Off topic, but still a prediction in that I don't know the answer: I think Tolkien wrestled in his youth. When you read his description of armed combat, it's pretty simple and somewhat vague, but when it becomes unarmed combat, suddenly every single motion gets described and punching takes a distant second place to grappling.
Maybe it's out there somewhere, but I've looked around and not read much about Tolkien's athleticism - some brief mention of tennis and rugby at Oxford, but that's about it.
Anyway, I always thought his description of physical combat demonstrated the saying, write what you know. Maybe sometime I'll find out if my prediction's right.
Why a wrestler if he was rugby player. rugby = applied grappling at its best.
ReplyDeleteIt could have been a thing of the time ... The Worm Ourouboros, I recall, had a huge amount of wrestling. Maybe it was a fascination of intellectuals of the era, or earlier books had such an influence on the books of the time (perhaps also check RE Howard). It could be that at the time wrestling was the main source of sport/combat metaphors (as soccer is today), and that to readers of the era such references would have come across as trite (like saying "Frodo slotted a goal" or something in the modern era).
ReplyDelete... and it appears his sport was <a href="http://straightsets.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/18/tolkiens-path-suffer-tennis-injury-write-hobbit/>tennis</a>.
ReplyDeleteIt was from rugby. See page 143 of
ReplyDeleteJ.r.r. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship And Critical Assessment
edited by Michael D. C. Drout
As to The Worm Ouroboros, Eddison's books give equal time to real tennis
ReplyDeleteNote that as a walker in Lake District, he went from inn to inn.
ReplyDeleteA group that camps along the trail knows what under garments everyone is wearing.