By Michael Colhaze
October 31, 2010
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to
find them,
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie. ~ JRR Tolkien
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie. ~ JRR Tolkien
Many moons ago and for a few years only, I wore my
locks long and sported colourful garb and roamed the psychedelic haunts of
Paris, London or Amsterdam, usually holding a joint in one hand while employing
the other to underline with languid gestures my latest concept of how to bring
instant peace and love to the world. As for my fellow freaks and hippies, most
subsisted on very little, at least money-wise, but nearly all had pets, the
latter named frequently after a brand of heroes much en vogue during those
innocent times.
For cats, Galadriel stood high on the agenda,
also Arwen and Legolas. In Amsterdam my next-door neighbour, a
middle-aged lady with henna-dyed hair, flowing dresses and tinkling bells
around one fat ankle, owned a huge tomcat called Gollum. When he was one
day run over by a lorry, she came and cried bitterly into my lap. I did my best
to comfort her, though secretly rejoiced because the cunning bastard, nomen
est omen, used to be a veritable bane for the local sparrows and
blackbirds, and long since had I weighed means of abandoning him in a far-away
place without coming under suspicion.
As for dogs, I remember a Frodo, Bilbo and Pippin,
also one Boromir, him a mighty Leonberger and the gentlest fellow I’ve
ever met.
Which gives you an idea of how much Tolkien’s arrant
epos was on our mind during those happy years. Wherever you came, you found in
the bookshelves from cardboard boxes or orange crates at least one copy,
usually a weighty paperback falling apart from much use.
Walls were hung with coloured maps of Middle Earth,
and Gandalf was a household name for anything from an Underground
publication to a short-lived artistic society. Depending on fantasy and
imagination, and perhaps also on the daily cannabis consumed, an inordinate
number of people identified with a member of the Fellowship, or wished
fervently for the return of the King, or would have retired into the Shire
without looking back even once.
On the other hand there were some, myself included,
who had enjoyed the book but found it somewhat lacking in psychological depth.
It was, after all, a monumental canvas painted largely in black and white, with
protagonists either amazingly valiant, handsome and noble or the absolute
opposite, namely unspeakably ugly and wicked ~ which made the tale rather
predictable and deprived it of the complex emotional touch that otherwise would
have found a way into the heart.
Still, Tolkien’s power of imagination cannot and will
not be denied, and for his excuse it must be said that he relied much on the
High Germanic saga like Edda or the Nibelungen, and that those were on the
whole magnificent exemplifications of the eternal battle between Good and Evil
~ a battle where tads of intellectual embroidery might have seemed
misplaced.
Yet under the heroic plainness there hid an aspect
that intrigued me and many of my friends considerably, namely the deeper
meaning behind the fantasy. Because, as we all agreed, there had to be one
since the tale was simply too carefully thought out to be without one.
Never mind that the ghastly Sauron, title
figure and main protagonist aiming to enslave the world and mankind
particularly, didn’t turn up personally during the proceedings. But his
presence is overwhelmingly felt, and he had to have an equivalent within the
recent history of man, and as such a name that made sense.
First in line was of course Adolf Hitler, temporal saviour of a betrayed, ruined and starving Germany robbed naked by the Versailles victors, but for the rest and according to the New York Times the biggest blackguard ever to set foot on our sacred earth.Next came good old Joe Stalin, mass murderer par excellence supported by a closely knit clan of henchmen as described and defined by the great Solzhenitsyn in his Gulag and Two Hundred Years Together.Then the fabulous Chairman Mao, who most likely holds the Guinness record for accumulated corpses worldwide.And finally the inventors of the nuke, embodied by one Robert Oppenheimer who paid, just like that abominable fraud Freud, with lung cancer and a slow and painful death for his sins.
But try as you might, none of the above really made
sense. One reason was of course that Tolkien had begun The Lord of the Rings
already in the mid-thirties, long before those villains blossomed medially into
full bloom.
As to the ring itself, what kind of power did it
exactly wield?
It was, this we know, potent enough to enslave the
lesser ones, but not all-powerful. Because long ago Isildur King
of Gondor, in a desperate attempt to stem the advance of the Orcs, had
offered battle to Sauron their chieftain.
And in a one-to-one succeeded with God’s help to cut
off the latter’s hand which bore the ring. This was a feat that routed the Dark
One and his hosts, at least for a while and until he tried another grab at the
hideous thing.
My understanding of Tolkien’s political leanings is
scant. He himself has, as far as I know, refused to give any clues. But there
are hints. It is rumoured that he considered General Franco rather emphatically
as the saviour of Catholic Spain, a view much at odds with contemporaries like
that heartless hunter, boozer and scribbler Hemingway and his liberal chums.
