Why Tolkien Hated Shakespeare

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  • Опубліковано 10 лип 2024
  • In this video we explore Tolkien's opinions on William Shakespeare and his works, primarily Macbeth, and how the Bard influenced the development of the Lord of the Rings!
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    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro and Tolkien's Youth
    0:47 Tolkien's Early Dislike
    2:13 Tolkien's Literary Objection
    6:07 Tolkien's Dislike of Shakespeare's Legacy
    8:02 Shakespeare in the Lord of the Rings
    11:00 Conclusion
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 637

  • @jlworrad
    @jlworrad 2 місяці тому +654

    To be fair, Tolkien probably thought it was all downhill for English literature from the Norman conquest onwards.

    • @Baraodojaguary
      @Baraodojaguary 2 місяці тому +33

      Probably especially as he was a fellow Catholic and was hated by his protestant relatives

    • @Saber23
      @Saber23 2 місяці тому +52

      Not really, he wasn’t some linguistic “purist” who only wanted Germanic elements in English, there’s no indication of that, however he did think English would suffer if tons of people started speaking it outside of the anglophone world, which was starting to happen at the time and has happened since

    • @pricklypear7516
      @pricklypear7516 2 місяці тому +21

      There WAS no "English literature" in 1066. One of the earliest literary applications of English was Chaucer's Canterbury Tales a few hundred years later.

    • @jlworrad
      @jlworrad 2 місяці тому +34

      @@pricklypear7516 Fellas, no offence, really, but I’m just sort of joking here.

    • @ElonMuskrat-my8jy
      @ElonMuskrat-my8jy 2 місяці тому +43

      ​​​​@@pricklypear7516Man are you ignorant. Beowulf, Venerable Bede's voluminous writings, Alfred the Great's Psalms and other translations, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, hymns, homilies, poems, riddles, letters and elegies all existed before the Normans.

  • @johnwhelan9663
    @johnwhelan9663 2 місяці тому +346

    Should be retitled "why Tolkien sorta disliked Shakespear a bit sometimes".

    • @radurte
      @radurte 2 місяці тому +20

      Agreed. I thought the video was great and seemed well researched, but the title is definitely clickbait

    • @JeremyHelm
      @JeremyHelm Місяць тому +6

      Clickbait is the mouth of Sauron

    • @JeremyHelm
      @JeremyHelm Місяць тому +1

      Could've been a video about guessing what his reaction would be to the film adaptations, via his critique of Shakespeare

    • @Trendle222
      @Trendle222 Місяць тому

      no, sounds like he REALLY didnt like Shakespear to me

    • @MrVvulf
      @MrVvulf Місяць тому +3

      Agreed.
      Much of the criticism wasn't specific to Shakespeare, but instead directed at the tension between fantasy and drama.

  • @brendancoulter5761
    @brendancoulter5761 2 місяці тому +154

    He didnt hate Shakespeare. He may have taken issue with how the prophecy played out in Hamlet, not the same thing as hating Shakespeare.

    • @misseli1
      @misseli1 2 місяці тому +14

      I think he uses the word "hated" in these titles to grab people's attention, but in the video you he uses the word "disliked" instead. I also get the impression that Tolkien had more of a love-hate relationship with the bards works.

    • @Nugnugnug
      @Nugnugnug 2 місяці тому +10

      Hyperbolic language is how some people get clicks.

    • @ccgamedes33
      @ccgamedes33 2 місяці тому +8

      You meant Macbeth didn't you.

    • @brendancoulter5761
      @brendancoulter5761 2 місяці тому +5

      @@ccgamedes33 yesh I did

    • @taylordw
      @taylordw Місяць тому +4

      All I can say is that when i started college in 1969, Tolkien books were very popular. I thought the stories were garbage and couldn’t finish any of them. When the famous movies came out 32 years later,i still wasn’t impressed, though i sat through them(easier than reading them) But I’m still in awe of all things Shakespeare. That’s my opinion and I’m sticking to it

  • @AbexBroadcastingChannels
    @AbexBroadcastingChannels 2 місяці тому +184

    "To Ring or not to Ring, that is the question" - Sauron Probably

    • @RonCopperman
      @RonCopperman 2 місяці тому +7

      Polite golf clap

    • @Hernal03
      @Hernal03 Місяць тому +2

      @@RonCopperman You should have applied a golf _club._

    • @RazvanMihaeanu
      @RazvanMihaeanu Місяць тому +1

      "To be or not. To be, that is the question" - French critic

  • @labrynianrebel
    @labrynianrebel 2 місяці тому +77

    "I don't like this, it *should* be like this" is pretty much the basis for anyone to create something new or interesting.

    • @maracarlisle
      @maracarlisle 2 місяці тому +7

      Unless they try to impose it to other people too

    • @thepants1450
      @thepants1450 22 дні тому

      ​@@maracarlislewhat

  • @EmperorCaligula_EC
    @EmperorCaligula_EC 2 місяці тому +110

    Overwriting the whimsical view on Elves and Dwarfs in our culture is probably one of his biggest archievements.

    • @docsavage8640
      @docsavage8640 Місяць тому +3

      Except he didn't do that since it prevails over his version

    • @Rynewulf
      @Rynewulf 22 дні тому +1

      @@docsavage8640nah the old folklore versions are way way way different, the modern view is Tolkien's 'tall civilisation and short civilisation' rather than mythic or fairy tale esque.
      You dont get international councils making agreements or generals drawing up battle plans in folklore elves and dwarves, but you do in the Legendarium

  • @chandl34
    @chandl34 2 місяці тому +233

    My feed is flooded with videos about all the writers Tolkien hated. I wouldn't think too much about it.

    • @s.henrlllpoklookout5069
      @s.henrlllpoklookout5069 2 місяці тому +14

      I'm sure that if they were reincarnated, they wouldn't think too much about it either

    • @MrPGC137
      @MrPGC137 2 місяці тому +39

      Not just writers, either; he seemed to pretty much hate everyone, just like he hated everything that was not created by himself.

    • @user-hy9nh4yk3p
      @user-hy9nh4yk3p 2 місяці тому +4

      Got the same - this afternoon. Ignored them - a cursory glance - even cars were mentioned.
      Fare thee well.

