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ADDENDA AND
CORRIGENDA
(first revised edition 2008)
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ADDENDA AND
by Wayne G. Hammond and Christina Scull
CORRIGENDA TO
THE LORD OF THE RINGS:
A READER’S COMPANION The following list is specific to the revised text of The Lord of the Rings: A Reader’s
(2005) Companion first published in 2008 by HarperCollins. See elsewhere on this site for
ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA TO THE ORIGINAL EDITION of 2005, ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA TO THE
ADDENDA AND
SECOND REVISED EDITION of 2014, ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA TO ALL EDITIONS ADDED BY DATE
CORRIGENDA TO
THE LORD OF THE RINGS: (beginning 4 May 2008), and a SUPPLEMENTAL BIBLIOGRAPHY of works consulted. Significant
A READER’S COMPANION revisions of addenda or corrigenda (as opposed to revisions of the Reader’s Companion
(2014) proper), but not merely additions, are marked thus: [REVISED]. Hyperlinks are included
selectively, when we used an online source, the website is public (non-subscription), and
the relevant page still exists.
A few of the changes we submitted for the 2008 edition were not incorporated, or
only partially incorporated, and further errors were introduced in editing and
typesetting. Most notably, because two corrections to the order of notes were
overlooked, accompanying changes to page references in the index (which were taken
up) became erroneous; and because a long note from our Web page was inserted in the
book without our knowledge, we found too late that a new page break produced in the
index still more errors (of fact or omission).
Here The Lord of the Rings: A Reader’s Companion is abbreviated ‘RC’ for
convenience, e.g. ‘RC:655’ = Reader’s Companion, p. 655.

List of works facing the title-page: For ‘Letters by’ read ‘The Letters of’.
p. xvii, l. 8: For ‘and Makoto Takahashi’ read ‘Makoto Takahashi, and Yuval Welis’.
p. xvii, l. 17: For ‘messges’ read ‘messages’.
p. xvii, l. 4 from bottom (above our names): Reverse order of ‘David Kiltz’ and
‘Yuval Kfir’.
p. xvii, bottom line of text (above the authors’ names): Delete ‘Yuval Welis’. This
name belongs in the previous paragraph.
p. xxiii, l. 12 from bottom: For ‘Book III’ read ‘Book II’.
p. xxxiii, l. 14 from bottom: We say that Tolkien ‘proposed’ these volume titles, but
should have quoted the beginning of the first sentence in the block quotation: ‘I now
suggest as titles of the volumes’. There is perhaps little or no difference between our
‘proposed’ and Tolkien’s ‘suggest’, but there may be a shade of meaning; and as a matter
of cold fact, we do not know if in this letter Tolkien put forward his own ideas for titles
or was agreeing with titles suggested by Rayner Unwin at their meeting in Oxford that
same day – that is, we do not know who devised the titles The Fellowship of the Ring (a
phrase which, as we point out elsewhere, does not appear in The Lord of the Rings until
late in the final part, though the final chapter of Book II is ‘The Breaking of the
Fellowship’), or The Two Towers, or even The Return of the King though this appears in
Tolkien’s letter to Rayner of 8 August 1953 (Letters, p. 170). We might say much the
same about our paragraph on the title The Two Towers on p. 353, where again we say
that Tolkien suggested it, though he may have been only accepting a suggestion by
Rayner.
But this is probably excessive quibbling, and with ourselves.
p. xlvi, l. 6: For ‘Minas Morghul’ read ‘Minas Morgul’.
p. lvii, l. 8–9: For ‘nor we have been able’ read ‘nor have we been able’.
p. lvii, l. 14 from bottom: Here we note that ‘Bindbole’ is ‘so spelled’, and two lines
later, that Brockenborings ‘is spelled thus’, and other examples may be found of ‘spelled’
so spelled. More frequently in the Reader’s Companion, however, we have used ‘spelt’.
Both, in fact, are permissible according to our authorities, the Concise Oxford

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Dictionary of Current English and the Oxford Style Manual, and equal use of each form
as quoted in the larger Oxford English Dictionary is noted by H.W. Fowler in his
examination of ‘-t and ed’ in A Dictionary of Modern English Usage (though personally
he leaned – or leant – towards -t); still, only one form should be used in a text. The
present authors know that they occasionally differ in spelling preferences, but
apparently failed to notice our variation of ‘spelled’ and ‘spelt’ when writing the Reader’s
Companion; and for practical purposes, there’s nothing to be done now except to
confirm that the Americans and the English are two peoples divided by a common
language, or at least by their orthography. We do recall regularizing to ‘spelled’ in the
Companion and Guide (except for one stray Scull-Hammond ‘spelt’ in the Chronology).
Tolkien himself used ‘spelt’, and we retained this of course in quotation.
p. lix, l. 16: For ‘Place-Names’ read ‘Place-names’. Our entirely arbitrary preference
in this book – but not followed consistently – was to use hyphenated ‘place-name(s)’,
and to use lower-case ‘-names’ in titles of books with ‘Place-names’, but upper-case ‘-
Name’ seems appropriate for ‘English Place-Name Society’ and in common usage.
p. lxiii, l. 2 from bottom: For ‘my son’s protests’ read ‘my son’s [Christopher’s]
protests’.
p. lxiv, l. 5 from bottom: Delete ‘in Anórien,’.
p. lxiv, l. 2 from bottom: For ‘the Púkel-men’ read ‘them’.
p. lxv, ll. 2–3: For ‘Andrast’, not in Anórien. ‘My father’ read ‘Andrast. My father’.
p. lxviii, l. 3 after titling: For ‘Appendices’ read ‘Prologue and Appendices’.
p. lxxvii, l. 8 from bottom: For ‘Guide (forthcoming)’ read ‘Guide: Reader’s Guide
(2006)’.
p. lxxviii, l. 18 from bottom: For ‘stealthily’ read ‘shabbily’.
p. 4, ll. 17–18: For ‘in height between 3 and 4 feet in height’ read ‘in height between 3
and 4 feet’. Our transcription from the Bodleian manuscript has ‘in height’ twice, but
Christopher Tolkien’s transcription published in Unfinished Tales, p. 287, has only the
first instance, and is undoubtedly correct.
p. 4, l. 19: For ‘Halflings’ read ‘Halflings. . . .’
pp. 7–8, note for They dressed in bright colours . . . : Janka Kaščákova, ‘“It
Snowed Food and Rained Drink” in The Lord of the Rings’, Middle-earth and Beyond:
Essays on the World of J.R.R. Tolkien (2010), discusses the importance of food and
drink in Tolkien’s characterization of Hobbits, in their everyday life, in their songs and
speech, and in how they react when in uncertain or dangerous circumstances. In the
same volume, Kathleen Dubs finds in ‘No Laughing Matter’ that most of the humour in
The Lord of the Rings is associated with the Hobbits not only in their own jests, banter,
and reactions, but also in their interaction with other characters.
p. 8, ll. 20–1: In regard to ‘an unpublished sketch (referred to in Artist and
Illustrator, p. 99)’, this rough sketch made by Tolkien for his American publisher has
since been published in John D. Rateliff, The History of The Hobbit, Part Two: Return
to Bag-End (2007), pl. xii, and in our Art of The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien (2011), fig.
102. See also The Art of The Hobbit, fig. 103, for enlarged details of Bilbo Baggins from
seven of Tolkien’s illustrations.
p. 10, l. 23: For ‘connexion with the word fród’ read ‘connexion is with the old word
fród’.
p. 23, ll. 21–2: A reader has pointed out that the historical suling, hide, and carucate
are measures of area, whereas Tolkien uses sullong as a measure of length. It was not our
intention to equate Tolkien’s sullong with the historical suling, only to point out that a
sullong (suling) exists in our world, and that Tolkien presumably adopted this alternate
spelling as the name of one of the Hobbit ‘long measures’ in one of his manuscript
workings.
p. 25, ll. 23–4: For ‘passage in both’ read ‘passage . . . in both’.
p. 33, note for Boffins: Fredrik Ström reminds us that a ‘Sergeant Boffin’ appears in
Tolkien’s Mr. Bliss.
p. 38, l. 12 from bottom: For ‘(I:21–2)’ read ‘(I: 21–2)’ (i.e. with an added space).
p. 39, l. 13: For ‘specimen’ read ‘‘specimen’’ (i.e. in quotation marks).
p. 42, ll. 3–4: On Breton precursors of the name Meriadoc, see further, Carl

