Название: The Return of the Shadow
Автор: Christopher Tolkien
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика
Серия: The History of Middle-earth
isbn: 9780007348237
isbn:
XVIII AGAIN FROM BUCKLAND TO THE WITHYWINDLE
XIX THE THIRD PHASE (1): THE JOURNEY TO BREE
XX THE THIRD PHASE (2): AT THE SIGN OF THE PRANCING PONY
XXI THE THIRD PHASE (3): TO WEATHERTOP AND RIVENDELL
XXII NEW UNCERTAINTIES AND NEW PROJECTIONS
Other books by J.R.R. Tolkien
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The original opening page of The Lord of the Rings
The original description of the writing on the Ring
The Ring-verse, and the emergence of the Ruling Ring in the narrative
Plan of Bree
The emergence of Treebeard
The earliest map of the lands south of the Map of Wilderland in The Hobbit
The inscription of the West Gate of Moria
As is well known, the manuscripts and typescripts of The Lord of the Rings were sold by J. R. R. Tolkien to Marquette University, Milwaukee, a few years after its publication, together with those of The Hobbit and Farmer Giles of Ham, and also Mr. Bliss. A long time elapsed between the shipment of these latter papers, which reached Marquette in July 1957, and that of The Lord of the Rings, which did not arrive until the following year. The reason for this was that my father had undertaken to sort, annotate, and date the multifarious manuscripts of The Lord of the Rings, but found it impossible at that time to do the work required. It is clear that he never did so, and in the end let the papers go just as they were; it was noted when they reached Marquette that they were ‘in no order’. Had he done so, he must have seen at that time that, very large though the manuscript collection was, it was nonetheless incomplete.
Seven years later, in 1965, when he was working on the revision of The Lord of the Rings, he wrote to the Director of Libraries at Marquette, asking if a certain scheme of dates and events in the narrative was to be found there, since he had ‘never made out any full schedule or note of the papers transferred to you.’ In this letter he explained that the transfer had taken place at a time when his papers were dispersed between his house in Headington (Oxford) and his rooms in Merton College; and he also said that he now found himself still in possession of ‘written matter’ that ‘should belong to you’: when he had finished the revision of The Lord of the Rings he would look into the question. But he did not do so.
These papers passed to me on his death eight years later; but though Humphrey Carpenter made reference to them in his Biography (1977) and cited from them some early notes, I neglected them for many years, being absorbed in the long work of tracing the evolution of the narratives of the Elder Days, the legends of Beleriand and Valinor. The publication of Volume III of ‘The History СКАЧАТЬ