    • @hugoclarke3284
      @hugoclarke3284 2 місяці тому +20

      He is simply the type to be roused into expression when dissatisfied. "The existence of a positive feeling can be inferred only indirectly, as it were." - C. G. Jung

    • @MrPGC137
      @MrPGC137 2 місяці тому +9

      @@hugoclarke3284 Ghad, I'd hate to live inside such a head. Sounds like a pretty miserable place to be.

  • @pokerandphilosophy8328
    @pokerandphilosophy8328 2 місяці тому +183

    I think it's mostly sour grapes because Shakespeare wrote a terrible review of The Lord of the Rings.

    • @RonCopperman
      @RonCopperman 2 місяці тому +7

      Lol !
      I knew it...!

    • @mrgandolf5349
      @mrgandolf5349 2 місяці тому +17

      I almost Googled what Shakespeares review.
      But then I was like hold up wait, a minute I ain’t that stupid.

    • @brianedwards7142
      @brianedwards7142 2 місяці тому +8

      I laughed so hard the cat jumped off my lap.

    • @emilyburton4095
      @emilyburton4095 2 місяці тому +5

      @@mrgandolf5349 Good you caught yourself in time.

    • @mrgandolf5349
      @mrgandolf5349 2 місяці тому +2

      @@emilyburton4095 bro I was that 👌close
      i had google open.

  • @Marshmellow3971
    @Marshmellow3971 2 місяці тому +46

    If you write literature, poetry or theater in English, whether you know it or not you were influenced by William Shakespeare. Literally; when Shakespeare started writing English grammar & spelling still weren’t standardized and his use of language helped shape our vocabulary, spelling, grammar and manner of speaking. This is in addition to creating what we think of as modern plot structure and character archetypes, pioneering many of the techniques that are now essential to theater and creating new poetic styles. Tolkien was a once in a generation literary mind, but Shakespeare was truly a once in a millennium sort of storyteller if not rarer.

    • @vol94
      @vol94 2 місяці тому +8

      Hard disagree with the last line. Shakespeare was all of those things, except a once in a millenia storyteller. He was an unmatched wordsmith, brilliant poet as well as prose writer, a true bard and rhyme machine, but there were many before him and many after him that were simply better storytellers, writing deeper narratives with more fleshed out characters

    • @fredneecher1746
      @fredneecher1746 Місяць тому

      True enough, but it misses the specific point Tolkien was making about Fantasy.

    • @christopherblanchard2099
      @christopherblanchard2099 Місяць тому +1

      As I recall , in a worldwide poll, Shakespeare was voted Man of The Millennium in 2000AD

    • @Marshmellow3971
      @Marshmellow3971 Місяць тому +4

      Eh, art is subjective I suppose. That can be your opinion. Just saying if people are still buying tickets to see your plays 500 years after you died I think you probably did something right.

    • @mpnuorva
      @mpnuorva 20 днів тому

      And if you write fantasy you'll be influenced by Tolkien and Moorcock whether you like it or not.

  • @LynetteTheMadScientist
    @LynetteTheMadScientist 2 місяці тому +188

    Tolkien about Shakespeare: needed more trees and less people

  • @jlworrad
    @jlworrad 2 місяці тому +75

    I think the loophole prophecies in Macbeth work because we get to see Macbeth's arrogance beforehand. He is undone and undone cruelly and cheaply by fate. In contrast, we never look inside the Witch King's mind like we Macbeth, so cheap loopholes would carry no sting and would just look, well, cheap. Both prophecies work in both stories because they fit the essence of either story.

    • @pricklypear7516
      @pricklypear7516 2 місяці тому +5

      What "prophecies" in Macbeth? The whole point of the tale is that, while the Weird Sisters baited Macbeth with a suggestion, his blind ambition did all the rest. Only their scrap to Banquo proved prophetic ("You shall not be king, but you shall get kings"), but this was only to connect the later survival of Fleance to the new King James I (for whom Shakespeare wrote the play).

    • @nealjroberts4050
      @nealjroberts4050 2 місяці тому +4

      There's no substantial difference between the MacDuff v MacBeth prophecy and the Arwen v the Witch King prophecy. They both rely on a semantic loophole.

    • @tenthclassgaming
      @tenthclassgaming 2 місяці тому +7

      In fact, historically, it was Duncan that was a tyrant, he invaded Moray, his own vassal, & got killed by Macbeth's troops. So, Macbeth became king, & many historians today agree that Macbeth was a good king. The story is just no historical accuracy, pure slander. Also, Macbeth is a direct ancestor of mine, so I may be a little biased.

    • @RictusHolloweye
      @RictusHolloweye 2 місяці тому +9

      @@tenthclassgaming - Turns out that learning history from Shakespeare is no more educational than learning from Hollywood.

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@tenthclassgaminghow can Macbeth be your direct ancestor? He had no children. His stepson Lulach became king (briefly) after his death.

  • @thelostone6981
    @thelostone6981 2 місяці тому +34

    To paraphrase Cunk on Shakespeare, Shakespeare had it much easier in school because he didn’t have to learn Shakespeare. But it is interesting to learn about Tolkien’s take on Shakespeare. I would love to know what he thought of Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus because that is sooooooo dark and messed up.

  • @Publicistvideos
    @Publicistvideos 2 місяці тому +27

    It’s incredible to consider that Tolkien’s influence has been so great that his versions of Elves and Dwarves have supplanted both Shakespeare’s and Disney’s respective interpretations in the public imagination. No mean feat!

    • @MundaSquire
      @MundaSquire Місяць тому +2

      For Shakespeare, elves were a device, not a belief. What was in that pipe JR was puffing on? The same stuff that started the Boxer Rebellion?

    • @NicholsonNeisler-fz3gi
      @NicholsonNeisler-fz3gi 9 днів тому

      Thank god we’ve still got gnomes and fairies

  • @jeremykraenzlein5975
    @jeremykraenzlein5975 2 місяці тому +12

    Tolkien thought that Shakespeare's plays work better as performed than as just read? I doubt that Shakespeare himself would have disputed that! Shakespeare never intended for his plays to be read as literature, he wrote them to be performed on stage!

  • @MatthewCaunsfield
    @MatthewCaunsfield 2 місяці тому +47

    As always, Tolkein articulated his opinions clearly

    • @shiven513
      @shiven513 2 місяці тому

      Tolkien was a mentally ill brat who stole from fantasy and paved a way for generations of hacks.

