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In the movie Tolkien, after

Edith is engaged to another man

Tolkien is shouting drunkenly at the stars in the college quad, in one of his constructed languages. Soon after, Professor Wright says to him that he recognised some Finnish in there. I guess the language was Qenya. Is this correct? And what was Tolkien saying?

2 Answers 2

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Yes and no.

No, because the filmmakers in a way came up with the language he spoke in, but yes because the base of it is Tolkien's language, Quenya.

But, as Tolkien director Dome Karukoski told The A.V. Club, that scene takes place when Tolkien was still in university, when he was just beginning to create the mythology of Middle-earth. Tolkien wrote the languages first, drawing much of his stories and characters from the words he made up for them, letting the words and languages be the driving forces, in a way. Tolkien’s first endeavor was The Silmarillion, the backbone of the mythology he’d draw on when writing The Hobbit and especially The Lord Of The Rings. But he hadn’t fleshed out the elves yet, even though he was creating the language that would eventually be spoken by them.

“He’s thinking about fairies, so what he shouts is more a language of fairies,” Karukoski told The A.V. Club about the scene. To make the language accurate to the time, the director worked with a linguist to come up with a sort of proto-Elvish language. “Tolkien was using the Finnish language, to the point where he was even learning Finnish grammar,” says Karukoski, who is himself Finnish. “So we used that as a base.” He and the linguist, who specializes in Anglo-Saxon language, reverse-engineered Tolkien’s Elvish into how it might have sounded at this earlier stage in Tolkien’s life.

And what is Tolkien saying? “He’s citing Christ, he’s looking for the heavens for an answer because he’s lost love,” Karukoski says. “He’s looking at the northern star and that forms an idea in his mind—the idea of the Eärendil.” (Eärendil appears in The Silmarillion. He’s a child of men and elves who carries the morning star, the jewel called “Silmaril,” on his brow. Galadriel gives Frodo a phial with the light of Eärendil in The Fellowship Of The Ring.)

Is J.R.R. Tolkien drunkenly shouting in Elvish in that scene from Tolkien?


But if you think about it in a "real-life" perspective in retrospect of how that "scene" would have played out for the Professor in that very year, I would say that it is very likely it was Qenya he was saying, as that is known as the earlier form of the Quenya used in his legendarium.

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  • 1
    Surely someone who speaks Finnish could listen and see if they can make any words out! Commented Jun 29, 2019 at 5:27
  • If I remember correctly he says "elena" a couple of times. "Star", that is.
    – Apollo
    Commented Oct 31, 2019 at 19:37
  • Based on the context, I assume "Christ" here means Cynewulf?
    – ibid
    Commented Jun 29, 2021 at 1:31
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Not quite Quenya.

“He’s thinking about fairies, so what he shouts is more a language of fairies,” [Tolkien director Dome Karukoski] told The A.V. Club about the scene. To make the language accurate to the time, the director worked with a linguist to come up with a sort of proto-Elvish language. “Tolkien was using the Finnish language, to the point where he was even learning Finnish grammar,” says Karukoski, who is himself Finnish. “So we used that as a base.” He and the linguist, who specializes in Anglo-Saxon language, reverse-engineered Tolkien’s Elvish into how it might have sounded at this earlier stage in Tolkien’s life.

And what is Tolkien saying? “He’s citing Christ, he’s looking for the heavens for an answer because he’s lost love,” Karukoski says. “He’s looking at the northern star and that forms an idea in his mind—the idea of the Eärendil.” (Eärendil appears in The Silmarillion. He’s a child of men and elves who carries the morning star, the jewel called “Silmaril,” on his brow. Galadriel gives Frodo a phial with the light of Eärendil in The Fellowship Of The Ring.)

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  • Was near-done with my answer when you posted yours (snail typer here). Couldn't help using the same reference, hope you don't mind.
    – Voronwé
    Commented Jun 27, 2019 at 13:08
  • No worries. ^_^ In the end, there usually is one source. Kind of a shame he didn't say what the phrase was specifically...
    – FuzzyBoots
    Commented Jun 27, 2019 at 13:10
  • Unfortunately yeah. I'm having bad luck finding any reference to that scene, even the script for Tolkien for that matter.
    – Voronwé
    Commented Jun 27, 2019 at 13:17
  • Sorry, but the other answer is a little more comprehensive. Both are worthy. Commented Jun 29, 2019 at 5:26
  • No worries. I accept that.
    – FuzzyBoots
    Commented Jun 29, 2019 at 5:35

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