ordeal, Smith wrote saying that Colonel Stainforth, his commanding officer (or âCOâ), seemed certain to find space in the 19th Lancashire Fusiliers for Tolkien if he would write requesting a place. Schools finished the next week and Tolkienâs undergraduate life was behind him. Now for enlistment, training, and war.
Smith had sent a note on âmatters Martianâ â advice on what kit to buy together with a facetious lexicon explaining the application procedure. The most important entry in Smithâs Concise Military Dictionary ran: â Worry : The thing to be avoided. Keep perfectly calm, and everything will settle itself.â The policy worked for GBS, who was now a lieutenant. From Brough Hall, near Catterick Bridge in Yorkshire, where the Salford Pals had moved on midsummerâs day, Smith sent the reassuring suggestion, â Do not be afraid to bring a book or two, and a few paints, but let them be portable.â Smith was now only a few miles to the north of Rob Gilson and the Cambridgeshires, who had marched out of their home town to Lindrick Camp nearFountains Abbey on 19 June. Gilsonâs letters had dried up, however, and he was probably unaware of their proximity.
Tolkien was at last catching up with his friends and getting into step with this world in motion, yielding to the pressures he had resisted for almost a year. Unsurprisingly, he wasted no time and, in his own words, â bolted â into the army. On 28 June he applied at the Oxford recruiting office for a temporary officerâs commission âfor the duration of the warâ. Captain Whatley of the university OTC sponsored his application and a Royal Army Medical Corps officer pronounced him fit. The form pointed out that there were no guarantees of appointment to any particular unit, but noting Tolkienâs preference a military pen-pusher scrawled â19/Lancs Fusiliersâ in the top corner.
Tolkien packed up the âJohnnerâ, his digs in St John Street, and bade farewell to Oxford, perhaps forever. When the English School results were issued, on Friday 2 July, he knew that his commitment to philology had been vindicated and that if he survived the war he would be able to pursue his academic ambitions. Alongside two women and an American Yale scholar, he had achieved First Class Honours. On Saturday the results were published in The Times and the next day Smith sent congratulations on âone of the highest distinctions an Englishman can obtainâ. He again urged Tolkien to write to Colonel Stainforth.
After some time with Edith in Warwick, Tolkien went to Birmingham, where he spent part of the next three weeks with his maternal aunt, May Incledon, and her husband Walter, in Barnt Green, just beyond the southern limits of Birmingham â a house he associated with childhood security and early language games with his cousins Marjorie and Mary. Travelling on foot and riding the bus between Edgbaston and Moseley, he was consumed one day in thoughts of his mythology and, in his Book of Ishness , he wrote out a poem on 8-9 July entitled âThe Shores of Faëryâ opposite his May painting of the same name. It describes the setting of Kôr. Eärendel makes an appearance and, for the first time outside the Qenya lexicon, essential and permanent features of the legendarium are named: the Two Trees, the mountain of Taniquetil, and the land of Valinor.
East of the Moon
West of the Sun
There stands a lonely hill
Its feet are in the pale green Sea
Its towers are white & still
Beyond Taniquetil in Valinor
No stars come there but one alone
That hunted with the Moon
For there the Two Trees naked grow
That bear Nightâs silver bloom;
That bear the globed fruit of Noon
In Valinor.
There are the Shores of Faery
With their moonlit pebbled Strand
Whose foam is silver music
On the opalescent floor
Beyond the great sea-shadows
On the margent of the Sand
That stretches on
Alice Clayton, Nina Bocci