Название: The J. R. R. Tolkien Companion and Guide: Volume 1: Chronology
Автор: Christina Scull
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Критика
isbn: 9780008273477
isbn:
7 October 1937 Mary St John, OSB, of Oulton Abbey, the sister of Christopher Wiseman, writes to ask Tolkien if he would send her a copy of The Hobbit. Since she has taken a vow of poverty she offers to pay with prayers for him and his family.
8 October 1937 C.S. Lewis anonymously reviews The Hobbit for the London Times. He compares it to The Wind in the Willows and remarks that ‘in this book a number of good things, never before united, have come together: a fund of humour, an understanding of children, and a happy fusion of the scholar’s with the poet’s grasp of mythology’ (p. 20).
9 October 1937 Jane Neave writes to Tolkien enthusiastically about The Hobbit, the signed copy of which she has now received. She cannot find the reply from the Times Book Club.
10 October 1937 Michaelmas Full Term begins. Tolkien’s scheduled lectures and classes for this term are: Beowulf: Text on Tuesdays at 11.00 a.m. in the Examination Schools, beginning 12 October; Finn and Hengest on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 12.00 noon in the Examination Schools, beginning 12 October; Old English Texts (Class) on Tuesdays at 5.15 p.m. at Pembroke College, beginning 12 October.
11 October 1937 Stanley Unwin writes to Tolkien. His son Rayner is rereading The Hobbit now that it is in print. He sends Tolkien an appreciative letter from Richard Hughes, and warns him ‘that The Hobbit has come to stay and that a large public will be clamouring next year to hear more from you about Hobbits’ (Tolkien–George Allen & Unwin archive, HarperCollins). Bumpus, the important London bookseller, has taken fifty copies on the basis of the Times review.
13 October 1937 Jane Neave is scheduled to pass through Oxford on her way to London by coach. Tolkien possibly meets her during a stop from 11.50 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. – Tolkien attends a Pembroke College meeting.
15 October 1937 Tolkien writes to Stanley Unwin, commenting on reviews of The Hobbit and the letter from Richard Hughes. He notes that no reviewer has mentioned his use of dwarves rather than dwarfs; he himself became aware of his usage only through reading reviews. He is perturbed at the idea of a sequel: he cannot think of anything more to say about hobbits, but he has a great deal to say about the world (of ‘The Silmarillion’) into which Bilbo Baggins intruded. He would like to show this material to Allen & Unwin and get an independent opinion of it. But if it is more about the hobbit that is wanted, he will start to think what can be done. He wonders if possibly such works will be successful enough to allow him to write, rather than spend vacations on examining and such things in order to pay medical and education bills, as he has done for seventeen years. ‘Writing stories in prose or verse has been stolen, often guiltily, from time already mortgaged, and has been broken and ineffective. I may perhaps now do what I much desire to do, and not fail of financial duty. Perhaps!’ (Letters, p. 24). He comments on the reception of The Hobbit in Oxford. ‘The attitude is (as I foresaw) not unmixed with surprise and a little pity. My own college [Pembroke] is I think good for about six copies, if only in order to find material for teasing me’ (Letters, p. 24). He asks if 27 October would be a suitable day for him to have lunch with Unwin. He could bring Mr. Bliss with him to get advice on how to redraw it to make it reproducible. He acknowledges the return of the specimen drawings lent to Houghton Mifflin.
19 October 1937 Stanley Unwin writes to Tolkien. He thinks that Tolkien might well hope for an income from writing. He confirms a lunch appointment for 27 October.
?20 or 27 October 1937 C.S. Lewis reads part of Out of the Silent Planet at a meeting of the Inklings.
21 October 1937 Tolkien attends an English Faculty Library Committee meeting.
23 October 1937 Tolkien writes to Stanley Unwin, confirming their lunch appointment on 27 October. He will try to start writing a sequel to The Hobbit soon, and will submit it to Rayner Unwin at the earliest opportunity. – Tolkien attends a Pembroke College meeting.
27 October 1937 Tolkien travels to London, probably on the 12.05 train, for a 12.45 lunch with Stanley Unwin. Unwin asks him to submit various writings for consideration. After their meeting Unwin makes a rough list of material that Tolkien has mentioned. These include ‘a volume of short fairy stories in various styles practically ready for publication … (Sil Marillion) [sic]’; ‘the typescript of a History of the Gnomes, and stories arising from it’; Mr. Bliss; The Lost Road, ‘a partly written novel of which we could see the opening chapters’; ‘a great deal of verse of one kind and another which would probably be worth looking at’; a translation of Beowulf ‘upon which he has as yet done very little’; and the ‘Father Christmas’ letters (Tolkien–George Allen & Unwin archive, HarperCollins). Unwin also notes that Tolkien spoke enthusiastically of The Marvellous Land of Snergs by E.A. Wyke-Smith (1927). – Tolkien had planned to travel to London this day in order to attend a lecture by Professor Joseph Vendryes at the British Academy later in the day. But he is tired, and has ‘a worrying business on mind awaiting me at 3 o’clock’ which, in the event, takes ‘so long that I only just managed to squeeze in [an appointment] in Elliott & Fry [the photographers] before my train. But, though I rather rushed them, they were very polite and expeditious, so that I hope the results will be satisfactory’ (letter to Stanley Unwin, 29 October 1937, Tolkien–George Allen & Unwin archive, HarperCollins). Tolkien has been sent to Elliott & Fry by Allen & Unwin, so that they can have photographs for publicity purposes.
28 October 1937 Stanley Unwin writes to Tolkien. He hopes that by their next meeting, on 17 November, Tolkien ‘will have put together the volume of short fairy stories in various styles. I hope you will also bring with you the History of the Gnomes and such chapters as you have written of The Lost Road’ (Tolkien–George Allen & Unwin archive, HarperCollins). He would also like to see Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis, which Tolkien apparently has mentioned.
29 October 1937 Tolkien attends an English Faculty Board meeting. He is elected to the Standing Committee on the Library, and is appointed (as convenor) to a committee ‘to consider and report on the whole question of the First Public Examination as affecting the English scheme’ (Oxford University Archives FA 4/5/1/1), together with *Helen Darbishire, C.S. Lewis, M.R. Ridley, and David Nichol Smith. The Applications Committee has appointed Tolkien the supervisor of advanced student K.R. Brooks of Merton College, who is preparing an edition of the Old English poem Andreas. – Tolkien writes to Stanley Unwin, suggesting dates in November for their next meeting. If 10 November, he would prefer the afternoon, for tea rather than lunch, so as not to miss a meeting in Oxford in the morning. 12 or 15 November would be free all day. He has seen C.S. Lewis, whose contract for Out of the Silent Planet obliges him to submit it first to the publisher J.M. Dent. – Tolkien writes again to Unwin, after receiving his letter of 28 October which suggests a meeting on Wednesday, 17 November. Tolkien can meet him on that date but ‘unless urgent matters intervene I work with Mr. Lewis each W[ednesday] morning and dine in College (my only night in the week). Mondays and Saturdays are my only days left empty (supposedly dedicated to my own study)’ (Tolkien– George Allen & Unwin archive, HarperCollins). He asks if he should borrow a copy of Out of the Silent Planet for Unwin to read, so that he would already have an opinion should Dent refuse to publish it. – J.N.L. Myres, a History scholar of Christ Church, Oxford writes to Tolkien regarding a bone object with a runic inscription found in an Anglo-Saxon cemetery at СКАЧАТЬ