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Phelpstead in Tolkien and Wales: Language, Literature and Identity (2011), p. 103.
p. 52, ll. 12–23: On eleventy-first, see further, the discussion of eleventy-one in
Peter Gilliver, Jeremy Marshall, and Edmund Weiner, The Ring of Words: Tolkien and
the Oxford English Dictionary (2006), pp. 112–13.
p. 52, l. 12 from bottom: For ‘twelve dwarves’ read ‘thirteen dwarves’.
p. 56, l. 16 from bottom: In Amon Hen 199 (May 2006), p. 23, David Doughan
comments that we could have said more about the word gaffer. While we would not go as
far as he suggests, we should have mentioned that gaffer is recorded in general English
dialect use also with the meaning ‘grandfather’, and is found ‘prefixed to a proper name
as a term of respect’ (Joseph Wright, English Dialect Dictionary).
pp. 56–7, note for They lived on the Hill itself . . . : The place-name Bagshot is
found in both Surrey and Wiltshire, with disagreement among authorities as to its origin.
We note in particular -shot as from Old English *scēot, but neglected to deal with Bag-
except in terms of folk-etymology. Eilert Ekwall in The Concise Oxford Dictionary of
English Place-names (4th edn., 1960) explores a variety of possible derivations for Bag-
under ‘Bagley’: ‘In Scand[inavian] languages bagge means “a wether, a ram”, [Middle
Dutch] bagghe means “a small pig”. There may have been an [Old English] word bacga
denoting some animal’ (p. 23). A.H. Smith discusses Old English *bagga ‘bag’ at length in
his English Place-name Elements (1970), eventually sugesting that the word ‘must have
had extensions of meaning to suit the [place-names], either topographical “hill
resembling a bag” (which would be appropriate in some [place-names]) or, as with the
Swed[ish], [Middle Dutch] words, “an object or creature resembling a bag”. . . . The most
appropriate native wild animal is the badger . . .’ (p. 17). Referring to Anglo-Saxon
personal names, the Cambridge Dictionary of Place-names makes the Surrey Bagshot
‘Bacga’s nook’ and the one in Wiltshire ‘Beocc’s gate’, without elaboration.
p. 56, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘dwelling’ read ‘dwelling)’.
p. 56, final line: For ‘Place-Names’ read ‘Place-names’.
p. 57, note for gentlehobbit: Merlin deTardo, referring to discussion on
theonering.net, has called our attention to Tolkien’s use of ‘old man’ to refer to Gaffer
Gamgee in Book I, Chapter 3 (‘The old man seemed put out.’) in contrast with his care to
use ‘gentlehobbit’ rather than ‘gentleman’. Tolkien may well have chosen here, as earlier
in The Hobbit, to have emended ‘old man’ to ‘old fellow’ (or the like). It has also been
noted that in The Lord of the Rings he used compound words such as kinsman, postman,
and waterman to apply to Hobbits, to which we would add (off the top of the head) the
surnames Holman and Sandyman; but one could argue that kinsman, etc. are not only
(in traditional, if not politically correct, grammar) gender-neutral but also species-
neutral, while gentleman (‘gentle’ + ‘man’) cannot be gender-neutral and therefore was a
good candidate for ‘hobbit’ transformation. While there are ‘man’-less alternatives to
kinsman, etc. – such as relative – they have too contemporary a tone relative to the rest
of the Lord of the Rings prose; and to have used instead ‘kinshobbit’, ‘posthobbit’, and so
forth would have overdone the conceit.
p. 59, note for Gorbadoc: Change paragraph heading to: And Mr. Drogo was
staying at Brandy Hall with his father-in-law, old Master Gorbadoc, as he
often did after his marriage. Add new first paragraph: Gaffer Gamgee says that
Drogo Baggins was staying with Gorbadoc Brandybuck at the time of Drogo’s death by
drowning, which family trees in Appendix C date to 1380; but according to the
Brandybuck family tree, Gorbadoc died seventeen years earlier, in 1363.
p. 64, l. 17: For ‘conscription’ read ‘selection’.
p. 65, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘backarraper’ read ‘backarapper’. As backrapper, the
word is recorded by Joseph Wright in his English Dialect Dictionary as in the
Warwickshire dialect. See also Peter Gilliver, Jeremy Marshall, and Edmund Weiner,
The Ring of Words: Tolkien and the Oxford English Dictionary (2006), pp. 92–3.
p. 76, l. 5: For ‘many an age, I hope’ read ‘many an age’.
p. 78, between ll. 2 and 3, add:
44 (I: 53). ‘Says he did, perhaps.
44 (I: 53). sees things that ain’t there – In ‘Studies in Tolkien’s
Language III: Sure as Shiretalk – On Linguistic Variation in Hobbit Speech
(Part Two)’, Arda 7 (1992, for 1987), Nils-Lennart Johannesson notes that
‘in the Shire, ain’t is used only by [working-class] hobbits: Sam Gamgee,
Gaffer Gamgee, and [as here] Ted Sandyman’ (p. 97). In the first part of his
essay (Arda 5, 1988 for 1985), Johannesson makes the important point that

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although the ‘most widespread pronunciation’ of ain’t in England is [eınt],
its ‘most common pronunciation in Warwickshire and Oxfordshire’, two
counties central to Tolkien’s life and thought, is [ent] (according to The
Linguistic Atlas of England, 1978). From this he observes further that the
discussion between Sam Gamgee and Ted Sandyman about the possibility
of walking tree-like giants (which we will come later in the story to know as
Ents), in which both use ain’t evidently meant to be pronounced [ent], is a
‘low philological jest’ (p. 42), thus:
‘Your Hal’s always saying he’s seen things; and maybe he sees
things that ain’t there.’
‘But this one was as big as an elm tree, and walking. . . .’
‘. . . What he saw was an elm tree, as like as not.’
‘But this one was walking, I tell you; and there ain’t no elm tree on
the North Moors.’
See also note (below) for p. 465, ‘There are Ents and Ents. . . .’
p. 78, ll. 16–17 from bottom: For ‘place name’ read ‘place-name’.
p. 83, l. 9: For ‘attempts, which he felt too large and sprawling;’ read ‘attempts,’.
p. 83, l. 10: For ‘sixteenth’ read ‘eighteenth’.
p. 88, ll. 2–20: In regard to Aragorn, see further, Elizabeth M. Stephen, Hobbit to
Hero: The Making of Tolkien’s King (2012) and Angela P. Nicholas, Aragorn: J.R.R.
Tolkien’s Undervalued Hero (2012). (See also Christina’s blog posts HERE and HERE.)
p. 89, l. 4: For ‘bringing out’ read ‘bringing it out’.
p. 90, l. 15: For ‘Bilbo ‘as fierce’ read ‘Bilbo is ‘as fierce’.
p. 93, l. 16: For ‘messenger’ read ‘message’.
p. 97, block quotation at foot of page: At the end of the first paragraph, the three-dot
ellipsis should be a four-dot ellipsis, i.e. including the full stop after ‘again’.
p. 103, l. 21: For ‘passage’ read ‘words’.
pp. 104–5, note for ‘Elen sila lúmenn’ omentielvo . . . : Further on the
alteration of omentielmo to omentielvo, see comments by Carl F. Hostetter in ‘Five Late
Quenya Volitive Inscriptions’, Vinyar Tengwar 49 (June 2007), pp. 38, 49.
p. 108, l. 2: In regard to the phrase ‘netted stars’, in some cultures the Pleiades are
described in terms of a sieve or wickerwork.
p. 108, ll. 4–6: For ‘cluster of seven stars’ read (to avoid quibbling) ‘cluster of stars’.
It has been suggested to us that this should read ‘nine stars’, even though the cluster
actually contains hundreds of stars, most of which are not visible to the naked eye; but
historically, the Pleiades have been referred to as seven stars (in some cultures, six), and
are named, as we state, after the seven daughters of Atlas and Pleione (who themselves
have stars named for them in the constellation).
p. 108, note on Borgil: In ‘A Definitive Identification of Tolkien’s “Borgil”: An
Astronomical and Literary Approach’, Tolkien Studies 2 (2005), Kristine Larsen also
argues that Borgil should be identified with Aldebaran, ‘the sole astronomical object
which truly fits the etymological, astronomical, and literary evidence’. ‘However,’ she
adds, ‘in the end, one can never know with absolute certainty whether Tolkien meant for
Aldebaran to be Borgil (as astronomical inaccuracies do infrequently appear in his
work), unless further manuscripts are discovered which shed light on his thinking in this
matter’ (p. 168).
p. 113, l. 11: Change single quotation marks to double quotation marks around ‘a
division of a common field’.
p. 113, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘The name’ read ‘The name Fang’.
p. 116, ll. 5–8: We quote from Tolkien’s Nomenclature that ‘-windle [as a second
element] does not actually occur [in English place-names] (withywindle was modelled
on withywind, a name of the convolvulus or bindweed)’. As Jason Fisher HAS POINTED OUT,
however, there is in Surrey a ‘Windle Brook’, near Windlesham (and Bagshot). Eilert
Ekwall suggests that Windle Brook may be a back-formation from Windlesham (perhaps
from ‘Winel’s hām’), though ‘the name of the brook may have been [unrecorded Old
English] Windol ‘winding brook’, the name being a derivative of Old English windan “to
wind”’ (The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names (1960), p. 522). The
latter point is also noted by Tom Shippey in The Road to Middle-earth (1992), p. 98.

