LotRO and Lore: The Real Bird and Baby

Welcome back to LotRO and Lore, an article series where we take a look at a few of the stellar ways that Turbine ties Tolkien’s wonderful writings into the realm of the MMORPG. Today we diverge from the novels and look at some of the real-world inspirations for the places and people we see in the game.

Anyone who stops by the Shire is sure to have heard of Michel Delving, the largest town in the area and the city that holds the seat of the Mayor. A traveller passing through might spend the day at the Bird and Baby, a tavern with a large common room near the center of town. Turbine may invented this inn for the purpose of the Lord of the Rings Online, but the roots of this iconic place go back to the time that Tolkien himself was a professor at Oxford University.

bird-and-baby

Back then, J.R.R. Tolkien was a part of a writing club called “The Inklings” composed of himself and a number of other prestigious individuals who met regularly at a local tavern known as the Eagle and Child, but the pub also had a nickname that was commonly used by its regular patrons: The Bird and Baby.

Look behind the bar counter and you’ll find a hobbit by the name of Carlo Blagrove. This hobbit actually represents a real-world person; at the time that Tolkien visited the inn, the proprieter was Charles F. Blagrove.

Walk down the hallway in LotRO’s Bird and Baby and you will find a small room in the back with a table where three hobbits can be found, two in discussion and one reading a book. The hobbits’ names are of particular interest: Owen Farfield, Carlo Williams, and Jack Lewisdown. In fact, each of these hobbits reference a member of Tolkien’s writing club!

Inklings_Shire

Owen Farfield is a tribute to Owen Barfield. During a particular quest, Owen Farfield mentions that he is writing a book called The Silvered Horn; this is a reference to Owen Barfield’s book, The Silver Trumpet.
Carlo Williams is, in real life, Charles Williams. He talks about his book, The Place of the Boar, which is a reference to Charles William’s book The Place of the Lion.
Jack Lewisdown represents C.S. Lewis, who went by Jack with his friends.

The observant eye will notice that one member of the club is missing from the Bird and Baby. Tolkien himself is not present at the pub; but he can be found in a different part of the game. Travel with me to the southern hills of Evendim, where we find the town of Dwaling and encounter a peculiar hobbit named Ronald Dwale. This is, in fact, a stand-in for the professor; he was called Ronald by his close family (it is his first middle name) and Dwale is closely related to a Gothic translation of the surname Tolkien. He provides the quest ‘Missing the Meeting’, in which the player may travel back to the Bird and Baby and explain to Ronald Dwale’s writing club that he cannot attend the meeting. A few lines of dialogue are interesting to see in this quest, starting with the bestowal dialogue:

‘…I really should get started on my new book, but I haven’t an inkling how I should reach my friends in time to tell them of my absence…’

Notice the terminology? This is a subtle nod to the real-life writing club.

Ronald_Dwale

Ronald Dwale also offers two other quests which directly reference his real-life works. In the quest ‘Recovering the Lost Leaf,’ the player finds a scrap of paper with the words ‘In a hole in the ground there lived a boar…’ with a note written in the margin beneath in red ink that reads, ‘No, that’s not it…‘ The inspiration for this quest is The Hobbit, which famously begins with ‘In a hole in the ground, there lived a hobbit.’

Another quest with a more subtle tie-in to real life is Lost Dog. Ronald sends the player to the sandy banks of the Brandywine river to find a small lead dog toy that his son lost and return it to him. Tolkien’s son Michael once lost a toy dog when the family went to spend a day at the beach. He was so distraught over the loss of his toy that the professor wrote the story Roverandom to console the young boy, a tale of the adventures of a dog turned into a toy by a wizard.

 

What other real-world inspiration have you found in Turbine’s Middle-Earth? Share your discoveries and any comments on this week’s article below!

 

Find out more about the above-mentioned writers with the links below:
Owen Barfield
Charles Williams
C.S. Lewis
J.R.R. Tolkien

 

Interested in reading more LotRO and Lore? Check out these links:
Statues of the Elves
Kheled-zâram and the Dimrill Dale
The Shadows Where the Kergrim Dwell

8 comments

  1. Also the little bunny in the corner of the room at the Bird and Baby is a reference to the Rabbit Room where the Inklings would meet at the Eagle and Child.

  2. timhedden /

    Nothing about Professor Tolkien but a couple of years ago I read an article about Colbert the Mad, in the North Downs who is afraid of bears. Supposedly he was a characature of the real life Steven Colbert who is also afraid of bears and is a gigantic Tolkien fan. I thought that was a pretty awesome knod to a particular fan of Tolkein. Will Turbine add Lotro Players knod, I wonder.

  3. Tirian /

    Another excellent lore discussion 🙂 I was wondering if you had any material on the Earth-Kin, as I bumped into them recently in the Lonelands, and then again in the North Downs, and my knowledge of them, and their origins is rather sparse – I’m not sure if there is something to draw on, but if there is, I’m sure you’ll find it!

    • Gnagerwine /

      Seconded. I’d very much like to see what you can come up with for the Earth-kin’s origins.

      • Alfroth /

        I’d love to do an article on the Earth-kin some day! I’ll keep that in mind as a future topic. 🙂

  4. Heuer /

    Excellent! I had no idea. Makes me want to revisit those places all over again.

  5. Rucagorn /

    Awesome reading cheers!

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