One of Tolkien’s close friends, the writer and poet
Roy Campbell, had witnessed the atrocities committed by Marxist death squads
against priests and nuns in Cordoba and described them in vivid detail. What
makes him interesting in this context is that he also contributed articles to The European, a fascist gazette run by Lady Diana Mosley, wife of Sir Oswald and, as James Lees-Milne
described her, the nearest thing to Botticelli’s Venus as I have ever
seen.
Ezra Pound, among others, was a fellow contributor to The
European.
The latter should have rung a bell, but didn’t. Nearly
twenty years had to pass before bits and pieces fell into place, at least
within my much limited perception. One was an exhibition, the other a
production of Wagner’s Ring.
The exhibition was staged in Frankfurt by one of the
more affluent art establishments, meaning that decent Fizz, snacks with French
pâté and a few interesting people could be expected on the eve of its grand
opening.
This was the reason, some curiosity apart, why an old
friend took me there. Both of us have no truck with Modern art and knew the
artist only vaguely by name. Lucien
Freud it
was, grandson of you-know-who, and his hams about as uplifting as a dead rat
under the sink. As we stood in front of one, an uncouth male nude reclining on
a smutty bedstead with legs spread wide open while scratching reddish genitals
dangling above a cavernous anus, my friend cast a look around and said:
Grand Orc of the Crap Arts! Never had any sense of beauty, and never will!
ED: I debated whether or not to include this objectionable image from the original posting of this article. I do not like the work of Lucien Freud considering him to have ridden to fame by riding on his family name. He is one of the many Jewish artists who set out (and to some degree have succeeded) in destroying true art for "modern" schock. Ugly is part of life and art but why revel in it?
This was a remark that transported me immediately into a more sunny and innocent past, but also made me decline any comment. Because this was after all Germany, a country ruled by politically correct criminals that long since have booted the freedom of expression as laid down in the constitution, and who slap you for years on end into the cooler if you dare to insist on it.
.
Damned be the Ring I forged with a
Curse!
Though the Gold gave me unlimited
Might
Now its Sorcery has brought me
Ruin!
~ The
Rhinegold, 3rd Scene
About a week later I saw,
and heard, Richard Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung. I have no intention,
and lack the intellectual acumen, to give this masterwork its proper due.
George Bernhard Shaw, in his essay The Perfect Wagnerite, has summed it
up like this:
Only those of a wider consciousness can follow it breathlessly, seeing in it the tragedy of human history and the whole horror of the dilemma from which the world is shrinking today.
Dilemma?! Horror?!
Shaw did not enter into
detail as to the above, but the composer himself was more forthcoming.
You ask me about Jewry. I felt a long-repressed hatred for them, and this hatred is as necessary to my nature as gall is to blood. An opportunity arose when their damnable scribbling annoyed me most, and so I broke forth at last. It seems to have made a tremendous impression, and that pleases me for I really wanted only to frighten them in this manner. Because it is certain that not our princes, but the bankers and Philistines are nowadays our masters... ~ Correspondence between Wagner and Liszt, Vol. I, p.145, 18/4/1851
He did however not intend,
as stated very clearly elsewhere, to blame the whole tribe, just as you and I
wouldn’t consider every Italian automatically a member of the Cosa Nostra.
As to the tremendous
impression, this is how it commences. Namely at the very bottom of Germany’s
mighty river Rhine. There a trove of gold lays embedded in a reef, glinting and
gleaming mysteriously in the sunlight that filters through the timeless waves.
Beautiful mermaids guard it on orders of their father, enjoying its dazzling
radiance, cajoling and wriggling their lovely bodies in the bright reflection.
Until one Alberich
crawls out of the deep, a stunted Nibelung and Son of the Night who
beholds the maids with greedy eyes. When he tries to seduce them, they only
laugh, pull his beard and taunt him.
Enraged, he asks about the
significance of the gold. Carelessly they tell him that unlimited Power to
rule the World is in store for the one who will forge a Ring out of the
precious metal. But, they also warn him, this feat is only possible if he
renounces forever the Power of Love.
.
.
.
.
It takes Alberich only a moment to make up his mind.
The World as heirloom would I gain!And if I cannot have LoveMight I not cunningly extort Lust?The Light will I extinguish for youThe Gold will I tear from the reefAnd forge the avenging Ring!Let the Waves be my witness:FOREVER HAVE I CURSED LOVE!
He rips the gold from the
rocks and forges the Ring to rule the World with cunning and brute force ~ and
of course without Love.
