A Call for a Silmarillion Talmud

Though we live in a digital age, we are sometimes artificially constrained by older technologies. Like modern cars and trains that are largely designed according to the size of Roman cart paths, our reading is still shaped by a time when scrolls were the containers of words. Though we can flip through a book that falls open on our laps, we still approach reading very much like the unrolling of a scroll: as lines that emerge one after the other, from beginning to end.

There is something to be said about the linearity of books. Stories have a beginning, a middle, and an ending. And although some great pieces play with time, the only nonlinear stories I have loved could still be plotted on a timeline, living life as humans do.

But not all stories are a single story. To read the Bible cover to cover the first time you pick it up would be a strange experience in a post-Christian culture. Anthologies, poetry collections, and the providential scraps we find in archives often lack that A to Z space-time linearity. Series like Discworld or Narnia have different kinds of internal logic and can be read in chronological order, the order of composition, or according to cycles of characters and tales found within the series. Not all stories are a single story.

The Silmarillion is one of these books that is not a single story. The Silmarillion we have is not all the Silmarillion that exists, and in some cases–due to editorial necessity–has more than the original Silmarillion drafts had. It is an edited text, drawn from a living collection of texts, artificially sealed in time and compiled so that lovers of Middle Earth can find their way to the Legendarium behind The Lord of the Rings. It is not one text, but many texts, the many stories of many peoples from many lands and languages.

The Silmarillion is broadly chronological in the way that the Bible and Narnia are chronological, moving from genesis to the fall of sentient creatures, through the heartache and great deeds of its heroes to the dawn of a new age. But, like these, The Silmarillion has a number of genres within it and spans great ages. And, like the Bible at least, The Silmarillion is better reread than read, offering great challenges to the uninitiated and great obstacles to emerging readers who are not familiar with this kind of literature.

Perhaps one of the unnecessary challenges to reading The Silmarillion is the linear nature of the task. What if we thought about technology and reading in a new way to create a new kind of reading experience of Tolkien’s great work?

If I can summarize the challenges of reading The Silmarillion, they are these:

  • an archaic style, especially in the mythic and dialogue portions
  • complex geographies that cover multiple ages and includes lands that cannot be mapped
  • an intense interest in languages, which are not always translated and can be difficult to pronounce (and thus hard to remember)
  • a large number of critical characters, many of whom have multiple names
  • names that have an internal linguistic and cultural logic but are also chosen because they are beautiful (euphonic, or phonaesthetic), with the result that the names of kin often sound similar and blur in the mind
  • myths, epics, sagas, and tales strewn across a grand timeline that is not always evident in the text itself

The only way to conquer the first point is by spending time reading Tolkien and authors that influenced him–Arthurian tales, Nordic sagas and medieval poetry, and authors like William Morris. The other points, however, have been anticipated (except one) by Christopher Tolkien as he edited The Silmarillion. My text has an index of names, basic family trees, some maps, a pronunciation guide, and some elements in Elven languages that occur again and again. The only thing it is missing is a timeline, which you can find easily enough online. The editor, though, is attuned to the challenges that come for virgin readers.

However, even with this dandy text, this is not a perfect way to read. I only own one copy of The Silmarillion, so flipping back and forth between the text and the appendices is challenging. And, honestly, the maps on a paperback page are not very good at all. I can open up my Sibley-Howe map of Middle Earth, but it only covers a part of the whole Legendarium. Far better are the online resources, where the LOTR Project and other websites have gathered maps, chronologies, genealogies, languages, and text linkages together for the reader.

This means, however, that if I am going to truly read The Silmarillion and try to make all the links possible, I have to supplement the paper book either with a big paper map open and my phone app, or at my computer desk with multiple screens. Honestly, that’s a difficult way to read with a paper copy open.

Yet, the technology exists for a heightened reading of The Silmarillion, and history provides with a great model of how to do that.

Let’s begin in history.

The ancient Jews are a remarkable people. An oppressed confederacy of small tribes, as exiles under the brutal dominion of some of the greatest empires of history, they managed to collect together one of the most remarkable collections ever known. With the possible exception of Luke and Acts, the entire Bible is written by Jews, and that book is just a part of their religious literary legacy.

