JOHN RONALD REUL TOLIEN
"In Tolkien you find exalted all the values that fascists and the traditional
Italian Right admire: spirituality, community, comradeship, order, adventure,
heroism, a warrior spirit, the struggle against evil, a sense of duty and of
mission, the heroism of the ordinary man; in fact all those values unknown to
or rejected by contemporary western society." (Gianfranco de Turris)
Master of Middle Earth
Brittanicus (Spearhead, July 1998)
Despite the universal derison of the literary establishment, which could never
comprehend its inherently noble spirit, Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings
was recently voted the greatest work of fiction of the 20th Century by
thousands of Waterstones' customers. The accolade is well-deserved, for
Tolkien's masterpiece is a classic of heroic romance. Drawing inspiration from
traditional European mythology and from his love for the English countryside,
Tolkien created an imaginary world and invented mythology which have proved
timeless in their appeal.
First published in 1956, Tolkien's Ring Saga is composed of three books, The
Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers and The Return of the King.
Although the late Walt Disney planned to produce a grand, animated film of the
entire trilogy, which would probably have done the mammouth work justice, the
film rights were unfortunately acquired by a hyphenated 'Hungarian' film
producer. He tore the story to ribbons and totally lost the plot, even
portraying Tolkien's white Elvish tribes as Mexicans with Oriental features. It
seems that a worthwhile film version of the great work will therefore have to
wait until the political victory of British Nationalism unleashes a fresh wave
of culturally sound artistic energy. In the meantime, fortunately, we still
have the books.
'National myth'
John Ronald Reul Tolkien, ex-soldier, expert philologist and Professor
of Anglo-Saxon by the time he was just 33, claimed that he wrote his novels to
fulfil an inner desire to "create a myth for
Although Tolkien disliked allegory, his Middle Earth is in many ways like our
own, and ethnic realities play an important part in the lives of its
inhabitants. For instance, the Numenoreans were an aristocratic race of men,
".... fair of face and tall, and the span of their lives was thrice that
of other men of Middle Earth. These were the Numenoreans, the Kings of Men,
whom the Elves called the Dunedain."
But three great evils endangered the Numenorians: plague; invasions by hordes
of alien Wainriders from the lands of the East; and racial intermixture:-
"After the return of Eldacar, the blood of the kingly house and other
houses of the Dunedain became more mingled with that of lesser men. For many of
the great had been slain in the Kin-strife. This mingling did not at first
hasten the waning of the Dunedain, as had been feared, but the waning still
proceeded, little by little, as it had before...."
"For the high men of Gondor already looked askance at the men among them,
and it was a thing unheard of before that the heir of the crown, or any son of
the King, should wed one of lesser and alien race...."
"Now the descendants of the kings had become few. Their numbers had been
greatly diminished in the Kin-strife ... while others had renounced their
lineage and taken wives not of Numenorean blood. So it was that no claimant to
the crown could be found who was of pure blood .... and all feared the memory
of the Kin-strife, knowing that if any such dissension arose again, then Gondor
would perish."
Comparable to the advanced, highly gifted and intelligent European peoples in
our own world, the Dunedain were great pioneers, administrators, leaders and
empire-builders, despite making up only small proportion of the total population
of Middle Earth:-
"All told, the Dunedain were thus from the beginning far fewer in number
than the lesser men among whom they dwelt and whom they ruled, being lords of
long life and great power and wisdom."
Yet the Dunedain's special qualities and attributes were gradually lost over
years of degeneracy, diluted and bred out by mixing with other types, so that
their nobility and longevity, bestowed upon them by their Creator, the
'All-father of the Universe', was brought down to the level of their inferiors.
'Evil'
The "evil of mixing," as Tolkien describes
it, is a major theme of his writing, and is naturally of much interest to those
who wish to see the various racial groups of humanity preserved, rather than
being destroyed forever through the intermingling of blood.
As he wrote his epic, Tolkien would mail out each completed chapter to his son,
Christopher, who was serving in the RAF in
In total contrast to the Numenorians, Northmen, Elves, Hobbits and Dwarves are
the Orcs, a green skinned, ignorant race of giant goblins who, according to Tolkien,
spoke 'snaga-speech'.
"Orc is the form of the name that other races had for this foul people, as
it was in the language of Rohan. The Orcs were first bred by the Dark Power in
the North in the Elder Days. It is said that they had no language of their own,
but took what they could of other tongues, and perverted it to their own
liking, yet they made only brutal jargons, scarcely sufficient even for their
own needs, unless it were for curses and abuse. And these creatures, being
filled with malice, hating even their own kind, quickly developed as many
barbarous dialects as there were groups or settlements of their race, so that
their Orkish speech was of little use to them in intercourse between different
tribes."
