Five Great Tom Bombadil Theories | Tolkien Theory

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  • čas přidán 2. 05. 2024
  • Who is Tom Bombadil? It is one of the biggest questions in all Middle-earth. Today, we are going to cover five of the best and most popular theories of who, or what, Tom Bombadil is. We will cover many of the oldest and most common: Tom is one of the Valar, Maiar, and Eru himself. As well as a newer and more complicated theory!
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    Nerd of the Rings on PATREON: / nerdoftherings
    For the full theory on Tom being the Music of the Ainur, check out this blog: whoistombombadil.blogspot.com/...
    00:00-04:17 - Intro/What we know
    04:17-6:50 - Tom is Eru Ilúvatar
    6:50-12:47 - Tom is a Vala
    12:47-14:46 - Tom is a Maia
    14:46-20:22 - Tom is the Music of the Ainur
    20:22-22:20 - Tom is...
    --------------
    All content falls under fair use: any copying of copyrighted material done for a limited and “transformative” purpose, such as to comment upon, criticize, or parody a copyrighted work. Such uses can be done without permission from the copyright owner.
    Old Tom Bomabdil - Tammy Martin (Painted Brush Studio)
    Tom Bombadil - Greg Hildebrandt
    Tom Bombadil - Francesco Amadio
    Goldberry - Greg Hildebrandt
    Ho, Tom Bombadil - Alisaryn
    In the House of Tom Bombadil - Anke Eissman
    Barrow Wights - Julio Rocha
    Leaving the Barrow Downs - Anke Eissman
    Tom Bombadil - Melanie L Hullier
    Old Man Willow - Greg Hildebrandt
    The Old Forest - faqy
    Tom Bombadil - Alan Lee
    Tom Bombadil and Goldberry - Mareishon
    Tom Bombadil - Dracarys Drekkar
    Tom Bombadil - Joao Machay
    Tom Bombadil - Joao Machay
    Tom Bombadil - sprat9069
    Tom Bombadil - Williweissfuss
    Tom Bombadil and the Hobbits - Anke Eissman
    Tom Bombadil - Borja Pindado
    Tom Bombadil - Cynthia Blair
    Tom Bombadil - Denis Gordeev
    Tom Bombadil - Pavel Filippov
    Argonath - Elaine Dezso
    Awakening of the Elves - Ted Nasmith
    The Music of the Gods - Kip Rasmussen
    Ascension - John Pitre
    The Council of Elrond - Alan Lee
    Eru Iluvatar - Jankolas
    Gandalf Returns - Ted Nasmith
    Melkor Weaves Opposing Music - Ted Nasmith
    Minas Tirith - Ludovic Burgeois
    Rivendell - Philip Straub
    Rivendell - Zak Seymour
    The Mill in the Forest - Shishkin
    Barrow-wight - John Howe
    Frodo and Gandalf in Bag End - Raul Vitale
    Saruman - AIMaNeGrA
    The Balrogs of Morgoth - Thylacinee
    Ringwraiths - Anato Finnstark
    Nazgul on Weathertop - Anato Finnstark
    Battle of the Last Alliance - entar0178
    The Nazgul from Minas Morgul - Daniel Pilla
    Balrogs Defending Morgoth from Ungoliant - Jovan Delic
    Nazgul - Lukasz Jaskolski
    Melkor and Ungoliant Before the Two Trees - John Howe
    Radagast - Aleksander Karcz
    The Blue Wizards - Daniel Pilla
    Finrod Among Beor's Men - Ted Nasmith
    Aule - Kamehame
    Aule - Jankalateckova
    Council of Elrond - Mysilvergreen
    Forging the One Ring - Mako Manev
    Orome Hunts the Creatures of Morgoth - Kip Rasmussen
    Powers of Arda - Skinnyuann
    Vana the Ever-young - Steamey
    Aule the Destroyer - Ted Nasmith
    Valar - Simili Tortue
    Vana and Orome - Auta i lome
    Yavanna - Gustavo Malek
    Check out these resources for this and more info about Tom Bombadil:
    The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien
    The Adventures of Tom Bombadil - JRR Tolkien
    History of Middle-earth: The Return of Shadow - JRR Tolkien/Christopher Tolkien
    The Letters of JRR Tolkien - Humphrey Carpenter
    The Encyclopedia of Arda
    Tolkien Gateway
    #tolkien #tombombadil #lordoftherings
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Komentáře • 8K

  • @NerdoftheRings
    @NerdoftheRings  Před 3 lety +1044

    Who or what do you think Tom Bombadil is? Let’s hear those theories!
    And don’t forget to hit subscribe! 😁

    • @gunner_123
      @gunner_123 Před 3 lety +69

      it would have been funny if he was in the movie

    • @mz-pd5hw
      @mz-pd5hw Před 3 lety +158

      Its also worth to remember that Tom Bombadil was created way before LOTR, and the Hobbit, it was a character of a poem. So in a way it was "created" before Iluvatar :D it may well be just an "Easter egg" of sorts of its own previous creation and that became a wonderful addition. And I think that the power the ring has over someone is not related to the power of the user but somehow on how much can offers to the wearer how much can tempt him/her, is not that tempting for a hobbit because hobbits usually don't seek power; I think the ring has no power over Tom because the ring has nothing to offer to him, Tom doesn't "want" stuff, has the power that he needs no more, no less; live as he please. I like the fact that he transcend all the drama and the fact that he doesn't share "who" he is is because he doesn't care, all you need to know about him is that he is who he is, nothing behing the curtain, all about him that is important is in plain sight, the rest is unimportant. I really like Tom Bombadil.

    • @grokeffer6226
      @grokeffer6226 Před 3 lety +67

      The theory I came up with a few decades ago was that Tom and Goldberry were in fact Tulkas and Nessa. They maintain a window/doorway to The West through which Tom and Goldberry can see, but no one else can. The Entwives were summoned to the Old Forest to insure that the whole species wasn't obliterated. Eventually, The Man Ents would find their hidden Entwives and have the choice of staying in Middle-Earth, or passing through Tom's portal into The West. Since no Ent would ever want to get onto a ship of sawed planks, and they were needed across The Sea, Tom and Goldberry were tasked with maintaining a doorway, until The Ents' work was done in Middle-Earth. That's not canon, but whatever.

    • @Rekaert
      @Rekaert Před 3 lety +38

      I find it likely that Tom is something as old as the Valar and Maiar, perhaps a side-effect of the Song who didn't come about entirely by design, or perhaps even existed independently outside the machinations of gods.
      There's some form for this in-story of Ungoliant and the like.
      This seems reflected also in comments regarding Tom's ability to withstand the Ring, but only whilst in his domain, and not in the face of a fully restored Sauron knocking at his gates.
      It at least gives us some idea of the extent of his power in any case.

    • @KarEllen
      @KarEllen Před 3 lety +112

      Tolkien put himself as Tom into his own books.

  • @rosabueker
    @rosabueker Před 3 lety +17365

    I think that Tom is actually Tolkien. He saw the first raindrops and acorns because he wrote them, and he doesn't interfere greatly with the storyline for the sake of the readers.

    • @smuecke
      @smuecke Před 3 lety +2752

      I thought this the entire time! Maybe Tom is Tolkien's idea of a perfect life, living in peace in his own little paradise with a beautiful wife, forever.

    • @radagast7200
      @radagast7200 Před 3 lety +790

      Sort of like Stan Lee is "The One Above All." I can see that.

    • @roberthornibrook6344
      @roberthornibrook6344 Před 3 lety +328

      I often thought this as well. Makes a lot of sense the author putting himself in his own story.

    • @anthonyhollyer127
      @anthonyhollyer127 Před 3 lety +557

      He said himself in LOTR was Faramir and no one else

    • @stointhedwarf9838
      @stointhedwarf9838 Před 3 lety +310

      I personally kind of think that Tolkien is much like Bilbo Baggins. Both went away on an unexpected journey (like the Quest to Erebor for Bilbo and the First World War for Tolkien), ending up as an old, well respected writers who lived a happy life until the end of their days. This and the Bombadil-Tolkien theory are both possible ways that he has embedded himself into his own writing.

  • @ZacksHacks
    @ZacksHacks Před 3 lety +3640

    Council: Let’s ask Bombadil!
    Gandalf: Nah he doesn’t give a shit.

    • @zephyrna6249
      @zephyrna6249 Před 3 lety +350

      Theory: What if Tom Bombadil took the ring to Mordor but instead of destroying it he just bitch slapped Sauron out of existence.

    • @TheShuaness
      @TheShuaness Před 3 lety +46

      hahahaha exactly. He cares less than Thranduil :P

    • @justinstewart4889
      @justinstewart4889 Před 3 lety +111

      @Nicky Bobby
      lol The idea they removed Tom from the movies so as to keep everyone unenlightened is hogwash nonsense. He also didn't create Middle Earth.

    • @joemauch6912
      @joemauch6912 Před 3 lety +39

      @Nicky Bobby he can’t be the “God” and “Creator” of Middle Earth though, because that’s Eru already

    • @joemauch6912
      @joemauch6912 Před 3 lety +21

      @Nicky Bobby I do agree with that. I believe Tom is an anomaly of sorts in the world of Middle-Earth, one who cannot be quantified by any definitions or laws of the world we are aware of. In a way, I think he is outside of even Eru’s influence and creation; that is why the One Ring, and the powers of Sauron and Melkor have no effect on him. That would also explain his state as he “is”, neither entirely good nor evil, allied with neither Eru nor Melkor, but merely existing in his own plane.

  • @MasterOfTheBrood
    @MasterOfTheBrood Před 10 měsíci +533

    I love how Gandalf's reasoning behind Tom not being a good ring barer is because the ring has SOO little effect on him, He'd just forget about it and misplace it.

    • @sei_Hacke
      @sei_Hacke Před 3 měsíci +6

      I could imagen that

    • @danielshafer1212
      @danielshafer1212 Před 3 měsíci +37

      And the ring lay forever lost, in the back of Tom's nightstand drawer.

    • @thefrener794
      @thefrener794 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@danielshafer1212 The problem is that the ring is like a tracker device of today broadcasting its position and letting a device know it is around to be found. It is the tracker tech of fantasy.

    • @candy6852
      @candy6852 Před 2 měsíci +10

      ​@@thefrener794except that the ring cannot be found by any specific person. It's more like a constantly ringing alarm clock. (FYI in the books neither sauron nor the nazgul can feel the presence of the ring, special magical circumstances not withholding)

    • @ttrey743
      @ttrey743 Před 2 měsíci +8

      ​@@thefrener794that's not really how it works in the books.

  • @asisgonzalez1468
    @asisgonzalez1468 Před rokem +813

    He was Tolkien's favourite toy as a kid.
    He had this doll of an old bearded guy with a hat and named him Tom Bombadil. When he started writing stories, he used to include him on them, LOTR is not the only Tolkien's book in which he appears.
    He is the only creature/thing in middle earth that was not created by the music of the Ainur because it existed before out of that world.
    It is usually said that he is the personified Tolkien but I believe he is more of a privileged spectator of the worlds that his friend creates. He existed before any of them, he can go from one to another and he is not restrained by the rules of any of them.
    I would say Iluvatar could be closer to being a representation of Tolkien in his own world. But that's just guessing

    • @aeternusnightshade2726
      @aeternusnightshade2726 Před rokem +90

      I like this theory.
      Tom Bombadil standing completely apart of the whole world, having fun, singing and dancing, master of his own realm because he is not only a creation of Tolkien, but a friend. And as a true friend, he has free reign on Tolkien's creation because he can be trusted not to mishandle it and let it unfold as it is, with the privilege of being there himself to witness in person.
      It's even a beautiful thought if you think about it, that such a deep creative mind such as Tolkien would still hold his favorite toy with such regard as to give him the premier seat to witness his most beloved creation.

