Michael
Foster
Inklings
Dr. Mark Hall
26 April 2002
High Brow and the Hobbit Hole
Damaris and Bilbo: A Comparative Analysis
Charles Williams' character, Damaris Tighe,
from The Place of the Lion, and J.R.R. Tolkien's
character, Bilbo Baggins, from The Hobbit, have
two diversely different personalities. Damaris
is a highly educated, and somewhat uptight,
woman who finds safety in knowledge, while Bilbo
is a simple Hobbit that enjoys the uneventful
pleasures of his Hobbit hole. They are two characters
that may have never been associated together
in any way, but in the course of their stories,
they share a common experience. Both Damaris
and Bilbo are reluctantly drawn from their respective
comfort zones, but ultimately, their willingness
makes way for a greater good.
Bilbo Baggins is an intriguing creature that
lives a quiet life of humble pleasure. Tolkien
describes daily life in the Shire so seductively,
that it is difficult not to wish we lived there
ourselves. Tolkien opens The Hobbit with a simple
yet profound sentence. "In a hole in the
ground there lived a Hobbit." He follows
with a short description. "Not a nasty,
dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms
and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy
hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to
eat: it was a hobbit hole, and that means comfort"
(3).
When Gandalf firsts meets Bilbo, Bilbo is enjoying
an after-breakfast pipe on a beautiful day.
As soon as Gandalf mentions the prospect of
an adventure, Bilbo responds true to his nature.
"We are plain quiet folk and have no use
for adventures. Nasty, disturbing, uncomfortable
things! Make you late for dinner! I can't think
what anybody sees in them..." (Tolkien,
6).
Even later in Bilbo's adventure, we see that
he continually misses the comforts of home,
especially in bad situations. "He thought
of himself frying bacon and eggs in his own
kitchen at home - for he could feel inside that
it was high time for some meal or other; but
that only made him miserabler" (Tolkien,
64). Bilbo Baggins, as explained by Tolkien,
was a Hobbit of habit, reluctant to change.
Like Bilbo, Damaris Tighe was also reluctant
to change. She placed her security and comfort
in intellectual pursuits. In fact, throughout
the book, she is working on her doctoral dissertation
with a vengeance. Williams explained the importance
she placed in her studies. "In general,
Damaris associated peace with her study, her
books and her manuscripts rather than with the
sky, the hills, and the country roads..."
(96).
On one occasion, Anthony spoke on the uncomfortable
subject of marriage, and why Damaris should
marry him. "'Nobody else,' Anthony went
on, 'sees you as you are. Nobody else will give
you such a difficult and unpleasant time as
I do. You'll never be comfortable, but you may
be glorious'" (Williams, 35). Anthony understood
that Damaris was anchored to her books. He knew
that she was searching for happiness in the
wrong place.
Bilbo and Damaris, in their respective stories,
had been living their lives as they saw fit
prior their divine change. Bilbo had been leading
an uneventful, and therefore by Hobbit standard,
a respectable life. Damaris had been content,
resting her identity and relative happiness
in intellectual achievement. Both, however,
needed change. It eventually became necessary
for each to fulfill a kind of destiny.
In Bilbo's case, Gandalf served as the catalyst
that forced Bilbo from his previous life. Through
persistence and a bit of trickery, Gandalf succeeded
in getting Bilbo to join the adventure. Although
highly uncomfortable, Bilbo continued with the
treacherous journey and fulfilled his role in
destiny. At the very end, Gandalf explained
to Bilbo that he is "only quite a little
fellow in a wide world after all!" and
Bilbo humorously responded, "Thank Goodness"
(Tolkien, 272).
Overall, Bilbo's activities helped preserve
the safety of Middle Earth, and also deeply
affected his own life. Upon the end of the journey,
when Gandalf and Bilbo returned to the shire,
Gandalf said, "My dear Bilbo! Something
is the matter with you. You are not the Hobbit
that you were'" (Tolkien, 270).
Damaris' journey out of her comfort zone began
in response to a supernatural Pterodactyl. The
account of Damaris conversion is appropriately
entitled, in chapter eleven, "The Conversion
of Damaris." The shock of a big stinky
prehistoric beast forces Damaris to think outside
of her narrow-minded life. Anthony explained
the vision of the Pterodactyl to Damaris in
terms she could understand. "'You saw what
you know', he said, 'and because it's the only
thing you know you saw like that'" (Williams,
135). For the first time, Damaris begins to
think of someone other than herself when she
suggests that she should look for Quentin. This
example of selflessness completes her conversion.
Bilbo Baggins and Damaris Tighe may be an odd
pair of fictional characters, but they have
undergone similar transformations. One was a
proud Hobbit, and the other was a proud human.
Both characters began deep within themselves.
Their lives and their needs were at the center
of their attention. Bilbo thought he was happy
with his conveniences, and Damaris thought she
was happy with her knowledge. At the nudging
of outside forces representing providence, Gandalf
and the Pterodactyl, Bilbo and Damaris are forced
outside of their comfort zones. From here, a
new reality, they are truly able to fulfill
destiny and achieve happiness.
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