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(The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-names (2004), p. 684, declares the origin
of Windlesham ‘partly uncertain’, ‘possibly “the settlement with or by a windlass”, OE
*windels + hām’. The element of ‘winding’ is nonetheless present.)
p. 116, note for a dark black bundle: The text from The Hunt for the Ring given
here continues in Marquette MSS 4/2/36 with a comment by Tolkien that the Nazgûl
would not touch the Baranduin, as its waters were ‘Elvish’. In Unfinished Tales, p. 344,
Christopher Tolkien comments that his father ‘nowhere explained the Ringwraiths’ fear
of water’, and quotes relevant words from MSS 4/2/36. ‘But it is not made clear’, he
adds, how the Ringwraiths ‘crossed other rivers that lay in their path, such as the
Greyflood. . . . My father did indeed note that the idea was difficult to sustain.’
Nonetheless, it is an issue we might have done well to explore in a note. Our memories
are unclear as to why we did not.
p. 118, note for five ponies: To expand upon our note, Christopher Tolkien
observes in The Return of the Shadow that it was part of ‘the original plans of the
conspirators’ (i.e. Merry, Pippin, Sam, and Fredegar, The Lord of the Rings p. 108) that
Fredegar (Fatty) should stay behind, and therefore when Merry explains to Frodo, who
had asked about preparations, that ‘five ponies’ are ready in the stable, he is referring to
preparations specifically for those four hobbits going on the journey, that is, excluding
Fatty. We would also point to a paragraph earlier in ‘A Conspiracy Unmasked’, when
Pippin says to Frodo: ‘Merry and I are coming with you. Sam is an excellent fellow . . .
but you will need more than one companion in your dangerous adventure’ – thus
indicating to Frodo that he would have three companions, and thus four hobbits would
be making the journey. (Granted, this is a confusing point, since Tolkien does not make
it explicit that Fatty is staying behind until after preparations are discussed.)
p. 119, l. 19 from bottom: For ‘there was sound’ read ‘there was the sound’.
p. 120, ll. 5–6: For ‘most of dream’ read ‘most of the dream’.
p. 123, between ll. 2 and 3, add:
p. 116 (I: 127): Suddenly Frodo himself
p. 116 (I: 127). Suddenly Frodo himself felt sleep overwhelming
him. – As first published, this sentence read more forcefully: ‘Suddenly
Frodo himself felt the drowsiness attack him.’
p. 136, l. 9 from bottom: For ‘First Age’ read ‘First Age to settle in Númenor in the
West’.
p. 137, ll. 13–17 from bottom: Although the Oxford English Dictionary cites as the
earliest use of barrow-wight Lang’s Essays in Little (1891), Peter Gilliver, Jeremy
Marshall, and Edmund Weiner in The Ring of Words: Tolkien and the Oxford English
Dictionary (2006), p. 216, note that the compound appeared much earlier still, in Grettis
Saga: The Story of Grettir the Strong, translated by William Morris and Eiríkr
Magnússon (London, 1869), Chapter 18: ‘Everything in their way was kicked out of
place, the barrow-wight setting on with hideous eagerness. . . .’
p. 143: The notes beginning 141 (I: 152): a long arm was groping . . . and 141
(I: 152): they were in a kind of passage . . . are reversed in order.
p. 150, ll. 15 and 17 after titling: For ‘place names’ read ‘place-names’; for ‘place
name’ read ‘place-name’.
p. 151, l. 2: For ‘Strange as news’ read ‘Strange as News’.
p. 151: The note for ‘It never rains . . .’ should be moved before the heading ‘‘Hi!
Nob!’ he shouted’.
p. 155, l. 14: For ‘some time considerable’ read ‘some considerable’.
p. 155, ll. 16–18 from bottom: For ‘the proceedings of the October 2004 Marquette
University Tolkien conference, forthcoming)’ read ‘The Lord of the Rings, 1954–2004:
Scholarship in Honor of Richard E. Blackwelder, ed. by Wayne G. Hammond and
Christina Scull (2006)’.
p. 157, l. 17 from bottom: For ‘female and male’ read ‘female and male respectively’.
The switch of gender is explored further by Yvette L. Kisor in ‘“Elves (and Hobbits)
always refer to the Sun as She”: Some Notes on a Note in Tolkien’s The Lord of the
Rings’, Tolkien Studies 4 (2007).
p. 163, note for their power is in terror: At this point, Merry has asked if the
Black Riders will attack the inn at Bree. Strider thinks not, since ‘that is not their way . . .
they will not openly attack a house where there are lights and many people – not until

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they are desperate. . . . But their power is in terror, and already some in Bree are in their
clutch. They will drive these wretches to some evil work: Ferny, and some of the
strangers, and, maybe, the gatekeeper too.’ But then, as it seems, the Riders do attack:
the windows to the hobbits’ bedrooms have been forced, and violence done to beds and
bolsters; and Merry’s ponies have been driven from the stables. Merlin DeTardo has
referred us to Tolkien’s ‘New Plot’ of 26–7 August 1940, in which, after a cancelled
statement that the Black Riders ‘attack the Inn but fail’, Bill Ferney and the Southerner
‘burgle the Inn and try and get more news’ on the Riders’ behalf (The Treason of
Isengard, p. 71). In a late (probably 1954 or 1955) text, on the other hand, as we quote
on p. 166, ‘the Inn [is] attacked by the two Riders in early hours before dawn’ (The Hunt
for the Ring). In The Lord of the Rings proper, Tolkien is not explicit as to the agents of
the events at Bree.
p. 165, l. 15: For ‘Forest.’ read ‘Forest.]’.
pp. 175–6: The notes beginning 193 (I: 206). the Silmarils and 193 (I: 206).
the Elves of the West are reversed in order.
p. 178, l. 7 from bottom: For ‘the pierce the barriers’ read ‘to pierce the barriers’.
p. 182, note for he sang over it a slow song . . . : Edward Pettit has suggested in
‘J.R.R. Tolkien’s Use of an Old English Charm’, Mallorn 40 (November 2002), that
Aragorn’s use of athelas while singing was inspired by the Anglo-Saxon charm known as
‘Against a Sudden Stitch’, meant to heal, among other things, a sudden stabbing pain. See
also Carol A. Leibiger, ‘Charms’, in J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia (2006).
p. 188, note for There stood the trolls . . . : In discussing an example of
Scandinavian folklore, W.A. Craigie commented that ‘it is sudden death to night-trolls if
day breaks upon them, the dawning was their destruction, so that each of them became a
pillar of rock, and are now those which stand there’ (Scandinavian Folk-Lore:
Illustrations of the Traditional Beliefs of the Northern Peoples (1896), p. 62).
p. 200, l. 10: For ‘eastern border of Mordor’ read ‘eastern border of Gondor’.
p. 217, l. 2: For ‘gold and jewels’ read ‘yellow gold and jewels’.
p. 218, ll. 17–18 from bottom: For ‘bearing a flame’ read ‘flame-bearer’. See further,
Peter Gilliver, Jeremy Marshall, and Edmund Weiner in The Ring of Words: Tolkien and
the Oxford English Dictionary (2006), pp. 132–3. Flammifer is Latin; compare aquifer
‘water-bearer’, conifer ‘cone-bearer’, etc.
p. 218, l. 5 from bottom: For ‘page 79’ read ‘p. 79’.
p. 231, ll. 13–14 from bottom: The title in square brackets should be inserted before,
not after, the comma.
p. 244, l. 4: For ‘seems clear’ read ‘seems’.
p. 244, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘pointing’ read ‘painting’.
p. 246, l. 8: For ‘Nineteen-Eighty-Four’ read ‘Nineteen Eighty-four’.
pp. 248–9, note for in the Riddermark of Rohan: On the relation of mark and
march(es), see p. 28.
p. 264, l. 9 from bottom: For ‘war horn’ read ‘war-horn’.
p. 269, l. 7: For ‘It not is here genitive’ read ‘It is not here genitive’.
p. 276, l. 14: For ‘298 (I: 311): ‘Listen, Hound of Sauron!’’ read ‘298 (I: 311):
Gandalf stood up’.
pp. 280–1, note for What does the writing say?: In this note we suggested that
Frodo’s inability to read the Tengwar was related to its mode (for he also says, ‘I thought
I knew the elf-letters, but I cannot read these’), but might also have commented on the
fact that the script, reproduced in the picture of the doors of Moria, is somewhat
eccentric, and so difficult to read, especially given the unusual nature of the inscribed
medium. Indeed, the design is only being ‘guessed’. Tolkien refers to the letters as
‘interlacing’; in draft (The Return of the Shadow, p. 449) they are described as ‘tangled’.
p. 281, l. 2: For ‘(Quettar’ read ‘Quettar’.
p. 287, add before l. 8 from bottom:
317 (I: 330–1): ‘I like that!’ said Sam
317 (I: 330). In Moria, in Khazad-dûm! – Erik Mueller-Harder has

