Letter to Elsie Honeybourne (21 December 1967): Difference between revisions

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*'''Publication:''' A description and photograph of the letter was included in ''[[Bloomsbury Modern First Editions, Manuscripts and Autograph Letters, English and Continental Literature and History 24 May 2007]]''.<ref>[http://www.tolkienbooks.net/php/details.php?reference=74200 Modern First Editions. 2007] at [http://www.tolkienbooks.net/ TolkienBooks.net] (accessed 29 November 2011)</ref>
*'''Publication:''' A description and photograph of the letter was included in ''[[Bloomsbury Modern First Editions, Manuscripts and Autograph Letters, English and Continental Literature and History 24 May 2007]]''.<ref>[http://www.tolkienbooks.net/php/details.php?reference=74200 Modern First Editions. 2007] at [http://www.tolkienbooks.net/ TolkienBooks.net] (accessed 29 November 2011)</ref>
*'''Description:''' One page both sides, 5.25 x 7, personal letterhead.<ref>[http://rrauction.com/past_auction_item.cfm?ID=3154567 Item 519 - J.R.R. Tolkien Catalog 326 (Oct 2007)] at [http://rrauction.com RR Auction] (accessed 22 October 2011)</ref>
*'''Description:''' One page both sides, 5.25 x 7, personal letterhead.<ref>[http://rrauction.com/past_auction_item.cfm?ID=3154567 Item 519 - J.R.R. Tolkien Catalog 326 (Oct 2007)] at [http://rrauction.com RR Auction] (accessed 22 October 2011)</ref>
==Content==
“Thank you so much for writing such kind and appreciative letters, brevity is not necessarily a virtue. I am interested in what you say of your name. I think it still probable that your father’s name nonetheless comes from near Evesham. It must be derived from a place-name; and though -Bourne (stream) is widespread in England, and occurs in Kentish names, Honeybourne is found only in Cow H. and Church H. near Evesham. There was a considerable movement and interchange between Kent and Worcestershire, largely because of the industries of fruit-growing. I shall certainly put Honeybourne on the Shire Map as soon as an opportunity of revision (much needed) occurs. I was deeply interested in your choice of passages, and quite agree about Pippin’s ride. An easing of tension was needed at the end of the ‘Book’ (but of course provided instinctively and not by planning). To ride with Gandalf must have been like being borne by a Guardian Angel, with stern gentleness a most comforting combination to children (as we all are).
I am sending you a copy of my recently published story. Not addressed to children (reached by age). An old man’s tale, mainly concerned with ‘retirement’ and bereavement.”


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 07:01, 2 April 2014

Elsie Honeybourne 21 December 1967.png

Elsie Honeybourne 21 December 1967 is a letter from J.R.R. Tolkien to Elsie Honeybourne, composed on 21 December 1967.[1]

Content

“Thank you so much for writing such kind and appreciative letters, brevity is not necessarily a virtue. I am interested in what you say of your name. I think it still probable that your father’s name nonetheless comes from near Evesham. It must be derived from a place-name; and though -Bourne (stream) is widespread in England, and occurs in Kentish names, Honeybourne is found only in Cow H. and Church H. near Evesham. There was a considerable movement and interchange between Kent and Worcestershire, largely because of the industries of fruit-growing. I shall certainly put Honeybourne on the Shire Map as soon as an opportunity of revision (much needed) occurs. I was deeply interested in your choice of passages, and quite agree about Pippin’s ride. An easing of tension was needed at the end of the ‘Book’ (but of course provided instinctively and not by planning). To ride with Gandalf must have been like being borne by a Guardian Angel, with stern gentleness a most comforting combination to children (as we all are).

I am sending you a copy of my recently published story. Not addressed to children (reached by age). An old man’s tale, mainly concerned with ‘retirement’ and bereavement.”

See also

References