    • @JaKorsarz
      @JaKorsarz Před rokem +3

      interesting theory

    • @W47689
      @W47689 Před rokem +13

      Tom bombadill is confirmed eldritch being lol

    • @staleymims7610
      @staleymims7610 Před 10 měsíci +13

      I like this theory also. And it begs the question, who and what is Goldberry? She seems to be his match and is comfortable with who and what he is which could be a sign she is his equal.

    • @AlexDuWaldt
      @AlexDuWaldt Před 9 měsíci +3

      XD this comment has so few replies. The one a couple above about Tom being Tolkien has like 340.

  • @NitishKumarSingh2010
    @NitishKumarSingh2010 Před 3 lety +4319

    "In the beginning there was Eru, the One, who in Arda is called Ilúvatar; and he made first the Ainur, the Holy Ones, that were the offspring of his thought, and they were with him before aught else was made. One day the Ainur asked Eru, ' Who is that guy in blue coat and long hat?' and Illuvatar replied "I don't know, he was already there when I arrived." And thus the mystery of Tom Bombadil continues.

    • @jannickpedersen546
      @jannickpedersen546 Před 3 lety +203

      Too few has read this comment.

    • @coconutfleetsleeper5717
      @coconutfleetsleeper5717 Před 3 lety +334

      If the ainur was the offspring of Erus thought, maby bombadill is the offspring of Erus unconscious? Since he is master, free to roam as the unconscious..

    • @dustindoud6622
      @dustindoud6622 Před 3 lety +25

      LOL! Well said!

    • @neochrist33
      @neochrist33 Před 3 lety +128

      He's Tolkien himself then if he was there before Eru and the story ever began.

    • @Alondro77
      @Alondro77 Před 3 lety +174

      Tom Bombadil preceded the universe... meaning he may have been the sole survivor of the previous one!
      Tom Bombadil = Galactus, CONFIRMED!! XD

  • @CliveCalvin
    @CliveCalvin Před 2 lety +2470

    He’s the first and the oldest… in Tolkien’s mind. He existed in there as a quirky little adventurer long before the Valar or Ëa or anything else Tolkien created. I think he mentions somewhere in his letters that he would make up stories about bombadil with his brother when they were kids. That’s why he’s unconcerned with everything in middle earth. He sat quietly in Tolkien’s mind, watching the whole legendarium come into existence, and then he plopped himself into it because it looked fun. He exists outside the narrative. He can come and go as he pleases. He’s his own master! Not even his own author can control him!

    • @gimilijonnes
      @gimilijonnes Před 2 lety +147

      Thats actually a very valid theory

    • @theredwhirlwin
      @theredwhirlwin Před 2 lety +37

      You just blew my mind!

    • @Karambolagemusic
      @Karambolagemusic Před 2 lety +18

      Many thanks for this! Perfect :)

    • @rodjones9138
      @rodjones9138 Před 2 lety +41

      I think you have come up with the definitive description of Tom Bombadil. I would add that it has been great fun for people fond of the tales of all things Tolkien, to try and fathom of who and what Tom is.

    • @PattonDrummer
      @PattonDrummer Před 2 lety +48

      This is exactly what I see in Tom. He's oldest because out of universe he actually is. He doesn't "belong" in lord of the rings but he's there. Tolkien wanted to find a place for him somewhere and so Tom just showed up. I think yours is the most likely/accurate "theory"

  • @the.april.
    @the.april. Před rokem +176

    Tom Bombadil is one of my favorite characters in the books. He reads like a character from a children's fantasy book, which considering the overall tone of The Lord of The rings, is a breath of fresh air.

    • @lenakrupinski6303
      @lenakrupinski6303 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Hi same, I kind of think he represents purity and total love and can't be touched by the darkness of the world .💚🌿💚🍁💝🌻🍀🌹🌞💜🍀🙏💖

    • @romanmay2867
      @romanmay2867 Před 23 dny +1

      I was listening to the audiobook while I was at work, and the sudden change in tone and pase just totally felt like the hobbit, because I listened to it right before starting the Lord of the rings

  • @TheSithking
    @TheSithking Před 7 měsíci +27

    I think Tom is just a wholesome character of his own self. Just a happy gift from Eru to whoever meets or encounters him. A slice of positive music that Eru just willed into existance 😊

  • @CaptainAmaziiing
    @CaptainAmaziiing Před 3 lety +1524

    Tom is Eru's hippy brother who was couch surfing when Eru made Middle Earth, and he's still there. And he'll always be there and Eru can't do a thing about it.

  • @dereksandy8337
    @dereksandy8337 Před 3 lety +3819

    It's always who's tom bombadil, never how's tom bombadil

    • @zephyrna6249
      @zephyrna6249 Před 3 lety +325

      Tom Bombadil is doing fine 100% of the time.

    • @jfbrasch
      @jfbrasch Před 3 lety +187

      Drax -"Why is Tom Bombedil?"

    • @mattf2967
      @mattf2967 Před 3 lety +70

      When is Tom Bombadil?

    • @AeneasGemini
      @AeneasGemini Před 3 lety +27

      Wasn't there a whole song about merry he is?

    • @micahphilson
      @micahphilson Před 3 lety +37

      Well, that's pretty predictable; he's invariably happy, cheery, and singing.

  • @PureMetalNS
    @PureMetalNS Před rokem +419

    I like to think Tom is the spirit of Arda. Not dissimilar from the theory of him being the manifestation of the song of the Ainur, but just that he's specifically the embodiment of Arda, and his singing is a reflection of the songs of creation that run through him. Sort of like a 'mother earth' figure.

    • @JPHandel
      @JPHandel Před rokem +42

      This is exactly what I thought after watching this video. In the same way that the ring didn't possess the River Anduin when it lay there, it doesn't affect Tom. But when all elves, dwarves, and men fall, the last for Sauron to destroy is Arda itself.

    • @FrenkieWest32
      @FrenkieWest32 Před rokem +9

      @@JPHandel But it is said Morgoth corrupted Arda itself, while Tom Bombadil is not suggested to have been corrupted

    • @spirit.ofthe.harvestmoon
      @spirit.ofthe.harvestmoon Před rokem +11

      That's the conclusion I reached, watching the video.
      From the way he protected the hobbits, like a tree or a cave offering a place for travelers to rest and hide; to the way he was described by the council as disinterested in the affairs of the people*, with his way of support being a temporary mean(like the ground that offers a place for beings to hide their belongings while at the same time offering no resistance to the enemy of such beings who knew where to look or accidentally stumbled upon).
      It can be explained that the discord song of the Valar ended up inadvertently creating a slit of magic that allowed the earth to be extended and personified, though without any changes to its spirit.
      It even works with the fact that Sauron would eventually be able to best Tom, if he ever recovered his power. Sauron's goal, after all, was having absolute control of middle earth.
      *The way he was described as showing no interest in intervening almost gave him an air of blue and orange eldritch morality. To him, having someone beg on their knees for him to keep the object responsible for deciding the course of history was like if one of us got approached by someone on the street and asked to hold on to a grain of sand they picked up.
      It's kind of like that Jennifer Lawrence movie, Mother, but less humanized or human like.
      Who knows? Maybe Tom's form, boundary, actions and speech were all just the hobbits' and other children of Eru's perception of a form they were comfortable with, though not exactly the whole deal.

    • @spirit.ofthe.harvestmoon
      @spirit.ofthe.harvestmoon Před rokem +5

      @@FrenkieWest32 Because Morgoth's corruption was still Arda.
      The idea of the corruption of Morgoth only works if you look at it through a lens focused on what was meant to be and what it became instead.
      Tom Bombadil is beyond a plan of a definition. He just is, like the ground of middle earth itself. He'd still be Tom, no matter who ruled or how it was molded.
      Sure, Sauron would be capable of having dominion over him, since his plan is to have complete control of everything inside a certain boundary, but if he ever fell and became someone else's, Tom would belong to that being as he belonged to Sauron.

    • @FrenkieWest32
      @FrenkieWest32 Před rokem +2

      @@spirit.ofthe.harvestmoon morgoths corruption wasn't Arda, morgoth corrupted Arda. Not the same thing.
      And you're talking a bit too matter of factly about this theory for my taste.

  • @sean..L
    @sean..L Před 10 měsíci +94

    I think Tom Bombadil embodies 'The Green Man' of old European mythology. He and Goldberry are both elemental spirits of earth and water respectively.

    • @dawnv3436
      @dawnv3436 Před 2 měsíci +10

      I had a similar idea. Father Time and Mother Nature

    • @jessica_jam4386
      @jessica_jam4386 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@dawnv3436Father Time and Mother Nature is exactly who I always imagined them as. Even though Tolkien may have never intended that

    • @alexritchie4586
      @alexritchie4586 Před 2 měsíci +4

      That's the theory that's always made sense to me. After all, a big metaphorical aspect of LOTR is Tolkien lamenting the rurality of his upbringing becoming gradually destroyed by industrialisation, but go to any old (even ancient) rural church in England, as Tolkien surely often did, and a bearded Green Man with a curious, slightly mirthful, slightly knowing expression will be watching you froma ceiling boss, or a hidden corner, or as a gargoyle or grotesque. The Green Men are the ancient, silent, almost hidden guardians of 'Green and Pleasant' Albion, here long before us, and doubtless long after us.

    • @lezzpaul3880
      @lezzpaul3880 Před 16 dny

      This is so obvious to me from the text! If you read it literally, it's almost too easy to figure out. People assume it's way more complicated than that.

  • @deandeann1541
    @deandeann1541 Před rokem +1388

    IMO it is important to remember that Tom Bombadil was a children's story that Tolkein wrote which predates the LOTR. IIRC it was written for his grand daughter when she was small. He may have included Bombadil in TLOTR as a nod to his now older grand daughter, she may have enjoyed that. Bombadil does not have to be anything in the LOTR, he is himself - Tolkein's oldest character, still kicking and doing what he does with a child like innocence. In a way he represents the innocence of childhood, complete with a child's ability to ignore what is of value to adults. Years ago I thought Bombadil was simply Tolkein putting himself into the story, as authors sometimes do, I am not confident of that now. Bombadil was, though, a character that would be able to connect very well with young children, even though he is eldest.

    • @danielcaputo4264
      @danielcaputo4264 Před rokem +30

      I completely agree. Also he being a part of the complete story which is the song of the ainur, he is a helpful harmonic piece that helps the song go in the direction that iluvatar created

    • @SlowlyYouRot
      @SlowlyYouRot Před rokem +5

      This!

    • @hiramlawson2824
      @hiramlawson2824 Před rokem +37

      I think Tom represents story telling for the sake of simply telling a story. Every other character has some deeper meaning to the story. Every other character moves the plot along. Not Tom... Tom is just there for fun. If any character represents Tolkien himself it's Gandalf, not Tom. In the end Gandalf goes to talk with Tom because Tom is what a story should be like, simple childish fun for the pure sake of having childish fun.

    • @aimokoivunen7046
      @aimokoivunen7046 Před rokem

      Yes, well put.