  • @isaachester8475
    @isaachester8475 2 місяці тому +11

    “Why Tolkien had a reasonable and thoughtful critique about Shakespeare’s way of handling fantasy, and a few of the resolutions to his stories.” I guess that title would be a little too long, but what would’ve been more accurate and less inflammatory is “Tolkien’s Problem with Shakespeare”

    • @varalderfreyr8438
      @varalderfreyr8438 2 місяці тому +3

      Imagine if the algorithm suggested videos based on the title being as long as possible. We could have titles as thorough as a 19th century book.

    • @rainbowrotcod
      @rainbowrotcod 29 днів тому +1

      ⁠@@varalderfreyr8438I like your comment. thank you for sharing.

  • @NR-rv8rz
    @NR-rv8rz 2 місяці тому +15

    The great Tolkiens objection to the trees of Burnham Woods being cut down and moved is silly.
    The whole point of MacBeth not taking that prophecy serious was the common view that trees are fixed in place and can not walk.
    If MacBeth lived in a world where trees could move then there would be no reason for him to let his guard down regarding that prophecy.

    • @micklumsden3956
      @micklumsden3956 Місяць тому +1

      Silly???? Tolkien?
      You’re a brave person to say it.
      I can remember feeling similarly disappointed on my first reading of Macbeth. It still feels to me a little bit like the cheap device “when he woke up, and it was all a dream”

    • @NR-rv8rz
      @NR-rv8rz Місяць тому +3

      @@micklumsden3956 I prefer a practical realisation of prophecy. Not fond of magic in stories that are otherwise set in realistic worlds.

  • @Pumpkinshire
    @Pumpkinshire 2 місяці тому +29

    If Shakespeare didn’t make the cut then it makes a little more sense why he didn’t like Narnia

    • @doubleplusdanny
      @doubleplusdanny 2 місяці тому +17

      He disliked Narnia for different reasons, namely the heavy allegory.

  • @Anastas1786
    @Anastas1786 2 місяці тому +26

    "While still a young boy, like countless others of his age and background, J.R.R. Tolkien would've been immersed in Shakespeare's works and taught them extensively during his school years."
    Whew! From question to answer in under a minute! _Very_ concise! So what will the next 11 minutes be about, then?

  • @saladinbob
    @saladinbob 2 місяці тому +12

    In terms of theatre. I would agree it cannot not do Fantasy justice because of the visual limitations but Tolkien was a product of his time, it would be interesting to see if his opinion changed where he able to see fantasy in video games, or the cinema with today's technology. LoTR on stage would look ridiculous, it's too grand, too big in scale for the Theatre, but with modern technology that scale can be visualised on screen.

    • @lilykatmoon4508
      @lilykatmoon4508 Місяць тому

      I had the same thought myself. I really wish I could get his take on the movies made from his work as well as others like Wheel of Time and others!

  • @michaelnewsham1412
    @michaelnewsham1412 2 місяці тому +16

    He enjoyed the writings of Mary Renault, a former student of his at Oxford ( meaning she attended classes of his, not that he was her advisor), writing her a letter of praise for her books- even though she was a prominent lesbian and feminist, and her books, set in ancient Greece, referenced the powers of the Greek gods and goddesses, and had openly sexual elements involving heterosexual and homosexual relationships between both men and women. A catholic reader as well as a Catholic writer.

  • @jimslancio
    @jimslancio 2 місяці тому +6

    Interesting, considering that the Witch King's warning to Eowyn, "Come not between the Nazgul and his prey!" Is a close paraphrasal of a line from King Lear.

    • @talstory
      @talstory 2 місяці тому +1

      yes..I think there are other direct echoes from time to time

  • @mrgallbladder
    @mrgallbladder 27 днів тому +7

    Tolkien seems to have hated everyone who wasn't him

    • @idc0459
      @idc0459 23 дні тому +1

      Can you really blame him

    • @randbrannigan2590
      @randbrannigan2590 22 дні тому

      Artists, writers have strong opinions. Its what happens when you are immersed in your craft

    • @pierluigiadreani2159
      @pierluigiadreani2159 21 день тому

      People Who fought horroble wars tend to have strong opinions.

  • @j3i2i2yl7
    @j3i2i2yl7 2 місяці тому +9

    "Hated" seems to be a overstatement for the evidence provided. If I say "The 3rd season of the origional Star Trek had some weak episodes", that doesen't mean I hate Star Trek, and if I was given an assignment to take the debate position that Tolken wrote poor quality literature I could make a caes for it, though I read LOTR at least 6 times.

  • @danielstride198
    @danielstride198 2 місяці тому +10

    The debate means nothing about Tolkien's own beliefs. It's a debate. He's required to take a stance, and as the Baconian Theory requires Bill Shakespeare to be too thick to have written the works, Tolkien therefore used rhetoric to play up Shakespeare (the man's) supposed thickness.

    • @normanmeharry58
      @normanmeharry58 2 місяці тому +1

      With Shakespeare, doubt about his authorship is a class thing. Typical of Britain.

    • @michaeltilley8708
      @michaeltilley8708 2 місяці тому

      @@normanmeharry58this is the most common tactic of Stratfordians. Accusing people of elitism because they doubt that a man who died with no books in his possession, no surviving writing in his hand and two illiterate children; a venal moneylender and aspirant to titled privilege, wrote the greatest dramatic works in the English language. Well Mark Twain, to name one of many Baconians, was hardly some English fop with an antipathy for the working class, thou addle-pated knave!

  • @lookingforarlandria
    @lookingforarlandria 2 місяці тому +9

    All of this being said, im very excited to hear about the operatic adaptation of LoTR. Tolkien's love and inspiration owing to opera really gives me hope it will go well

  • @globesurfer122
    @globesurfer122 2 місяці тому +26

    What didn't Tolkien hate?

  • @pattube
    @pattube 11 днів тому +2

    Tolkien was primarily an Old to Early Middle English scholar. Shakespeare is Early Modern English. Tolkien didn't hate Shakespeare. He just didn't care as much about Shakespeare as, say, Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

  • @gustyko8668
    @gustyko8668 2 місяці тому +15

    Another great video.... I've also read Tolkien's essay on fairy tales and fantasy. It's very inspirational 🥹

    • @melissaamyx2196
      @melissaamyx2196 2 місяці тому +4

      That book is on my Tolkien library wish list!

