Sellic Spell
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"Sellic Spell" (; an
Old English Old English (, ), or Anglo-Saxon, is the earliest recorded form of the English language, spoken in England and southern and eastern Scotland in the early Middle Ages. It was brought to Great Britain by Anglo-Saxon settlers in the mid-5th c ...
phrase meaning "wondrous tale" and taken from the poem '' Beowulf'') is a short prose text available in Modern and Old English redactions, written by J.R.R. Tolkien in a creative attempt to reconstruct the folktale underlying the narrative in the first two thousand lines of the Old English poem ''Beowulf''. Among other things, it seeks to clarify and integrate a number of narrative strands in the early medieval poem. The resulting text is a loose variant of the '' Skilful Companions'' type of folktale, in which each of several characters (two or three in Tolkien's text, depending on the redaction) has a valuable but specific skill. Unlike in folktales of that type, however, the skills of Tolkien's characters do not supplement each other in the resolution of the narrative problem. Tolkien's recasting of the material also incorporates the sluggish youth motif and the abandonment of the hero at the waterfall, both elements found in the analogous Old Icelandic ''
Grettis saga ''Grettis saga Ásmundarsonar'' (modern , reconstructed ), also known as ''Grettla'', ''Grettir's Saga'' or ''The Saga of Grettir the Strong'', is one of the Icelanders' sagas. It details the life of Grettir Ásmundarson, a bellicose Icelandic out ...
''. The suggestion that a waterfall like that of ''Grettis saga'' was part of the original setting of the pool of monsters in ''Beowulf'' was made by W.W. Lawrence in 1912. In an article in ''Tolkien Studies'' (2016), Paul Acker shows that Tolkien's principal scholarly resource in recasting the tale was R. W. Chamber's 1921 work, ''Beowulf: An Introduction to the Study of the Poem.''


Dating and composition

The text's editor,
Christopher Tolkien Christopher John Reuel Tolkien (21 November 1924 – 16 January 2020) was an English academic editor, becoming a French citizen in later life. The son of author and academic J. R. R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien edited much of his father ...
, dates much of the composition and revision of the tale to the early 1940s on the basis of datable content on the versos of the manuscript leaves. The tale was actually accepted for publication in the forties by Gwyn Jones, who had already published "
The Lay of Aotrou and Itroun ''The Lay of Aotrou and Itroun'' is a poem of 508 lines, written by J. R. R. Tolkien in 1930 and published in ''Welsh Review'' in December 1945. and are Breton words for "lord" and "lady". The poem is modelled on the genre of the "Breton lay ...
" for Tolkien in ''The Welsh Review''; but the collapse of the latter in 1948 prevented "Sellic Spell" from appearing for almost seventy years.J. Rateliff ed., ''Mr Baggins'' (London 2007) p. 281-2 In a note discovered among his papers, J.R.R. Tolkien claims to have " utit first into Old English". However, Christopher Tolkien observes that this sequence of events is inconsistent with the textual evidence, since the earliest manuscript of the Modern English text was revised into a form that corresponds in several places to the Old English text, which was thus probably based on a version of the Modern English tale. The Old English version as published is furthermore incomplete, breaking off before either of the two companions faces Grendel. The Modern English text exists in three (partial) manuscripts and two typescripts; Christopher Tolkien published the text of the later typescript along with the Old English translation and a discussion of the tale's revision history in 2014.


See also

*
Bear's Son Tale "Bear's Son Tale" (german: link=no, das Märchen vom Bärensohn, Bärensohnmärchen) refers to an analogous group of narratives that, according to 's 1910 thesis, represent the fairy tale material reworked to create the Anglo-Saxon poem ''Beowulf' ...
*
Tolkien and the medieval J. R. R. Tolkien was attracted to medieval literature, and made use of it in his writings both in his poetry, which contained numerous pastiches of medieval verse, and in his Middle-earth writings where he embodied a wide range of medieval co ...


References

{{Beowulf Beowulf Short stories by J. R. R. Tolkien Old English literature 20th-century short stories