    • @ColoradoStreaming
      @ColoradoStreaming Před rokem +17

      Tom Bombadil is also kind of the exception that proves the rule. LOTR is so rich and real because every character and event has a backstory and lineage to the creation of the world itself. Tom is unique in that he was an opportunity to throw in a likable character for yucks and giggles and not have to provide an explanation or lore.

  • @truedp23
    @truedp23 Před rokem +1271

    I think Tom is meant to be a Tolkien family secret, to always remind his children that these stories were always for them first

    • @ZPtyy
      @ZPtyy Před rokem +123

      This is gold. Imagine having that kind of family secret, the rest of the world wondering what he really is, only for him to be a reminder that his children heard about him first hahah

    • @joypresleyify
      @joypresleyify Před rokem +6

      @@ZPtyy It's a fun idea, but when I read Tolkien in the '60's, I remember Tom talking with Bilbo and then Frodo, and then (I think) Frodo and Sam came upon him in a tree, trapped. He told them vital information, so I thought he should be featured in the films, but hey...

    • @ezakustam
      @ezakustam Před rokem

      @@joypresleyify As is, they were trapped and he released them. If you can find a source for what you said, it would be very interesting.

    • @lauaduen2625
      @lauaduen2625 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Such a dwarf thing... I want to believe is like that

    • @channingbloom7125
      @channingbloom7125 Před 8 měsíci

      800

  • @joeykimble62
    @joeykimble62 Před 6 měsíci +32

    My theory is that: Tom was a spectator of the music, but that he was so blissfully unaware of the situation he simply hummed his own theme to himself during the singing of the music and didn't hear it such that no external theme carried any sway over him. Meaning Tom lives by his own theme while simultaneously existing in Eru's and Melkor's creation. His innocent naiveté literally allowed him to traverse beyond the natural order of Ea and accomplish feats that should not be possible within this corporeal plane of existence.

    • @elijahisbell2622
      @elijahisbell2622 Před měsícem +1

      I really like this one. Very creative and an easy plausible explanation.

  • @user-qu3wc4ti7r
    @user-qu3wc4ti7r Před měsícem +4

    Thank you for this. Things are not going well in my life so I decided to finally read these books to hide from my depression but I got hung up on Tom Bombadil! He's such a fascinating character and I can't stop wondering and it's driving me crazy, but this really helps! So thank you.

  • @joshgrabslemons
    @joshgrabslemons Před 2 lety +352

    “If only more people valued home more than gold” Tom is the one who values home. He’s a good steward to the land. A fine role model for us all.

    • @ahaha8
      @ahaha8 Před 2 lety +1

      He is a time-share fraudster! I knew it!!!

  • @Romanissimus
    @Romanissimus Před rokem +777

    Tom Bombadil was the name of a Dutch doll Tolkien's children used to play with and, by extension, an imaginary persona inspired by that doll. I think he's nothing more than that in the LotR - a fictional character from another story who's made a crossover. He existed before the LotR was written (hence eldest), wasn't created or born by anyone inside the story including Eru himself (hence fatherless), is completely alien to its cosmic hierarchy and, at the end of the day, cannot understand and interact with the world the way any normal character would.

    • @musodata
      @musodata Před rokem +35

      this has a real-life practicality to it.

    • @gregfrantz5872
      @gregfrantz5872 Před rokem +20

      Exactly what I was thinking. Was glad to see it already written.

    • @gvvvyuyvuygvuyihjjj5408
      @gvvvyuyvuygvuyihjjj5408 Před rokem +7

      then why did gandalf speak to him for 2 years?

    • @jesusoftheapes
      @jesusoftheapes Před rokem

      No . He is Tolkien

    • @Romanissimus
      @Romanissimus Před rokem +17

      @@jesusoftheapes Tolkien, being the author of the story, would have the power to change anything in it. Tom doesn't.

  • @66balsam
    @66balsam Před rokem +27

    Theory 5 gets my vote, Tom simply is…. I think he does serve a roll as caretaker of Middle Earth, and as time has gone by, has set himself smaller boundaries. He is an observer, and a watcher, and a historian of all.

  • @bzqp2
    @bzqp2 Před rokem +43

    I really like the theory claiming Tom is the first character created by Tolkien based on his childhood toy. He can appear in many worlds but doesn't belong to any of them. It also nicely fits the recurring theme of the world trying to capture him and Tom easily avoiding the traps. Being with him for so long Tolkien also gave him many of his personal traits and gave him power to occasionally act as his Deus Ex Machina. Then again, knowing how creative process works, it's also very likely that he was just semi-accidentally written into LOTR without any specified theory developed by Tolkien beforehand. He would do that with other aspects of the Middle Earth and then had to revisit and rewrite them to make things more consistent. Tom was just left there as he was.

  • @Gman556
    @Gman556 Před 3 lety +1057

    Theory: Eru started off the Music by singing "Tom Bom, jolly Tom, Tom Bombadillo!"

  • @Ojja78
    @Ojja78 Před 2 lety +771

    You forgot to mention that Tom calls the Ring of Power a "little trinket" when he puts it on. That's one of the coolest moments of all the books.

    • @-taz-
      @-taz- Před 2 lety +15

      That is why he exists.

    • @Jowjoneking
      @Jowjoneking Před 2 lety +19

      Debatable if that is a cool moment or just ruins and diminishes the struggle all other characters go through. No matter what theories we have in papper, Tom Bombadil is a reminiscent character from the hobbit, wich was written as a children's book as gift to Tolkien son. He has no place in a more mature book like the Lord of the rings and even if looked at as a call back connecting the books it is still out of place.

    • @HelloImCrimson
      @HelloImCrimson Před 2 lety +77

      @@Jowjoneking Yea, I can already see you will out-write Tolkien lol. Stfu.

    • @Ojja78
      @Ojja78 Před 2 lety +46

      @@Jowjoneking iirc Tom, as a character, is one of Tolkein's oldest. Before The Hobbit. But your point is, in my estimation, a silly one. What Tolkein did was create an entire universe that's all interconnected, so his older characters "belong" in his world just as much as new characters. I would even go so far as to say there's no distinction to be made between new and old characters, because it's a living world where they all exist together.

    • @LordVader1094
      @LordVader1094 Před 2 lety +48

      @@Jowjoneking There's nothing wrong with a lighthearted character early in the story that deepens the world's mystery

  • @scottdelong188
    @scottdelong188 Před 4 měsíci +6

    I think the existence of Tom Bombadil is Tolkien's lesson for us that no matter how deeply we try to understand the workings of the universe, there is an inherent mystery under it all that cannot be analyzed and neatly interpreted by the scientific method or comprehensive theological frameworks. We all might have an encounter or two with that which cannot be explained and rather than obsess over making rational sense of these experiences, at some point we can just throw up our hands and accept there is a kind of enchantment to the world - mysteries, that, like Tom Bombadil, owe us no explanation. If Tolkien provided us with a Middle Earth that had airtight, logical history and everything was explainable, it would actually be a less fantastical world than the one we live in.

  • @MDTurner
    @MDTurner Před 7 měsíci +7

    I like the idea that Tom is the embodiment of the Music of the Ainur, but I think he’s just simply himself, as Tolkien intended. If anything else, he’s the gentle yet immutable representative of the sovereignty of goodness in the world that stems from Eru. He’s the one being that doesn’t fit a category and that mystery brings us ultimate comfort. Much like the mystery of the Holy Trinity in our own world. And that is an encouraging thought. 😊

  • @a_sethhale
    @a_sethhale Před 2 lety +513

    I was playing LOTRO with a friend of mine who’s never read the books, and when Bombadil walked in and destroyed all the Barrow wights by singing my friend just goes “wait what is this guy?” and I was just like “I don’t man no one knows”

    • @michaelgriffith5747
      @michaelgriffith5747 Před 2 lety +41

      Thats just Tom. Just ignore him.

    • @G31M1
      @G31M1 Před 2 lety +32

      Bombadil is the Eminem of the LOTR universe, he dissed those barrow wights so hard that they seized to exist.

    • @kamoroso94
      @kamoroso94 Před 2 lety +8

      @@G31M1 *ceased

    • @TyranasauruzFlex6669
      @TyranasauruzFlex6669 Před 2 lety +2

      @@G31M1 gross

    • @suffy101
      @suffy101 Před 2 lety +1

      @@G31M1 lmao

  • @matthewterry9413
    @matthewterry9413 Před 3 lety +506

    I agree. Tom is just Tom. I don’t think that Tolkien liked explaining everything in full, but leaving mysteries intentionally.

    • @johnshannon9656
      @johnshannon9656 Před 3 lety +11

      Like the Watcher of the Water.

    • @morgothbauglir8687
      @morgothbauglir8687 Před 3 lety +18

      I like that Tolkien didn’t explain everything, whether intentionally or not, because trying to formulate theories and make sense of certain things is really awesome and fun

    • @michami135
      @michami135 Před 3 lety +5

      That would fit with, "he is".

    • @matthewterry9413
      @matthewterry9413 Před 3 lety +2

      @@michami135 well, not exactly. As he points out in the video, “He is” is the classic deity claim. Which is why some insist that he is Eru Himself, incarnate. But no, that doesn’t fit either 🤷‍♂️

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 Před 3 lety +1

      Tom is Tom but what exactly is he. He cannot be man or Elve.

  • @PaddyRoon7
    @PaddyRoon7 Před 8 měsíci +17

    #4 is definitely my favourite. I've always loved the idea of the gods of this fantasy world creating the universe through their music, it's a beautiful idea. Bombadil being a personification of that music makes complete sense with what we know of his character.
    Before I heard this theory, I'd always thought of Tom Bombadil as a "glitch", some unintentional note played during the Ainur's music that ended up creating something unexpected. That would explain why he wasn't interested in the war or the rest of the world, as he wasn't originally meant to be part of Eru's design. Also explains why his powers are unlike any other being in Middle Earth. Perhaps Eru's surprise at hearing that unexpected note led his thoughts to create Bombadil, before he regained focus back to the composition.
    I like the "music personified" theory a lot more, though. I never liked the "Bombadil is Eru" theory, that's just so overdone in fiction, having God living on earth as a regular person.

    • @eddominates
      @eddominates Před 3 měsíci

      oooh I like this. mixing #4 with your theory -- an unintended consequence of Melkor's dissonance and Eru's effort to correct it, could have momentarily created a strange harmony that didn't exactly fit anyone's purpose, but nevertheless is a part of the music. that dang circle of 5ths, it can come back around and get ya, lol. Tom lives in harmony with all things the music created, as he was created with it, yet his particular harmony was not intended by either party, so he simply exists as a part of the music but not for anyone's specific purpose, Eru or Melkar.

    • @eddominates
      @eddominates Před 3 měsíci

      like if you have two people play random music on two pianos, eventually at some point harmonies will appear unintentionally. And if harmony is the medium of creation, well then when you've got two musicians battling for control over the music in real time, it's sensible to think that there could have been a few unintended harmonies in the mix before Eru smoothed it back out. Harmony without purpose, it just exists on its own.

  • @thepriorstone4064
    @thepriorstone4064 Před 7 měsíci +11

    I know the Hobbit was a story for his kids, so maybe Tom Bombadil is simply a character from another story he told his kids, something akin to Winne the Pooh. So Tom showing up in Lord of the Rings is simply a fun throwback to his first few stories, and lends credence to him being the Oldest and coming before the Dark Lord, he literally was made and existed in stories before anything else, and landed in Middle Earth

    • @sewmuchjoy
      @sewmuchjoy Před 6 měsíci +1

      True...never thought of that!

