Letter to Ken Jackson (29 January 1968): Difference between revisions

From Tolkien Gateway
m (Updated the opening sentence)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:1968 - Ken Jackson 29 January.JPG|thumb]]
[[File:1968 - Ken Jackson 29 January.JPG|thumb]]
On [[29 January]] [[1968]], [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] wrote '''[[Letters not published in "The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien"|a letter]] to Ken Jackson'''.<ref name=CG>{{CG|C}}, p. 716</ref><ref name=TL>{{webcite|author=[[Pieter Collier]]|articleurl=http://www.tolkienlibrary.com/collecting/seenonebay/object17/description.htm|articlename=JRR Tolkien 2 signed letters 1968 Handwritten & Typed|dated=|website=TL|accessed=30 March 2014}}</ref>
On [[29 January]] [[1968]], [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] wrote '''[[Letters not published in "The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien"|a letter]] to Ken Jackson'''.<ref name=CG>{{CG|C}}, p. 716</ref><ref name=TL>{{webcite|author=[[Pieter Collier]]|articleurl=http://www.tolkienlibrary.com/collecting/seenonebay/object17/description.htm|articlename=JRR Tolkien 2 signed letters 1968 Handwritten & Typed|dated=|website=TL|accessed=30 March 2014}}</ref>, that was biology master in New College School.


*'''Subject:''' Reply to a reader, concerning permission to name his house "[[Bag End]]". Tolkien comments that he did not invent the name; Bag End was the local name for the house of his Aunt [[Jane Neave]].<ref name=CG/>
*'''Subject:''' Reply to a reader, concerning permission to name his house "[[Bag End]]". Tolkien comments that he did not invent the name; Bag End was the local name for the house of his Aunt [[Jane Neave]].<ref name=CG/>

Revision as of 14:37, 2 October 2014

1968 - Ken Jackson 29 January.JPG

On 29 January 1968, J.R.R. Tolkien wrote a letter to Ken Jackson.[1][2], that was biology master in New College School.

Transcription

My dear Jackson,

Thank you for your kind letter. It may interest you to know that (however unfair it may seem) it is impossible to patent mere names, so that you have no obligation to ask my permission, though I appreciate your courtesy. In the case of Bag-End, I did not invent it, it was in fact the local name of a house an aunt of mine lived in in Worcestershire: an old tumbledown manor house at the end of an untidy lane that led nowhere else.

Yours sincerely,

J.R.R. Tolkien

See also

References