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| | Amazon.co.uk: Books: Smith of Wooton Major: AND Leaf by Niggle [Audiobook] |
 | | These three are essential to understand this man. Leaf By Niggle is him venting his frustration, and then him expressing great hope for his work. |  | | This, along with his marvelous short story Leaf by Niggle, are essential of you want to read and understand this Godly man's life. |  | | Tree and Leaf, a small book containing the short story aforementioned and his classic essay On Faerie Stories, along with this, will enlighten you greatly on his views of Faerie. |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0007177631
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| | leaf |
 | | Leaf is another word for page (of a book), hence the word 'overleaf', over the page. |  | | The leaf shape may have deeply divided lobes, but the gaps between lobes do not reach to the vein. |  | | Pinnate-netted — leaf has usually one main vein (called the mid-vein), with smaller veins branching off, usually somewhat parallel to each other. |
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http://www.fact-library.com/leaf.html
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| | tolkienist.de - Die Tolkien-Site |
 | | In the attached tale, "Leaf by Niggle," Tolkien tells the story of a painter, persistent but not too talented, who is determined to finish an enormous canvas of a tree before he packs for the long journey. |  | | Finally Niggle is abruptly summoned on his journey. |  | | Moving swiftly from this assertion he touches on the story of Christ, and argues that here is a perfect example of a fairy-story eucatastrophe, the difference being that it actually happened. |
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http://www.tolkienist.de/rez/rez_tree.html
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| | WCU - Spring 2005 Leaf By Niggle |
 | | Briefly, for Tolkien, a "fairytale" (which is what we would call "Leaf by Niggle") is the kind of tale that places us in a state of "enchantment," a land where magic is possible, where the question "is this real?" applies only to the world that the tale creates. |  | | Walt Whitman also wrote, "I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey-work of the stars." Maybe, like a character in a Bob Dylan song, Niggle "sees the Master's hand in every leaf that trembles, in every grain of sand," and this is enough to "save" him. |  | | Perhaps the argument at the heart of "Leaf By Niggle" is that we can all imagine something beautiful, and if we don't we should try. |
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http://brainstorm-services.com/wcu-2004/niggle.html
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| | Expecting you since the Spring: examining Rosie Cotton. |
 | | There are obvious and cheerfully self-deprecating parallels drawn between Niggle and the author himself, but it is also possible to read Niggle as fitting into the same category of protagonist as Frodo - his journey takes him out of his comfortable life and through strange hardship. |  | | Also noteworthy here is Leaf by Niggle, the short story published in 1947. |  | | One interpretation of the two characters which can be drawn out of the story is that they represent two sides of one psyche: Tolkien as writer (Niggle) and Tolkien as man (Parish). |
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http://www.rosiesamfrodo.com/spring
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| | The Perpetual Three-Dot Column |
 | | His hobbits lived in a Chestertonian sort of anarchy; and Niggle is, in his ground-down way, an individualist hero -- smaller, realer, and altogether more interesting than the boring supermen favored by another sort of libertarian. |  | | For all his flaws, I still have a warm spot in my heart for Tolkien, though not for the sometimes awful imitations he inspired. |  | | It's a warmer spot, actually, than that occupied by Vonnegut, who by the '80s was turning out his own awful imitations of himself. |
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http://jessewalker.blogspot.com/2002_12_29_jessewalker_archive.html
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| | The Tolkien Reader |
 | | "Leaf" is something of a glimpse into Tolkien's own soul, concerning his work and his own mortality. |  | | The Fairy Story itself, Leaf by Niggle, is not great. |  | | The essay on Fairy Stories is long-winded and cryptic if you haven't read all his references. |
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http://284688.onlinesportdiscount.com/3436373937302d312d30333435333435303631.html
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| | TheOneRing.net Barliman's Chat Room The Hall of Fire Log 10/04/2003 : Leaf by Niggle |