  • @SG-js2qn
    @SG-js2qn 2 місяці тому +4

    What you imagine in your own mind is going to be greater than any stage play or movie. Literature is indeed the best way to convey fantasy.

  • @aldrichunfaithful3589
    @aldrichunfaithful3589 2 місяці тому +27

    whether you agree with his other opinions of shakespeare or not, it's hard to disagree with him that fantasy is meant to be written not performed. in plays back then or on tv today, fantasy is always held back by the medium and the imagination of the writer, and no matter how fancy that medium is or how great the writer, it leaves no room for your own imagination which defeats the whole point. and it gets worse when you consider how those movies and plays have influenced modern fantasy writing, these days fantasy books have no subtlety or mystery about them at all which is really sad. magic is either some oddly convoluted system that gets treated like a mundane tool by the characters, or it's simplistic and tries to amaze you by being really over the top, it's always a very tangible thing that's easy to explain. there are some books that overcome this like harry potter, but for the most part the fantasy genre today fails to achieve it's main objective which is creating a sense of wonder. this isn't a personal attack but it always frustrates me when i see people dissecting the lore of lotr and explaining how things work, or worst of all when someone tries to quantify how powerful the characters are, because the entire point of the genre is that you aren't meant to know everything. you don't know how powerful gandalf is, you don't know what it looked like when he became really tall to fight the wolves, and you don't know what kind of spells he can use. that's a good thing because it lets your imagination come up with an answer, and it'll be far more enjoyable than whatever answer a screen or lore expert can give you

    • @bigdog1391
      @bigdog1391 2 місяці тому +3

      As an early, enamoured reader of LOTR I must agree with you on how disappointing the films were for this reason

    • @aldrichunfaithful3589
      @aldrichunfaithful3589 2 місяці тому +2

      @@bigdog1391 i've never bothered watching them myself for the same reason. i love lotr because it's an amazing world full of wonder and mystery, and it really pushes the limits of my imagination. turning it into a movie strips all of that away, and usually rather than adding anything it just confuses the narrative. that's not true for every tv adaptation, just as an example i think the first hunger games movie does a really amazing job of bringing the world to life, but there's no wonder or mystery getting lost in the process there. a similar thing happens with video games, having a character driven narrative works really well when you spend so long with the character and actively control them, that's part of why the stories in god of war or the last of us can cause such strong emotions. it just comes down to different mediums being suited to different stories, and traditional fantasy really works best in a book

    • @zachlong5427
      @zachlong5427 2 місяці тому +2

      @@aldrichunfaithful3589 Agreed! I also wonder how much DND's magic system has influenced the genre. And don't get me started on Terry Pratchett (RIP) and his 'belief makes gods and makes them stronger' tropes. I love his humor, but his cosmology is a tad terrifying.

    • @aldrichunfaithful3589
      @aldrichunfaithful3589 2 місяці тому +1

      @@zachlong5427 i don't have any experience with DND, but in general i don't think games have had a negative effect on fantasy. particularly video games are pretty cool with magic when it's done properly, it's usually just treated as a game mechanic and the focus of the story has nothing to do with it. the point is for you to be fully immersed in what you're doing, which works great with fantasy elements because it's so far outside of our own experience. and video games are unique because you're getting a very hands on experience with the world, which leaves a lot of room for interesting lore that doesn't need to be shoved down your throat, from software are excellent at that.
      just to clarify, i don't think it should be illegal for people to use fantasy elements in their stories without following the traditional fantasy genre, what i have a problem with is people trying to do traditional fantasy and missing the entire point of it. there are loads of lotr clones or similar books and movies, and all of them expect you to be amazed despite doing everything they can to limit your imagination lol. the point is that if you want the audience to be fascinated by something you can't give them all the information, you need to let them wonder, but how you go about that doesn't need to follow a formula

    • @zachlong5427
      @zachlong5427 2 місяці тому

      @@aldrichunfaithful3589 Boy howdy don't I know it. I'm launching a sci fi book and a fantasy book today on Amazon (long story), and I have to have 2 different minds when writing one or the other.

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean5280 2 місяці тому +7

    George Bernard Shaw also had beef with Shakespeare and compared him unfavorably with Bunyan. He too criticized Macbeth, calling the language of the play "right in feeling but silly and resourceless in thought and expression."

    • @ElonMuskrat-my8jy
      @ElonMuskrat-my8jy 2 місяці тому

      Good thing that his opinion is irrelevant as an atheist.

    • @joegibbskins
      @joegibbskins 2 місяці тому +4

      Tolstoy also hated Shakespeare and there is even a long passage in Anna Karenina just tearing down the mid 19th century cult of Shakespeare in Western Europe. As a fan of all the writers mentioned in this thread, I think my main takeaway is that writers of their caliber have giant egos

    • @ElonMuskrat-my8jy
      @ElonMuskrat-my8jy 2 місяці тому +1

      @@joegibbskins Which proves Dostoevsky to be the superior 19th century Russian author as he loved, respected and was influenced by Shakespeare.

    • @joegibbskins
      @joegibbskins 2 місяці тому +1

      @@ElonMuskrat-my8jy I honestly think they are too different to compare and honestly love all of them for very different reasons

    • @boxonothing4087
      @boxonothing4087 2 місяці тому

      GBS would've cut LotR to pieces

  • @ccgamedes33
    @ccgamedes33 2 місяці тому +2

    I "hate" to think what Tolkien felt about Delphi Oracle's prophecies.

  • @outofoblivionproductions4015
    @outofoblivionproductions4015 2 місяці тому +28

    For Tolkien's beloved Fantasy I can understand his dislike, but I would dislike a wit that didn't love the Bard's.

  • @conservativecatholic9030
    @conservativecatholic9030 2 місяці тому +3

    This raises the question of what Tolkien would have thought about the Peter Jackson trilogy. (Lord of the Rings of course, not The Hobbit) I wonder if he would have thought it was fantasy, would the technology used give it that fantasy element he was talking about.

  • @tarvoc746
    @tarvoc746 2 місяці тому +4

    Tolkien makes some good points. This may seem like a tangent, but I think this might also be the reason why Baldur's Gate 3 feels so hollow to me compared to the original games. A fantasy-themed RPG game like this should have loads of text and sparse graphics and effects. A still portrait and a wall of written dialogue in a text box simply works better for this kind of game and story than a hyper-detailed 3D-animated model overacting their tragic backstory.