  • @TheAdrianMD
    @TheAdrianMD Před 2 lety +213

    The fact that he named his horse Fatty Lumpkin makes me like him even more.

  • @Ghost-rb5tg
    @Ghost-rb5tg Před 3 lety +1680

    I always imagined Robin Williams as the actor to play Ol' Bombadil.

  • @WickerSticksSinema
    @WickerSticksSinema Před rokem +31

    I always thought Tom was a version the Green Man from Pagan and old English folklore. Tolkien was always inspired by Norse and tales of old. Wouldn’t be shocked if that was incorporated as well.

    • @CptSmittyPants
      @CptSmittyPants Před 7 měsíci +2

      the green man is in my pantheon of pagan beliefs, and i just described him to my wife the other day "think jolly green giant... but not a giant"

  • @tylerjones7113
    @tylerjones7113 Před 11 měsíci +14

    I used to lean towards the "Tom is a Maia" theory, perhaps one who fell in love with the world as the world, and thus ignored good vs evil (though he himself is good), and battle, nations, etc. After this video, I now believe that the most likely theories are either that he was created directly by the Music or IS the music. Both are pretty good theories.

    • @lukebullen705
      @lukebullen705 Před 6 měsíci

      Original theory made no sense because if he loved the world he'll be against evil because it was destroying the world and not remain neutral to it

  • @paolopesare3566
    @paolopesare3566 Před 3 lety +475

    Me while Reading the books years ago:
    "Who's this guy?"
    Me while watching this video now:
    "What the hell is this guy?"
    Me, a moment before my death:
    "Let's Hope there's an afterlife, I must ask Tolkien Tom Bombadil's true identity"
    Me in the afterlife:
    "tell me, who's Tom Bombadil?"
    Tolkien: "He Is"

    • @thedarknesscallingme
      @thedarknesscallingme Před 3 lety +39

      I'll do you one better, why is Tom Bombadil?

    • @Highonwater3X
      @Highonwater3X Před 3 lety +39

      @@thedarknesscallingme Nobody ever asks how is Tom Bombadil. Sad.

    • @dr.vikyll7466
      @dr.vikyll7466 Před 3 lety +14

      @@Highonwater3X because everyone knows he is happy and care-free all the time.

    • @mowermen1762
      @mowermen1762 Před 3 lety +7

      @@dr.vikyll7466 (this maybe a bit too real)
      Just because he puts up the charade of being happy doesn’t mean he actually is aka depression you act happy but in fact you are sad

    • @baldrbraa
      @baldrbraa Před 3 lety +15

      The first rule of the afterlife:
      Don’t talk about Tom Bombadil

  • @leonardofaber5823
    @leonardofaber5823 Před 3 lety +412

    Tolkien himself wrote the most likely answer.
    In one of the many letters (16 December 1937 - To Stanley Unwin), back when he was still starting to think about The Hobbit's sequence, he asked "Do you think Tom Bombadil, THE SPIRIT of the (vanishing) Oxford and Berkshire countryside, could be made into the hero of a story?"
    Tom is a spirit. No doubt about that.
    The theory of him being a spirit of the Music is good, but more likely Tom was one of the countless spirits created by Eru himself before Time. The Ainur were not just Valar+Maiar. There were other spirits, lesser than Maiar but still powerful, roaming around. Tom is likely one of them

    • @MasterBombadillo
      @MasterBombadillo Před 3 lety +29

      You need to remember that that letter was written discussing the aspects of a possible sequel to The Hobbit, before Bombadil was included in the mythos Tolkien was crafting. We also see that Tolkien used the words "the spirit of the (vanishing) Oxford and Berkshire countryside". You cannot take those words out of the equation. This is Tolkien talking about what Bombadil _represents,_ not is in the lore of Arda. Don't put too much weight to those particular words when discussing Bombadil's origin.

    • @leonardofaber5823
      @leonardofaber5823 Před 3 lety +10

      @@MasterBombadillo I know about the time period when the letter was written. That doesn't change the fact that, to Tolkien, Tom was a spirit. He was a spirit outside the Mythos of Arda, and so he would continue to be inside of it. At least there's no evidence pointing Tolkien would change his classification. What Tom represents is what he is.
      As he was a spirit of a vanishing area of the real world, he is a spirit of a vanishing area of the secondary world (after all, the Old Forest was a vanishing spot, one of the last parts of ancient woods in Arda, destroyed by the hands of Men and Enemy).
      Not Eru, for there was no embodiment of Him; Not Tolkien, for he himself said he was not part of Middle-earth; Not Vala, for ALL were named; A lesser Maia perhaps, but no evidence of that; A spirit (either a manifestation of the Music or a lesser Ainu), why not?

    • @MasterBombadillo
      @MasterBombadillo Před 3 lety +9

      @@leonardofaber5823 That doesn't add up actually. You can't take an explanation talking outside the whole mythology and give that the kind of authority you give it right now. You can consider it, certainly, but it's not a certainty Tolkien ever thought about Bombadil in that term.
      A "lesser" Ainu that comes to Middle-Earth would still be a Maia. After all, Maiar are all of the Ainur who came to Middle-Earth that aren't Valar.

    • @leonardofaber5823
      @leonardofaber5823 Před 3 lety +2

      @@MasterBombadillo no. Ainur=Valar+Maiar+Unnamed Spirits

    • @MasterBombadillo
      @MasterBombadillo Před 3 lety +7

      @@leonardofaber5823 Could you provide a quote where Tolkien specifies that there are other spirits than Maiar and Valar amongst the Ainur?

  • @janeelliott9297
    @janeelliott9297 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Hi there NOTR - I've just found your channel here and I really love this episode about Tom - I wanted to say that all the illustrations and artwork are really excellent and I'm glad you credited all the artists in the description area. Much Thanks !

  • @darrellhall6279
    @darrellhall6279 Před rokem +7

    I've been a Tolkien fan for over 45 years, I just tumbled on to your CZcams site and am very interested. There is so much more beyond the books that I am looking forward to getting into, thanks for your contributions here. I'll be checking them out any time I can 😉😎

  • @blueshattrick
    @blueshattrick Před 2 lety +374

    Tom shows that Tolkien's real mastery was knowing what to explain - and what to leave as mystery - for his readers.

    • @JesusProtects
      @JesusProtects Před rokem +5

      I wanted to know more about him tho.

    • @ElficGuy
      @ElficGuy Před rokem +1

      Yep, he was BSing in that letter

    • @SnailHatan
      @SnailHatan Před rokem

      Nah I’m pretty sure his mastery was the insane detail in lore and language and the great stories that came from that.

    • @ElficGuy
      @ElficGuy Před rokem

      @@SnailHatan not mutually exclusive.

    • @Feuerbach1
      @Feuerbach1 Před rokem +1

      Textual ruins! Anyone know what was the deal with the cats of Queen Beruthial?

  • @ripley2995
    @ripley2995 Před 2 lety +112

    Tom putting the ring on his pinkie is one of the most epic and confusing moments in the series

    • @HobbitOfChaos
      @HobbitOfChaos Před rokem +1

      I mean rings on the pinky symbolize wealth and status of importance

    • @ripley2995
      @ripley2995 Před rokem +2

      @@HobbitOfChaos Nice

  • @caitlynbennett7829
    @caitlynbennett7829 Před rokem +15

    I like to think that not even the creator, Eru, knows the full extent of their creation, and that Tom is just as much of a mystery to the creator as he is to everyone else. Perhaps Tom is the personification of what "nature" is beyond our conscious thought and understanding. A "magical" and unknown effect of the music of the Ainur. Just like if Tolkien didn't entirely know who or what Tom was when he created him, only that he came about in the process of creating his stories, and he enjoyed him so much that he kept him and left him a mystery because not everything has an answer, nor needs one.

  • @anaragstale7307
    @anaragstale7307 Před 10 měsíci +11

    I think Tom, like Gia in Greek mythology, is the embodiment of the world itself. The first raindrop, the first well, everything. In contrast, he could as well be the embodiment of the music as it created the world and the lands. Tom rembers the first raindrop, Tom is. Tom was first and might be the last when darkness comes. Plus, his song songs are stronger songs, and his feet are faster. I love Tom Bombadil.😁

  • @Jerd123
    @Jerd123 Před 2 lety +90

    I like how every character in LOTR has a huge amount of backstory and explanation for their existence, one of the most vast and detailed stories of all time. Then you also have tom bombadil

  • @thaddeusrobinson6866
    @thaddeusrobinson6866 Před 2 lety +491

    Bombadil is like Tolkien’s favorite DnD character that he made into an NPC in his first big campaign as DM.

    • @SixSioux
      @SixSioux Před 2 lety

      or maybe a GT existing under ZM for never forgetting when the ME was LL

    • @KeyserSoze685
      @KeyserSoze685 Před 2 lety

      Awesome!!!!

    • @thaddeusrobinson6866
      @thaddeusrobinson6866 Před 2 lety +4

      @@SixSioux That's extra funny coming from you, RC. But if you came down here to make fun of my Dungeons and Dragons joke in the comment section of a video about the esoteric debate over the nature of an obscure fantasy character, you may be playing to the wrong crowd.

    • @babsbylow6869
      @babsbylow6869 Před 2 lety +1

      That hits home Thaddeus.
      While I've not done it I've sure given up retired characters for other Storytellers to use in their future stories.
      It's great fun when I have the chance to check in with them and catch up on my creations.

    • @TheGrumbliestPuppy
      @TheGrumbliestPuppy Před 2 lety

      Enjoy your 420th like, sir.

  • @jeffgrothe447
    @jeffgrothe447 Před rokem +12

    I think that the old English folklore of “the green man” had some inspiration for Tolkien’s Bombadil. He would have possibly lectured on him at Oxford, his face is all over the place in Oxford carved in stone and wood (most notably on the “Narnia door” in the St. Mary’s corridor). No surviving stories of the character exist, so Tolkien May have been creating his own green man myth. If I’m not mistaken, Bombadil was a creation of Tolkien’s before he wrote The Hobbit, so perhaps some of Tolkiens old poems and children’s stories are making it into his LOTR epic for fun.

    • @ogolthorp
      @ogolthorp Před 10 měsíci

      The green man exists in Philadelphia. Also known as Charlie.

  • @shehansenanayaka3046
    @shehansenanayaka3046 Před 8 měsíci +1

    There are lot of things i learned from this channel which i previously unlnown. Brilliant doc series. Love your channel and your videos. We always appreciate your hard work and dedication towards these videos.

  • @SamaritanPrime
    @SamaritanPrime Před 2 lety +274

    Tom Bombadil is... content.
    Does Tom want for anything? No. He has a house, he has Goldberry, he has a little patch of land to call his own. I don't really see Tom wanting.... anything, really.
    Which is why the One Ring does not work on him. Just about everyone who has wielded the One Ring (or tried to take it) is not content with their lives when they get it. Isildur, Smeagol, Bilbo Baggins, Frodo Baggins, Boromir, etc. The One Ring whispers into their ear that "Oh, I can help you achieve what you desire..."
    But Tom Bombadil wants nothing. Thus, there is nothing for the One Ring to try and tempt him with.

    • @nickcampbell5626
      @nickcampbell5626 Před 2 lety +27

      The ring: "I can help you achieve what you desire."
      Tom: "I wanna scare these hobbits!"

    • @bubbles784
      @bubbles784 Před 2 lety +22

      @@nickcampbell5626 The Ring: "OK... But maybe we should think bigg-"
      Tom: "Nope."