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asked if the exclamation mark should be italicized after ‘Khazad-dûm’. Sam
is quoting from Gimli’s song which has just ended, indicated by the relevant
words set in italics. But there was no exclamation mark in Gimli’s rendition:
in Sam’s dialogue, the mark conveys his enthusiasm. Our immediate
response was that one could make a valid argument that the exclamation
mark should be in roman, but since this particular mark has been italicized
since the first edition, it could have been done as a matter of house style by
Allen & Unwin or their printer, and indeed one could argue that the mark
should be italicized on aesthetic grounds when it follows italic words. A
similar question occurs in regard to Gandalf’s exclamation ‘Mithril!’ on the
same page: the word Mithril is italicized twice in the same paragraph (out of
three uses; it is in roman in ‘mithril-rings’) and three times (out of three
uses) in the preceding paragraph, where the word is introduced – the italics
presumably because an unusual (Sindarin) word is being spoken, or for the
sake of emphasis.
In the Marquette Tolkien papers, Sam’s dialogue in manuscript has the
exclamation mark placed outside of the underlined phrase In Moria, in
Khazad-dûm, hence it would not be italicized, but in a following typescript,
made on Tolkien’s special Hammond typewriter with changeable fonts, the
phrase with the exclamation mark is typed entirely in italics. But then, in
the typescript sent to the printer, made on a normal typewriter, the
exclamation mark again is separated from the phrase, and the latter is once
more underlined to indicate setting in italics. As for Gandalf’s ‘Mithril!’: in
manuscript the exclamation mark is separate from the underlined word, in
the Hammond typescript it is italicized along with the word, and in the
printer’s typescript it is again separated. All of this suggests that Tolkien
was either of two minds about italicizing punctuation, or else did not pay
much attention to it, and that the final text as published was influenced by
publisher’s or printer’s house style. In any event, there is no problem of
comprehension.
p. 305, l. 18: Preceding this note should be a paragraph heading: 341 (I: 355): ‘I
said not so;.
p. 305, l. 7 from bottom: For ‘Galadhon’ read ‘Galadon’.
p. 307, l. 5 from bottom: Add at the end of the note: ‘Its tip is the Tongue: see note
for p. 372.’
pp. 321–3 [REVISED]: The headings 362 (I: 377): ‘And you?’ she said and 362
(I: 377): ‘Many things I can command are reversed in order. The notes, however,
are correct as printed. These headings and associated notes were fully reversed in order
in the 2005 edition; in correcting them for the 2008 edition, the editor moved the notes
but not the headings.
p. 327, note for the long home of those that fall in battle: In Amon Hen 199
(May 2006), p. 24, Helen Armstrong adds to our note that ‘“long home” is a term that
exists in Middle English, meaning simply “the grave”’. Tolkien himself comments on the
phrase at the start of Some Contributions to Middle English Lexicography (Review of
English Studies, April 1925, p. 210), noting an unrecorded occurrence (‘langan hame’) in
the Old English Vision of Leofric which is ‘specially interesting in showing that the
expression meant “grave” and not “the future life,” or “heaven”’.
p. 327, l. 5 from bottom: for ‘Sarn Ford’ read ‘Sarn Gebir’.
p. 343, l. 11 after titling: For ‘Berennyn’ read ‘Berennyr’.
p. 343, l. 14 after titling: For ‘of Second’ read ‘of the Second’.
p. 361, note for the hilt and shards of his sword: Julian Wilson remarks in
correspondence that the plural hilts has the same sense as the singular hilt. Tolkien
evidently came to prefer hilt and emended some instances of hilts in The Lord of the
Rings. Later editors have noted his preference and applied it to corrected texts of this
work.
p. 365, note for He is smaller than the others [REVISED]: We examined this
point in the Lord of the Rings papers at Marquette, and found that ‘other’ was a
typesetting error for ‘others’ in the original printing of The Two Towers. Christopher
Tolkien has since written to us that his note in The Treason of Isengard (p. 404, n. 15)
was not meant as a suggestion, but to indicate a clearly evidenced error.
p. 370, l. 25: For ‘436’ read ‘437’.
pp. 378–9: The notes beginning 451 (II: 54): At that moment and 451 (II:
54): ‘I know,’ growled Uglúk are reversed in order.

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p. 383, l. 1: Preceding this note should be a paragraph heading: 464 (II: 67): ‘Hoo
now!’ replied Treebeard.
p. 383, ll. 6–7 [REVISED]: More than one reader has queried our statement that ain’t
is ‘generally pronounced very like “ent”’, and rightly so. The general pronunciation of
ain’t, according to current dictionaries as well as the Oxford English Dictionary, uses the
rising vowel sound as in day, not the short e of went. What we should have said was that
the construction of Treebeard’s ‘Ents but ain’t’ strongly suggests that Tolkien meant to
make a joke based on a similar pronunciation of Ent and ain’t. Many readers have taken
it as such, e.g. in the Rómenna Meeting Report of 24 August 1985, it is ‘noted that in at
least some British dialects, the words “Ent” and “ain’t” are probably pronounced
identically’. We have added a note, above, for p. 44 (‘sees things that ain’t there’), citing
research into Tolkien’s use of dialectal English by Nils-Lennart Johannesson and noting
that, according to The Linguistic Atlas of England (1978), the predominant
pronunciation of ain’t in Warwickshire and Oxfordshire is, in fact, [ent] and not [eınt].
Johannesson calls Treebeard’s statement (‘There are Ents and Ents, you know; or there
are Ents and things that look like Ents but ain’t’) ‘a quibble of Shakespearean
proportions’ (‘Studies in Tolkien’s Language III: Sure as Shiretalk – On Linguistic
Variation in Hobbit Speech (Part One)’, Arda 5 (1988 for 1985), p. 42). (The informants
in the dialect survey were born in the 1870s and 1880s, and surveyed in the 1950s and
early 1960s.)
To further amend our statement in question, ain’t is a contraction not only of ‘are
not’ (as in the words glossed) but also of ‘am not’, ‘is not’, etc.
p. 385, l. 8: For ‘Here you are’ read ‘Here we are’.
p. 389, l. 22: ‘I am not sure . . .’ should begin a new paragraph.
p. 389, l. 9 from bottom: For ‘back’ read ‘behind’.
p. 390, l. 6 after titling: For ‘carried’ read ‘carried’ (italics).
p. 392, note for His fire was quenched . . . : In Amon Hen 199 (May 2006), p.
25, Helen Armstrong suggests that the balrog as ‘a thing of slime’ ‘is a fine description of
a cold, wet, fire-extinguished balrog’. Our comment was not meant to identify the balrog
of Moria as itself a shape-changer, only that (as we wrote, emphasis added) ‘Gandalf’s
account recalls shape-changers in myth and legend’.
p. 399: Add following l. 8: ‘See further, Thomas Honegger, ‘The Rohirrim: “Anglo-
Saxons on Horseback”? An Inquiry into Tolkien’s Sources’, Tolkien and His Sources, ed.
by Jason Fisher (2013).’
p. 400, l. 16 from bottom: For ‘509’ read ‘510’. For ‘they seemed more than
mortal men’ read ‘taller they seemed than mortal men’
p. 401, l. 9: For ‘Beowulf’ read ‘Beowulf’.
p. 403, l. 3: For ‘Wormtongue’ read ‘Théoden’ (though the sentiment is surely that of
Wormtongue).
p. 404, l. 16: For ‘begun’ read ‘began’.
p. 404, ll. 10–11 from bottom: The element dwimor- in Dwimordene is derived
from Middle English dweomer, Old English (ge)dwimor, -er ‘illusion, phantom’
(compare our explanation of dwimmerlaik, p. 562) + dene ‘wooded valley’ (also spelled
dean), from Old English denu.
p. 406, l. 5 from bottom: For ‘other too’ read ‘others too’.
p. 416, add after the fifth paragraph:
531 (II: 136). ‘Behind us in the caves of the Deep
531 (II: 136). three parts – Three-quarters.
p. 422, ll. 9, 10: For ‘550’ read ‘551’.
p. 429, l. 3 from bottom: For ‘those you now wear’ read ‘those you wear now’.
p. 430, l. 4 from bottom: For ‘an negative’ read ‘a negative’.
pp. 435–9: In regard to the ride of Gandalf and Pippin to Minas Tirith, Tolkien
wrote to Elsie Honeybourne on 21 December 1967 that ‘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)’ (Bloomsbury
Auctions online, sale of 24 May 2007).