“My Ring and Wagner’s were
round, but there the resemblance ceases!” scoffed Tolkien rather maliciously after his
book had been published in the mid-fifties. This is so transparent a denial that it seems almost laughable.
Shaw’s aforementioned essay
The Perfect Wagnerite, nearly of book-length, much acclaimed and widely
read, must have been known in detail to Tolkien as well. Because his Ring
and Wagner’s are identical in theme and essence, twins in fact if only in a
different quality of clothing ~ meaning that the former, compared to Wagner’s
peerless magnum opus, is over-large and very entertaining, but not really a masterpiece
of literature in the classical sense.
Interesting might be that
Tolkien uses words like Mordor or Sauron, clearly derived from
the German Mord, or murder, and Sau, or sow. Though his claim
that his own name derived from the German tollkuehn, meaning extremely
foolhardy, seems unlikely since it doesn’t exist as a family name.
As to the deeper
meaning in both cases, it is important to know that the one Ring of Power
has no magical potentials as we understand them. It cannot destroy enemy armies
simply by an order of its bearer. It cannot make you fly. It cannot stop the
flow of time. It can’t even prevent you from getting wet if it rains. It can
make you invisible, true, but that is just an illusion. And you’d still get wet
in any case. So what is it really?
It really is only GOLD!
And isn’t that enough to
rule the world?!
For many of those who had
witnessed the last decades of the great European Empires, a reign of peace and
general improvement that ended abruptly and horribly with World War One, the
era afterwards must have seemed like the proverbial devaluation of all values because
the bankers and Philistines, already so powerful in Wagner’s times, had by now
metastasized out of all proportion.
Germany, down on its knees,
was hardest hit. During the ill-fated and debt-ridden Weimar Republic the
country’s capital, Berlin, boasted 115 banking institutions of which 112 were
Jewish-owned. The same ratio was true for innumerable cabarets and brothels where
girls and boys as young as ten years old sold their famished bodies to the new
caste of money acrobats.
As to the banks, they used
the country’s catastrophic finances to their advantage and tricked and forced
the starving population out of their assets, be it shares, shops, houses,
farmland, factories or newspapers, until half of Germany was in the hands of a
very few.
The same happened, though
much less drastically, in much of the Western World and resulted finally in the
cataclysmic Black Friday. An exercise, as the Orc-faced Robert Fuld of formerly Lehman Bros.
has informed us so brazenly,
where we ruin a national economy and pick up the bits and pieces for a song.
Now it must be remembered
that in those years public opinion was on the whole far less brainwashed than
today. No Holocaust had yet been invented to slap down undesirable critics; no
worldwide Media Mafia could tell you convincingly that a crock of shit is a pot
of gold. Thus in many of the national and international gazettes, accounts of
thefts, crimes and injustices abounded, backed up with caricatures of the cruel
and greedy Jew.
These would be accounts
that surely had been observed and considered by Tolkien as well. Therefore it
seems highly plausible that the Ring he began to forge in his mind during the
early Thirties wasn’t so very different from the one Wagner had invented a
hundred years earlier.
Particularly if we remember
a rather interesting detail, namely that indeed one Aragorn strode out of the
wild and re-forged the sword that was broken. A man not of royal descent, it is
true, but some kind of Mahdi or Sent-One, as Carl Gustav Jung has
called him. Very powerful, a great orator, fearless as well, and immediately
setting to work and succeeding, almost overnight, to break the Ring’s
terrible stranglehold
~ a feat he brought about by throwing worthless paper money out of the window and replacing it with barter based on real goods and honest work.
Well, we know what became
of him and his folks and how dearly they paid for an attempt that
endangered the supremacy of Sauron’s banking institutions worldwide. The
latter regrouped, giving his Ring full play, and Germany’s ancient
cities and their innocent inhabitants, millions of them, perished in a
Firestorm of unimaginable magnitude and barbarity. A sad moment in our great
Christian European history, you will agree, and its final curtain fittingly
drawn by one of its greatest conductors, Herbert von Karajan, who performed
on the eve of Berlin’s destruction the Ring’s last episode, Twilight
of the Gods.
As for the Sent-One, there comes a day when he will be assessed more objectively and not just demonised out of all proportion. When some of the most hideous accusations levelled against him might crumble like a house of cards in a cloud of dust about as big as the one at 9/11 and its official explanations. This could result in two schools of thought, namely one where he remains indeed a villain, and another that pronounces him the most tragic character that ever walked the earth.
Him and his people. As for myself, I still have
to make up my mind.
