The Two Towers by J.R.R Tolkien (Harper Collins 1991, 2007) pp. 657-659
Aragorn need do no more choosing. At least not for a while. Gandalf has bidden him not to regret the choice that he made in the valley of the Emyn Muil and to go to Edoras and to Théoden in his hall where he is needed.
“The light of Andúril must now be uncovered in the battle for which it has so long waited.”
And so on the edge of the forest and the plains of Rohan Gandalf gives a long whistle, “clear and piercing” and soon the companions hear the whinny of a horse and soon the sound of hooves also.
“There are three,” said Legolas, gazing over the plain. “See how they run! There is Hasufel, and there is my friend Arod beside him! But there is another that strides ahead: a very great horse. I have not seen his like before.”
Readers will remember how, on the night before they had entered Fangorn in search of Merry and Pippin, Saruman had come to the camp in search of news of what had happened to the band of orcs that he had sent in search of the Fellowship and of hobbits in particular. He chased Arod and Hasufel away but soon Legolas and Gimli heard a sound that mystified them. They had expected to hear the cries of frightened horses but heard joy instead. For what they heard was their horses meeting Shadowfax, their lord.
“That is Shadowfax,” said Gandalf. “He is the chief of the Mearas , lords of horses, and not even Théoden, King of Rohan, has ever looked on a better. Does he not shine like silver, and run as swiftly as a swift stream?”
Gandalf first met Shadowfax after he escaped from his captivity in Isengard, borne by Gwaihir, lord of eagles, to Edoras. Gandalf had tried to warn Théoden about Saruman but he was not listened to. Théoden told Gandalf to choose a horse and to depart and Gandalf chose Shadowfax who had never been ridden before.
The Rohirrim had long had a close relationship to horses, closer than any other people in Middle-earth. Tolkien based this people upon the English who dwelt in this land before the Norman conquest of 1066. The language that he created for them was closest to Old English, a language that he taught in Oxford. But Tolkien gave the Rohirrim something that the ancient people of England never had, a mastery of horses. For although the warrior elite of England could ride the mass of the people who would make up the army in time of war could not. The army of England was essentially an infantry force and in 1066 it had to fight two battles against invading forces. The first against Harold Hadrada of Norway was fought at Stamford Bridge in the north of England and the second, just a few days later, was fought against a Norman army under William the Conquerer near Hastings on the south coast. The Normans won the battle decisively and William became king. Tolkien believed that the imposition of the French language as the language of the new rulers of England and the relegation of English to the language of the peasantry destroyed the indigenous mythology of England. He also believed that a key factor in the English defeat was the lack of any effective cavalry in the English army and the use of cavalry by the Normans. As a consequence he not only gave horses to the Rohirrim but built an entire culture around this. The Rohirrim were the horse lords.
I know little about horses myself but have long admired them and I live in an area of England with a strong tradition of horse riding and horse racing. I spent many hours watching my daughters learn to ride as they grew up and observed the bond that can develop between horse and rider at close quarters. This bond is very deep indeed between Gandalf and Shadowfax. We see him ask permission of him and Arod and Hasufel to carry the four companions to Edoras.
“Gandalf caressed him. ‘It is a long way from Rivendell, my friend,’ he said, ‘but you are wise and swift and come at need. Far let us ride now together, and part not in this world again!’
Excellent timing! Yesterday was the Belmont Stakes. Fifty years ago, a horse named Secretariat (from just down the road) ran the most amazing race I’ve seen. For a lot of the race, the cameraman couldn’t get any other horses in the frame because Secretariat was ahead by something like 25 lengths. That must have been just a year before I first read “Lord of the Rings”. When I got to this part of the book, I had a clear picture in my mind of what Shadowfax must have looked like.
I have heard of Secretariat and I must look for that race on YouTube. I remember being out for an early morning walk in Yorkshire as a group of race horses came past me down the road. I was aware of their nervousness and raw power. But Shadowfax is older and wiser. An archetypal horse who has developed astonishing stamina without losing speed.
I have been around and ridden many horses in my life. Some are timid and suspicious, easily frightened. Others are so docile and easy-going. You almost think they’re robotic, My sister had a stallion that was just plain sneaky and mean. He would be all nice and then bite you when you least expected it.
Sounds strange sometimes but the horse I always rode was a gelding, “Peanut” always seemed happy to see me and was so great to ride. Why they named him Peanut, I don’t know, he was over 15 hands tall. I have ridden western, English, and bareback. Ive always felt at ease on the right horse when bareback. I get the feeling that Gandalf discribes when he says if Shadowfax consents to bare you he will not not let you fall.
Thanks for bringing back great memories!
Thank you so much for sharing such wonderful memories, John. I can really see the difference between someone who really understands horses and someone like me who merely observes!