POETS Day! Why Is Tom Bombadil?

Ben Sears

Ben Sears is a writer and restaurant guy in Birmingham, Alabama. He lives quite happily across from a creek with his wife, two sons, and an obligatory dog. You can follow him on Twitter and read his blog, The Columbo Game.

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6 Responses

  1. Doctor Jay
    Ignored
    says:

    “Tom is oldest, Tom is first”

    This is the best explanation for why Tom Bombadil is in the book at all. He was the fist character Johnnie (along with his brother) ever created in Middle Earth. He didn’t mean the things you describe (which work for me, by the way) at that moment.

    He is in the book because Tolkien couldn’t not put him in. I always thought of him as a personification of Nature – a sort of Father Nature figure. Later, when I learned about him, he seemed a bit of a Green Man reference. But really, I think both Tom and the Hobbits and the Shire all represent England in the geographic analogue of Middle Earth.

    And by the way, Tolkien would not approve of you calling it a “grand Christian allegory”. There’s the famous quote from one of the later editions: “I have a cordial dislike of allegory in all of its forms”. He’s addressing the World War II allegory. (we love to imagine that after that, he might insert, “I’m looking at you Jack”, in reference to C.S.Lewis, known as Jack to the Inklings, and who wrote what is most certainly a grand Christian allegory).

    I would agree that ideas of Christianity infuse the book, but Tolkien prefers “applicability” to allegory.

    I first read it at fourteen, and I sort of slogged through the poetry. I don’t know if I read all of it, but I’m sure I read more than none of it.

    I struggle with the meter of it. I keep feeling that Tom should be singing in triple meter, but he doesn’t. I’ve never quite felt I’ve locked on to the rhythm of the song he sings. (And it probably is only one song, with words that vary to suit him.)Report

    • Ben Sears in reply to Doctor Jay
      Ignored
      says:

      Applicability is fair, but I have a priest friend who, whether he agrees with you or not, would take that disagreement – any Tolkien quibble – as an excuse to expound at length. That man loves those books.
      We talked in the book club about Tom as Nature. I’m open to that, but if he is, is he only part of nature? He seems to have boundaries. I don’t know if they’re self-imposed boundaries, but we all got the sense that he escorted the Hobbits through his realm.
      I’ve got no answers, but the questions are fun.Report

      • Doctor Jay in reply to Ben Sears
        Ignored
        says:

        You are right, he does have boundaries. It is a distinctly non-Christian idea, but he comes off as some sort of kami – an animistic spirit being associated with a particular place.Report

  2. North
    Ignored
    says:

    An entertaining internet digression once theorized that Tom Bombadil was an eldritch evil contained by Gandalf and the Elves to his particular corner of Middle Earth. He is unaffected by the ring because his own power transcends it. Tom releases the hobbits, and the Ring, back into Middle Earth because he very much wants Sauron to fail, the ring system to collapse and the Elves to fade departing middle earth and leaving Tom free to rampage.

    I trudged through the poetry in total but gave each line little thought and definitely endured it with no enjoyment.

    I agree that Tom Bombadil is in the story because Tolkein is a world builder and Tom was an early creation and, thus, could not be left out. If Dungeons and Dragons had existed in Tolkeins time his players no doubt would ruefully have complained about old Tom. Also if D&D had existed as a creative outlet back then it may be that the novels wouldn’t have been written so let’s give thanks for that.

    Toms’ inclusion in the Rings of Power Season 2 somehow manages to be indulgent, ham handed and utterly contrary to Toms cannonic role and nature. It’s uniformly so bad it’s almost impressive.Report

  3. InMD
    Ignored
    says:

    Whether it was Tolkien’s intent or not Tom Bombadil is a lot like those frustratingly small maps of the western edge of Middle Earth in the books. There’s obviously more, but what?

    Yet if you think about it a bit there’s no answer that would ever be interesting enough or satisfying. Similarly Bombadil makes the world feel big. He implies there’s stuff going on out there that we don’t know about, and for whom all of the high drama between elves and men and Sauron could well be tiny and meaningless.

    Not to go too far on a tangent but I think one of the worst things about fandom of fantastical media and nerd culture is the constant demands for an answer to everything, as if knowing is better than allowing for some mystery. The lack of knowing everything helps the world feel real, especially when you compare it to our current sprawling science fictions and fantasies where everyone and everything always turns out to be somehow intimately related. We all know the real world doesn’t work that way.Report

  4. Chasm
    Ignored
    says:

    At thirteen, in 1976, I did not have the musical knowledge to complete these rhymes. At 61, I can spit these bars in multiple cadences for effect. Tom was not only present at the beginning of time, he invented rapping.Report

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