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p. 444, l. 11: Tom Shippey discusses ninnyhammer in his ‘History in Words:
Tolkien’s Ruling Passion’, The Lord of the Rings, 1954–2004: Scholarship in Honor of
Richard E. Blackwelder (2006), pp. 32–4.
p. 445, ll. 13–14: Tom Shippey makes a brief comment about noodles, relating it (as
we did, through the Oxford English Dictionary) to ninnyhammer, in his ‘History in
Words’ (2006), p. 33.
p. 458, ll. 4–5 from bottom: The error ‘mountains’ for ‘mountain-wall’ entered also
into the Allen & Unwin and Houghton Mifflin editions. It was confirmed by Christopher
Tolkien to be an unauthorized alteration, and was first corrected in 1987.
p. 459, note for That is the only way big armies can come [REVISED]: One
reader (among several who have written to us on this point) has suggested that Gollum
was referring to big armies opposed to Sauron, who would attack Mordor in the north
rather than in the Morgul Vale. The fact remains, however, that Gollum says ‘That is the
only way big armies can come’ immediately after stating that Sauron ‘will come out of
the Black Gate’, the sequence of words naturally tending to the interpretation that ‘big
armies’ refers back to Sauron’s forces. Another reader has suggested that the Black Gate
is the only way for big armies to come out of the interior of Mordor, where they did not
have to cross mountains; but this seems to us too fine a distinction for Gollum to be
making. See also pp. 609–10, note for p. 928.
p. 464, l. 6 from bottom: Before the note for ‘in-falling freshet’ there should appear a
paragraph heading, 651 (II: 259): Here they washed themselves.
p. 465, ll. 10, 11 from bottom: For ‘656’ read ‘657’.
p. 467, add:
661 (II: 269–70). To his astonishment
p. 661 (II: 269). Big as a house, much bigger than a house – A
reference to Sam’s ‘oliphaunt’ poem earlier in the chapter (‘Grey as a
mouse, / Big as a house’). Stuart D. Lee and Elizabeth Solopova have
commented in The Keys of Middle-earth: Discovering Medieval Literature
through the Fiction of J.R.R. Tolkien (2005) that the tenth-century Aelfric
of Eynsham described the elephant as ‘bigger than a house’ in his Old
English homily on the Maccabees. Bestiary literature, of which Aelfric was
evidently aware, tends to describe the elephant as resembling a mountain
rather than a house: cf. Tolkien’s description of the Mûmak as ‘a grey-clad
moving hill’.
p. 490, l. 1 after titling: Stuart D. Lee has analyzed manuscript variants of ‘Shelob’s
Lair’ in his essay ‘Manuscripts: Use, and Using’ in A Companion to J.R.R. Tolkien, ed. by
Lee (2014).
p. 491, ll. 11, 12 from bottom: For ‘722’ read ‘723’.
p. 496, l. 13: For ‘have stings’ read ‘sting’.
p. 496, l. 18 from bottom: For ‘Saunders’ read ‘Sanders’.
p. 501, l. 6 from bottom: Although our gloss is correct (per the English Dialect
Dictionary), it has been suggested to us that ‘nar’ is more likely a colloquial version of
no, and this may be so. The usage seems to be absent from our standard, dialect, and
slang dictionaries, but online sources say that it is common in the ‘Geordie’ speech of
north-east England.
p. 513, l. 18 from bottom: For ‘N[úmenórean’ name]’ read ‘N[úmenórean] name)’.
p. 513, l. 4 from bottom: For ‘he case’ read ‘the case’.
p. 517: Lines 21, 22 from bottom: for ‘III: 27’ read ‘III: 28’. Line 22 from bottom:
for ‘755–6’ read ‘756’.
p. 519, add before first heading:
756 (III: 28): ‘I am,’ said Pippin [‘Take the hilt,’ said Gandalf]
756 (III: 28). ‘I am,’ said Pippin. – This sentence appears in the
anniversary edition as a separate paragraph, but from the first edition and
in many printings thereafter, it was run on with the previous paragraph
(beginning ‘Take the hilt’ [originally ‘Take the hilts’], in which Gandalf asks
Pippin if he is resolved to pledge his service to Denethor). It was separated
in the 1994 HarperCollins resetting, and persisted as a separate paragraph

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into the 2002 HarperCollins edition we used as a copy-text. Since this was
not a point previously noticed, and there was no issue of comprehension
whether the sentence was run on or not – indeed, normal English practice
would have it separated – we gave it no thought when producing our
edition. In his manuscripts and typescripts, however, Tolkien consistently
has Pippin’s dialogue run on, perhaps to show a quick (nervous?) response
to Gandalf’s question, and this would suggest that the sentence should be
returned to its former position, ‘standard practice’ notwithstanding, which
indeed we have recommended. (Tolkien uses a similar, though not
identical, device in Book I, Chapter 1, during the ‘long-expected party’,
where Bilbo’s comments to the gathering are set in italics, followed by
comments from the crowd run on.)
p. 519, l. 2 from bottom: For ‘406, 412’ read ‘406; 412’.
p. 521, l. 12: In regard to daymeal, Peter Gilliver, Jeremy Marshall, and Edmund
Weiner in The Ring of Words: Tolkien and the Oxford English Dictionary (2006), p.
101, cite the gloss of dag-mál in Cleasby and Vigfusson’s Icelandic–English Dictionary:
‘one of the divisions of the day . . . synonymous with dagverðarmál breakfast-time . . .
when the ancient Icel[anders] used to take their chief meal, opposed to náttmál, night-
meal or supper-time’. Tolkien, however, places the ‘daymeal’ of Gondor in the evening.
p. 523, l. 6: For ‘769’ read ‘768’.
p. 527, l. 8 from bottom: For ‘777’ read ‘776–7’.
p. 528, ll. 11, 12, 14: For ‘777’ read ‘778’.
p. 534, l. 11: For ‘he fact’ read ‘the fact’.
p. 539, l. 10 from bottom: For ‘Callanash’ read ‘Callanish’.
p. 541, l. 1: For ‘Théodon’ read ‘Théoden’.
p. 541, l. 7: For ‘Luxemburg’ read ‘Luxembourg’.
p. 541, l. 15: For ‘there independence’ read ‘their independence’.
p. 541, l. 22: For ‘Eastfold.’ read ‘Eastfold:’.
p. 550, l. 15: For ‘Why do the fools fly?’ read ‘Why? Why do the fools fly?’.
p. 550, note for before ever a ship sailed hither from the West: Extend the
boldfaced quotation as: We will burn like heathen kings before ever a ship
sailed hither from the West. The gloss on heathen in our note for p. 853 (III: 129),
Reader’s Companion p. 573, should appear at this point, the first use of ‘heathen’ in the
story.
John R. Holmes notes in ‘“Like Heathen Kings”: Religion as Palimpsest in Tolkien’s
Fiction’, The Ring and the Cross: Christianity and the Writings of J.R.R. Tolkien (2011),
that ‘the word “heathen” jumps out at the reader in these two passages [new edn., pp. 825
and 853]. . . . It seems out of place in a novel in which . . . religious references are
conspicuous by their absence’ (p. 119). And he comments that ‘surely a philologist as
careful as Tolkien, in a work that had been as heavily revised as The Lord of the Rings,
could not have been insensitive to the semantic dissonance created by the word
“heathen” in the Denethor passages. He would have known that his readers would
apprehend the word as an exclusively Christian term . . .’ (p. 121). Holmes follows with a
discussion of the etymological associations of the word, and points out that Tolkien
often used ‘common words still in circulation . . . but in contexts that subtly suggested
that another, and as it turns out, older, meaning must be showing through, like the
earliest inscriptions on a palimpsest’ (p. 123).
p. 562, note for dwimmerlaik: See also Peter Gilliver, Jeremy Marshall, and
Edmund Weiner, The Ring of Words: Tolkien and the Oxford English Dictionary (2006),
pp. 108–10.
p. 569, l. 9 from bottom: For ‘Sun went down at last’ read ‘Sun went at last’.
p. 571, ll. 3, 6, 9 from bottom: The boldfaced words to be glossed should be in italics,
as set in the original poem.
p. 571, ll. 1–6 from bottom: The notes for ‘the South-kingdom’ and ‘Stoningland’
should be placed before that (in the middle of the page) for ‘There Théoden fell . . .’
p. 573, note for only the heathen kings . . . : Although this is the most
appropriate place (i.e. p. 853 or III: 129) for our comments on suicide, we should have
glossed heathen at its first use in The Lord of the Rings, p. 825 (III: 98–9): ‘We will burn