 | | He invests each and every leaf of his tree with obsessive attention to detail, making every leaf uniquely beautiful (of course, he niggles over each one!). |  | | The way Niggle talks in the beginning of his story, about the painting taking on creatures reminds me of how Tolkien has described writing about Faramir...how he stepped out of hte woods. |  | | I love the part where Niggle wishes he could see himself walk in the studio and give comments and praise on his painting |
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http://www.theonering.net/barlimans/hall_logs/100403_p.html
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| | Bibliography of Tolkien |
 | | Niggle is reunited with Parish, and together they make the forest even more beautiful. |  | | J.R.R. Tolkien's 'Unfinished Tales' is a collection ranging from the time of 'The Silmarillion', the Elder Days of Middle-earth — to the end of the War of the Ring in The Lord of the Rings. |  | | In his essay "On Fairy-Stories", Tolkien discusses the nature of fairy-tales and fantasy and rescues the genre from those who would relegate it to juvenilia. |
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http://members.chello.nl/~f.debresser/writers/tolkienbooks.html
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| | Lord of the Rings Fanatics Library |
 | | Sir Orfeo - Tolkien's translation of this thirteenth/early fourteenth century poem about Sir Orfeo, a king of England in olden times whose wife is stolen by the Faerie King and after Sir Orfeo undergoes much travail, is rescued by him and returned to her proper estate. |  | | Tree and Leaf - an issue in a single volume of the 1945 'Leaf by Niggle" and the 1947 'On Fairy Stories’. |  | | Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and Sir Orfeo - Tolkien's brilliant translation of the early fifteenth century poem that he had edited with E.V. Gordon in 1925; an 'Arthurian quest' poem, treating of Courtly Love and the Moral Law. |
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http://www.lotrlibrary.com/faqs/books.asp
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| | TolkienWiki: TolkienBooks |
 | | "Leaf by Niggle" (in: Tree and Leaf and Tales from the Perilous Realm, etc.) |  | | Smith of Wootton Major and Farmer Giles of Ham (reprint in one volume with illustrations by Pauline Baynes) |  | | Tree and Leaf (first edition only contained "On Fairy-Stories? |
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http://www.thetolkienwiki.org/wiki.cgi?TolkienBooks
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| | Tolkien's Books - HobbitHoleWiki |
 | | “Leaf by Niggle”, an allegoric tale first published in The Dublin Review. |  | | It wasn’t intended to be a Middle-earth book, but it became so in the writing, as parts of the then unpublished Silmarillion was thrown into the story. |  | | Tree and Leaf, a collection consisting of “On Fairy-stories”, “Leaf by Niggle” and in the second edition (1988) the poem “Mythopoeia”. |
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http://www.ourhobbithole.com/index.php?title=Tolkien's_Books
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| | Other Books by Tolkien |
 | | "Farmer Giles," "Leaf By Niggle," and "Tom Bombadil" can also be found in Tales From the Perilous Realm. |  | | Also included is "The Adventures of Tom Bombadil," a collection of verse from The Red Book. |  | | "Beorhtnoth" can also be found in the new edition of Tree and Leaf. |
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http://users.telerama.com/~taliesen/tolkien/other.html
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| | "Leaf by Niggle": The Worth of the Work |
 | | A portrait of an unusual modern artist, "Leaf by Niggle" dramatizes the theory of "sub-creation" that Tolkien enunciates in a companion essay, "On Fairy-Stories." His view of fantasy owes less to Romantic notions of creativity than to the wider philosophical and literary traditions that inform Dantes Divine Comedy. |  | | The "Tree of Tales" recalls similar tropes found in Nietzche and Eco, but Tolkiens aesthetics differ radically from theirs. |  | | "Leaf by Niggle": The Worth of the Work |
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http://www.carleton.ca/esc/leaf.htm
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| | A Critical Look at A Leaf By Niggle |
 | | "Leaf By Niggle" is a short story written by J. Tolkien in 1938 and publishedin 1945. |  | | His fascination with linguistics inspired him to invent several languages, later elaborating an entire cosmogony and history of Middle-earth as background. |  | | It is often thought that this short story is one of Tolkien's only works that uses the literary element of the allegory. |
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http://www.arches.uga.edu/~sonnier/report.html
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| | Tolkien Fantasy Tales Box Set (The Tolkien Reader/The Silmarillion/Unfinished Tales/Sir Gawain and the Green Knight) |