The Orcs were generally shambling, clumsy brutes, savages created by the
sorcerors Margoth and the Dark Lord, Sauron, as war fodder. They were needed to
help him to gather the Rings of Power, the means by which he would be able to
bring about an evil world empire, and the enslavement of all the peoples of
Middle Earth.
'Usury and manipulation'
Tolkien's last book, The Silmarillion,
published in the 1970s, took this theme even further. Universally panned by the
literary world, it tells of an evil, scheming, underground race, which lurks in
the shadows, operates usury, dabbles in necromancy and hordes gold and jewels,
manipulating events from behind the scenes.
Though civilisation, freedom, life, honour and beauty seem doomed by the evil
forces arrayed against the 'White Council' of Aragorn and Gondor in The Lord of
the Rings, the mannish, dwarvish, and elvish armies finally turn the tide with
a famous victory at The Battle of Pelennor Fields:
"East rode the knights of Dol Amroth, driving the enemy before them:
troll-men and Variags, and orcs that hated the sunlight. South strode Eomer ...
and they were caught between the hammer and the anvil. For now men leapt from
the ships to the quays of the Harlond and swept north like a storm .... But
before all went Aragorn with the Flame of the West, Anduril, like a new fire
kindled ...."
"Hard fighting and long labour they had still, for the Southrons were bold
men and grim, and fierce in despair, and the Easterlings were strong and
war-hardened and asked for no quarter. And so in this place and that, by burned
homestead or barn, upon hillock or mound, under wall or on field, still they
gathered and rallied and fought until the day wore away."
"Then the Sun went at last behind Mindolluin and filled all the sky with a
great burning, so that the hills and the mountains were dyed as with blood;
fired glowed in the river, and the grass of the Pelennor lay red in the
nightfall. And in that hour the great
This is the first victory for the armies of the White Council in a very long
war. The men of Middle Earth want only to live in peace and plenty among their
womenfolk, families and loved ones, yet they fully realise that it is their
sacred duty to take up arms against an enemy who seeks to enslave them. Their
war is heroic and just: the pale-skinned mannish, elvish and dwarvish allies
are never cruel or mistreat their prisoners, unlike the Orcs, who think nothing
of beheading prisoners for fun.
The fate of a warrior is in his own hands. Wielding his sword and shield he has
at least a chance to live, or die, through his own fighting prowess.
It is clear from Tolkien's personal diaries that he deeply detested modern
warfare, especially the aerial mass bombing of civilians in
'British patriot'
Tolkien was no pacifist, but he believed that British
soldiers should only be called to fight for
In the foreword to The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien wrote that:-
"One has indeed personally to come under the shadow of war to feel fully
its oppression; but as the years go by it seems now forgotten that to be caught
in youth by 1914 was no less hideous an experience than to be involved in 1939
and the following years. By 1918 all but one of my close friends were dead ....
The country in which I lived in childhood was being shabbily destroyed before I
was ten, in the days when motor cars were rare objects."
Parallel to his dislike of modern, impersonal warfare, Tolkien increasingly
began to reject and actively oppose the encroachment of mechanisation,
automation and the urbanisation of traditional country life. He was one of the
first pro-countryside campaigners!
"Hobbits are an unobtrusive but very ancient people, more numerous
formerly than they are today; for they love peace and quiet and good tilled
earth: a well-ordered and well-farmed countryside was their favourite haunt. They
do not and did not understand or like machines more complicated than a
forge-bellows, a water-mill, or a hand-loom, though they were skilful with
tools."
Tolkien's vision was of a
'Nobility and freedom'
There is much with which nationalists can identify in
J. R. R. Tolkien's writings: the nobility of ancient and self-reliant peoples;
the neighbourliness, comradeship and community spirit of The Shire, with its
clean air and green landscape; the heroic life or death struggle for a great
cause, between the forces of light, freedom and racial survival, against the
conspiracy of corruption and tyranny.
Tolkien undoubtedly lit a beacon of inspiration in the imagination and hearts
of many of his fellow Britons, and indeed among kindred folk worldwide. The
Lord of the Rings in particular continues to touch a nerve deep in our
racial psyche, which clearly worries the twisted champions of genocide through
integration. Any popular literature which has ethnic identity, and the
necessity of struggle to protect it, as its theme must inevitably arouse the
hostility of the cosmopolitan arts and literary critics network, just as it
must deserve our attention.
Tolkien's healthy, moral and idealistic tales of valour and truth therefore
make particularly good Christmas and birthday presents for the children of
nationalist families. The Hobbit is ideal for younger children, while The
Lord of the Rings will delight teenagers and adults alike. Here there is no
perversion, no degeneracy, and no political correctness. Take a look for yourself!