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like heathen kings before ever a ship sailed hither from the West.’
p. 574, ll. 11–12: For ‘Palantíri’ read ‘The Palantíri in’.
p. 574, ll. 19–20: For ‘August’ (three instances) read ‘March’.
p. 580, l. 20: The separate note for ‘the high tongue’ should be joined, as a separate
paragraph, to the preceding note, in which the glossed words are included in the
quotation, thus: The high tongue is Quenya.
p. 580, ll. 2–4 from bottom: The paragraph on ‘The Valinorean language . . .’ should
follow that for ‘Rustics’.
p. 580, ll. 2–3 from bottom: In the Lambengolmor Tolkien linguistics forum, MESSAGE
850, Fredrik Ström correctly commented that our gloss asëa aranion ‘leaf of kings’ is
not attested in Tolkien’s writings. In MESSAGE 851 , however, Arden R. Smith defended this
translation as an extrapolation from the gloss of athelas ‘kingsfoil’ in an unpublished
etymology by Tolkien together with ‘the transparent meaning of aranion “of kings”’.
p. 581, ll. 1–9: The note for ‘no virtue . . .’ should follow the heading ‘Your pardon
lord!’.
p. 581, l. 1: For ‘864’ read ‘865’.
p. 590, l. 8 from bottom: For ‘When Imrahil parted’ read ‘When the Prince
Imrahil had parted’.
p. 606, ll. 2–8 after titling: Both of these notes refer to the same paragraph, and
should be grouped after a single paragraph heading, of which the second here is in the
fullest form. Also, the notes are reversed in order.
p. 607, l. 13: For ‘Marges’ read ‘marges’.
p. 608, final line: Jaakko Pirinen has pointed out to us, and is undoubtedly right,
that here Shriekers refers to the Nazgûl.
p. 609, l. 6: For ‘remember vaguely’ read ‘remember it vaguely’.
p. 615, l. 6: For ‘7/17/03’ read ‘MSS 8/1/3’.
p. 622, l. 9 from bottom: For ‘later took’ read ‘later takes’.
p. 623, l. 17 from bottom: For ‘c 1020’ read ‘c. 1020’.
p. 625, l. 2: For ‘954’ read ‘954–5’.
p. 625, l. 3: For ‘swords. . . . And’ read ‘swords. . . . [paragraphs:] And’.
p. 627, l. 8 after titling: For ‘permitted from rising’ read ‘permitted to rise’.
p. 631, l. 6: For ‘pp. 271–2)’ read ‘pp. 271–2).’ (add a full stop).
p. 633, l. 1: For ‘Guards’ read ‘guards’.
p. 634, l. 12: For ‘cessation’ read ‘cession’.
p. 642, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘Literature p. 59,’ read ‘Literature’.
p. 644, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘Then Éowyn gave to Merry’ read ‘This is an
heirloom’.
p. 653, l. 3 after titling: For ‘to’ read ‘towards’.
p. 653: The note beginning 989 (III: 268). Bree-hill should follow the note
beginning 989 (III: 268). At length they came to Weathertop.
p. 653–4: The notes beginning 992 (III: 271) up-away and 992 (III: 271).
Pickthorn are reversed in order.
p. 655, l. 15 after titling: In the Lambengolmor Tolkien linguistics forum, MESSAGE
844, Fredrik Ström queried our comment ‘See also note for p. 107’, suggesting that ‘p.
10’ (i.e. our note on hayward) was meant instead. Although too much time has now
passed to be sure, we are inclined to think that we did mean ‘p. 107’, referring to our
mention of guards at the Hay Gate. This query does point, unfortunately, to a
regrettable duplication of comments on hayward on RC:35 and RC:655. The first note
was written early in the project and forgotten 620 pages later.
p. 659, l. 11 from bottom: For ‘getting under cover’ read ‘“getting under

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cover”’.
p. 662, ll. 3–5 from bottom: The note for ‘All the chestnuts were gone’ should follow
the note for ‘tarred sheds’.
p. 666, l. 4: Add to the note: Shale is the shell or outer covering of the nut.
p. 667, l. 5: For ‘So it was settled’ read ‘And so it was settled’.
p. 674, l. 7: For ‘a narrow inlet of the sea’ read ‘an inlet of the sea or estuary’.
p. 668, ll. 18–19: For ‘the proceedings of the October 2004 Marquette University
Tolkien conference, forthcoming)’ read ‘The Lord of the Rings, 1954–2004:
Scholarship in Honor of Richard E. Blackwelder, ed. by Wayne G. Hammond and
Christina Scull (2006)’.
p. 691, add following the heading for 1041, n. 1:
1041, n. 1 (III: 321, n. 1). This note should be enclosed within quotation
marks, to indicate that it is an extract from ‘longer annals and tales’.
See The Lord of the Rings, p. 1033, and our ONLINE ADDENDUM for p. 1041 in The Lord of
the Rings 50th anniversary edition.
In the first edition of The Lord of the Rings, only one footnote (but substantial parts
of the text proper) in Appendix A appeared within quotation marks. When Tolkien
revised his text for the 1965 Ballantine Books second edition, he added quotation marks
around seven other footnotes; and as Christopher Tolkien has informed us that his
father added the quotation marks to the same footnotes in a personal copy of the Allen &
Unwin Return of the King, there is no question that Tolkien meant them to be included.
When in 1966 Allen & Unwin came to revise their standard hardback edition, Tolkien’s
original copy for the Ballantine revisions had been lost, and the Ballantine setting
became the default copy-text for the Appendices. But either the typesetters overlooked
the added quotation marks, or they compared the copy-text with the first edition setting
and omitted the quotation marks in error; and in the process, they also deleted the
quotation marks that had been present in the setting of 1955. Moreover, we have found
in the Tolkien papers at Marquette University that the footnotes were not in quotation
marks as the text approached its final form and was sent to the printers. In the first
proof, Tolkien added quotation marks to the note beginning ‘The sceptre . . .’ – the one
note to have quotation marks in the first edition – but only to this note. And very
curiously, in another proof, the note was marked to have quotation marks added, but
those proofreading marks were then struck through. We can only think that the
footnotes did not receive close attention as the writing and production of the
Appendices proceeded in fits and starts in 1954 and 1955, with not a little confusion
over available space and with Tolkien under pressure from Allen & Unwin to complete
the final volume of his work.
p. 691, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘1042, n. 1 (III: 322, n. 2): These were the
Stones’ read ‘1042, n. 2 (III: 322, n. 2): These were the Stones’. Add following
this corrected heading:
1042, n. 2 (III: 322, n. 2). This note should be enclosed within
quotation marks, to indicate that it is an extract from ‘longer annals and
tales’.
p. 691, l. 5 from bottom: For ‘1042, n. 1’ read ‘1042, n. 2’.
p. 691, between ll. 3 and 4 from bottom, add:
1042, n. 1 (III: 322, n. 1): In this way the ring
1042, n. 1 (III: 322, n. 1). This note should be enclosed within
quotation marks, to indicate that it is an extract from ‘longer annals and
tales’.
p. 694, note for the Tower of the Dome of Osgiliath: One reader takes issue
with our statement that ‘domes (as a matter of engineering) cannot have towers’,
pointing out that some domes have cupolas (evidently taking cupola by its broad
definition as an ornamental structure atop a dome or roof). He also observes that some
cathedrals (for instance) have bell towers separate from the main building. None of this,
however, makes the phrase ‘Tower of the Dome of Osgiliath’ less curious or provides, to
us, an adequate explanation.
p. 695, between ll. 2 and 3 from bottom, add:
1050, n. 1 (III: 330, n. 1): That law was made

