Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 12:32 am
I think we also should consider the fact that Tolkien only reveals Tom Bombadil and Goldberry to us in this tale as they are perceived by the Hobbits. It could be possible that they have the power to assume different forms that are understandable and comfortable for the particular beings they are encountering. Hence, to the Hobbits, Tom is a bizarre rustic bumpkin, and Goldberry is a lithe, merry lass. Perhaps they appear as grander, more majestic figures to beings such as Gandalf or Elrond or Galadriel.
I am endlessly fascinated by Tom and Goldberry, I LOVE their highly enigmatic qualities, and definitely feel that the overall story would suffer greatly without them. I find the following passage about Tom from the Encyclopedia of Arda very interesting:
I am endlessly fascinated by Tom and Goldberry, I LOVE their highly enigmatic qualities, and definitely feel that the overall story would suffer greatly without them. I find the following passage about Tom from the Encyclopedia of Arda very interesting:
I think Goldberry's explanation of Tom in answer to Frodo's question -- "He is" -- completely captures this concept in two simple words.Though Tom's insertion into the nascent Lord of the Rings might be viewed (at least in a sense) as 'accidental', it is certainly no accident that he remained there. Tolkien reviewed and revised the book with his customary meticulousness - it is inconceivable that the character of Tom Bombadil would have stayed in place if Tolkien didn't see him, in some sense, 'fitting' with the rest of the story. In Tolkien's own words:
"...I kept him in, and as he was, because he represents certain things otherwise left out." The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, No 153, dated 1954
In the same letter, he goes on to summarise what these 'certain things' are. It is difficult to paraphrase his statements here: the suggestion is that while all sides in the War of the Ring seek, in their different ways, some sort of political power, Tom is immune from this in the same way that he is immune from the Ring. He only wishes to understand things for what they are, and desires no control over them.