    • @DARKMalice9000
      @DARKMalice9000 2 місяці тому +1

      I disagree I would hate the wall of text. I like even voiceless cut scenes

    • @clmberserker245
      @clmberserker245 2 місяці тому +1

      I dislike walls of text but BG3 is soulless

  • @ventiterre7371
    @ventiterre7371 22 дні тому +2

    There is no evidence that J.R.R. Tolkien disliked Shakespeare. In fact, Tolkien was known to appreciate and respect Shakespeare's work.

  • @GILGAMESH069
    @GILGAMESH069 2 місяці тому +18

    I disagree that visual medium can't portray fantasy as well as literature, a story like berserk will not work as a novel for example because its art is essential to its storytelling

    • @gustyko8668
      @gustyko8668 2 місяці тому +4

      Yes, but Berserk was made waaaaay after Tolkien's time.

    • @celestialhylos7028
      @celestialhylos7028 2 місяці тому +2

      Techonology

    • @GILGAMESH069
      @GILGAMESH069 2 місяці тому +2

      @@gustyko8668 berserk is just one example
      It is true tho that technology is his time wasn't advanced enough, I think if he seems some modern attempts like berserk or even games like souls game that he'll change his mind

    • @gustyko8668
      @gustyko8668 2 місяці тому +4

      @@GILGAMESH069 I'm not so sure, Berserk world view and philosophy is in opposition to the one in Middle Earth.

    • @GILGAMESH069
      @GILGAMESH069 2 місяці тому +5

      @@gustyko8668 maybe on the surface but its themes about human connections, the strength of the human will, overcoming truma and pain through opening ourselves to other people are pure universal themes that I think Tolkien would've at least appreciate even if he didn't like the gore and violence

  • @NiallMor
    @NiallMor 2 місяці тому

    I think this is the second of your videos I've seen. Your presentations are well researched, well thought out, and well presented.

  • @rchas1023
    @rchas1023 Місяць тому +1

    Shakespeare's plays were probably written in a rush, with the deadline of the date set for their performance. Hence their defects. And yet, their genius shines down the centuries.

  • @rcjdeanna5282
    @rcjdeanna5282 Місяць тому +1

    P.G. Wodehouse was so well educated and intelligent he had Shakespeare and the Bible almost memorized. His books bring so much humor and joy....

  • @berserkley
    @berserkley 2 місяці тому +7

    Did he like anybody?

    • @keouine
      @keouine Місяць тому +1

      one day we'll learn he loved Howard Sprague and the show My Mother the Car.

  • @reggie18b
    @reggie18b 2 місяці тому +7

    This makes me wonder what Tolkien felt about Wagner.

    • @michaeltilley8708
      @michaeltilley8708 2 місяці тому +3

      IIRC he disliked Wagner and denied the alleged influence of the Tetralogy, which, to me, seems a bit the lady doth protest too much

    • @q45ij54q
      @q45ij54q 2 місяці тому +3

      Tolkien was a prude so I'm sure he disliked Wagner as a person.
      As for the Ring Cycle, its fingerprints are all over the trilogy regardless of what Tolkien claimed.

    • @margaretsproule7256
      @margaretsproule7256 2 місяці тому +1

      Wagner?Pinched Richards best ideas!😊

    • @talstory
      @talstory 2 місяці тому +1

      I heard on a podcast that he said the only thing the stories had in common was that they both had a ring..he didn't like Wagner at all

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 Місяць тому

      @@q45ij54q To be fair to Tolkien, both he and Wagner drew influence from the same source material. Most of the similarities, such as a broken sword being re-forged, or a sinister ring, come from Norse and Germanic mythology.

  • @booksteer7057
    @booksteer7057 Місяць тому +1

    I always had a problem with "Macbeth", too. If the witches' prophecies are curses, then Macbeth isn't responsible for his actions. If they are true predictions, then his fate is pre-determined, and he also isn't responsible. Even if they just put ideas into his head, the truth of their other predictions forces Macbeth to consider the ones concerning him to be unavoidable.

  • @EpicGeopolitics
    @EpicGeopolitics 4 дні тому

    Hey dude. I've really enjoyed your videos, both on this topic and Tolkien's thoughts and feelings about Disney. Would love to see more content like this, perhaps delivered in an even more refined way. Keep up the good work!!!

  • @Blokewood3
    @Blokewood3 Місяць тому +1

    Regarding the prophecies of Macbeth, Tolkien may have had a point about the trees, but he, like many others, was wrong about the other one. The apparition actually said that " *none* of woman born shall harm Macbeth," so Eowyn would have been out of luck unless she had a caesarean section. Also, in Medieval times, Caesarean sections had a 100% fatality rate for the mother, so in Macduff's case, the surgeon would not have even tried it unless Macduff's mother were already dead as a last-ditch attempt to save the baby. That is why Macduff was not "of woman born:" his mother died before she could properly finish giving birth to him, so he was born of the knife. The modern C-section is more like "of woman born, with some surgical assistance."

    • @keouine
      @keouine Місяць тому +2

      Shakespeare has characters on more than once suggest one's mind and soul is vulnerable and weak. Because of that director's can take the view Macbeth himself becomes deranged with ambition and disgard the magic as mere delusion. Having the trees uproot and march just destroys the play. It goes from a human play with whispers of remote devilish interference to an all out ahistorical fairy tale. He might as well bring in a unicorn and pegasus after that stunt.

  • @beorbeorian150
    @beorbeorian150 Місяць тому +1

    Tolkien wanted a high fantasy based on the earliest myths that could be found in English folklore. He saw the potential to influence culture in a positive way. The cheap versions of these myths like Disney dwarfs greatly destroyed the potential of Tolkien’s gifts. It’s a bit like the two towers. Disney the sell out, and Tolkien the Gray.

  • @varframppytwobtokwanguz2286
    @varframppytwobtokwanguz2286 2 місяці тому +2

    Tangent: From a modern perspective, Shakespeare feels close to Tolkien because it's set in an historical period filled with sword-wielding knights, rapier-fencing rogues, conniving kings and evil witches. Unfortunately, most modern Shakespeare renditions render the material in a contemporary "relevant" setting, completely un-moored from the context and visual cues modern audiences need to understand the language. Richard III in World War II. Hamlet in a corporate boardroom. Besides, the farther we travel in time, the more fantastical Shakespeare gets. People like sword fights and witches. We need a real period Shakespeare movie. Not a modern setting, not a minimalist abstraction. Period, period. It would be metal AF.

