - 30:29have shaped our culture. And one does
-
30:29 - 30:33wonder how many others didn't survive,
-
30:33 - 30:35what potential was locked inside them that
-
30:35 - 30:39they never had time to bring out of themselves.
-
30:39 - 30:43So there is an uncountable loss there.
-
30:44 - 30:48Simon Stacey: G.B.Smith gives a brief glimpse
-
30:48 - 30:53of a young life snuffed out and only very
-
30:53 - 30:57incompletely communicating its dreams.
-
30:57 - 30:59Paul Golightly: This is a generation that did
-
30:59 - 31:01not talk about the way it felt. So in that
-
31:01 - 31:05sense I think the psychological affect was
-
31:05 - 31:08long lasting. A number of veterans surived
-
31:08 - 31:11the war only to find that they couldn't survive
-
31:11 - 31:11the peace.
-
31:12 - 31:15VO: In the chapel at King Edward's School,
-
31:15 - 31:19eight brass plaques hold the names of
-
31:19 - 31:21245 Old Edwardians who lost their lives during
-
31:21 - 31:25the First World War. Tolkien and his TCBS
-
31:25 - 31:27friends, are just four of almost
-
31:27 - 31:29fifteen hundred Old Edwardians who answered
-
31:29 - 31:33their country's call and fought in The Great War,
-
31:33 - 31:36and each of their stories is worth telling.
-
31:37 - 31:39Paul Golightly: The graveyards that you can
-
31:39 - 31:42walk around in northern France now have become
-
31:42 - 31:45almost 21st century cathedrals; where some
-
31:45 - 31:48really important questions need to be ask about
-
31:48 - 31:50the nature of war and the nature of
-
31:50 - 31:55sacrifice, and in the First World War's case,
-
31:56 - 32:01the scale of that sacrifice. Whether any war
-
32:01 - 32:06could be worth that.
-
32:13 - 32:28(Piano Solo)
- Title:
- Tolkien's Great War
- Description:
-
Tolkien's Great War
A half hour documentary on JRR Tolkien's experiences during the First World War produced for a centenary exhibition at King Edward's School, Birmingham. For more information, please visit www.kes.org.uk/great-war-exhibition
Produced & Directed by:
Elliot Weaver & Zander Weaver 2014
www.EllianderPictures.co.uk - Video Language:
- English
- Duration:
- 32:58
Kelsey Mitchell edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War | ||
Maggie S (Amara staff) edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War | ||
Arvind Patil edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War | ||
Joanna Lam edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War | ||
Gaal Galaa edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War | ||
Enji Mitchel edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War | ||
Enji Mitchel edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War | ||
Enji Mitchel edited English subtitles for Tolkien's Great War |