PEARL - 1953 1st Edition - E.V. Gordon with Contributions from J. R. R. Tolkien

$100.00
Among the medieval masterpieces that played an influential role in J.R.R. Tolkien’s life is the dream vision poem Pearl. Tolkien was introduced to the complex elegiac work as a student, taught it as a professor, and translated it into modern English as a scholar. He also crafted a poem in the style of PearlThe Nameless Land (later The Song of Ælfwine), based on characters in his grand mythology of Middle-earth. The question remains, however, as to what additional impact Pearl had on his own writing. A close parallel reading of Tolkien’s translation of Pearl alongside his early mythology (prior to The Lord of the Rings) was motivated by the possibility that one of his mysterious minor original characters, the Sleeper in the Tower of Pearl, was an homage to Pearl. But as this paper will describe, additional pearls’ of Pearl can be found throughout Tolkien’s writings of the so-called Blessed Lands and the story of Eärendil the Mariner.

-Tolkienists
8vo hardcover. w/o jacket. Blue cloth over boards. 167pp. Gilt titles on spine. Some rubbing/bumping to tips. Casual shelf wear to head and toe of spine. Previous owner's name in pen on inside cover. No other marks or foxing on interior.
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Among the medieval masterpieces that played an influential role in J.R.R. Tolkien’s life is the dream vision poem Pearl. Tolkien was introduced to the complex elegiac work as a student, taught it as a professor, and translated it into modern English as a scholar. He also crafted a poem in the style of PearlThe Nameless Land (later The Song of Ælfwine), based on characters in his grand mythology of Middle-earth. The question remains, however, as to what additional impact Pearl had on his own writing. A close parallel reading of Tolkien’s translation of Pearl alongside his early mythology (prior to The Lord of the Rings) was motivated by the possibility that one of his mysterious minor original characters, the Sleeper in the Tower of Pearl, was an homage to Pearl. But as this paper will describe, additional pearls’ of Pearl can be found throughout Tolkien’s writings of the so-called Blessed Lands and the story of Eärendil the Mariner.

-Tolkienists
8vo hardcover. w/o jacket. Blue cloth over boards. 167pp. Gilt titles on spine. Some rubbing/bumping to tips. Casual shelf wear to head and toe of spine. Previous owner's name in pen on inside cover. No other marks or foxing on interior.
Among the medieval masterpieces that played an influential role in J.R.R. Tolkien’s life is the dream vision poem Pearl. Tolkien was introduced to the complex elegiac work as a student, taught it as a professor, and translated it into modern English as a scholar. He also crafted a poem in the style of PearlThe Nameless Land (later The Song of Ælfwine), based on characters in his grand mythology of Middle-earth. The question remains, however, as to what additional impact Pearl had on his own writing. A close parallel reading of Tolkien’s translation of Pearl alongside his early mythology (prior to The Lord of the Rings) was motivated by the possibility that one of his mysterious minor original characters, the Sleeper in the Tower of Pearl, was an homage to Pearl. But as this paper will describe, additional pearls’ of Pearl can be found throughout Tolkien’s writings of the so-called Blessed Lands and the story of Eärendil the Mariner.

-Tolkienists
8vo hardcover. w/o jacket. Blue cloth over boards. 167pp. Gilt titles on spine. Some rubbing/bumping to tips. Casual shelf wear to head and toe of spine. Previous owner's name in pen on inside cover. No other marks or foxing on interior.