So, adult me discovered about fifteen years ago that I
really enjoy reading Charles Dickens. A thousand years ago, back in high
school, my class was assigned A Tale of
Two Cities to read but I, either through laziness or indifference, decided
to wing it and only read the Cliff Notes the night before the test. Think I got
something like a B, but the incident rested heavily on my heart for many years.
So much so that I decided it would be a good way to equilibrialize the karmic
multiverse to finally read the book cover-to-cover on my daily train commutes
into NYC.
I did, and relished it so much I may have actually
kicked myself for faking it twenty years prior.
Recently I started reading a Dickens story every
Thanksgiving. I did the Pickwick Papers,
Great Expectations, and now I’m about
a quarter through David Copperfield.
I enjoy this new tradition of mine immensely.
Now, just a few nights ago I read the following passage
and thought immediately of J.R.R. Tolkien. See if you can figure out why:
“Oh, what do you want?” grinned this old man, in a fierce, monotonous
whine. “Oh, my eyes and limbs, what do you want? Oh, my lungs and liver, what
do you want? Oh, goroo, goroo!”
I was so much dismayed by these words, and particularly by
the repetition of the last unknown one, which was a kind of rattle in his
throat, that I could make no answer; hereupon the old man, still holding me by the hair, repeated –
“Oh, what do you want? Oh, my eyes and limbs, what do you
want? Oh, goroo!” – which he screwed out of himself with an energy that made
his eyes start in his head.
“I wanted to know,” I said, trembling, “if you would buy a
jacket.”
“Oh, let’s see the jacket!” cried the old man. “Oh, my
heart on fire, show the jacket to us! Oh, my eyes and limbs, bring the jacket
out!”
That’s right. Gollum.
Oh,
goroo, goroo!
…
a kind of rattle in his throat …
“show
the jacket to us!”
I wonder: did a young Tolkien read David Copperfield (published in 1850) as
a lad and did this scene subconsciously imprint itself upon his wondrously
imaginative mind, till years and years later the poor pitiable creature once
called Smeagol drew itself out upon the printed page, 87 years later in The Hobbit?
An interesting piece of literary archaeology, no?
N.B. Above scene occurs near the beginning of Chapter
XIII, where young David decides to flee his degrading employment at Murdstone
and Grinby’s to travel uplands to throw himself upon the mercy of his never-seen
miserly spinster Aunt. David is all of ten years old.
Awesome stuff. "Show the jacket to us" immediately sent shivers down the spine. Great call.
ReplyDeleteUncle