  • @missjoshemmett
    @missjoshemmett 22 дні тому

    Shakespeare wanted to be an actor but was often not hired because of reasons we don't need to get into here. He solved the solution by writing his own plays and appearing in a lot of them. There were also times, he would come up with an idea and decide he wanted to do it and wrote it at the side of the stage passing sheets of paper to his trusted actors who read the new play on stage holding the paper. Audiences didn't mind. Also, Shakespeare was more interested in action more than anything else. (If he were here today, he would be writing massive movies with huge battle scenes.) And, people had little money to spend on things other than food and housing, so with little savings, they went to plays that interested them. Shakespeare was better at history which pleased the Monarchy and the people. I notice that Tolkien mentioned fantasy but not historical. And the endings were rushed because people stood through the plays (no seats) and he did work with a time limit. Shakespeare was a man with a great imagination and no editor. I think it did pretty for himself.

  • @RogerCoyBooks
    @RogerCoyBooks 9 днів тому

    Good work on this. Well done.

  • @keouine
    @keouine Місяць тому +1

    I look forward to next episode of "Whom did Tolkien hate?" I expect it will be another master whom I revere. Debussy? Oscar Wilde? Richard Strauss? Van Gogh? Arnold Schoenberg? George Gershwin? Sinclair Lewis?

  • @Rynewulf
    @Rynewulf 22 дні тому

    Funny thing is, the eariesr mention of a King and Queen Oberon and Titania of the fairies we've found is a 1400s English mummers play.
    It's quite likely Germanic elves and fairies had different or at least parallel origins. rather than spoiled at some point

  • @bigdog1391
    @bigdog1391 2 місяці тому +4

    Great video thank you!

  • @andrewreynolds9371
    @andrewreynolds9371 2 місяці тому +14

    It's sad that even Tolkien fell into the trap that only 'gentlemen' and those with the 'proper' education could truly write. It's a relic of the English class system, and one held by far too many even among writers today.

    • @MundaSquire
      @MundaSquire Місяць тому +2

      But in this case, Tolkien was correct, though he had the wrong man behind the name. That was Edward De Vere, the 18th Earl of Oxford. Loo😮k up Alexander Waugh, grandson of noted English author, Evelyn Waugh (a man). He has videos on youtube that will convince you

    • @andrewreynolds9371
      @andrewreynolds9371 Місяць тому

      @@MundaSquire advising someone to 'watch a video on UA-cam' so they can have some point 'proven' to them is hardly scholarly research. if you want to know why, google 'chemtrails are real' and find out just how insane some of the video 'proofs' available on UA-cam are.

    • @MundaSquire
      @MundaSquire Місяць тому +1

      Oops, typo. 17th Earl of Oxford.

    • @jaredarmstrong7403
      @jaredarmstrong7403 24 дні тому

      I’m more convinced he is right day by day than that he was wrong.

  • @stevew1669
    @stevew1669 2 місяці тому +1

    Thank you. A fascinating video. Tolkien was somewhat hypercritical regarding literature. I guess CS Lewis, JRT''s fellow Inkling, would have been more sympathetic to Shakespeare as his understanding of fantasy was less literary than Tolkien's.

  • @l.loganboswell1761
    @l.loganboswell1761 Місяць тому +1

    I knew I liked JRRT for more than just the Lotr stories.

  • @crusader2112
    @crusader2112 2 місяці тому +9

    I’ve only read Romeo & Juliet and Julius Caesar, so I’m not that knowledgeable on Shakespeare, but great video nonetheless. 👍

    • @InkandFantasy
      @InkandFantasy  2 місяці тому +7

      Thank you very much, Caesar is probably my favorite!!

    • @crusader2112
      @crusader2112 2 місяці тому +2

      @@InkandFantasy It was very good, I read it back in college.

    • @georgerady9706
      @georgerady9706 2 місяці тому +1

      Cutting and dicing the fact that Shakespeare wrote the plays to be PERFORMED (and didn’t publish them himself so we only have pirated texts)
      This is like criticizing ‘music’ by how it’s annotated on the sheet… and never play it! “I don’t like his treble clef!” 😅😂🤣

    • @crusader2112
      @crusader2112 2 місяці тому +2

      @@georgerady9706 Okay. Is that aimed at me or Tolkien? I assume it’s Tolkien.

  • @cylondorado4582
    @cylondorado4582 26 днів тому

    His take on Macbeth is interesting to me, since that's probably my favorite Shakespeare play. I never was that into them, but of course I also read some of them for school. I thought the prophesy was a bit of a stretch, but I just chalked that up to how he shouldn't have trusted those witches in the first place. Although I did feel a similar dissapointment when we read The Crystal Cave in high school, and I didn't like how the "Dragon" was a meteor or something. And I'll also grant him that the part with the Ents was one of my absolute favorite parts of The Lord of the Rings.

  • @throckmortensnivel2850
    @throckmortensnivel2850 Місяць тому

    "...Tolkien believed that Shakespeare's works were at their best when they were being performed..." Well, after all, they were plays, not novels. Bernard Shaw was the first dramatist that really worked to make his plays readable as stories. In Shakespeare's day, you didn't spend a lot of money printing plays for the general public. They were printed for the actors, and each copy ended up with all sorts of marks and notes. More than that, they didn't include much detail about settings, and stage "business". When you write a story, you have to include gestures, facial expressions, etc. In a play, that is contributed by the actors.

  • @Scientist_Salarian
    @Scientist_Salarian 15 днів тому

    Tolkein is correct: the difference between reading and watching Shakespeare is night and day (provided the actors are sufficiently skilled). I never liked Shakespeare until I got dragged to see Twelfth Night at the Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival. Now, it’s the event I look forward to most every year.

  • @martineldritch
    @martineldritch 2 місяці тому +10

    Tolkien's words about Shakespeare's humble beginnings reminded me of the line in his book "What is the house of Eorl but a thatched barn where brigands drink in the reek, and their brats roll on the floor among the dogs?"

  • @SloppyHeimer
    @SloppyHeimer 2 місяці тому +1

    Next video: “Why Tolkien would hate High School Musical”

  • @sifatshams1113
    @sifatshams1113 17 днів тому

    For a second I read the title as Why Shakespeare Hated Tolkien and was like "Wait...how fucking popular were the LOTR books????"