While the story is more complex than I am making it sound, a critical moment in Jewish history was when the Roman hammer fell on Jerusalem. Various Jewish political forces united to throw off the Roman yoke in 66 CE. By 70 CE, Jerusalem was sacked, the Temple was razed to the ground, and 10% of Judea’s people were lost (as seen in the Arch of Titus above). Though a second rebellion was attempted in 132-5 CE, even after the first Jewish war, the people knew that Jews would never have the same relationship with Rome again.

We do not know the whole story, but we do know that something happened in the first few years after that war that sealed in the Jewish understanding of Scriptures. Called by historians the Council of Jamnia, a number of rabbis are believed to have retreated from Jerusalem to set the text of the Hebrew Bible–the same text that makes up the Christian Old Testament. In the cultural pressures and persecutions of the next century, Jewish leaders had to deal with two realities. First, how can they be the people of God without the temple? Second, how do they relate to the followers of Jesus that were now part of every synagogue? While the second question worked itself out in various ways–the persecution of the Romans on both Jews and Christians served to separate the two groups–scribes and rabbis began to shape the Jews into a people of the book.

This meant thinking about books differently. I have seen the 2200-year-old Qumran scroll of Isaiah, 24 feet of precise Hebrew text on 17 sheets of parchment. And this is just one of many scrolls that made up the Hebrew Bible. The Torah would have been a series of five scrolls and the minor prophets on another single scroll. Though it would be unusual for a synagogue to have a complete collection of texts–a set of Torah might have had the relative cost the equivalent of a suburban bungalow today–the scrolls they had lived like rare wine bottles, taken down carefully from their precious space and experienced as a single unit of deep goodness.

What the 2nd- and 3rd-century scribes and rabbis did, however, was to think about what it would mean to live the “way” as Jews scattered across the earth, alienated from land and temple. One of the things they did was create the Mishnah, a word that means “studying by repetition.” Jewish scribes wrote down the “Oral Torah,” the traditions about how to read and live Scripture. The scribes clustered these customs and teachings around bits of Scripture on the page, adding commentary. What you see on the left is a clearly non-linear text: multilingual, multi-generational, circular, layered, and attuned to the different levels of reading necessary to applying text to real life.

As time went on, the Mishnah (c. 200 CE) was taken up into the Talmud, a word that means “learning.” The Talmud–the first page of a copy of the Talmud is on the left–set the Mishnah at the centre of its text, then filled it out with the debates of faithful scholars. If a scholarly reading of either the law or the oral law was reasonable, it was included. There is an old saying that if you give a text to two rabbis you will get three opinions. This is the spirit of Talmud, where the critical thinking necessary to a life of faith–often a life lived under intense social pressure–requires a diversity of intelligent voices. The Talmud sought to bring together all the resources for reading a biblical text onto a single page, including background knowledge, conversations about language and meaning, and how to apply the text in real life.

I think the Talmud is a model for new reading experience of The Silmarillion in two key ways.

First, it would not be difficult to create a text that looks like the Talmud. Imagine the text of The Silmarillion framed by brief biographies of characters (including alternate names), geographical notes, pronunciation hints, known words written in Elven tongues, family trees and intimate connections, and echoes of other stories in the Legendarium. The Silmarillion Talmud could also have relevant variants and Tolkien’s own comments about the text from letters and marginalia.

The paper copy of the Silmarillion Talmud could be laid out like an Archaeology Study Bible, with text on top and footnotes on the bottom, and sprinkled throughout with text cross-references, beautiful maps, and quick studies. Or the circular nature of the Mishnah and Talmud could be kept. Either way, this would be a big, thick book with large colour maps and all the references you need on a single page so a quick glance to the margin will make a necessary link in reading.

Plus–and this might be controversial–the Silmarillion Talmud could include the opinions of scholars when they have critical disagreement about a passage. Is it not true, after all, that if you put two Tolkienists in a chatroom together they will emerge with three opinions (and sometimes a digital bloody nose)? What better way to capture the constructive diversity of the field than a Silmarillion Talmud?

Second, with the Talmudic principle of non-linearity and diversity in mind, imagine what the digital possibilities would be! Though a phone screen might be too small, if we want to read with a screen open, The Silmarillion is the perfect text to test the capability of tech-forward reading possibilities for our generation.

Begin with one of my favourites, the LOTR Project (though true Tolkienists would know what the full digital landscape has to offer). This website has interactive maps linked in with the critical timeline. There is a lot of potential for hours in front of your screen at the LOTR Project when you add in the blogs, infographics, statistics, and cool apps. I mean, just check out the Periodic Table of Middle Earth or the Six Degrees of Sauron utilities. Awesome.