    • @tintinaus
      @tintinaus Před 2 lety +19

      This is why I felt the argument against Tom being an Ainur was a bit weak. The ring simply doesn't effect Tom because it has no desires or needs to work upon. Gandalf and Sarumon both came to Middle Earth with definite goals, and so could be tempted towards corruption. Tom, not so.

    • @xBINARYGODx
      @xBINARYGODx Před 2 lety +9

      having no desire such as described in this thread is not something a mortal, or something mortal adjacent can achieve. PS - not able to screw with the mind of is one thing, not making you invisible and you being able to see others who are is another thing.

    • @tintinaus
      @tintinaus Před 2 lety +7

      @@xBINARYGODx The ring didn't always turn people invisible or cutting Sauron's finger might have been harder than it was. Gandalf himself says that the ring offered powers in proportion to the one who wielded it. I would guess neither he or Galadriel would turn invisible for instance.

  • @KuraSourTakanHour
    @KuraSourTakanHour Před 2 lety +343

    Wow Goldberry's answer was basically
    Frodo: Who is Tom Bombadil?
    GoldB: Yes

    • @Losrandir
      @Losrandir Před 2 lety +5

      Goldberry is awesome

    • @qetoun
      @qetoun Před 2 lety +8

      Its how God answered Moses when he asked what his name was; 'I am that I am'.

    • @klausstock8020
      @klausstock8020 Před 2 lety +8

      Peter Jackson: "No, he isn't."

    • @caramelldansen4121
      @caramelldansen4121 Před 2 lety

      Susumu Hirasawa

  • @WatchWadeEat
    @WatchWadeEat Před rokem +13

    I have a similar line of thinking to the embodiment of the music, I was happy you tied Ungoliant into that theory also. I believe Tom and Ungoliant were beings that existed before Ea was created. If Eru Illuvatar existed before then, it is fair to assume there were other beings that existed before Eru decided to create the Valar and their song. I believe they are both just a good and evil being that were attracted to the song and came to it for different reasons, Tom because he enjoyed the music and wanted to be a part of it, and Ungoliant because she wanted to feed on it or heard the dissonance and it resonated with her. Gandalf even mentions even more unspeakable beings in the depths, which I believe would be similar beings that were just in the same space as Arda as it was created and were trapped inside of it. My evidence for Ungoliant is that Melkor feared her initially when he came upon her, however Melkor knew they were the most powerful of the Valar, and would have no reason to fear any creation of Eru Illuvatar. In my opinion it makes sense for why they do not fit in any specific class or order of Illuvatar's creation or children, because they are not part of Illuvatar's creations.

  • @Nickle_King
    @Nickle_King Před rokem +8

    I like the theory that Tom is a creation at the moment of creation. He is the barometer of the world in perfect harmony. A living embodiment of what all life was and could be again without the Discord. Not really responsible for what happens in the world, but wishing it the best and helping a little along the way when it suits him.
    He is, as the last two theories state, who he is. No more. No less. He doesn't strive for more, not begrudge what has been lost. He is a creature of a moment kept safe by himself.

  • @DamonNomad82
    @DamonNomad82 Před 3 lety +179

    IIRC, Tom Bombadil was in LOTR because Tolkien's daughter, Priscilla, had a favorite doll by that name, and he promised her that he would include the doll in the story he was writing.

    • @derdimi927
      @derdimi927 Před 3 lety +29

      Maybe she described him how Tom has to be like in the story, just being a happy man living his own in the forest and cannot be harmed by any means, and Tolkien added it like this without any further explaination.

    • @bookmouse2719
      @bookmouse2719 Před 3 lety +12

      Ah....the voice of truth settles it. :-) he's a toy.

    • @sachadavid8410
      @sachadavid8410 Před 3 lety +10

      @@bookmouse2719 He's Woody's ancestor ;)

    • @nicholase2868
      @nicholase2868 Před 3 lety +12

      That makes sense for how nonsensical the character is, even for a fantasy novel.

    • @mrlardtard6552
      @mrlardtard6552 Před 3 lety

      That's hot

  • @drask1988
    @drask1988 Před 2 lety +241

    As a child I immediately thought that tom was the embodiment of the earth, married to the daughter of the rivers. The elves talk about how Sauron can corrupt and break mountains, thus being able to eventually even overwhelm tom. His songs and control over the things in the natural world I attributed to him being wise and having experienced everything that has happened since the beginning of ardas history

    • @andrewnewell1142
      @andrewnewell1142 Před 2 lety +25

      While the idea that he’s the song kinda already covers this, this is the gist I got. Tom is Arda, hence why it would take the entire world asking him to take the ring, and the worry that if Sauron conquered the world he would have power over Tom Bombadil.

    • @kelseybisset88
      @kelseybisset88 Před 2 lety

      I iy 786 minutes 66feet 66th and 66AM 66 and

    • @mechadoggy
      @mechadoggy Před 2 lety

      I always thought Tom Bombadil was Eru Illuvatar

  • @MrFrefontain
    @MrFrefontain Před rokem +2

    I've only just seen your channel, I am sorry, but a long time fan of Tolkien and his works. Bombadil is so mysterious and without enough context for some of us fans. I like the thoughts put in from your own brain and the thoughts of others who love this world. I am in my forties now and first saw this world when I was younger ofc, reading everything my young mind could get it hands on. In elementary school I had flourished in just a few areas but reading was my best subject and began looking for more in the fantasy world. The LoTR and others were my first literary "loves." Fantasy had ensnared me and these stories were just the beginning for my need to read. Thanks for the efforts on all parts. Very cool stuff.

  • @JD_Gaming_CR
    @JD_Gaming_CR Před rokem +1

    All i have to say is, since i found your channel, which was when i started watching The Rings of Power series, i have loved your videos. I have been a LOTR fan for a while but somehow only found your channel recently.

  • @mfcabrini
    @mfcabrini Před 3 lety +278

    Re: comments below that Tolkien saw himself and his wife as Luthien and Beren: In Tolkien's biography, you read that while he was courting Edith, they went on a picnic in the woods where she danced. Imagine her as lovely young woman in a flowing 1900's dress, dancing in the woods like an elf-maiden. What a romantic scene! And Tolkien, the poor mortal, falling hopelessly in love. BTW, I did my own Tolkien tour in Birmingham and visited their graves. Very touching! There are the names Beren and Luthien on the headstones. People leave little notes, some written in elvish, some with drawings, rosaries and flowers on the graves. It's beautiful.

    • @xxsauron007xx
      @xxsauron007xx Před 3 lety +15

      that really sounds beautiful

    • @dionysusnow
      @dionysusnow Před 3 lety +13

      You make me want to go on a pilgrimage.

    • @simonmorris4226
      @simonmorris4226 Před 3 lety +8

      Being a romantic the first time I heard this I did have a lump in my throat. When lockdown is over if you come up to the Midlands I will take you to what I believe is the inspiration for Brandywine Bridge. And possibly the Old Forest as it’s right by Cannock Chase and Tolkien lived there for a while!

    • @amoney1934
      @amoney1934 Před 3 lety +2

      Wow.

    • @prakashpanangaden1373
      @prakashpanangaden1373 Před 3 lety +4

      As you obviously know, the graves are not in Birmingham, they are in the Wolvercote cemetery just North of the ring road around Oxford. I just didn't want other readers to go to Birmingham to look for his grave as your comment gave the impression that the graves were in Birmingham.

  • @jonathanraithel5726
    @jonathanraithel5726 Před 3 lety +388

    Tolkien described Tom Bombadil’s inspiration to a friend in a letter as “the spirit of the English countryside.”
    My personal theory: Tom Bombadil is the personification or genius loci of the lands that would become England as the ages pass in Arda. In this, Goldberry would likely be the rains and waters of England.
    It’s why he was there before the Valar, because the Valar entered Arda after he was made.
    It’s why he has boundaries: because England has territorial limits (history laughs at the irony). The areas around the Shire were to someday become the location of England, which would explain why Tom Bombadil wouldn’t leave.
    It’s why he can’t control weather, because he’s just the land, so the weather affects him.
    It’s why the ring does nothing to him, because he’s not a being.
    When it’s mentioned that he could fall to Sauron, it’s because he can be affected the way Hollin was affected by Elves, and Minas Morgul affected by the Nazgul. When it’s said Bombadil can’t resist Sauron “unless such power is in the earth itself”, it’s a literal statement. The land can’t defend anything if people don’t defend the land.
    It would also be why he regards Farmer Maggot in regard: Farmer Maggot loves and respects the earth, and Tom Bombadil respects him in turn.
    Being England’s genius loci would also account for Tom being “master”, and commanding to an extent what’s in his bounds, but not being all-powerful.
    This is also why he ignores the struggles of the world: Until the second music, he’ll just continue existing no matter what happens. He’s willing to save hobbits because they love the land, but he’ll do no more.
    I doubt Tolkien would endorse any single theory other than Tom Bombadil is Tom Bombadil, but Tom Bombadil as England’s genius loci is possibly the closest he would get to endorsing one.

    • @ladycavalier
      @ladycavalier Před 3 lety +18

      Dadgum i love this theory

    • @kentuckyjohnson7394
      @kentuckyjohnson7394 Před 3 lety +38

      I figured he's supposed to be some kind of earth or nature spirit, possibly an embodiment of the land of Arda itself. The fact that he's lived for as long as he did might symbolize the vitality of the land. It might not be a familiar concept within Judeo-Christian culture, but nature spirits are quite common in other cultures. Even English folklore has prominent examples, ie. the lady of the lake in Arthurian legend.

    • @vrijbuiterspartei2715
      @vrijbuiterspartei2715 Před 3 lety +6

      Yes, Tom is the spirit of the Woods.

    • @johnlucas2838
      @johnlucas2838 Před 3 lety +5

      @@vrijbuiterspartei2715 Yet Tom has existed before the forests or woods.

    • @vrijbuiterspartei2715
      @vrijbuiterspartei2715 Před 3 lety +8

      @@johnlucas2838 because the spirit was there first.

  • @jimmysaviano4950
    @jimmysaviano4950 Před měsícem +1

    This might be the most satisfying video, and content and commentary I have heard on any Tolkien subject

  • @stusup74
    @stusup74 Před rokem +1

    I adore this video! One of my favourites from your vast selection. Bravo!

  • @mantequillaop8262
    @mantequillaop8262 Před 3 lety +79

    I think Tom Bombadil is just Tom Bombadil. Just because, is the purest thing in Middle Earth, and nothing can affect or bother him.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 Před 3 lety +2

      I think there are some things for which there will never be an explanation. Too many people think that because some things in Tolkien's mythos are so detailed in their explanation, that necessarily means _everything_ has a detailed explanation, and that's just not true. This was one man's creation, and one man can only come up with so much, especially when the majority of it came out of inspiration and not deliberate invention.

  • @Oskarelu
    @Oskarelu Před 3 lety +182

    Imagine a Silmarillion movie which begins with a young Tolkien having an encounter in the forest with Tom Bombadill and the latter telling him about the story of the Middle-Earth.

    • @ashleythibault5434
      @ashleythibault5434 Před 3 lety +10

      That sounds like an awesome idea for a movie.

    • @ThorRuneHansen
      @ThorRuneHansen Před 3 lety +30

      It would be a musical then :)

    • @Greendalewitch
      @Greendalewitch Před 3 lety +8

      @@ThorRuneHansen Lmao. Touché

    • @foxykc
      @foxykc Před 3 lety +3

      Works for me

    • @Greendalewitch
      @Greendalewitch Před 3 lety

      @fred McMurray At least until Melkor came and ruined everything with his own version of singing.