  • @ryanjohnson3615
    @ryanjohnson3615 2 місяці тому +1

    Shakespeare can say three pages worth with one sentence. I find new things in his writing even after ten readings.

  • @roundninja
    @roundninja Місяць тому

    I'm not even a huge fan of Tolkien, I actually like Shakespeare's way of handing prophecies better, but he's got a very interesting point about the over-application of theatrical norms to literature. George R. R. Martin likes to quote "the only thing worth writing about is the human heart in conflict with itself," which seems influenced by Hamlet and Macbeth, and in some ways it's served him well since I do think the characters are stronger in ASoIaF than in LotR, but in other ways it's a somewhat reductive and impoverished understanding of writing that really limits his prose ability and world building. I don't think one perspective is necessarily right and the other wrong, I'm just glad we have different excellent writers with their own philosophies of what makes a good book. We get more that way than we would if everyone followed all the same rules.

  • @aricliljegren890
    @aricliljegren890 9 днів тому

    I feel Tolkien's error regarding Shakespeare's Scottish play lays in seeing it as a fantasy. If the Bard had intended it to be a fantasy, he might indeed have had actual trees (ents) storm the castle - but it was not a fantasy story in that sense. The witches offered a prophecy that was technically true but highly misleading knowing that their words would lead to the violent downfall of the titular character.

  • @DougWIngate
    @DougWIngate 24 дні тому

    Shakespeare's been awfully silent since Tolkien dropped this diss track

  • @countvlad8845
    @countvlad8845 Місяць тому +1

    To improve on SHAKESPEARE! WHAT! What beggary of the mind is this? Shakespeare is a divine poet, a soothsayer to future events in England! He is best read in the quiet of a cloistered abbey, or in the meadow where the larks do play. Nothing bears comparison to his staggering genius and colossal wit. The man is a literary GIANT amongst pygmies that squawk and take fright from his shadow. There is no equal to his stature, to the depths of his artistic insight that plumbs and probes the human soul. There is no limit to his imagination that towers above the clouds and rests in the lap of Gods. The man is the epitome of greatness... and that is why I don't read him. My ego can't take it. I must lock myself for years away from his works lest I be tempted. I must bolt the door and bar the windows lest the people sing his praises as they pass my home. Even the angels in the church will secretly read his plays and take pleasure. I can not bear it. I, who has written nothing over the years, can not bear it! Alas... But I will not take it out on Shakespeare.

  • @davidgalbraith1739
    @davidgalbraith1739 Місяць тому +1

    Because Shakespeare was a great writer

  • @graceygrumble
    @graceygrumble 21 день тому

    Walking, running, cycling, driving, catching a train, sailing, or flying.
    All means of getting from A to B.
    You can enjoy them all.
    Every now and again, Tolkien could be a bit up his own... posterior.

  • @alberg6290
    @alberg6290 Місяць тому

    Tolstoy also had issue with the Bard but was effectively rebutted by Orwell

  • @grocefamilyfarm3062
    @grocefamilyfarm3062 16 днів тому

    Tolkien: I’m into older, more obscure stuff. You probably wouldn’t get it.

  • @MrDazzlerdarren
    @MrDazzlerdarren 26 днів тому

    Asmongold said, something along the lines of, only the true fans of WOW could be it's biggest critics because they knew and loved it so well; maybe Tolkien loved and knew Shakespeare's work so much which is why he criticised it so.

  • @tagoldich
    @tagoldich Місяць тому +1

    George Bernard Shaw: “With the single exception of Homer, there is no eminent writer…..that I despise so entirely as I despise Shakespeare when I measure my mind against his.” lol

  • @patrickstewart3446
    @patrickstewart3446 2 місяці тому +2

    It sounds like he had issues with a couple of plays, the more magical ones to be specific and even then only elements of the stories.
    😁

  • @tomernst8595
    @tomernst8595 2 місяці тому +1

    If anyone is interested in a differing, and exceptionally well researched, opinion, regarding the authorship of the plays, read “The Truth Will Out” by Brenda James. I frankly don’t understand why anyone in the 20th or 21st century would get their panties so twisted up whether William Shakespeare may or may not have been the actual author. It doesn’t change the brilliance of the writing. At least read the first chapter.

  • @srothbardt
    @srothbardt 23 дні тому

    I was never confused or influenced by Shaky’s use of elves, etc when reading Tolkien. It’s obvious that Tolkien’s use of those folk characters is different from Shaky’s, who perhaps stays more on the everyday view of fantastic characters such as Puck. One could say Tolkien lacks a sense of humor in his use of fantastic characters.

  • @HolySoliDeoGloria
    @HolySoliDeoGloria 2 місяці тому +2

    Good video! There's no "-size" in any form of the verb "prophesy" (or "prophesies" or "prophesied"). E.g., 9:44

    • @InkandFantasy
      @InkandFantasy  2 місяці тому +1

      Yeah I seem to make that mistake a lot. It’s kind of hardwired for some reason. Thanks for pointing it out!!!

  • @henryblunt8503
    @henryblunt8503 Місяць тому

    I think Tolkien's personal definition of "fantasy", which it seems he held since childhood, is the root of his misinterpretation of the fantasy elements in Shakespeare. They're not there because Bill is trying to write fantasy and failing, they're there because he's trying to create drama, and succeeding.
    Midsummer Night's Dream satirises sexual infatuation using fairies, it isn't a fairy story, and the way he's written them uses a variety of contemporary presentations that his audience would know - otherwise the satire wouldn't work. Nor does the play require a belief in fairies - which would have been considered as rather unsophisticated even then.
    Tolkien's view of Macbeth is even wider of the mark and he also disliked nearly all literature by his own contemporaries. Much as I have enjoyed reading LOTR over the decades, and recognise T's scholarship in philology and Old English, he was, I think, a rather a limited man in his literary taste.

  • @doubleplusdanny
    @doubleplusdanny 2 місяці тому +2

    Tolstoy took Shakespeare to task as well.

  • @kenkaplan3654
    @kenkaplan3654 2 місяці тому +1

    There is a strong theory that Macbeth is an unfinished work. It is substantially shorter than most of the tragedies.

