And an image appeared before me:
“Y-yes,” I said, still amazed at the vision of the Professor in front of me and not really focusing on this newer image.
“Look!”
This time I did look. “Who is it?”
“This is Edward Gibbon. He lived from 1737 until 1794.”
I did a quick calculation. “56! That’s my age! … my
God, do I look like that?”
Tolkien blew a ring of smoke and the Gibbon image
faded. “Do you know this man?”
Gibbon … Gibbon … Yes! “Yes! He wrote about the Roman
Empire. The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire – ”
“The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire,” he casually corrected me with a trace of a grin. “You have this
book in your collection.”
I thought a moment, then – yes! – in my Great Books of the Western World collection, currently housed in the storage space under the staircase along with all the Christmas decorations recently put away.
“I read that book … twenty years ago.”
The Professor raised his eyebrows.
“Well,” I back-pedaled, “I started to read it. Maybe got
a hundred pages in.” I thought further, scanning my memories. “It was in Cape
Cod. My wife and I were first dating, on our first weekend away together, and I
picked it up in a bookstore there.”
“Indeed you did, but you never finished it.”
What he said was true. But where was this going?
As if he could read my thoughts, he put aside his pipe
and stared into my eyes. “Hopper, I appreciate your plan to delve back into my
works, in a certain ‘internally chronologic way’ as you put it. Tell me, how
many times have you read my works?”
“Many times, sir.”
“More than once?”
“Yes.”
“More than twice?”
“Yes.” Where was this heading? “I’ve read your works
since I was ten or so. The Hobbit. Then The Lord of the Rings, as
a twelve or thirteen-year-old. I stumbled a bit through The Silmarillion the
next year, but then I took a twenty year hiatus until I re-read them all. This
spring will be my fifth go around – ”
“And how many times has your daughter gone to Italy?”
I froze, jaw agape. I think I knew where this was
going.
Tolkien started to meander down a muddy lane that just
happened to materialize. Bales of hay dotted the fields past a wooden fence. “Your
daughter is going to Italy, perhaps the heart of Western Civilization. She is
going there to study philosophy, art, and architecture, and, let us not forget,
literature. You’ve always did some sort of sympathetic reading with her, no?”
“Yes. When she was assigned The Divine Comedy freshman
year I read it too. Then, on her recommendation, I started The Aeneid,
but, to be honest, I never finished it.”
He paused in consideration. “How long will she be
gone?”
“Four months.”
“I think you should take up a work related to Italy
that would take you about four months to journey through.”
The light went off, and he smiled at me as we said,
together, “The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire!”
He chuckled. “Plus, if I know you as well as I think I
do, Hopper, it’s also a work on your bucket list?”
“Yes! Yes it is!”
Then a hearty laugh, and he reached in to his inner
jacket pocket for a pinch of tobacco and relit his pipe. “Hopper, I grant you
permission to set aside a fifth re-reading of my works to spiritually walk the
streets of ancient Rome as your daughter walks the modern ones, and cross another
item off your list.”
I was enlightened. “Thank you, master!”
“There is but one master,” the devout Catholic said to
me, “and I am not He.”
And as I was about to reply in affirmation, the vision
faded and I woke nestled and comfortable in my bed.
I visualize Tolkien as Gandalf in this exchange.
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