  • @NA-mg2eb
    @NA-mg2eb Před rokem +4

    I had considered the idea that Tom might belong to the same order of beings as Ungoliant prior to seeing this video but your incarnated music angle is the first really good explanation I've encountered of precisely what that sort of being might be

  • @scottfromspace
    @scottfromspace Před 3 měsíci +3

    I know this wasn’t Tolkien’s intention, but Tom makes for a perfect representation of someone who has reached Buddhahood

  • @somethingisverywrong
    @somethingisverywrong Před 3 lety +49

    "Tom's a guy who loves the forest, who is happy and sings constantly, and is just generally positive to everyone." Seems very much on brand for Tolkien as an aspiration. He doesn't need to be an incarnation of Eru, or the music itself, or anything. He is a person living how a person should. He's living the ideal Tolkien life, in tune with nature and poetry, with a decency in his soul. He's Tolkien's Righteous Man.

  • @Greendalewitch
    @Greendalewitch Před 3 lety +79

    I think Tom Bombadill is the incarnation of the Secret Fire. There is a passage during the music of the Ainur where its described that the secret fire is put in the centre of the world to burn, before the Valar enter it. If Tom Bombadil is indeed oldest and fatherless, it makes sense that he was there BEFORE the dark lord came from Outside. He was there before The Valar entered the world, because Eru had put him there as the secret fire and he had taken a form of his own. He is the *secret* fire.

    • @KelvinAdams.
      @KelvinAdams. Před 3 lety

      Makes sense that the secret fire was put in the middle of the earth to give balance go it

    • @kubaparcinski5942
      @kubaparcinski5942 Před 3 lety

      DOesn't it mean the core of earth? Althought i agree that Tom is most likely somehow connected to Ainur music.

    • @Greendalewitch
      @Greendalewitch Před rokem

      @@kubaparcinski5942 "Therefore Ilúvatar gave to their vision Being, and set it amid the Void, and the Secret Fire was sent to burn at the heart of the World; and it was called Eä."
      It was supposed to be "at" not "in" my apologies.

  • @kirelraes7644
    @kirelraes7644 Před rokem +2

    Thanks so much for all these 💚 I absolutely love the detail and depth you’ve gone to. It’s so nice to find someone more crazy than I am 😂😂🙏

  • @zacmccollum7144
    @zacmccollum7144 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I've been listening to the audiobook narrated by Andy Serkis, and I've had the god damn Tom Bombadil song stuck in my head all day!

    • @haruogiwara6286
      @haruogiwara6286 Před 2 měsíci

      same! as much as i love that audio book to death, when I first listened to the song, it started to get on my nerves haha

  • @brthrhell1
    @brthrhell1 Před 3 lety +471

    I've noticed no one ever asks, who is Goldberry? She seems to me just as enigmatic as Tom.

    • @sambonsampson228
      @sambonsampson228 Před 3 lety +37

      She's Tom's Huckleberry...

    • @occamsox5331
      @occamsox5331 Před 3 lety +58

      She’s the Rivers daughter.

    • @micahphilson
      @micahphilson Před 3 lety +25

      Wasn't she like a maia of the rivers?

    • @TJSaw
      @TJSaw Před 3 lety +18

      Personification of the Withywindle.

    • @gino7lord
      @gino7lord Před 3 lety +12

      I think she might be a Maia related to nature.

  • @UATU.
    @UATU. Před 2 lety +76

    “Tell me, who are you alone, yourself and nameless?” has always been my favorite line in LOTR. It clears my mind and leaves me staring into the middle distance for a weirdly long time. Works better than a Zen koan for me. Great video as always!

    • @AF-zw4wv
      @AF-zw4wv Před 2 lety +2

      It really is one of the most profound lines in the books

    • @kevinrussell1144
      @kevinrussell1144 Před rokem +1

      Tom is the most profound and mysterious section of the book, and he's right next door to the Shire.
      AND when Gandalf comes back to the Shire with the boys, but won't help them clean their house, he goes off to a LONG discussion with Tom. Why would an angelic being need to go off for a long visit with a singing simpleton? Maybe there is much more to Tom than meets the eye?
      Everything about Tom is my favorite part of the book, including Frodo's anticipatory dream of the Undying Land (Paradise).

  • @GarthSisco
    @GarthSisco Před rokem +4

    I've always thought of Tom Bambadil as a Forest Guardian, neither good nor evil, he simply is. It explains why the water-nymphs are un bothered by him, and life within the realm of his forest can be made to bend to his voice, it's his "work"... job to keep his forest.

  • @blessedheavyelements8544

    Good rabbit hole. Thanks for the tour! Best Regards and Best Wishes for 2023!

  • @williamjameslehy1341
    @williamjameslehy1341 Před 3 lety +784

    Robin Williams would've been good for the part had Peter Jackson left him in.

    • @ChacUayabXoc
      @ChacUayabXoc Před 3 lety +76

      Oh, what an amazing thought. He would've fit so well.

    • @AeneasGemini
      @AeneasGemini Před 3 lety +16

      I would've called that ironic, given how RW was really feeling much of the time

    • @micahphilson
      @micahphilson Před 3 lety +19

      Now I'm even more sad he was cut out, that's such a perfect idea! I would have loved an entire movie made like that!

    • @thomasfreudenberg4995
      @thomasfreudenberg4995 Před 3 lety +15

      @@micahphilson Let's make three movies out of that! ;)

    • @orang1921
      @orang1921 Před 3 lety +2

      @@micahphilson cut out of both the movie and life

  • @happyhammer1
    @happyhammer1 Před rokem +187

    Tolkien talked about Tom being purposefully enigmatic because some things should be mysterious. I think that was Tolkiens way of stoking the readers imagination. The beauty of books is that the readers mind helps construct the world the author created. So Tom Bombadil can be whatever the reader imagines him to be.

    • @petefrys545
      @petefrys545 Před rokem +2

      Sounds sensible to me

    • @IAmBael
      @IAmBael Před rokem +5

      This is exactly what I think as well. A great writer leaves some things open for the reader to insert themselves into. Each reader is different, and trying to control every single aspect of your story means that there's nowhere for the reader to fit themselves.

    • @anarchorepublican5954
      @anarchorepublican5954 Před rokem +2

      ..Here is where Tolkien's Catholic piety and Biblical influence cannot be dismissed...Tom B. is the anthropological manifestation of God... like unto, Daniel's "Ancient of Days" (see Daniel 7:9)...Tom, much like the original LORD God, of Genesis , is not transcendent from nature, but rather delights in its goodness. We are told, the Almighty even enjoyed the Garden of Eden in the cool of the day (see Genesis 2:8); ...and yes the true nature of God, always remains an enigmatic mystery...and Tolkien's, Tom B., captures that wonder perfectly...
      After all Bombadil remains the only being on Middle Earth apparently powerful enough that the "evil" Ring of power...is really only a golden ring...that is because all of creation is ultimately subject to Him...even tyrannical plotting of Evil, itself...and this Tom B. merely chuckles at (see Psalm 2:1-4)...
      ...Don't you know His name yet?.. (see Exodus 3:13-14 & John 14:8-10)...

    • @Magic_beans_
      @Magic_beans_ Před rokem +1

      @@IAmBael That would also fit with how Tolkien approaches questions in his Letters. He doesn’t present himself as _the_ authority on Arda, just someone who’s spent a lot of time thinking about it.

    • @retrohanska4441
      @retrohanska4441 Před 10 měsíci +1

      And that is wisdom plenty of modern fantasy writers have completely forgotten. They're in such a hurry to explain and flesh out their hard magic system, creature biology and background lore that they forget the importance of mystery in a story. Fully explaining how everything works makes the world feel small, regardless of its size. You always wanna leave something just beyond the horizon so that no matter how much your story expands the reader always has the impression that there's more because what they imagine to that space will always be more amazing and epic than what you can possible create.

  • @gyderian9435
    @gyderian9435 Před rokem +6

    I've always thought Tom Bombadil is Tolkien's version of Väinämöinen from Kalevala, the Finnish national epic that he took some influence from. Väinämöinen is an eternal man and first being made by Ilmatar (the Goddess) who sings his songs of creation to create the lands. He can also fight with his songs like, calling thunder or making a swamp beneath you etc.

    • @MariadeRonde
      @MariadeRonde Před měsícem +1

      I have thought of that as well. He was already old when he was born. And he fell in love with a maiden, Aino, who turned into a water spirit. The difference is that this lovestory is a unhappy one.

  • @Cloofinder
    @Cloofinder Před 20 dny +1

    Your Tom Bombadil Impression is really good!

  • @bloodypine22
    @bloodypine22 Před 2 lety +108

    What i love about him is that he appears to be inspired by Väinämöinen. A god/figure from Finnish mythology. Both were there at the beginning, before anyone else. Both have control over nature and live in connection with it, both project their power through song, both sing for the pleasure of singing. Tom also wears the feather of a swan on his hat, and waterfowl are considered holy animals in Finno-Ugric mythos.

    • @fredneecher1746
      @fredneecher1746 Před 2 lety +5

      And Quenya is based on Finnish. The man knew his languages!

    • @qarmatianwarhorse6028
      @qarmatianwarhorse6028 Před 2 lety +4

      I ought to study Finnish mythology more closely now.

    • @gino7lord
      @gino7lord Před 2 lety +6

      Tolkien must have had a deep knowledge of Finnish mythology seeing as he greatly admired the Kalevala, so this theory makes alot of sense

    • @MisterSpigot95
      @MisterSpigot95 Před 2 lety +1

      I think I read somewhere (possibly in Shippey) that Finnish was his favourite language.

    • @bbclaus1716
      @bbclaus1716 Před 2 lety +4

      100%. It's pretty well-known Tolkien loved the Kalevala. They're incredibly alike.

  • @Tom_Quixote
    @Tom_Quixote Před 2 lety +877

    I'm surprised you seemed to overlook the most obvious explanation: Tom Bombadil is a self-insert of Tolkien into his own story. Tom lives the life that Tolkien would love best. And I think a lot of men would also love to live like him: Master of his own domain, with a beautiful young faithful wife, being merry and strong, without having to subjugate others. Self-sufficient and free.

    • @greywolf7577
      @greywolf7577 Před 2 lety +36

      Yes, that would explain how Tom Bombadil can be more powerful than Iluvatar. He is the personification of the true God of the story, the author himself.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 2 lety +58

      @@greywolf7577 Tolkien dismissed this theory. He apparently said his presence in the story can be seen in the character of Faramir.

    • @UsernameRulesSuck1
      @UsernameRulesSuck1 Před 2 lety +16

      That theory isn't mutually exclusive with any of the other theories. Yes, he's almost certainly a self-insert, but that doesn't explain his origin within the books' universe. He still needs a backstory.

    • @jlock9085
      @jlock9085 Před 2 lety +7

      @@UsernameRulesSuck1
      We know he is either Eru himself, a direct creation of Eru, or some entity created by the music. He needs a legit in universe backstory.
      I don't see him as Eru for a number of reasons. I don't really see him as an opposite to ungoliant.
      I think he was either created directly by Eru to care for the earth sort of like how God created Adam. The first being. If not then he is a creation from arda itself in some way sort of like an avatar.
      Your thoughts?

    • @UsernameRulesSuck1
      @UsernameRulesSuck1 Před 2 lety +8

      @@jlock9085 We know he is definitely not Eru himself because Tolkein explicitly said that Eru has no physical presence in Ea.