 | | TREE AND LEAF: This is a book consisting of two things: his essay on faerie tales, and Leaf By Niggle. |  | | Tolkien's essay is now considered one of the main centerpieces of literature defending and validating fantasy and faerie tale (as if THE LORD OF THE RINGS and THE HOBBIT weren't enough). |  | | Leaf By Niggle is a very deep work, and basically it deals with his despair of mortality and not being able to finish his mythology, his great work. |
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http://www.mynaturalvitamins.com/vitamin-shop/0345466462
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| | The Fantastic Seriousness of J. R. R. Tolkien / téma - lynn forest-hill |
 | | The Lord of the Rings, apparently ignoring, for the most part, his intensely allegorical short story ‘Leaf by Niggle’, which demonstrates his consummate skill in the use of this form as a means of depicting some of the basic tenets of Roman Catholic eschatology. |  | | Lord of the Rings and the fable of ‘Leaf by Niggle’ illustrates a distinction in the way Tolkien regarded the use of allegory. |  | | This may relate to his own experiences, and it may be that he regarded the married state as kind of corporeal ‘Eucatastrophe’ – the happy ending he analysed in his lecture ‘Tree and Leaf’. |
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http://www.gasbag.wz.cz/tema/rocnik2/cislo4/04-03.htm
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| | Grace Works |
 | | The final lines that I've included here indicate that Niggle realizes that his works do not warrant grace. |  | | "Niggle thought that he had never heard anything so generous as that Voice. |  | | They seem to pass into an afterlife of some kind, which is a setting that Niggle painted, where they learn to live in harmony and appreciate each others skills. |
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http://members.shaw.ca/rilla/Grace_Works.htm
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| | Amazon.com: Books: J.R.R. Tolkien: Myth, Morality, and Religion |
 | | The other half of "Tree and Leaf" is a famous essay called "On Fairy Stories," which gives Tolkien's views of literature and its connection to life. |  | | The main works of Tolkien taken up by Purtill are "Leaf by Niggle", "On Fairy Stories", "The Hobbit", "Lord of the Rings", and "The Silmarillion". |  | | When Purtill works directly with Tolkien's published writings and with comments he made about them in his letters, Purtill is at his most interesting and his book most worth the time spent with it. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0060667125?v=glance
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| | Tool Explorer Niggle |
 | | Excel Help Forum > Usenet Groups > Excel Miscellaneous > Conditional Formatting niggle. |  | | Conditional Formatting niggle - Excel Help Forum from Excel Tip. |  | | Sakredchao, Posted Of course, the allegory of "Leaf by Niggle" is life, death, purgatory and paradise. |
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http://www.tool-explorer.de/Handhelds/Niggle.php
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| | Classic Catholic |
 | | Now, I know that Tolkien always spoke about applicability of a story, thus leaving it to the reader to apply it to himself, but I really got the sense this time that Tolkien himself was talking about his marriage. |  | | Because Parish knows about tree, plant and earth things that Niggle doesn't. |  | | But he is frequently "harrassed" by his only close neighbor, Parish, into doing things for him, thus distracting him for his work. |
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http://www.robertgotcher.blogspot.com/2002_07_28_robertgotcher_archive.html
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| | Art and artists |
 | | Lee Miller was a famous beauty, who became a famous model, which got her interested in photography. |  | | A home for all these leaves: and for birds, strange birds, and for vistas of mountains beyond, and almost a whole country built around what he can do with leaves and would like to do with his life's vision. |  | | He can't finish his paintings, he can't muster the discipline to do any one of them really well, but still he thinks he ought to try, that there's something he's got, in his own little way. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/dragon/judyt/arts.html
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| | St. Mary and Franklin Banner-Tribune |
 | | Niggle lived in a world where creation was forbidden, and "they" eventually came to get him, locked him away for decades until he had served some unexplained punishment for his crime. |  | | When he was released, he emerged back into the world, an old man, to find that it had become the painting for which he had been condemned, the single leaf, and the story ends that he "laughed. |  | | Strange birds came and settled on the twigs and had to be attended to. |
