Subject The
J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia describes "Errantry" as "the nonsensical adventures of a tiny messenger knight who falls in love with a butterfly and battles various insects." It adds that it is then linked to the
Hobbit Bilbo Baggins's "serious account of
Eärendil's quest" as described in Tolkien's 1954–55 novel
The Lord of the Rings. The poem mentions creatures called Dumbledors and Hummerhorns. "Dumbledor" is an English dialect word for
bumblebee, while according to the Tolkien scholars
Christina Scull and
Wayne G. Hammond, "Hummerhorn" is apparently a name invented by Tolkien for a large
wasp or
hornet.
Metre Tolkien invented the
metre, which consists of
trisyllabic assonances, three in each set of four lines. The second and fourth line in every
quatrain rhyme, as do the end of the first line and beginning of the second line in every pair. He found this so difficult that he never wrote another poem in this style, though he did later develop another style from this, and the result, through long evolution from
Errantry, was
Eärendil the Mariner, published in
The Fellowship of the Ring. Joe R. Christopher, in the
J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia, writes that the poem could be seen conventionally as quatrains of
iambic tetrameters with ABCB rhyme, but that the recording of Tolkien reading the poem shows the metre to be his own invention. In Christopher's analysis, each line is composed of "two second-class paeons", each consisting of an
iamb and a
pyrrhus: ˘ − ˘ ˘. There is an additional rhyme or half-rhyme of the ends of the A or C lines with the first
paeon of the B lines.
Catherine McIlwaine, director of an exhibition of Tolkien's works, called the poem "a new metrical experiment", noting that Tolkien read it to
The Inklings,
C. S. Lewis's literary group at Oxford. ==Middle-earth framework==