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Leaf by Niggle is a short story written by J.R.R. Tolkien in 1938 and 1939 and first published in the Dublin Review in January of 1945. It can be found most notably in Tolkien's collection titled Tree and Leaf. Along with the seminal essay "On Fairy-Stories", "Leaf by Niggle" helps to reveal the underlying philosophy (i.e. "creation" and "sub-creation") of much of Tolkien's fantastical writings.

In 1997, Roverandom was included in the official collective publication of Tolkien's short stories, Tales from the Perilous Realm. In 2003, an audiobook of this story and Smith of Wootton Major was released, narrated by actor Derek Jacobi.

Synopsis[]

An artist named Niggle lives in a society that does not value art. Working only to please himself, he paints a canvas of a great tree in the middle of a forest. He invests obsessive attention to detail in every leaf of his tree, making every leaf uniquely beautiful. Niggle ends up either discarding all his other artwork or tacking pieces onto the main canvas, which becomes a single vast embodiment of his vision.

However, many mundane chores and duties prevent Niggle from giving his work the attention it deserves, so it remains incomplete and not fully realized.

At the back of his mind, Niggle knows that he has a great trip approaching and must pack his bags, but he keeps delaying the task.

Niggle's next door neighbor, a gardener named Parish, is always needing help with various jobs since he is lame of foot and has a sick wife; Niggle, having a good heart, takes time to help, though he does so grudgingly. Niggle catches a chill doing errands for Parish in the rain.

At last, Niggle is forced to take his trip. He is not prepared and therefore ends up in an Workhouse Infirmary where he must perform menial labor each day.

He is eventually paroled from the Workplace Informary and is sent to a place in the country to work as a gardener in a forest. To his joy, he discovers that the forest is in fact the Forest of his great painting, which is now long abandoned and nearly destroyed (except for one perfect leaf which is placed in the Town Museum). The Great Tree in the Forest is the true realization of his vision, to which the flawed and incomplete form of his painting could not do justice.

Niggle is reunited with his old neighbor, Parish, who now proves his worth as a gardener, and together they make the Great Tree and Forest even more beautiful. Finally, Niggle journeys farther and deeper into the Forest and beyond the Edge into the great Mountains that he only faintly glimpsed in his painting.

Allegory[]

"Leaf by Niggle" has been interpreted as an allegory to life, death, purgatory, and Heaven: Niggle is not prepared for his unavoidable trip, as humans often are not prepared for death. His time in the Workhouse Infirmary and subsequent discovery of his Great Tree represent purgatory followed by paradise. The story also gives insight to Tolkien's religious philosophy of Creation and sub-creation: "true creation" is the exclusive province of God, and those who aspire and create things only make "echoes" (good) or "mockeries" (evil) of the truth - while "sub-creation" of work that echo the true creations of God is a way for mortals to honor him.

Appearances and mentions[]

By type
Characters Species and creatures Locations Factions, groups and titles
Events Objects and artifacts Miscellanea

Characters

  • Atkins
  • Councillor Tompkins
  • First Voice
  • Mr. Niggle
  • Mr. Parish
  • Mrs. Parish
  • Perkins
  • Second Voice
  • Severe doctor

Species and creatures

Locations

  • space
    • solar system
      • Earth
        • Niggle's Parish
          • Edge
          • Forest
          • Great Tree
          • Mountains
          • Parish's Garden
          • Spring
        • Society
          • Town Museum
          • Workhouse Infirmary

Factions, groups and titles

  • Shepard
  • Society
    • Builder
    • Doctor
    • Driver
    • Court of Inquiry/Medical Board
    • Inspector (Mentioned only)
      • Inspector of Houses
    • Porter
    • Town Council (Mentioned only)
      • Emergency Service (Mentioned only)

Events

  • Calls/Interruptions
  • Fire in the Town Museum
  • Flood in the valley
  • Gentle Treatment

Objects and artifacts

  • Niggle's Picture
    • Leaf: by Niggle
  • Records

Miscellanea

  • Fire
  • Flood


Translations[]

Foreign Language Translated name
Afrikaans Blad deur Niggle
Albanian Fletë nga Niggle
Arabic ورقة نبات بواسطة نيععلي
Azerbaijani Niggle tərəfindən yarpaq
Basque Niggle-ren hostoa
Catalan Fulla de Niggle
Croatian List po Niggle
Czech List od Nimrala
Danish Nørkles blad
Dutch Blad van Klein
Esperanto Folio per Niggle
Finnish Niukun lehti
French Feuille, de Niggle
Galician Folla por Niggle
Georgian ნიგლის ფოთოლი
German Blatt von Tüftler
Gujarati નિગ્ગલ દ્વારા પર્ણ
Haitian Creole Fèy pa Niggle
Hebrew עלה לפי ןיגגלי
Hindi णिग्ग्ले द्वारा पत्ता
Hmong Nplooj ntoos los ntawm Niggle
Icelandic Lauf af Niggle
Irish Gaelic Duilleog ag Niggle
Japanese ニグルの木の葉
Javanese Godhong kanthi Niggle
Kurdish Pel bi destê Niggle (Kurmanji)
Latin Folium a Niggle
Latvian Lapas ar Niggle
Lithuanian Lapas, nutapytas Niekelio
Luxembourgish Blat vum Niggle
Macedonian Cyrillic Лист од Ниггле
Manx Duillag er Niggle
Marathi निग्गल करून लीफ
Nepalese पत्ता द्वारा निगले
Norwegian Blad av Niggle
Old English Lēaf to Niggle
Pashto پاڼه د نیګګلې
Persian برگ توسط نیگگله
Polish Liść, dzieło Niggle'a
Portuguese Folha por Niggle
Romanian Frunză de Niggle
Russian Лист кисти Ниггля
Slovak List podľa Niggle
Slovenian List z Niggle
Somalian Caleen by Niggle
Spanish Hoja, de Niggle
Sundanese Daun ku Niggle
Swahili Jani na Niggle
Swedish Blad av Niggle
Turkish Niggle tarafından yaprak
Vietnamese Lá của Niggle
Western Mari Нигглын ӹлӹмӓшӹжӹ
Yiddish בלאט דורך ניגגלע

External links[]

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