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http://www.banner-tribune.com/ftos/Columns-Archive/ftos9-7.htm
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| | The Life and Influences of J.R.R. Tolkien |
 | | “Leaf by Niggle” and “On Fairy Stories” were published together in a single edition called Tree and Leaf in 1964, and the following year, the first American paperback edition of The Lord of the Rings was published. |  | | In 1945, Tolkien became Merton Professor of English Language and Literature at Oxford, and in 1948, “Leaf by Niggle” was published. |  | | But Ungoliant sucked it up, and going then from Tree to Tree she set her black beak to their wounds, till they were drained; and the poison of Death that was in her went into their tissues and withered them, root, branch and leaf; and they died” (Tolkien 1977, 73). |
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http://members.aol.com/linkinparkchc617/mytolkienpage.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | He found that it contained only a paint-box and a small book of his own sketches: neither food nor clothes. |  | | Niggle was feeling very tired and sleepy; he was hardly aware of what was going on when they bundled him into his compartment. |  | | The Driver gave him no time to pack, saying that he ought to have done that before, and they would miss the train; so all Niggle could do was to grab a little bag in the hall. |
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http://www.tamu-commerce.edu/Tolkien/projects/tolkien6.doc
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| | Translations of Tolkien's works |
 | | To be reprinted soon by Amber S.A. On Fairy Stories, Leaf by Niggle...: First edition 1994, trans. |  | | Leaf by Niggle was also published in some fantasy magasine in 1984, trans. |  | | "Faerie" containing Farmer Giles of Ham, Smith of Wooton Major, Leaf by Niggle, and On Fairy Stories, 1974 |
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http://www.mines.edu/stu_archive/jchuhta/trans.html
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| | Tolkien's Parish: The Canonical Middle-earth |
 | | Tolkien considered these changes in order to make Middle-earth's nature and history closer to that of the real world, but he might have reconsidered once he realized that no realistic connection to true history was possible. |  | | This is only a metaphor: I do not mean to imply that Tolkien wrote "Leaf by Niggle" with such a specific comparison to his own work in mind. |  | | I like to think of this as "Tolkien's Parish", his own version of the "picture made real" that became known as Niggle's Parish in his story "Leaf by Niggle". |
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http://tolkien.slimy.com/essays/TolkParish.html
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| | Translations |
 | | With 5 illustration by Tolkien and a different cover. |  | | Grey paperback with a cover illustration by Erik Kriek. |  | | Italian Tree and Leaf, Smith of Wootton Major, Homecoming of Beorhtnoth |
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http://www.tolkienshop.com/en-gb/dept_25.html
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| | the other change of hobbit science fiction & fantasy bookstore: October 1998 releases |
 | | None of the original Pauline Baynes' illustrations survived this transition. |  | | Edited with the usual fascinating Story Notes by Paul Williams |  | | British trade paperback reprint 1997 British hardcover omnibus, collecting Farmer Giles of Ham (1949), The Adventures of Tom Bombadil (1961), Leaf by Niggle (1964), and Smith of Wootton Major (1967). |
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http://www.otherchangeofhobbit.com/9810.html
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| | Publisher description for Library of Congress control number 2003580077 |
 | | Full of wit and humor and set in the days of giants and dragons, it tells the tale of a reluctant hero who saves his village from the dragon Chrysophylax. |  | | SMITH OF WOOTTON MAJOR tells of baking a Great Cake to mark the Feast of Good Children and the magical events that follow, while LEAF BY NIGGLE recounts the adventures of a painter trying to capture a tree on canvas. |  | | Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Fantasy fiction, English |
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http://www.loc.gov/catdir/description/hm041/2003580077.html
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| | Finduilas's J.R.R. Tolkien Page |
 | | On Fairy Stories, often combined with Leaf By Niggle |  | | Sir Gwain and the Green Knight (a translation) |  | | The Monsters and the Critics (a series of lectures he gave on various topics) |