  • @johnnzboy
    @johnnzboy 2 місяці тому

    Super interesting and beautifully scripted and read, excellent work! I also appreciate the parallels to Ancient Greek myth and legend when it comes to the ambiguity of prophecy - the foretold event occurs but in an unexpected way,- and not just in Ancient Greece, the ambiguity of prophecy is a feature of many world mythologies. To be honest, Tolkien comes across as pompous and precious for being so censorious about the "reveals" of the prophecies in Hamlet. Incidentally, in a few of the quoted letters, the word 'pan' is used in an odd way - are you sure that the word shouldn't have been 'part', which makes much more sense?

  • @fredneecher1746
    @fredneecher1746 Місяць тому

    Tolkien's dislike of Shakespeare's use of fantasy is precisely why the movies are so exasperating for a true fan to suffer through.

  • @JohnSmith-fx2mz
    @JohnSmith-fx2mz 17 днів тому

    Thats funny, because I always thought his books were a chore to read but some of the movies and videogames based on his work are fantastic.

  • @tonydarcy1606
    @tonydarcy1606 Місяць тому

    The Bard of Stratford might have had humble origins, but some achieve greatness.

  • @blatherskite3009
    @blatherskite3009 2 місяці тому

    Arguably, the reason why anyone writes a novel - or makes a film, or records an album, or creates any kind of art - is because of a certain dissatisfaction with everyone else's efforts in that direction, i.e. because no-one's done it exactly the way they would want to see it done, so it falls to them to do it.
    I'm sure Peter Jackson would have preferred that some other competent director had made a top-notch cinema adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings" so that he could simply watch it as a member of the audience and be swept along by it without knowing how it was all achieved. But no-one else was capable of doing it properly, and so it fell to him to do it.
    The curse that any creator is under is that, because they made the work, they're one of the few people on earth - or in an author's case, the _sole_ person on earth - denied the pleasure of ever experiencing it.

  • @fondajames
    @fondajames 2 місяці тому +1

    From how he described what he thinks fantasy should be, i wonder what hed have thought about dungeons and dragons

  • @andrewkern8778
    @andrewkern8778 2 місяці тому +1

    To be critical is not to dislike.

  • @tombombadil1262
    @tombombadil1262 2 місяці тому +2

    Cause he’s smart. Moving on…

  • @msdm83
    @msdm83 Місяць тому

    I wonder what he would have thought of Jackson's trilogy. When the technology was good enough to render it well.

  • @laserwolf65
    @laserwolf65 2 місяці тому +49

    Tolkein's mantra: "only I know how to write fantasy."

    • @maalikserebryakov
      @maalikserebryakov 2 місяці тому +20

      he’s right

    • @Saber23
      @Saber23 2 місяці тому +16

      He would be right but that’s not what he believed, he had tons of love and respect for different authors and stories

    • @Saber23
      @Saber23 2 місяці тому +3

      @@maalikserebryakov true lol

    • @AB-et6nj
      @AB-et6nj 2 місяці тому +8

      @@maalikserebryakov tolkein is overrated. never have i read something so imaginatively bland

    • @UltimateKyuubiFox
      @UltimateKyuubiFox 2 місяці тому

      “I only know how to write fantasy.”

  • @donaldlococo954
    @donaldlococo954 Місяць тому

    As many of Shakespeare's plays are histories and non-fantasy comedies, I imagine Tokien might have had a different opinion about them. I in fact agree with him on the cheap play on words that resolved the witches' prophecy. However, it was a kind of witchy thing to do.

  • @KeiPyn24
    @KeiPyn24 Місяць тому

    On behalf of most 10th grade British literature students and the adults such as myself: we hate Shakespeare too.

  • @jamesdettmann94
    @jamesdettmann94 Місяць тому

    Precious, precious, where art thou precious

  • @rickythe2nd63
    @rickythe2nd63 2 місяці тому

    Wow. Didn't expect to agree with Tolkien on this one, but he certainly won me over!

  • @vitorafmonteiro
    @vitorafmonteiro 2 місяці тому +2

    Video liked at doggo video farewell. Good boy, thanking the patrons.

  • @CRT_sRGB
    @CRT_sRGB 2 місяці тому

    Tolkien did win one battle. The noble elf and the stalwart dwarf are the primary archetypes in the popular imagination of today, championed by his book, then later in a massive way by Peter Jackson's adaptation, along with all the works _LOTR_ inspired. I'm enjoying the anime series _Dungeon Meshi_ at the moment, and it traces a long but direct line to Tolkien, via its source manga, computer/video games, tabletop games, and the rest.

  • @stueyapstuey4235
    @stueyapstuey4235 Місяць тому

    The approx 5:20 point is exactly the opposite of Shakespeare - there is no attempt to 'realize'. There is only 'play' - 'the play's the thing' - Renaissance drama is a non-realistic non-fantastic genre. Tolkien is talking (well, writing!) across it. I think it's informative to recognize Tolkien's antipathy to adaptations of his work - feeling that something would be lost. Whereas in Renaissance drama the audience interaction is written into the text - drama/performance is a communal act. Implicit in Tolkien's view of Fantasy is the reader as recipient, not participant. It's not that one is right or, wrong but that there is a misunderstanding of genre and expectation here.

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon 2 місяці тому

    I agree with Tolkien up to a point.
    Theater and prose are very different.
    Although it is true the theater is less than Ideal form for fantasy, for the reasons stated,
    does that mean that fantasy should never be portrayed in plays??
    I think that conclusion is wrong.
    But, we must understand Tolkien and his issues.
    The fact that it took 30 years for Tolkien to bring the Hobbit and LOTR to publication,
    and that his supporting notes are the bases for many books after his death,
    means that JRR Tolkien was an extreme perfectionist.
    Tolkien's criticism of Shakespeare comes from his wanting perfection.
    He rejects Shakespeare for not being PERFECT.
    I look at things differently. Shakespeare's work's may not be perfect.
    But, is the world better off with them??
    Despite their flaws, doesn't the existence and reverence of Shakespeare's plays
    after 400 years imply a unique quality??
    Few literary works have had such longevity of love.
    Don Quixote, Gulliver's Travels, Don Juan, Leviathan and others are still revered.
    But, I think none have the following and respect that Shakespeare still receives.
    Despite Tolkien's valid criticisms, I wish Tolkien had been more humble and accepted the greatness of Shakespeare.

  • @swylie222
    @swylie222 2 місяці тому

    Is this voiced by an AI? The typo "pan" instead of "part" is spoken as pan.