It is early morning here in the English county of Worcestershire just a few miles down the road from the farm that once belonged to the Suffield family and was the childhood home of Mabel Tolkien, the mother of John Ronald Ruel Tolkien, author of The Lord of the Rings and creator of a legendarium that has caught the imagination of the world ever since the publication of that book in 1954 and 1955. The locals who were the neighbours of the Suffields named their farm house, Bag End, and this and the surrounding countryside and small towns and villages was to form, through the medium of Tolkien’s rich imagination, his Shire, the home of the hobbits.

A photo taken of me a couple of years ago at Magdalen College, Oxford, by my daughter, Dr Bethan Winter, who has been teaching there.
Tolkien’s hobbits were very much a reimagining of the Worcestershire country folk among whom Tolkien grew up in the early years of the 20th century both when he visited his Suffield relatives and in the village of Hall Green just a few miles north of Bag End. You can still recognise the slow speech and the rich accent of Worcestershire folk but Hall Green is now a suburb of the English city of Birmingham and many of the farm houses of north Worcestershire are now inhabited by wealthy incomers who have made their money elsewhere and now enjoy the fruits of their labour in this beautiful countryside. At least I hope that they do.
I guess that you could include me among the incomers, perhaps not so wealthy but comfortably off, who have moved into this area. My father was London born but he took the opportunity offered to his generation who had served in the armed forces in the Second World War of a college education to go to agricultural college and spend his working life on farms in the English countryside. We never had much money. My father left enough money to pay for his funeral and nothing more but thanks to the generosity of the English state back in the 1960s and 70s I was educated at the Royal Grammar School in High Wycombe among boys from the families of senior military officers and leading political families. My school also educated luminaries such as Roger Scruton and Paul Kingsnorth but Scruton came before me and Kingsnorth after.
Following a brief career as a school teacher I was ordained a minister in the Church of England in 1988 and came to serve in the city of Birmingham where I met my wife, Laura, who was a young hospital doctor there, and so we have spent the rest of our lives together since then in the English Midlands where Tolkien grew up.
In these last years I have served seven country parishes here in Worcestershire as their Rector but I will be 70 years old this month and feel that the time has come to pass that responsibility to someone else. It is time to move on to other things.
I first read The Lord of the Rings back in the late 1960s thanks to the encouragement of my school friend, John Flint, whose father was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force. There were copies of the three volumes in our school library and I took them out and read them voraciously. Eventually I bought John’s paperback copy of the entire book in a single volume from him. It cost me six weeks work at weekends on the farm to do this but I never resented a single minute. I still don’t. I have read and re-read this and other works by Tolkien ever since and enjoyed both a BBC radio dramatisation of the work and Peter Jackson’s films.
Back in 2013 I began to write a blog here on WordPress on the wisdom that I have learned from the The Lord of the Rings. I figured that after reading Tolkien for so many years I might have something to say about him. I think that I have written over 300,000 words since then and had over half a million readers. Thank you to each and every one of you.
Last year I somehow lost access to the blog site and as I was winding up my work in the parishes and then taking a complete break after taking my final service at the end of August I haven’t got round to sorting this out until now. Laura and I walked 150 miles of the Camino del Norte, the pilgrim route to Santiago da Composite in northern Spain during the autumn and we will return to walk the last 250 miles later this year. We have been catching up with friends and family and working on our cottage together. And it’s been a lot of fun just catching up with each other after years of busy work as a priest and as a doctor.
Now the energy is coming back and it is time to write again. I both want to return to the blog and I am beginning a book. I will tell you more of that another time. My daughters are teaching me how to use new technologies to publicise my work. There’s a lot going on. To my delight I found that I had a record number of readers last September, three months after my last post and while Laura and I were in Spain. It seems that people are finding their way to my work. I am so grateful.
Thank you to all who have taken the time to send messages of good will while I have been away from the blog. I will write in response to all of you.
I left Frodo and Sam with Faramir in Henneth Annûn last June. They are in safe hands there but they don’t really know that yet. When you next rejoin me I will take up that part of the story again. It has so much to teach us.
Anke Eissman ‘s wonderful depiction of the scene in which Frodo and Sam talk with Faramir in Henneth Annûn. I really love her work!
I hope you will join me.
oh!! Croeso yn ôl! Welcome back, fr, this was a delight to find
How lovely that you were wandering by on the day I began to write again on this blog. Now that I am about to be a man in his 70s can I ask that you drive over to see me some time? It would be good to hear how your story has developed. Peace and all Good be with you.
I would absolutely love to! Could you send me an email on mthrvictoria@yahoo.com and we can arrange a time 🙂
Thank you for your blog for all these years, and for this latest addition to it. Very many congratulations on your approaching birthday. All best wishes for the future. (I like the picture!)
Thank you for your welcome back and your good wishes on my birthday and for the future.
Welcome back, and happy birthday! I know that one parish has a rector, and someone who handles two parishes is a director, but seven seems like a lot.
The English parish is an ancient thing. The old Latin parochia came in the 7th century through the great organiser, Theodore of Tarsus. Five of the parishes have a combined population of around 2,000 souls and the other two about 6,000. People have a fierce loyalty to their parish and woe betide the bishop who tries to shut down a parish church.
Welcome back, Stephen. You’ve been missed, but it’s good to hear that you are settling into retirement with lots of ideas. It’s such a watershed in our lives, as well as a challenge to find new beginnings. Best wishes.
Thank you for your kind words, Chris. I take it that you have made the same move. I can’t quite make up my mind on the one hand why I didn’t do it long ago. I love the time for writing and for friends and family. On the other hand I miss the sense of purpose that belongs specifically to being a parish priest. Maybe as in so much in life it is a matter of times and seasons.
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So glad to hear that you’re well and returning to writing. Congratulations on your “retirement”.
Many thanks for your good wishes, Bob.
Good to see you again, Stephen. I am glad you’re back.
Best wishes,
Tom
Many thanks for your good wishes, Tom. I look forward to finding out what you are doing right now.
Welcome back! Glad you have enjoyed the break from writing, but just as glad to see you will take it back up again. Your reflections are always interesting and welcome.
Thank you so much for your encouragement. I look forward to more conversations in the future.
[heart] Dirk Seghers reacted to your message:
it’s good you’re writing again! Please continue! In these times, Tolkien’s wisdom is more needed than ever.
Many thanks, Kate. I agree that we need Tolkien’s wisdom. The more that I read him the more I see him as a genuinely prophetic figure who speaks to our 21st century predicament.
Welcome back! I look forward to reading more of your edifying blog posts, and hearing about your book.
Thank you so much for your encouragement.