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1050, n. 1 (III: 330, n. 1). This note should be enclosed within
quotation marks, to indicate that it is an extract from ‘longer annals and
tales’.
p. 698, note for he became a friend of Gandalf . . . : For a lengthy discussion of
Gandalf in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings relative to Merlin in Arthurian tales,
see Frank P. Riga, ‘Gandalf and Merlin: J.R.R. Tolkien’s Adoption and Transformation
of a Literary Tradition’, Mythlore 27, nos. 1/2, whole nos. 103/104 (Fall/Winter 2008).
The subject is also considered by Carl Phelpstead in Tolkien and Wales: Language,
Literature and Identity (2011), pp. 81–5.
p. 702, note for There is now no ship . . . : In Amon Hen 199 (May 2006), p. 25,
Helen Armstrong suggests that we quibble too much over Arwen’s phrase ‘There is now
no ship that would bear me hence’: ‘Had Arwen been able to cross the Sea, she could
have done so then, never mind the Havens. It seems likely from this and other context
. . . that Arwen could not sail, will she or nill she.’ This may be so.
p. 702, l. 12 from bottom: The inner quotation marks are reversed in orientation.
p. 703, ll. 13–14: For ‘forthcoming in the proceedings of the October 2004
Marquette University Tolkien conference’ read ‘in The Lord of the Rings, 1954–2004:
Scholarship in Honor of Richard E. Blackwelder, ed. Wayne G. Hammond and Christina
Scull (2006)’.
p. 705, between ll. 12 and 13, add:
1070, n. 1 (III: 351, n. 1): For her shield-arm
1070, n. 1 (III: 351, n. 1). This note should be enclosed within
quotation marks, to indicate that it is an extract from ‘longer annals and
tales’.
p. 706, l. 8: For ‘Douglas A’ read ‘Douglas A.’ (with full stop).
p. 706, l. 12: For ‘tale of Turambar’ read ‘tale Turambar’.
p. 707, between ll. 6 and 7, add:
1074, n. 1 (III: 355, n. 1): It is said that Thorin’s shield
1074, n. 1 (III: 355, n. 1). This note should be enclosed within
quotation marks, to indicate that it is an extract from ‘longer annals and
tales’.
p. 707, between ll. 18 and 19, add:
1076, n. 1 (III: 357, n. 1): Such dealings with their dead
1076, n. 1 (III: 357, n. 1). This note should be enclosed within
quotation marks, to indicate that it is an extract from ‘longer annals and
tales’.
p. 711, l. 2: For ‘be more deadly’ read ‘seem more deadly’.
p. 713, ll. 9–10 from bottom: The paragraph heading (When maybe a thousand
years) and associated note for p. 1084 should be placed on p. 714, immediately before
the paragraph heading for p. 1085 (Throughout the Third Age).
p. 723, add as the first notes on the page:
1099 (III: 379). [Note on family trees] – One might usefully add to
Tolkien’s note that the family trees follow the convention of placing in
square brackets the names of descendants whose surname differs from that
of the main line: in the Baggins family tree (p. 1100), for instance, the
names of Odo, Olo, and Sancho Proudfoot are so marked, to indicate a
divergent line from the marriage of Linda Baggins to Bodo Proudfoot.
1100 (III: 380). [Baggins family tree] – Here the name of Prisca
Baggins, daughter of Polo Baggins and wife of Wilibald Bolger, has been
underlined, though she was not so marked in previous editions. Tolkien
indicated that she was a guest at Bilbo’s party, along with her children
Wilimar, Heribald, and Nora, in his manuscript Bolger genealogy, and thus
these names are underlined in the Bolger family tree (p. 1101). Christopher
Tolkien comments in Peoples of Middle-earth, p. 94, that Prisca ‘was 95 [at
the time of the party], but Frodo’s still more ancient aunt Dora was present
at the age of ninety-nine’.

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p. 718, l. 3 from bottom: Add as a new paragraph:
Some readers have observed in Book II, Chapter 8 that on the
Company’s final day in the golden wood, they reach the Tongue when ‘noon
[is] at hand’ (p. 371, I: 387), and after a parting meal with Galadriel and
Celeborn leave as ‘a yellow noon [lies] on the green land’ (p. 377, I: 393).
These ‘two noons’ have been taken to mean that two days pass at this point
in the story and therefore that time follows different rules in Lothlórien.
But this conclusion, from which the emendation of 14 to 15 February would
be in error, wrongly supposes that noon has the same meaning in both
contexts. In the first instance, ‘noon was at hand’, noon means ‘midday’, in
the sense of clock time; but in the second instance, ‘A yellow noon lay on
the green land of the Tongue, and the water glittered with silver’, noon
means ‘as if it were noon’ and refers to the quality of sunlight. Yellow noon
is a poetic way of saying ‘golden sunshine’, in deliberate contrast to the
silver of the water. In the earliest manuscript of this part of The Lord of the
Rings, Tolkien first began the sentence in question ‘The Sun lay golden’ but
struck this through in favour of ‘A yellow noon’, and continued: ‘on the
green land of Tongue [sic], and silver was the stream’.
p. 719, l. 18 from bottom: For ‘(1965)’ read ‘(1965).’ (i.e. with full stop added).
p. 722, ll. 4–5 from bottom: The words ‘on March 1st came at last the Passing
of King Elessar’ should be boldfaced.
p. 723, l. 1 from bottom [REVISED]: A letter by Tolkien to Rayner Unwin dated 12
May 1955, not preserved in the Allen & Unwin archive but which has surfaced at
auction, confirms that the Boffin and Bolger family trees were omitted for lack of space;
in the earlier text of this addendum (28 December 2011), we had said only that this was
‘evidently’ true. The text of the Appendices runs almost to the end of the final page of
the final gathering of the volume, with barely more than an inch of blank space
remaining, and publication of The Return of the King was already delayed, with copies
urgently wanted. If the Bolger and Boffin family trees had been included in the original
edition, either Tolkien would have had to reduce the text by two pages, no doubt a
difficult proposition under the press of time, or Allen & Unwin would have had to allow
an extra gathering, which may not have been possible (for economic or practical
reasons, or both), as it does not seem to have been considered.
In his letter of 12 May, Tolkien commented that he was influenced in his choice of
material to include or discard by letters he had received and by the requests of critics
such as W.H. Auden, P.H. Newby, and Hugh Brogan. The result, Tolkien felt, was too
much material (given limitations of space), but also too little (to satisfy readers wanting
‘lore’). He thought it particularly important to include The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen
and, in Appendix E, the tables for the Angerthas and Tengwar. It was his choice to omit
the two family trees; and if more space was needed, he would have discarded the second
part of Appendix F, ‘On Translation’, about which he had second thoughts. Nonetheless,
he was still sorry that the ‘Book of Mazarbul’ ‘facsimiles’ could not be included (see note
for p. 323), and that there were no lists of names which would have given him the
opportunity to provide some Elvish vocabulary.
pp. 723–4, note on the Bolger and Boffin family trees: HarperCollins set these from
uncorrected proofs made for (but omitted from) the first edition, rather than from
Christopher Tolkien's family tables in The Peoples of Middle-earth, and never showed
their new setting of the trees or tables to us for proofreading, due to a tight production
schedule. Larry Kuenning has pointed out to us that the date of Odovacar Bolger (father
of Fredegar) is given in the anniversary Lord of the Rings as 1336, but in Peoples as
1335. We will note this for future checking in the Marquette Tolkien paper archive.
p. 724, ll. 21–3: Tolkien noted in one of his check copies of The Lord of the Rings
that he had told a correspondent in 1965: ‘I believe he [Meriadoc] married a sister of
Fredegar Bolger of the Bolgers of Budgeford’ (The Peoples of Middle-earth, p. 117).
p. 724, ll. 1–5 from bottom: We have been reminded that Fíriel, a daughter of Elanor
(daughter of Samwise), is mentioned in note 2 to the preface to The Adventures of Tom
Bombadil and Other Verses from the Red Book (1962). Her name, Tolkien says, if
connected with the poem Fíriel, ‘must be derived from it; it could not have arisen in
Westmarch’.
p. 728, l. 11 from bottom: For ‘more that two’ read ‘more than two’.
p. 730, ll. 1–6 from bottom–p. 731 through ‘safely refers to both locations’: These
notes and associated paragraph headings are reversed in order.
p. 735, l. 15: For ‘attributed’ read ‘also attributed’.
p. 739: Add before sub-section ‘On Translation’:

