From the 1990s onwards, novelists and scholars began to adopt a more favourable view of Tolkien's place in literature. The 2014
A Companion to J. R. R. Tolkien in particular marked Tolkien's acceptance in the literary canon, with essays by major Tolkien scholars on style and many other aspects of his writing. Kullmann and Siepmann observe that characters such as
Sam Gamgee and
Gollum are marked out by their non-standard speech. Walker comments that Tolkien uses language to expand his readers' imaginations: And further:
Hobbits as mediators with the heroic Turner states that
The Lord of the Rings makes use of several styles of prose, with discrete
linguistic registers for different characters, peoples, and cultures. In his view, Tolkien intentionally creates a contrast between the simple modern style of the
Hobbits and more archaizing language for the
Dwarves,
Elves, and Riders of Rohan. The genre of the work begins with novelistic realism in
the Shire, where the down-to-earth Hobbits live, climbing to
high romance for the defeat of the Dark Lord
Sauron, and descending to realism again for
the return to the Shire. Kullmann and Siepmann comment that from the first page of the novel, written from the point of view of the people of
Hobbiton, the reader hears a "common-sensical, no-nonsense [Hobbit] perspective, from which fantastic, fairy-tale creatures like dwarves appear 'outlandish'." Further, Turner notes, Tolkien avoids the expression of modern concepts when describing pre-modern cultures. Tolkien stated that he intentionally changed the speaking style of certain individual characters to suit their interactions with other characters, mentioning that "the more learned and able among the Hobbits", including
Frodo, were "quick to note and adopt the style of those whom they met". Shippey explains that the Hobbits serve as mediators between the ordinary modern world and the heroic and archaic fantasy realm, making
The Hobbit and
The Lord of the Rings readily accessible. Such mediation is effected early in
The Lord of the Rings by having the Hobbits present the archaic characters in their own way, as when Pippin "attempts a formal register" with the words "O Wise People!" on meeting the
High Elf Gildor in the woods of the Shire.
Ancient clashing with modern Shippey analyses some of the cultures that clash in "
The Council of Elrond". The Wizard
Gandalf reports on what he heard from Gaffer Gamgee, a simple old Hobbit in the Shire: I can't abide changes', said he, 'not at my time of life, and least of all changes for the worst. Shippey writes that his
proverb-rich language speaks of psychological unpreparedness, and a sort of baseline of normality. Gaffer Gamgee's son
Sam speaks slightly better in Shippey's view, with his "A nice pickle we have landed ourselves in, Mr Frodo", as he is refusing to see Mordor as anything bigger than "a pickle", the "Anglo-hobbitic inability to know when they're beaten". Gandalf then introduces the traitorous Wizard
Saruman, his slipperiness "conveyed by style and lexis": Shippey comments that no other character in the book uses words so empty of meaning as "real", "deploring", and "ultimate", and that Saruman's speech contains several modern evils – betraying allies,
preferring ends to means,
W. H. Auden's "conscious acceptance of guilt in the necessary murder". Rosebury comments that Saruman has a "convincingly" wide repertoire of speaking styles: "colloquial, diplomatic, intimidatory, vituperative". In his view, Gandalf has both a broad range of diction and powerful rhetoric; he is able to deploy warm humour as well as irony; and he narrates, explains, and argues effectively. Given "his nomadic life, linguistic skill and far-reaching intelligence", he can vary his speaking style as widely as Tolkien's narrative, from relaxed Hobbit conversation to "exalted narration". Rosebury cites Elizabeth Kirk's remark that Tolkien uses each style not mainly to "define the individuality of the given speaker or situation, but to enact the kind of consciousness he shares with others who have a comparable stance before experience", but he suggests instead that often there is simply a "Common Speech" shared by Men, Elves, and Dwarves with not much to differentiate them. In comparison to these modern voices, Tolkien makes the other Council members speak in an "archaic, blunt, clearsighted" way. The leading Elf,
Elrond, uses antique words like "esquire", "shards" (of a sword), and "
weregild", along with "old-fashioned inversions of syntax", remarking for instance "Now, therefore, things shall be openly spoken that have been hidden from all but a few until this day". directly echoes the
ubi sunt section in the Old English poem
The Wanderer. Less obviously, the theme is revisited, "usually with incidental casualness", to create an elegiac tone and a feeling of deep time and history behind what can be seen, as when the Hobbit Pippin sees the great stone city of
Minas Tirith for the first time: "Pippin guessed of great men and kindreds that had once dwelt there; and yet now they were silent, and no footstep rang on their wide pavements, nor voice was heard in their walls, nor any face looked out from door or empty window".
Varied dialogue types for the enemy Rosebury writes that whereas some critics have asserted that the monstrous
Orcs are represented as "working class", Tolkien had in fact created at least three types of Orc-dialogue for different ranks and tribes within their "closed militarist culture of hatred and cruelty"; and none of these is working class. He describes the
Mordor Orc-leader
Grishnákh as "comparatively cerebral", speaking "like a
melodrama villain, or a
public-school bully".
Merry and
Pippin are told:
Anna Vaninskaya writes that the most modern
idiom in
The Lord of the Rings is used by the Orcs overheard by Frodo and Sam in Mordor. Tolkien gives them the speech of the twentieth century, whether
as soldiers, functionaries in party or government, or "minor officials in a murderous bureaucracy". Gorbag says: She writes that Tolkien captures, too, "the clipped language of army dispatches": Also quite modern, she writes, is frustration with whatever headquarters is up to:
Distinctive individuality considers Tolkien's depiction of
Gollum (pictured) his most memorable success. Rosebury considers that Tolkien's "most memorable success" of voice is the
monster Gollum's "extraordinary
idiolect", with its obsessive repetition, its infantile whining, its minimal syntax and its unstable sense of being one or two people,
hinting at mental illness; "Gollum's moral deformity is like that of an unregenerate child grown old, in whom the unattractive infant qualities of selfishness, cruelty and self-pitying dependency are monstrously preserved and isolated." Kullmann and Siepmann state that the eight members of the
Fellowship of the Ring (barring
Boromir, who dies early in the narrative) are clearly distinguished by their style of speech. They consider
Sam Gamgee and
Aragorn to be the most distinctively individual, for their colloquialism and "archaic and literary" speech respectively.
Legolas and
Gimli always use a literary style, often
with proverbs; and both consider the past more significant than what Legolas calls "these after-days". In contrast to those "epical" characters,
Merry and
Pippin speak the ordinary colloquial English used in Tolkien's time. They differ from each other in that Merry makes direct statements, while Pippin characteristically asks questions.
Gandalf speaks the most of any character. He talks plainly, neither archaically nor colloquially, sometimes using complex sentences. He varies his style of speech depending on who he is speaking to; and he often uses the imperative, whether for direct commands or to encourage the rest of the Fellowship. Finally,
Frodo speaks often, but usually in short utterances, whether exclamations, questions, or answers. Like Gandalf, he can vary his style when speaking to Elves, Dwarves, or Men rather than Hobbits: he uses courtly politeness with
Gildor – including the "high-elven"
Quenya greeting "A star shines on the hour of our meeting", with
Glóin, and with
Faramir. == Narrative quality ==