  • @Morlhach101
    @Morlhach101 Před rokem +5

    I always had the feeling that this character was the Ainur Tulkas who did not want to be an Ainur. At some point, it is said that "one of the Ainur was taken off". The obvious idea is that it referred to Melkor but from that point, there's is no reference to Tulkas anymore

    • @MerkhVision
      @MerkhVision Před 5 měsíci

      But Tulkas was the strongest, the most ready to fight evil, the one who hated Melkor the most. That doesn’t seem to fit Tom Bombadil.

  • @vincentbroeders4992
    @vincentbroeders4992 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I noticed in the hobbit movie a watched a while ago, that a few times when pretty much any important characters had a conversation, there was a sort of face or figure visible in the rocks or trees besides them. I think this is Tom and he was present at the meetings in which they forgot to invite him.

  • @dragoon3219
    @dragoon3219 Před 2 lety +91

    One of my favorites is the idea that he's a creature born from the Discord in the Song between Melkor and Eru just like the Nameless things. The idea that even from such conflict something kind and good can be created is comforting.
    The idea that he's Tolkien himself is also a neat one. Very meta and puts his comments about seeing everything first into place because he literally wrote them.

    • @masync183
      @masync183 Před rokem +3

      That's a great idea, that first one about him coming from discord. A tone so discordant that it sort of overflows and becomes harmonious again.

    • @thegatorhator6822
      @thegatorhator6822 Před rokem +1

      Personally I think the second is an ugly idea. It's just very typical and egotistical to insert oneself as some ageless god-like entity into your work.

    • @TrickyNick55
      @TrickyNick55 Před rokem +1

      I think I read somewhere that Tolkien made Faramir as his (sort of) self-insert, by giving Faramir similar traits he shared in real life.

    • @EMPERORSPROTECTION-TERRA4LIFE
      @EMPERORSPROTECTION-TERRA4LIFE Před rokem

      Maybe it’s just that Tom bombadil was created before the lord of the rings so was able to view it through Tolkien as he is tolkiens or one of tolkiens first characters.

  • @pcuimac
    @pcuimac Před 3 lety +158

    Tom is an ideal. He is the character that is in tune with himself and the world around him. He is a gardener and a loving husband. He is unchanged and unchangable by any and everything. He is the living embodyment of a garden at midsummers eve. He is the summer solstice at it's height and his sun never sets.

    • @mobiedyche9266
      @mobiedyche9266 Před 3 lety +11

      You are a sweetheart.

    • @cuevob
      @cuevob Před 3 lety +10

      How beautifully put.

    • @TeatroGrotesco
      @TeatroGrotesco Před 3 lety +7

      Nicely put.

    • @jonathanraithel5726
      @jonathanraithel5726 Před 3 lety +2

      Not far off from what Tolkien said; he described Tom Bombadil as a personification of the English countryside. But Tolkien also said that strictly isn’t who Tom is, it’s just how he came up with the inspiration.

    • @shadowtrader-options
      @shadowtrader-options Před 3 lety

      Ching sai buk lau ahhhh

  • @WankiTank
    @WankiTank Před 3 měsíci +1

    i first watched the first movie I think before reading the books, that's why I was super surprised by Tom Bombadil showing up.
    and all while reading I had such a bad feeling about it that I ran through the pages as quickly as possible as if I expected something sinister to happen to them.
    he gave me such an uneasy feeling. and it makes sense to me today because he wasn't supposed to fit into the rest of the story as he was completely detached from its fate.

  • @crowlsyong
    @crowlsyong Před 6 měsíci

    I love that you do their voices it always makes me smile

  • @joshgerber718
    @joshgerber718 Před rokem +104

    J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis were good friends and influenced each other’s writing. To me the existence of Tom Bombadil in LotR is parallel to the existence of Father Christmas in Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia. They’re both jolly old men who help out the hobbits/children and though perhaps they could assist the good in combatting the evil, they take a passive side and disappear from the story almost as quick as they came.

  • @Brainlags
    @Brainlags Před 2 lety +39

    I've always considered Tom to be like the Spirit of the Earth itself.
    Or to be more precise: He and Goldberry always reminded me a lot of Oberon and Titania.
    There is a LOT of old mythology spread throughout Middle Earth, so I feel like the Fairy King and Queen who behave very similar to Tom and Goldberry would be a very likely inspiration.

  • @gabiporter6552
    @gabiporter6552 Před rokem

    Where has this channel been my whole life! Full body nerdgasim. 10 outta 10 recommend.

  • @plaguedeity
    @plaguedeity Před 6 měsíci

    I love that half way through I was like man what if Tom is supposed to be just tom and the fact you finish with that was the cherry on top

  • @egliusmaximus
    @egliusmaximus Před rokem +223

    I've always thought of Tom as a "father time" character who exists to mark the fullness of time, and I think it's wonderful that Tolkien doesn't follow the old father time motif but instead revels in the lightness of creation to the ageless creator. In that context, when it's said that Sauron could defeat him and "and then night will come", it feels as though the recording of time will stop when Middle Earth (the realm of Men bound by time) is over.

    • @xycap8351
      @xycap8351 Před rokem +3

      Yes I like that , Father time, the soul of nature itself ,the spark behind the seasons , keeping it all in motion with his songs , from the path of the creek the melting of snow to the snowdrop emerging and the creature pollinating it.

    • @Aranel_Alasse
      @Aranel_Alasse Před rokem +3

      I really like that theory. I always thought of him as being more like the Ents and Eagles than the Ainur - created to keep watch over the earth, but not actively getting involved with the people who live there. It would also explain why he is fatherless, since he is father. I also see Goldberry as a mother nature character, so then mother nature and father time would be a couple 😊. Perhaps they were part of Eru's original creation of Arda, before the Valar went there and started their creations.

    • @theLore-Master
      @theLore-Master Před rokem +7

      Hi Fellow Tolkien Fans;
      It takes research to figure out Tolkien’s greatest mystery, so here goes.
      Yes, Tom Bombadil is the most powerful thing in Arda, and here's the proof, with theory de-bunkings along the way.
      The council of Elrond, and their opinions of him, are not Tolkien canon. They are simple the author imparting the ignorance of elves who are a fraction of his age and power. They don't even know what happened when TB put on the Ring, as the hobbits never told them and they were never asked. Including Gandalf. If they had known the Ring did not make TB invisible, that TB had no temptation from it, that he could make it invisible instead, that he knew it was evil when he told Frodo not to wear it anymore, and that he could see Frodo when he was wearing the Ring, among other things covered below, they would have been better informed.
      The rest of the canon lore is from the Silmarillion where Tolkien writes clearly that Tom is "oldest and fatherless". A fact that he, Gandalf and Goldberry confirm (both Maia). But there's more. He was there before the rivers and the trees, even the acorns. Older than ents. He was there before the dark lord Melkor came from the outside. In fact, it is stated that Melkor was the first of the Valar in Arda, before Manwe and Yavanna.
      This means TB is the original spirit of Arda, he was first and ensouled into Arda by Eru (but as Tolkien writes "Eru himself is not embodied in Arda..."). Why do we know this? Because everything made by Eru was ensouled with a spirit. Arda was made by Eru before he revealed its creation to the Valar, yet TB was already there before the Valar arrived and fashioned the rest of Arda with "their gifts". Therefore, since he was already there, at the very creation of Arda which "pushed back the Void" to make room for its existence, TB is the very spirit of Eru's creation. This makes TB the counter arch-spirit to Ungoliant.
      And how do we know this? Because Tolkien writes Ungoliant is the spirit-demon of the Void who came to Arda in the carnal form of a great demon spider. She both hated and loved Arda and the light and wanted to consume them. Tom is the antithesis of Ungoliant, as he is the opposite of hunger, devouring, power mongering and nothingness.
      Tolkien also writes TB would have nothing left (to love and do) if Sauron was to win...but not that TB would be defeated. Just that he would be "last as he was first", as Gandalf and Tolkien both admit. This means TB is immune to destruction and evil. He cannot be vanquished. Also, if he is last, then everything else including Sauron, perishes. Even if Sauron attains a political/military victory for a time. But Tom remains- as he remained during Morgoth's dominion in previous ages.
      It follows then, that Tom is and was, whether even Morgoth knew of him or not. If Morgoth knew of him, he either couldn't destroy him, or he didn't know of him. But the Silmarillion says the Valar- like Morgoth, could see all things and were aware of all powers. So, if Morgoth couldn't see him, Tom is more powerful. Or, he could see him and didn't want to mess with him, and/or couldn't-wouldn't-shouldn't).
      The conclusion here is obvious. Morgoth is not as powerful as Ungoliant (he needed balrogs to save him from his bindings and being devoured by her). At that time she was growing in power and he was diminishing. Tom Bombadil is therefore more powerful that both of them because he is of Eru and his existence is the creation-power (as Arda incarnate) that could not be defeated or stopped by either Morgoth in Arda, or by the Void (Ungoliant).
      For those of you still wondering how this fits into Tolkien legendarium as a deliberately inserted enigmatic mystery, take a seat and a deep breath. Tolkien was a Catholic and a philosophical Christian in many aspects of his life and works. Tom Bombadil is a mystery to be discovered, in a way, like Jesus is to be discovered. But here it's within Tolkien's mythology. The Romans and most people of Jesus' time also viewed Jesus as silly and non-powerful. Just a hippie singing a silly song most didn't understand and didn't want to understand. Only those seeking the truth that's hidden behind the barriers of physical things/appearances- will ever find it. Brilliant.
      Eru ensouled a human form (who could take any form) to be the holy spirit of life in Arda. The imperishable light, discussed in the Silmarillion and the spirit of the valiant who oppose evil- like Frodo and Sam (and others). Melkor couldn't find the flame imperishable in the Void. No wonder. Melkor was searching for something he couldn't understand- in the bowels of the Void, aka the demon-spirit Ungoliant. (Moru in Tolkien's early writings). Not a place to find it.
      Tolkien wrote in his letters to the editors that leaving Tom in the LOTR was deliberate because "leaving him out would feel like something important to the whole story was missing." What a subtle and amazing clue. Tom Bombadil, Iarwain Ben-Adar to the elves, Orald to Rohan, Forn to the Dwarves, "oldest and fatherless" to all others, is only one of two entities ever described by Tolkien as "he is". The other is Eru.
      Tom Bombadil, despite Tolkien's ruse of Tom's appearance (deliberate), and his silly manner of singing his version of the Ainulindale (also deliberate), is and was the most powerful entity in Arda at any time in its history, and the answer to greatest Tolkien riddle.
      All hail to Tolkien the master author and creator of the fantasy genre.
      A star shines on the hour of our meeting,
      The Lore Master
      Lore-Master.com

    • @all_thegood_stuff7789
      @all_thegood_stuff7789 Před rokem

      Wow amazing break down! Gives me goosebumps!

    • @sagefreeman9260
      @sagefreeman9260 Před rokem

      I have always referred to Tom as Father Time. I have a brother-in-law who is not a reader but loved the movies. I have told him hundreds of hours of additional content and when it comes to this, in particular, this has always been my view. I always thought of Goldberry as Mother Nature, the partner to Father Time.

  • @maxblake5564
    @maxblake5564 Před rokem +239

    The theory that Tom Bombadil is the incarnated music of the Ainur also holds up under the idea that Tom’s power is comparable to the power of “the earth itself.” Arda was created by the Music, so Tom’s power, which derives from the Music, would be very similar to the power invested into Arda, which also derived from the Music. In other words, being an incarnation of the spirit of the Music would make Tom essentially the spirit of Arda itself.