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1132 (III: 410): They are a tough, thrawn race
1132 (III: 410). thrawn – In this context, thrawn means ‘obstinate, ill-
tempered’. Compare ‘thrawn trees’, note for p. 392.
p. 747, l. 22: For ‘possesses’ read ‘possessed’.
p. 798, l. 11: For ‘> That–glass’ (with an en dash) read ‘> That—glass’ (with an em
dash).
p. 802, l. 10 from bottom: For ‘midsummer’ read ‘mid-summer’.
p. 803, l. 8 from bottom: The single quotation mark before ‘That’ should be
inverted.
p. 806, l. 2: For ‘Cermië, Urimë’ read ‘Cermië, Úrimë’ (adding an acute accent to the
second name).
p. 806, ll. 21–2: The second ŋ in l. 21 appears to have been set boldface; it should be
normal weight. For ‘ŋ is used for ng in sing’ read ‘ŋ is used for ng in sing’.
p. 807, l. 5: Add another textual change at the beginning of the note in square
brackets: ‘Númenorean’ > ‘Númenórean’.
p. 808, ll. 13–14: This note, incorrect in different ways in both editions of RC,
should read: ‘I think – No, I will not say,’ > ‘I think—No, I will not say,’ [en dash > em
dash, to better indicate pause].
p. 809, l. 15: For ‘past his full’ read ‘past his full,’ (with a comma).
p. 811, l. 6: For ‘elenÁtri’ read ‘elentÁri’.
p. 811, ll. 22–4: The entry for 1122–3 is not indented correctly. Many other
instances were corrected in proof, but this one slipped through.
p. 812, l. 5: Insert before ‘p. 1136’: ‘p. 1110, l. 5, for ‘Urui’ read ‘Úrui’ (with an acute
accent on the U);’ ’.
p. 819, ll. 28–29: For ‘Forthcoming in the proceedings of the October 2004
Marquette University Tolkien conference’ read ‘The Lord of the Rings, 1954–2004:
Scholarship in Honor of Richard E. Blackwelder. Ed. by Wayne G. Hammond and
Christina Scull. Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 2006. pp. 41–56.’
p. 825, ll. 13–14 from bottom: For ‘Forthcoming in the proceedings of the October
2004 Marquette University Tolkien conference’ read ‘The Lord of the Rings, 1954–
2004: Scholarship in Honor of Richard E. Blackwelder. Ed. by Wayne G. Hammond and
Christina Scull. Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 2006. pp. 101–12.’
p. 825, l. 11 from bottom: For ‘forthcoming.’ read ‘2006. 2 vols.’
p. 826, l. 20 from bottom: For ‘Place-Name’ read ‘Place-name’.
p. 828, ll. 13–15 from bottom: For ‘Forthcoming in the proceedings of the October
2004 Marquette University Tolkien conference’ read ‘The Lord of the Rings, 1954–
2004: Scholarship in Honor of Richard E. Blackwelder. Ed. by Wayne G. Hammond and
Christina Scull. Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 2006. pp. 317–29.’
p. 832, col. 1, entry for ‘Aman’, l. 5: For ‘175’ read ‘176’.
p. 833, col. 1, entry for ‘Anórien’: ll. 2, 4, for ‘541’ read ‘542’.
p. 835, col. 1, entry for ‘Auden, W.H.’: For ‘xxxvi’ read 'xxxvii'.
p. 835, col. 1, l. 8 from bottom: For ‘Backarraper’ read ‘Backarapper’.
p. 838, col. 2, entry for Boffin family: For ‘723–4, name’ read ‘723–4; name’.
p. 841, col. 1, entry for ‘Calendars’: Add see reference to ‘Chronology’.
p. 841, col. 2, entry for ‘Celebdil’, l. 3: For ‘compared to the Jungfrau’ read
‘compared to the Silberhorn’.
p. 842, col. 2, entry for ‘Cirion’: Add reference to p. 541.
p. 843, col. 2, entry for ‘Concise Oxford English Dictionary’: For ‘152, 152’ read ‘152,
153’.
p. 844, col. 2, entry for ‘Dead Marshes’: For ‘230’ read ‘231’.

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p. 848, col. 2, entry for ‘Eldar: Noldor’: Add, in first sequence of numbers, reference
to p. 176.
p. 851, col. 1, entry for ‘Eorl the Young’: Add reference to p. 541 to first sequence of
numbers, and to subheading ‘Oath of’.
p. 854, col. 1, entry for ‘First World War’: Add subheading: ‘Great Britain, treaty
obligations in 540–1’.
p. 855, col. 1, l. 6 from bottom: For ‘character,’ read ‘character’ (delete comma).
p. 859, col. 2, entry for ‘Gregorian Calendar’: For ‘lxvii–l’ read ‘xlvii–l’.
p. 860, col. 1, add reference: ‘Greyhame (earlier Grayhame) 369’.
p. 860, col. 1, l. 5: For ‘Grimá’ read ‘Gríma’.
p. 861, col. 1: For ‘Haysend lix, 16’ read ‘Haysend lix, 116’.
p. 865, col. 1, entry for Jordanes, De Origine Actibusque Getarum (Gothic History),
l. 2: For ‘453, 642, 563’ read ‘453, 563, 642’.
p. 865, col. 1, entry for ‘Jungfrau’: Delete ‘and Celebdil’.
p. 867, col. 2: The entries for ‘Lune (Lhûn), river’ and ‘Lune (Lhûn), Gulf of’’ are
reversed in order.
p. 871, col. 1, entry for ‘Moon(s)’, l. 6: For ‘26’ read ‘261’.
p. 871, col. 1, entry for ‘Morannon (Black Gate)’: Line 1, for ‘454’ read ‘453’. Add
reference to p. 544.
p. 871, col. 2, entry for ‘Morgoth’s Ring’, l. 2: For ‘Aman’ read ‘Aman’.
p. 872, col. 2, entry for ‘Nazgûl (Ringwraiths)’: Add reference to p. 608.
p. 873, col. 1, entry for ‘Nazgûl (Ringwraiths)’, l. 13: For ‘543’ read ‘543–4’.
p. 875, col. 1: Add cross-reference: Old Man Willow (character) see Willow, Old
Man.
p. 878, col. 1, entry for ‘Rammas Echor’: Add reference to p. 541.
p. 880, col. 2, entry for ‘Rohan’: Line 5, add reference to p. 542; l. 16, for ‘541’ read
‘540’.
p. 883, col. 1, entry for ‘Second World War’: Add subheading: ‘Great Britain, treaty
obligations in 540–1’.
p. 884, col. 1: For ‘Shirebourn lix, lviii’ read ‘Shirebourn lviii, lix’.
p. 884, col. 2, add entry: ‘Silberhorn 267’.
p. 886, col. 2, entry for ‘Sun’: Add (with the word in quotation marks): ‘noon’ 718–
19.
p. 887, col. 1, entry for ‘Tar-Elendil’: Add reference to p. 713.
p. 887, col. 2, entry for ‘Théoden’: Add reference to p. 541. Lines 15–16: For ‘funeral
cortège leaves Minas Tirith 641’ read ‘funeral escort 641, 719–20’.
p. 890, col. 2: The entries for ‘Umbar, Havens of’ and ‘Umbar, Corsairs of’ are
reversed in order.
p. 892, col. 1, entry for ‘War, and Tolkien’: For ‘lxxvii–lxviii’ read ‘lxxvii–lxxviii’.
p. 892, col. 1, entry for ‘Watchers of Minas Morgul’, l. 2: For ‘602, 608’ read ‘602’.
p. 893, col. 2: Add cross-reference: ‘World War see First World War; Second World
War’.

For all of our lists of addenda and corrigenda to the three editions of our Reader’s
Companion, we are indebted to Magnus Åberg, Chris Anderson, Helen Armstrong,
Rodrigo Bergamaschi de Azevedo, David Bratman, Marjorie Burns, Pieter Collier, David
‘Hisilome’, Merlin DeTardo, Kevin P. Edgecomb, Jason Fisher, Timothy Fisher, Troels
Forchhammer, John Garth, David Giraudeau, Jay Hershberger, Krzysztof Kêdzierski,
Yuval Kfir, David Kiltz, Joe Kraemer, Christopher Kreuzer, ‘Lalaith’, Oliver Loo, Brian P.
Maxwell, Erik Mueller-Harder, Johan Olin, Zoran Pajic, Jaakko Pirinen, Alan Reynolds,

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Helios De Rosario Martínez, Laura Schmidt, Manuel Schnell, ‘sevilodorf2’, Trudy Shaw,
Michael Spencer, Fredrik Ström, ‘Thaliorne’, Eric J. Thompson, Petri S. Tikka, Angela
Wagner (‘Nielíqui Erurén’), Tony Wearing, Richard West, Julian Wilson, and Danny
Zumbrun for calling some of these points to our attention.

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