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http://fin.go.wifl.at.org/layers/html/main.shtml
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| | Some Bibliographical Notes on The Inklings |
 | | (includes On Fairy Stories and Leaf by Niggle. |  | | In addition, the best commentaries on Tolkien’s work emphasizing his mystical and spiritual thought are by Verlyn Flieger of the University of Maryland: |  | | has been editing and publishing over the last decades, he has two short stories which succinctly illustrate some of the aspects of his feelings about Faerie: Smith of Wootton Major and Leaf by Niggle. |
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http://members.aol.com/theloego/inklings.html
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| | Leaf |
 | | Tree and Leaf Tree and Leaf is a collection of works by Leaf by Niggle" and a poem called "Mythopoeia". |  | | Leaf by Niggle "Leaf by Niggle" is a short story written by On Fairy-Stories" and "Leaf by Niggle," offers the underlyin... |  | | Satanic Leaf-Tailed Gecko The Satanic Leaf Tailed Gecko, Uroplatus phantasticus, is an interesting inches total length.... |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/leaf.html
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| | leaf insect - Columbia Encyclopedia® article about leaf insect |
 | | The eggs of leaf insects are scattered on the ground and hatch in the spring. |  | | leaf insect, common name given to herbivorous insects insect, invertebrate animal of the class Insecta of the phylum Arthropoda. |  | | This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. |
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http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/leaf+insect
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| | Joseph Pearce on The Lord of the Rings on National Review Online |
 | | Such was his meticulous precision, such was his perfectionism, that a single lifetime was not enough to bring his creative vision to fruition. |  | | Something of the frustration that he felt at his inability to complete his magnum opus surfaced in his purgatorial allegory, "Leaf by Niggle." The story's chief protagonist, Niggle, had spent his life trying to paint a landscape but, at the time of death, had not even finished a solitary tree to his satisfaction. |  | | To illustrate the same point by switching metaphors, The Lord of the Rings was a sublime movement, of which the composer was justly proud, but the great music to which he aspired was elusive. |
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http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/pearce200312170848.asp
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| | WCU - Spring 2005 none |
 | | Among other things, "Leaf By Niggle" is an allegory that illustrates Tolkien's convictions abou the nature of "fairy story" and its "usefulness" as an art form. |  | | Even the First Voice changes its opinion about Niggle; he's not as worthless as the First Voice makes him out to be. |  | | The story expresses what appears to be his profound conviction that art can be a catalyst for growth: spiritual growth or psychological growth, however you choose to interpret that. |
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http://brainstorm-services.com/wcu-2004/fourquestions.html
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| | Tree and Leaf: Including "Mythopoeia" — Compare Product Prices & Reviews |
 | | The book was originally a publishing concoction consisting of only two items, short story 'Leaf by Niggle' and essay 'On Fairy-Stories'; both have since become readily available in other editions. |  | | But even if you already have the texts in your collection, know that 'Tree and Leaf' has sprouted new branches since its first publication in 1964, as is only fitting. |  | | Search for Tree and Leaf: Including "Mythopoeia" at Kelkoo |
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http://www.onlinereviewers.co.uk/store/asinsearch_0007105045.htm
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| | J.R.R. Tolkien - The Lord of the Rings Wiki |
 | | Tree and Leaf (On Fairy-Stories and Leaf by Niggle in book form) |  | | Early drafts of The Lord of the Rings (originally titled "The Magic Ring") were sold to Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1956 for 1,500 pounds sterling (about US$4,700). |  | | The Tolkien Reader (The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorthelm's Son, On Fairy Stories, Leaf by Niggle, Farmer Giles of Ham' and The Adventures of Tom Bombadil) |
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http://lotr.wikicities.com/wiki/Tolkien
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| | Great Leaf |