Beyond the LOTR Project there are commentaries, podcasts, blogs, encyclopedias, lexicons, films, and audiobooks. Imagine having the text open on your screen and you come to a name you do not know. You shadow the mouse above the name and it gives you a brief bio or geographical location. You can click on the name and get pronunciation, etymology, history, importance to the story, place history or kin connections, and a map that shows you where you are in space and time. There are a few Peter Jackson film clips that are relevant that might highlight a scene, or you may want to read along with Marin Shaw or Achim Höppner’s rich voices. Or you may want to pause your reading and spend some time in that section with the Tolkien Prof (Corey Olsen).

All of this by the click of a mouse or the tap of your finger on an iPad.

I am not naive enough to think that the legal aspect of this is even remotely possible, or that the price point is reasonable (though I think the Digital Silmarillion Talmud would not be that costly as much of the material is already produced). I just think that in opening up The Silmarillion and trying to read it beginning to end is an unnecessarily rigorous project when you consider the models we have from history and the tools we have through digital technology (as well as the time of Tolkien nerds lovingly devoted to the craft).

More than anything, this project is true to Tolkien’s work. Creating a Silmarillion Talmud not only invites others into a deeper experience of the world he loved so much, but it would be “a treasury of good counsel and wise lore” that Elrond himself would admire. Tolkien’s work is, after all, like the Mishnah in reverse. With The Lord of the Rings at the centre, rather than moving forward as the rabbis did, Tolkien moved backwards into the already established and yet ever-living Legendarium.

So, here’s the call: Who would like to create a Silmarillion Talmud?

About Brenton Dickieson

“A Pilgrim in Narnia” is a blog project in reading and talking about the work of C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, the Inklings, L.M. Montgomery, and the worlds they created. As a "Faith, Fantasy, and Fiction" blog, we cover topics like children’s literature, myths and mythology, fantasy, science fiction, speculative fiction, poetry, theology, cultural criticism, art and writing. This blog includes my thoughts as I read through my favourite writings and reflect on my own life and culture. In this sense, I am a Pilgrim in Narnia--or Middle Earth, or Fairyland, or Avonlea. I am often peeking inside of wardrobes, looking for magic bricks in urban alleys, or rooting through yard sale boxes for old rings. If something here captures your imagination, leave a comment, “like” a post, share with your friends, or sign up to receive Narnian Pilgrim posts in your email box. Brenton Dickieson (PhD, Chester) is a father, husband, friend, university lecturer, and freelance writer from Prince Edward Island, Canada. You can follow him: www.aPilgrimInNarnia.com Twitter (X) @BrentonDana Instagram @bdickieson Facebook @aPilgrimInNarnia
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31 Responses to A Call for a Silmarillion Talmud

  1. danaames says:

    This is brilliant. I got a copy of the S. when it was first released in paperback, so late ’70s/early ’80s. I slogged through, inspired by my college read of LOTR… and very quickly bogged down; haven’t been back to it since. A commentary would have been so lovely to have. The archaic style didn’t bother me; the major difficulties for me were the other ones you describe. I am completely in awe of the Tolkien universe, and at the same time find it somewhat forbidding because of its expanse.

    Dana

  2. Mike Foster says:

    Shared. Daunting task–like so many in Tolkien.

  3. Pingback: Approaching “The Silmarillion” for the First Time | A Pilgrim in Narnia

  4. tphillman says:

    I recognize that I will be in the minority here, and so that my opinion may not be of much weight. I bought “The Silmarillion” the day it was published and never had a problem with it. I took to it like a duck to water and had finished it by the next day. I understand that many others — many others of great intelligence, significant education, and wide reading — have had the sort of difficulties the first time through that you speak of Brent. I have also often heard Corey Olsen speak of the trouble he had at first. Why it clicked for me the first time through, but not for you two, is something I won’t pretend to know, and certainly won’t guess at.

    I have too much respect for you and for Corey as scholars and readers to speculate as to why a particular text didn’t click with you at a particular time. For me, I like “Watership Down” but I don’t love it as Corey does. It just hasn’t clicked yet, though another reading might change that. “The Well at the World’s End” is for me perfectly described by Lewis’ comment that no book could live up to that title. It certainly doesn’t for me. I came to dislike it quite a lot as I went through it. I don’t know that I would try to read it again. Doubtless now you or some other reader is shaking their head at what a blockhead I am for not getting it. Fair enough.

