The Press

The Tolkien friend who saved Lord of the Rings from a fiery death

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BRITAIN: With its tales of the life or death battle of Frodo Baggins and his friends against the Dark Lord Sauron it has won an army of devoted readers and inspired a series of acclaimed films.

But JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings almost didn’t see the light of day after its author threatened to throw the book’s manuscript into the fire.

It has emerged that it was only the interventi­on of George Sayer, Tolkien’s close friend and mentor, which saved his work for publicatio­n and eventual posterity.

Now Sayer is to receive a prestigiou­s honour for his influence on budding writers from Malvern College, where he taught generation­s of students. A fellowship will be named after him/

Sayer met Tolkien at Oxford in the early 1930s, through CS Lewis, his tutor and close friend, and the author of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and The Narnia Chronicles series.

Margaret Sayer, his widow, has now confirmed that during one visit to their home in Malvern, Tolkien - disillusio­ned by the difficulty he was experienci­ng in finding a publisher for the fantasy novel he was working on - contemplat­ed throwing the manuscript on the fire.

Sayer would have none of it. He praised the power of the writing and persuaded his friend to persevere in trying to have it published.

The story he rescued from the flames eventually became Lord of the Rings, written in stages between 1937 and 1949, and published in three volumes in 1954 and 1955, when it went on to become one of the bestsellin­g novels of all time.

Mrs Sayer said: ‘‘In one of his visits to our home in Malvern, while sitting around the fire, Tolkien was down about struggling to find a publisher. He even threatened to destroy the whole thing, but George reassured him and asked him to read some passages from it aloud. He told him that it certainly deserved a publisher and that he might even be able to find one.’’

It is possible Tolkien may have earlier also discussed his early drafts of The Hobbit with Sayer, before its publicatio­n in 1937.

During Tolkien’s visits the pair would walk in the Malvern Hills which Tolkien compared to the White Hills of Gondor in Lord of the Rings - talk, drink and collaborat­e on literary projects.

Sayer also remained close to CS Lewis, who beneath his jovial exterior suffered from anxiety. Sayer counselled him over whether to marry Joy Gresham, the American poet and writer, a divorcee nearly 20 years his junior, and advised him against the marriage, partly on religious grounds.

Although it eventually went ahead, she died of cancer only four years later - a version of their story being told in the 1993 film Shadowland­s, starring Anthony Hopkins and Debra Winger.

Sayer went on to write an authorised biography of Lewis, Jack: CS Lewis and his Times, which was published in 1988 and is widely considered the best account of the author’s life, due to the deep personal bond between the two men.

Sayer was Head of English at Malvern College from 1949 until his retirement in 1974 and was said to have profoundly influenced his pupils.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? George Sayer, right, persuaded his friend JRR Tolkien not to burn the original manuscript that became the book. Sayer was also a close friend of CS Lewis.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES George Sayer, right, persuaded his friend JRR Tolkien not to burn the original manuscript that became the book. Sayer was also a close friend of CS Lewis.
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