Path: ...!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: Stephan Seitz Newsgroups: rec.arts.books.tolkien Subject: Re: Tom Bombadil Date: 25 Oct 2024 10:07:08 GMT Organization: =?UTF-8?Q?Barad=2Dd=C3=BBr=2C?= Mordor Lines: 40 Message-ID: References: X-Trace: individual.net ERH02BA9JMkYJZNPmLMWvQQUzjVh4BLL3odpxBMGjC9gpNbJ2d X-Orig-Path: not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:kCPHety5VPMqROugZml574mCURY= sha256:ppHr4zFBoWDJvd3sjy7Xt7ucqjWTdzYzzEwOpcXnawo= User-Agent: tin/2.6.4-20240917 ("Banff") (Linux/6.11.5 (x86_64)) Bytes: 2364 Paul S Person wrote: > On 20 Oct 2024 13:50:30 GMT, Stephan Seitz > wrote: >>I have some questions about Tom Bombadil. >>After reading the LotR I would say the following: >>- the hobbits don't know Tom; > The ones we encounter may not, but there are more Hobbits in the world > than just those. Sorry, I meant in this case our four heroes who met Tom. >>- Tom doesn't cross his own borders, not even for free ale; > Only if the Barrows are inside his borders -- and didn't Tom wave > goodbye (as it were) before those were reached precisely because they > are not inside his borders? And yet, he rescues them from the Wights. He waved goodbye from his house. And he gave the hobbits the "summoning spell" for the next day. I doubt that it would work in Bree or Moria. So the Barrows have to be inside his borders. > I suppose it depends, in part, on /when/ the poems were written by the > Hobbits in relation to the events in /LOTR/. The first poem was written long before LotR, the second poem after the War but with content shortly before the War. >>Can Tom cross his borders to visit friends? Or are Buckland and the >>Marish part of his country? After all nothing is really said about the >>borders. > I think it is more a matter of not wanting to do so than not being > able to do so. Yes, certainly. Tom is making is own borders. The question is more how strict is he with his own rules. Stephan -- | Stephan Seitz E-Mail: stse+usenet@rootsland.net | | If your life was a horse, you'd have to shoot it. |