As for Tolkien, nearly
twenty years went by between the Ring’s first written page and its
publication ~ a time span that radically changed the face of the world,
including the book market. Which ended up, to a large part and small wonder, in
Sauron’s hands as well. Thus it doesn’t come as a surprise if Sauron’s
chronicler got somewhat mum and choose to refute any familiarity, let alone
indebtedness, with and to his German forbear. And so removed any ideological
obstacles and cleared the way for a tremendous literary success.
A success most certainly
deserved, with the one little setback that we will never know what kind of Secret
Fire the old wizard Gandalf the Grey has been serving, and which he
so mightily evoked when he smote the Bridge
of Khazad-Dùm from under the Balrog’s fiery feet.
The latter an intriguing
name, particularly if you keep in mind that Baal is the Canaanite god of
fertility who demanded human sacrifices, and Rog the Hindi word for
malady.
As for the rest of the
world, the question is of course of how far the Lords of the Ring have
succeeded to enslave us. Logically speaking, and seeing their immeasurable
wealth and nearly unlimited influence, they should have long since consolidated
the realm ~ a realm which seems indeed the case in most Western countries where
presidents, prime ministers and chancellors are their obedient marionettes.
Ring Wraiths, Tolkien has called them
fittingly. Men and women like you and me, but empty-eyed ~ outer shells of
their former selves who command us to abandon our morals and artistic
heritance, fight proxy wars for their masters, pay any amount of money into
their purse, and generally order us to be at their service whenever it pleases
them.
Yet something went badly
wrong.
To begin with, the Shadows have been torn from the Land of Mordor, a mysterious region shrouded in deep secrecy for hundreds of years, but now glaringly illuminated.So much so that its schemes and crimes are every day more clearly observed and understood, be it the corruption of politicians, the doling out of jobs to foreign countries, the true intent behind globalism, the giant thefts, the resulting economical upheavals, the unspeakable atrocities in the occupied territories, the bungled assassinations, the real culprits behind 9/11, to name but a few.
Next come the Ring
Wraiths, perhaps Tolkien’s finest invention. Enablers, Paul
Gottfried has called them, and deems them worse than their criminal masters ~ men
and women who once possessed Christian souls and knew about the Power of Love,
but sold both for thirty pieces of gold to forge their own insignificant rings
~ trinkets that serve for a few brief years to ride the crest of power until a
new contender wins the upper hand and sends them packing. This is usually
sweetened with honours and compliments to ease the approaching twilight years,
a time when the ghosts and corpses of the past begin to whisper in the dark and
the hour of reckoning draws close, slowly but inevitably.
Today this kind of sugar-coating can have a sour aftertaste, due to an unforeseen invention called the Internet which markedly diminished the control of the Media Mafia and its sniffing, lying, cajoling, mudslinging lackeys. That is why the Bushes and Blairs of this world have become lepers instead of paragons, with motions underway to hold them responsible for their crimes, including the death of countless women and children and that of many fine soldiers whose intentionally poor equipment has prolonged the conflict to this day.
Today this kind of sugar-coating can have a sour aftertaste, due to an unforeseen invention called the Internet which markedly diminished the control of the Media Mafia and its sniffing, lying, cajoling, mudslinging lackeys. That is why the Bushes and Blairs of this world have become lepers instead of paragons, with motions underway to hold them responsible for their crimes, including the death of countless women and children and that of many fine soldiers whose intentionally poor equipment has prolonged the conflict to this day.
Finally the Dark Lords
themselves.
Those who have already
entered the twilight years, like the one on top of this little essay, watch
with silent horror how the mountains of gold are seeping like water through
their fingers, leaving them empty-handed and with nothing to bargain on
Judgement Day.
As for the others, still
springy and enterprising, it is said they are preparing for the ultimate
Armageddon with their nukes, viruses, bacteria, cheque books, connections and
whatnot. And perhaps they do, because they see that the world has tired of
them, of their lies and extortions.
But if they do, they’ll
have to fight themselves for a change and not let others do the dirty work.
Which will result, as a kind of divine retaliation and since they are so few,
in the final destruction of the Ring and the utter defeat of its
forgers.
Because once, long ago,
when tempted by a hoard of gold deep in the River Rhine, they made the wrong
choice and…
Tolkein also reportedly said that he did not write an Allegory...well DUH !!
ReplyDeleteSee Matthew 13 where the Tares go into the ovens...
...reading THE NAZARENE by Sholem Asch is the mar'dor...an herb used by Mariam of Migdal...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sholem_Asch
...one looks with unrestrained anticipation for
... THE RETURN OF THE KING !!
Davy