Songs for the Philologists
Authors | J. R. R. Tolkien, E. V. Gordon, et al. |
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Language | English |
Publisher | Privately printed in the Department of English, University College, London |
Publication date | 1936 |
Songs for the Philologists is a collection of poems by E. V. Gordon and J. R. R. Tolkien as well as traditional songs.[1] It is the rarest and most difficult to find Tolkien-related book. Originally a collection of typescripts compiled by Gordon in 1921–1926 for the students of the University of Leeds, it was given by A. H. Smith of University College London, a former student at Leeds, to a group of students to be printed privately in 1935 or 1936, and printed in 1936 with the impressum "Printed by G. Tillotson, A. H. Smith, B. Pattison and other members of the English Department, University College, London."
Since Smith had not asked permission of either Gordon or Tolkien, the printed booklets were not distributed. Most copies were destroyed in a fire, and only a few, perhaps around 14, survived. The book is accordingly "extremely rare", according to the University of Leeds, which has a copy.[2]
Tolkien's songs
[edit]Of the 30 songs in the collection, 13 were contributed by Tolkien:
1 "From One to Five", to the tune of "Three Wise Men of Gotham".
2 "Syx Mynet" (Old English: Six Pennies), to the tune of "I Love Sixpence".
3 "Ruddoc Hana" (Old English: Cock Robin), to the tune of "Who Killed Cock Robin".
4 "Ides Ælfscýne" (Old English: Elf-fair Lady), to the tune of "Daddy Neptune" by Thomas John Dibdin.
- --- Reprinted, with a Modern English translation in The Road to Middle-earth[3]
5 "Bagmē Blōma" (Gothic: Flower of the Trees), to the tune of "Lazy Sheep" (by Mantle Childe, after an old French air). The poem displays Tolkien's love of trees, and of language.[4]
- --- Reprinted, with a Modern English translation in The Road to Middle-Earth[3]
6 "Éadig Béo þu!" (Old English: Good Luck to You), to the tune of "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star".[4]
- --- Reprinted, with a Modern English translation in The Road to Middle-earth[3]
7 "Ofer Wídne Gársecg" (Old English: Across the Broad Ocean), to the tune of "The Mermaid".
- --- Reprinted, with a Modern English translation in The Road to Middle-earth[3]
Ofer wídne gársecg | Across the broad ocean (prose translation) | "The Mermaid", a traditional folksong |
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Þa ofer wídne gársecg wéow unwidre ceald, |
When the cold blast was blowing across the broad ocean, |
Oh 'twas in the broad Atlantic, mid the equinoctial gales |
8 "La Húru", to the tune of "O'Reilly".
9 "I Sat upon a Bench", to the tune of "The Carrion Crow".
10 "Natura Apis: Morali Ricardi Eremite", also to the tune of "O'Reilly".
11 "The Root of the Boot", to the tune of "The Fox Went Out".
- --- Reprinted in Anderson's The Annotated Hobbit, and in revised form in The Return of the Shadow. Reprinted in The Tolkien Papers: Mankato Studies in English. Revised and printed in The Lord of the Rings and The Adventures of Tom Bombadil as 'The Stone Troll'. The manuscript is archived at the University of Leeds.[5] The song's irregular strophic metre[6] and rhyming scheme are those of the 15th century folk song "The fox went out on a winter's night"; Tolkien used the same scheme for the two "lays" (narrative poems) published in his Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary.[7]
12 "Frenchmen Froth", to the tune of "The Vicar of Bray".
13 "Lit' and Lang'", to the tune of "Polly Put the Kettle On". In the Department of English at the University of Oxford where Tolkien worked, teaching was divided into two streams. "Lit'" meant "English Literature", i.e. the study of works from Shakespeare to modern times, whereas "Lang'" meant "English Language", meaning the philological study of Old English texts such as Beowulf, and Middle English, such as Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Tolkien and Gordon were philologists and firmly in the "Lang'" camp, but they could see that it was dying out.
Once there were two little groups, |
The remaining songs
[edit]The remaining 17 songs were:
1 Grace. To be sung to the tune of "The King of France".
2 Fara Með Víkingum. [Icelandic: To go with the Vikings] By Egill Skallagrímsson. Tolkien and Gordon had started a "Viking Club" at the University of Leeds, where they and their students sang songs and drank beer.[8][2] The Leeds philologist Alaric Hall stated in 2015 that the tradition still continued in the department.[9]
Egill Skallagrímsson | 1893 translation by W. C. Green |
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Þat mælti mín móðir, |
Thus counselled my mother, |
3 Já, láttu gamminn. [Icelandic] By Hannes Hafstein
4 Bring Us In Good Ale.
5 Björt Mey Og Hrein. [Icelandic] Translation of a Polish folk song by Stefán Ólafsson
6 Rokkvísa. [Icelandic: Song about rocks]
7 Ólafur Liljurós. [Icelandic: a man's name]. The folk song tells of a man who meets an Elvish maiden.
Icelandic | Translation |
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Ólafur reið með björgum fram |
Ólafur rode with hills ahead |
8 Gaudeamus. [Latin: Let us rejoice]
9 Icelandic Song [Það liggur svo makalaust]. [Icelandic: It's so incomparable] To be sung to the tune of "O' Reilly". By Bjarni Þorsteinsson
10 Su Klukka Heljar. [Icelandic: That Bell of Hell] To be sung to the tune of "The Bells of Hell". By E. V. Gordon
11 Gubben Noach. [Swedish: Old Man Noah] By Carl Michael Bellman, accompanied by Icelandic translation by Eiríkur Björnsson
12 Bí, bí Og Blaka. [Icelandic lullaby] By Sveinbjörn Egilsson
13 Guþ let vaxa. [Icelandic] By Hannes Hafstein. To be sung to the tune of "Laus Deo" by Josef Haydn.
14 Salve! [Latin: Greetings!]
15 Hwan ic béo déad. [Old English, Scots, and Gothic: When I'm Dead]
16 Vísur Íslendinga. [Icelandic: Icelandic Song] By Jónas Hallgrímsson
17 Gömul Kynni. [Icelandic] By Árni Pálsson, imitating Robert Burns
References
[edit]- ^ Doughan, David (2021). "J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biographical Sketch". The Tolkien Society. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
- ^ a b "Collection highlights JRR Tolkien's time at the University of Leeds". University of Leeds. 19 March 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
- ^ a b c d Shippey, Tom (2005) [1982]. "Appendix B "Four 'Asterisk' Poems"". The Road to Middle-Earth (Third ed.). HarperCollins. pp. 399–408. ISBN 978-0-261-10275-0.
- ^ a b Annear, Lucas (2011). "Language in Tolkien's Bagme Bloma". Tolkien Studies. 8 (1): 37–49. doi:10.1353/tks.2011.0005. S2CID 170171873.
- ^ "The Root of the Boot". University of Leeds Library. c. 1924. Archive File: MS 1952/2/9. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
- ^ Kullmann, Thomas; Siepmann, Dirk (2021). Tolkien as a Literary Artist. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 228–238. ISBN 978-3-030-69298-8.
- ^ Fimi, Dimitra (2014). "Tolkien and Folklore: Sellic Spell and The Lay of Beowulf". Mallorn (55 (Winter 2014)): 27–28.
- ^ Collier, Pieter (20 February 2005). "Songs for the Philologists". Tolkien Library. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
- ^ "Singing students remember Tolkien". Belfast Telegraph. 19 March 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2021.