Tolkien and nature. We know that he was big (I mean, very, very, very big) on nature and its conservation and preservation. A lot of obnoxious criticism or offhanded jokes about his writing is that “he takes three pages to describe the shape of leaves in a forest” and while I’m not going to comment on that more than I already have, that did get me thinking. Why does Tolkien write so much about nature and go to such great lengths to describe it? I can think of a few reasons but one particular stands out to me as the most likely. One, he wanted to make it very clear to the reader his own love of nature and the natural world and wanted to take literary snapshots if you will of the world itself around the characters; two, active worldbuilding, or as he would have likely preferred it called ‘mythopoeia’; three, Middle-earth itself was a character and he wanted to do everything to help bring that across. From the Shire to Mordor, each landscape is different and each place is described with different words and phrases, different colors and different emphases.
I think it’s clear which one I prefer. While I do think he wanted to write about nature because he loved it, I don’t think that’s entirely the reason he wrote so much description and detail about it. I wholeheartedly believe that Middle-earth is a central character in Lord of the Rings and in the wider Legendarium. He goes to such lengths to describe it because the ‘where’ question of the characters’ interactions are just as important as the ‘who’ question. Where a character is influences what they say and what they do.J.R.R. Tolkien wrote: It was a hollow land, surrounded by mountains and great coast-cliffs higher than the plains behind, and no river flowed thence; and there was great mere in the midst of Nevrast, with no certain shores, being encircled by wide marshes. Linaewen was the name of that mere, because of the multitude of birds that dwelt there, of such as love tall reeds and shallow pools...
-Of Beleriand and Its Realms
Many of the mythological and folkloric inspirations Tolkien took, Norse, Finnish, Welsh, etc, also see nature and the natural world as a living thing filled with spirts specific to places and types of topography.
He’s not the only writer from that time period to write about nature and be as descriptive about it as much as he does. Another of my favorite authors, perhaps my actual favorite, Algernon Blackwood was very similar in the way he wrote about the natural world around the characters and stories he wrote.
While Algernon Blackwood came from a very different religious and genre background (he was a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and is one of the pioneers of weird fiction) I think he too saw nature and the natural world as characters in his short stories and novellas. The above example from the Willows is only part of the opening in which he goes to great lengths to describe the Danube, to give it personification and anthropomorphization. He does so, specifically in this story because the setting is of immense importance and nature is a very active participant (antagonist) to the story.Algernon Blackwood wrote:Happy to slip beyond the control of the stern banks, the Danube here wanders about at will among the intricate network of channels intersecting the islands everywhere with broad avenues down which the waters pour with a shouting sound; making whirlpools, eddies, and foaming rapids; tearing at the sandy banks; carrying away masses of shore and willow-clumps; and forming new islands innumerably which shift daily in size and shape and possess at best an impermanent life, since the flood-time obliterates their very existence.
-The Willows
This being my first real lore post I know it’s short on examples and quotations but my hope is that it engenders enough curiosity and understand to create a decent discussion.