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09-24-2024, 04:23 PM | #1 | |||
Overshadowed Eagle
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: The north-west of the Old World, east of the Sea
Posts: 3,901
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Finding the Cottage of Lost Play
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You see where I'm going with this. Tolkien gives a fairly precise description of Eriol's entry to Kortirion: he passes through a land of elms, then follows the road from the south described above up to the summit of the hill, then takes a winding road down the western slopes to the cottage. If Tolkien is being as precise as he later was with Tavrobel, can the original Cottage be found on the map? There are two roads running into Warwick from the south: the Banbury Road in the south-east, and the Stratford Road in the south-west. The Banbury Road is arguably straighter, but more significantly, the steepest part of the road runs right next to a high stone wall, topped with flowers, over which at least one yew-tree can be seen. It makes sense that Eriol would come from the east - he arrived on Eressea by ship, after all! For bonus points, coming this close against the castle wall means Eriol doesn't get a very good view of Warwick Castle close up - which explains why, at the start of BoLT 1: The Chaining of Melko, he needs a guide to find the approach to the Tower which is modelled on the castle. Particularly in maps from Tolkien's day (I'm not sure if this is available outside the UK), Castle Hill really does bring you very suddenly into the middle of the houses of Warwick. The hill gets gentler but continues to climb, up along The Butts, and reaches its summit somewhere around the end of Northgate Street. Here Eriol "stepped as if by chance" down a winding lane. The western road down from the hilltop was the Saltisford road, and is now the A425; it hardly screams "winding lane". Running vaguely north-west, however, is Cape Road - which on the old maps doesn't even have a name, has a big bend in it which qualifies it as "winding", and is flanked by a bank of trees. It's definitely the most lane-like road running from that spot (and the only one that, back then, didn't stay right in urban Warwick). So where does this lane go? Um... kind of nowhere! On the old maps, it passes a couple of terraces, and then wanders off over the railway towards a prison. Certainly there's no picturesque cottages "a little down the western slope". On a hunch, I went looking for Edith Bratt's house in Warwick. She was the only reason Tolkien was interested in the city, after all. It took a bit, but I turned up this article which gives her address as 15 Victoria Street. Where is that, exactly? Well, wouldn't you know it: it's one of those two terraces Cape Road runs past the end of. Can the Cottage of Lost Play really be an Edwardian terraced house? Well... Quote:
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Eriol's entry into Kortirion and arrival at the Cottage of Lost Play, on the 1903 OS map: hS
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book of lost tales, cottage of lost play, kortirion, warwick |
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