    • @BC08
      @BC08 Před rokem +4

      The music of the Ainur created Ea itself, of which Arda (and Middle Earth) is but a small part. Bombadil as the incarnation of the music should have mastery over creation second only to Eru himself - he shouldn’t be threatened by a Maia like Sauron if that was the case

    • @EMPERORSPROTECTION-TERRA4LIFE
      @EMPERORSPROTECTION-TERRA4LIFE Před rokem +1

      I thought this the most likely theory. But I like that somebody said it’s Tolkien himself.

    • @mickyt8848
      @mickyt8848 Před rokem

      I agree that's this theory holds most ground with ungoliant being the discord definitely my favourite theory

    • @Singapom888
      @Singapom888 Před rokem +2

      I have always thought of Tom Bombabil as an embodiment of the natural world, the earth, of creation, or "the music of the Ainur". In the world but not of it. A sort of male "Mother Nature".

    • @EchoF0xtrot
      @EchoF0xtrot Před rokem

      This was my opinion as well, after the video. Tom is "Father Arda" (derivation of mother earth), the physical incarnation of the spirit of the planet itself.

  • @valleyscharping
    @valleyscharping Před 3 měsíci +1

    I figured it out after many, many hours of thought. Happy to elaborate.
    Narratively: He is simply a creature (as Elrond calls him) that was created with Arda at the beginning of time by Eru. He functions as a sort of avatar of the Earth itself, as the council says he could withstand evil insofar as the Earth could.
    Analogically: Bombadil and Goldberry are Adam and Eve before the Fall, as they were meant to be in the Garden.
    Metatextually: Bombadil is Melchizedek. I have written a brief on the 15 parallels between the obscure Biblical character Melchizedek and Bombadil. He isn't Melchizedek, but metatextually he is the same archetype.

  • @cwhooks
    @cwhooks Před rokem

    I love that he created this mystery and never intended it to be solved. It gives us something to think about and stretch our imaginations. What better purpose to enrich and grow the horizons of our minds.

  • @roderickfemm8799
    @roderickfemm8799 Před 2 lety +220

    I like to think that Bombadil is the personification of nature in Arda. This goes along with a lot of his characteristics, including his inability to finally stand against Sauron. Sauron can (and does) destroy nature when he wants to. But nature is indifferent to the battles between good and evil, it just continues doing what it does as long as it can. Bombadil can control Old Man Willow, a creature of nature. Bombadil can banish the barrow wight because it is unnatural and does not belong. Bombadil was there before anything, because nature had to be created by the Valar at the beginning of the world, and perhaps they made a personification of nature to help them with that job. Saying that Bombadil is actually Tolkien is fine for an out-of-LOTR explanation, but within the universe Tolkien created, Bombadil serves a purpose too.

    • @CaveJohnsonAperture
      @CaveJohnsonAperture Před 2 lety +1

      @PurpleOwlAnimation Nature is only the nature of, whatever exists at a given time is "nature"

    • @salutations123
      @salutations123 Před 2 lety +1

      Yea my dad always tought that

    • @petersimple2543
      @petersimple2543 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, this seems the most likely the answer.

    • @petersimple2543
      @petersimple2543 Před 2 lety +4

      @PurpleOwlAnimation that wouldn't stop him being the spirit of nature. It would depend on whether he emerges from nature when it comes to be, or whether he transcends actually existing nature.

    • @KaunPrime
      @KaunPrime Před 2 lety +5

      I'd have to say he likely isnt the personification of nature, as there are others such as Carnan who very little is known about and is also immensely old and, as Celebrimbor suggested, will be around long after any other being.
      I believe Tom Bombadil is more of a being that was created in the dismay of the music of the Ainur, while Melkor's influence caused evil entities to spawn, it may have also caused manifestations of ones in the middle. Tom is a good being, but he isnt 'good' as in on the side of light. Tom keeps to himself besides something here and there, meaning he isnt like any other beings made to be good. Because of this I believe he is either from beyond the Music, as he is dubbed "The Fatherless" which could mean he is not from Eru's influence. Or that he is "Fatherless" in the sense that his true origin is unknown to all and that he was spawned from the disruption of the music.

  • @oldskoolGfunk
    @oldskoolGfunk Před 3 lety +105

    Tom Bombadil is the embodiment of nature and existence.

    • @oskarmikaszewicz7248
      @oskarmikaszewicz7248 Před 3 lety +1

      Or primeval chaos.

    • @Dunified
      @Dunified Před 3 lety +4

      And that's the reason he thinks ents is the most interesting part of Gandalf telling Tom the story about the destruction of the ring post-lotr. Ents = living trees moving around, which is fundamental to how nature and existence works. He'd find that interesting. That's what I've always thought of him.

    • @oldskoolGfunk
      @oldskoolGfunk Před 3 lety +1

      @@oskarmikaszewicz7248 that would be Ungoliant.

    • @oldskoolGfunk
      @oldskoolGfunk Před 3 lety

      @@Dunified that's interesting

    • @odin1313
      @odin1313 Před 3 lety +7

      Tom is the embodiment of the soul of Middle Earth, of the Anima Mundi of the alchemists, of the Holy spirit of christianity.
      Tom is not bound by time. He is always in the NOW. He does not think. The past and the future do not exist within him. He just IS, always. He represents the connection with the ALL that one acheives through enlightenment. A state of pure bliss. He incarnates a state of being that was before the Fall, when Adam and Eve just took care of the Garden, before they ate the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, and became aware that they were naked. Before suffering existed. He is life itself, seperated from death. He is Master of ''tree, hill and water''... ie He is master of the elements of Water and Earth, not of Air and fire.
      This paragraph should be of particular interest also, when at the end of ROTK Gandalf says: "I am going to have a long talk with Bombadil: such a talk as I have not had in all my time. He is a moss-gatherer, and I have been a stone doomed to rolling. But my rolling days are ending, and now we shall have much to say to one another."

  • @orsomariafrattali8330
    @orsomariafrattali8330 Před rokem +2

    I ve read the book many years ago and i remember that part being full of symbolisms. I remember that the guy lived close to a forest that was shaped like a triangle with a hole in the middle (does it remind u of something?) And he lived in a very comfortable home with "the daughter of the river" and he made..flips and sang? well..if it is a riddle and if u put things together.."he's the oldest", the eldest..he's the first rain drop..like baccador says "he is"...i'd say he represents.. Birth.
    "He's the oldest but he's also the youngest"
    then I remember there being fog..(a new born's sight is blurry).
    I like the idea that Tolkien is saying that at birth people are "good"(the ring has no power over bombadil). I also like the theory that he represents time..but then again, everyone's time starts at birth..just theories, what do you think?

  • @Shiny101
    @Shiny101 Před rokem

    I really wish he was in the movies because I've tried so many times to read the books and it's honestly hard for me with all the different names of things you have to remember. I've heard my Dad talk about him and it made me super curious because he wasn't in any of the movies. Thank you for this video.

  • @GolfbloggerCom
    @GolfbloggerCom Před 3 lety +48

    Having read Tolkien's "Father Christmas Letters," I have long thought that Bombadil was a kindred spirit to Father Christmas.

    • @siroswaldfortitude409
      @siroswaldfortitude409 Před 3 lety +1

      that's an interesting point, and you could be right? I must go to the hills and ponder this with a fine batch of shire weed...hmmm

  • @chriss.9398
    @chriss.9398 Před 2 lety +166

    I have a theory that is essentially unrelated to the books themselves. "The Adventures of Tom Bombadil" was a story Tolkein wrote for his child to make him happy in between writing The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. As we can see just like Santa Claus and other stories, its a story about a jolly person who brings joy. Considering Tom was written before the Lord of the Rings, Tolkien probably included this already existing character because he liked him and wanted to include a story his kid liked.
    This means there isn't much looking into who or what Tom actually was, because in essence he was and "extra" thing included in the story. He doesn't have a true origin in the story because he didn't come from the story. It's like if Bugs Bunny met Mickey Mouse somehow, they might exist together if written that way in a story but came from two completely different source materials originally. It creates an interesting enigma for sure but I believe that is the out of book explanation.

    • @Nersify
      @Nersify Před 2 lety +15

      And probably the most simple explanation is the correct, since we can't correlate him with anything or anyone.

    • @RickFleischman
      @RickFleischman Před 2 lety +4

      I would totally love a movie that is focused on Tom Bombadil

    • @ToranosukeEdo
      @ToranosukeEdo Před 2 lety +3

      Excellent meta-sleuthery 👌

    • @GFSagredo
      @GFSagredo Před 2 lety +7

      @Chris S. I am not sure if it was on purpose that you mentioned it. Mickey Mouse did meet Bugs Bunny once, and only once! (it was in 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit').

    • @RickFleischman
      @RickFleischman Před 2 lety +1

      He broke a wall of sorts by including Tom, also you should copy/past this as it's own thing because you put a lot of work into your comment (/bow)

  • @solemashi
    @solemashi Před 9 měsíci

    tom is the theme woven by Illuvatar when Melkors theme began to become audible; mentioned in Illuvatars own communications to Melkor - the hidden theme of the resistance to Darkness

  • @donniejefferson9554
    @donniejefferson9554 Před 10 měsíci +2

    My theory has been that Tom is simply the physical embodiment of story and legend. He loves telling stories. He only seems to appear when he can facilitate a good story (when no one else could save the hobbits in the old forest). Why would Tom forget the ring and discard it if it he took it with him? Because it would suddenly be an excellent plot point taken off the board. He'd need to get it back in play eventually.
    He is the eldest. Story and legend describes what happened even before the eldest being came into existence.
    Tom is physically capable of solving the problems of our story with ease, but who would want to hear the tale of a man of unlimited power winning with ease. A little hobbit saving the day while the armies if man band together against darkness is far more compelling. Maybe you could force him to do it, but why would you.

  • @sergioreyes298
    @sergioreyes298 Před 3 lety +28

    Tom Bombadil is probably my favorite Middle earth character.

  • @Oskarelu
    @Oskarelu Před 3 lety +126

    Middle Earth: *Being conquered by Sauron*
    Tom Bombadill: "I am walking on sunshine! Ohhhhhh!"

  • @hoo7797
    @hoo7797 Před rokem +4

    I had an idea about Tom Bombadil being one of the Valar, particularly Lórien, but I think it doesn't work either; Lórien is still far above Sauron in terms of power, and he does care about the Ring: Gandalf was a servant of Lórien (and of Nienna and Manwë and Varda), and he's the most active wizard against Sauron.
    I thought he could be Tom because of the prophetic dream that Frodo has while in his house, where he sees his own journey to the West, as well as the dream where he sees Gandalf escaping Orthanc. Since Lórien is the Lord of Dreams and Visions, I thought Tom Bombadil was like a projection of him, and his wife Estë (who is said to sleep on an island in a lake, so one could loosely connect her to the "river-woman") was Goldberry.
    I had this idea mostly because Lórien is a pretty uneventful character in the Silmarillion, while he seems to be more important and almost even present during Lord of the Rings, given how many times the main characters have insightful dreams and visions, as well as Lothlórien being the most beautiful realm in Middle Earth, much like how Lórien (the gardens, not the Vala) is said to be the fairest of all places in Arda (+the Mirror of Galadriel which can show visions of the past, present and future). But the connection between him and Tom is quite loose, and Tom seems to be very much present and physical and not just a projection, not to mention multiple people report to have interacted with him so he's obviously not an illusion.