 | | It can be found, most notably, in Tolkien's book titled ''"Tree and Leaf", and in other places. |  | | Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Biography 1.1 Exile to England 1.2 Return to Paris 1.3 Cirey 1.4 Frederick the Great 2 Discussion 3 His works 4 Quotes 5 External links 6 References Biography He was born in Paris to François Arouet and Marie-Marguerite Daumart or D'Aumard. |  | | See live article Leaf by Niggle "Leaf by Niggle" is a short story written by J. Tolkien in 1938-39 and first published in the Dublin Review in January 1945. |
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http://www.lindacannongallery.com/43/49.html
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| | Tolkien: Tree and Leaf ~ at runboard.com |
 | | Just thought I'd put in a plug for Tolkien: I have been reading 'Tree and Leaf' lately, which is a book that includes his essay 'On Fairy Stories', the poem 'Mythopoeia', the story 'Leaf by Niggle' and one other song (?) which I haven't read yet. |  | | The poem, which needs more than one reading to make full sense, is actually fast becoming one of my favourites. |  | | Register for a free Global account (Learn About It) |
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http://com1.runboard.com/bfantasywriting.freading.t29
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| | English 495: Bibliography |
 | | 'Leaf by Niggle', first published in The Dublin Review, January 1945, 46-61; also published in Tree and Leaf, Smith of Wootton Major, The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm's Son, London: Unwin Paperbacks, 1975. |  | | 'The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorthelm's Son', first published in Essays and Studies 6 (1953), 1-18; also published in Tree and Leaf, Smith of Wootton Major, The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm's Son, London: Unwin Paperbacks, 1975. |  | | Farmer Giles of Ham, first edition London: George Allen and Unwin, 1949; Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1950; also published in Farmer Giles of Ham, The Adventures of Tom Bombadil, London: Unwin Paperbacks, 1975. |
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http://www.csun.edu/~sk36711/WWW/tolkien/bibliography.htm
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| | The Guild Of Middle Earth - Works of Tolkien |
 | | ** "Leaf by Niggle" and "On Fairy-Stories" presented in The Tolkien Reader as a collective title "Tree and Leaf". |  | | Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and Sir Orfeo |
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http://www.geocities.com/sailorstratocaster/books/works.html
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| | Interesting British Tolkien items |
 | | This new edition of Tolkien's essay-and-story duo of "On Fairy-Stories" and "Leaf By Niggle" also includes the poem Mythopoeia and |
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http://ivory.lm.com/~taliesen/tolkien/uk/misc_british.htm
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| | ENGLISH 318: J. R. R. TOLKIEN |
 | | Along the way we will investigate his works on fantasy and mythmaking, such as “Mythopoiea,” “Leaf by Niggle,” and “On Fairy-Stories.” Clearly evident will be his interest in medievalness—especially the Old English Beowulf. |  | | Cassettes and films of and about Tolkien and his writings will supplement readings and discussions. |  | | To locate The Lord of the Rings within a broader historical and literary context, we will trace the development of Tolkien's art, beginning with The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings as a mythology for England and following up with The Silmarillion. |
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http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~jchance/tol2004.htm
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| | sffworld.com - Can anyone name all of his works? |
 | | I loved Leaf by Niggle (also sometimes known as Tree and Leaf) and I would heartily recommend it to anyone. |  | | I won't even try and name them all but the ones I have personally read are: |  | | I must be going blind because his bibliography is in the sticky at the top of the page. |
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http://www.sffworld.com/forums/showthread.php?t=6806
(147 words)
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| | Books by Tolkien |
 | | (Reprints Tolkien's lecture "On Fairy-Stories" and his short story "Leaf by Niggle".) New edition, incorporating "Mythopoeia", Unwin Hyman, London, 1988. |  | | (A deluxe edition containing The Adventures of Tom Bombadil, "The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm's Son", "On Fairy-Stories", "Leaf by Niggle", Farmer Giles of Ham and Smith of Wootton Major.) Includes the illustrations by Pauline Baynes. |  | | The Road Goes Ever On: A Song Cycle. |
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http://www.lord-of-the-rings.org/books/books_tolkien.html
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