    I love the idea of a Silmarillion Talmud. It would be absolutely fabulous to have all of that information at my fingertips. And I say this even though I am someone who loves paging back and forth in books and going from one open book on my desk to the other, then turning around to consult those behind me on the other table, then turning back to the original text. Clearly a Silmarillion Talmud would facilitate study, and I would embrace it, though I wouldn’t give up my piles of books.

    But, having said that, I am not sure I can agree that it’s something the first time reader of “The Silmarillion” would be best served by using. It’s true, as you say, that “The Silmarillion” is composed of many stories, but, as the name suggests, these stories join together to tell a single Tale, of the Silmarils and the Fates of Arda as realized in the deeds of the Children of Iluvatar, whether Vala, Elf, Man, or other sentient creature. As Sam says, “We’re in the same tale still!”

    I would be concerned that a first time reader would lose that larger tale in the details of its component stories. Lose sight of the forest for the trees. Scholars fall prey to this all the time, being so focused on individual passages or parts of larger texts that they cease to look at the whole. If that can happen to scholars — and I remember well how concentrated such research can become from my own time in the Academy — it can certainly happen to first time readers.

    • Tom, I’m sorry I couldn’t get to this great comment earlier. I hope my “liking” it let you know I saw it.
      I don’t know why we experience books differently, except that there must be some accounting for taste (to contradict public wisdom). I wasn’t particularly struck by “The Well at the World’s End,” but saw the problem of mortality that Lewis was writing against in it (and the archaic-language-in-romance that influenced Tolkien). My love of Watership Down is probably part nostalgia for childhood love of the film with my family. And even with the Silmarillion, if I had simply chosen to read it the first time I would have been fine. It was my resolve that failed, not skill or the book itself. My favourite parts of Scripture are still the era of the Kings and the scrappy letters of Paul. I struggle to read the daily Psalms. I’m sure almost no one agrees with me.
      And perhaps you are right about this un-doable project of a Silmarillion Talmud. It would be a better resource for rereading than for reading. But I think for the reader who keeps trying to integrate the whole, this kind of approach could be useful.

  5. Thank you for this brilliant post, Brenton! I think it’s a great idea. While I agree with Tom that perhaps it’s not the best approach for a first-time read (immersion, even into great difficulties, has its advantages), I agree with you that such a Silmarillion edition needs to exist! I’d like to do something of the same nature with Charles Williams’s Arthurian poems, which don’t have such a complex manuscript history or backstory but do have a rich, complicated, often private intertextuality that needs to be explicated.

    • Oh, yes–C.S. Lewis’ commentary on CW’s Arthuriad could actually use commentary. You’ve done that with your blog series, but I still like have a suite of resources for reading in my hands when possible.

  6. This would be an awesome project. Kind of like a standalone Silmarillion Wikipedia. It would also need to account for the published changes that we have in the Books of Lost Tales (showing S. in its infancy stages) and other published works. This could get crazy fast.

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  19. Theresa Swanepoel says:

    What a wonderful article to read! It boosted my self-confidence whenever I found myself thinking “hey, I thought that too! – which thankfully happened often!)
    I’ve only just started “reading” (audio book) the Silmarillion for the first time. I’m 2 hours in and I am utterly engrossed in the story already.
    I listened to the first 2 hours and realised that I was loving it but was getting a bit frustrated that I couldn’t remember the character’s names or how they were linked in the story. So I started again and am pretty much back at the point where I left off. That was a great idea! I see me doing that a few times, going back over sections so that I can follow along better.

    But a visual guide (especially for me, a predominently visual learner) would be first prize! I was already starting to think of how I could do something like you’ve proposed. I thinks it’s a fantastic idea!

    Please let me know if you ever managed to get the legal aspect sorted out and if so, did your epic vision ever come true?
    Are you looking forward to Amazon’s as-yet-unnamed series airing on 02 September 2022?

    • Thanks Theresa, Yes, I have found the audiobook super helpful, and I look forward to reading a couple of the other books in the Middle-earth histories that are also on audio, perhaps this coming winter.
      A visual guide would be great, of any kind!
      Legal, yes, I’m far from that possibility. But I am looking forward to the Amazon serial.

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  21. Harm J Schelhaas says:

    Brenton,
    I’ve been thinking this for thirty years, and saying it for at least fifteen. Thank you for writing this!

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