Francis Xavier Morgan

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Francis Xavier Morgan
File:Francisxaviermorgan.JPG
Born Francisco Javier Morgan y Osborne
(1847-01-18)January 18, 1847
El Puerto de Santa María (Cádiz, Spain)
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Birmingham (United Kingdom)
Nationality Spain, United Kingdom
Other names tío Curro
Alma mater University of Louvain
Occupation Priest (Oratory of Saint Philip Neri)
Years active 1883-1935
Parent(s) Francis Morgan (father)
María Manuela Osborne y Böhl de Faber (mother)

Francis Xavier Morgan, C. O. (18 January 1857 – 11 June 1935), born Francisco Javier Morgan Osborne,[1] was a Roman Catholic priest of the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri, who had Spanish and British dual citizenship. He served for most of his priesthood at the Birmingham Oratory in Edgbaston. Decades after his death, Morgan has become famous as the teacher, legal guardian, and father figure to the fantasy author J. R. R. Tolkien.[2]

Early years

Francisco Javier Morgan Osborne was born in El Puerto de Santa María, Cádiz, the son of Francis Morgan, a Welsh merchant who had settled at El Puerto de Santa María in Andalusia as a winemaker and exporter of sherry. There Francis Morgan had married a Spanish woman named María Manuela Osborne y Böhl de Faber (daughter of fellow British expatriate, Thomas Osborne Mann, founder of the wine business Bodegas Osborne. Through his maternal grandmother, Aurora Böhl de Faber, the future priest was the grandnephew of Cecilia Böhl de Faber, who wrote historical novels under the male pseudonym Fernán Caballero and whose work drew both praise and comparisons with that of Sir Walter Scott.[1]

According to a 1987 lecture about Fr. Morgan's life by a fellow priest of the Birmingham Oratory, Francis Morgan was a Protestant and María Manuela Osborne was a Roman Catholic, which made theirs a disparity of cult marriage.[3] They had five children: Tomás, Isabel, Augusto and Francisco, who was familiarly known as Curro.[1]

As a boy, Francis was sent to England, where he became only the third student to enter the primary school attached to the Birmingham Oratory,[4] where his teachers included Father John Henry Newman.[2] After primary school, Francis Morgan went to the Catholic grammar school run by Monsignor Thomas John Capel in London, and then entered the University of Louvain. After two years there he returned to the Birmingham Oratory as a novice.[5]

In 1880 he accompanied Father John Norris, the prefect of the Birmingham Oratory, to Rome, where they were granted an audience with Pope Leo XIII.[2] On his return, they both accompanied the newly appointed Cardinal Newman during his stay at the London residence of the Duke of Norfolk, a descendant of Recusants and the foremost Catholic in the English nobility, where polite society paid tribute to the Cardinal.[6] After his ordination to the priesthood in 1883, Fr. Francis Morgan became an active member of the Birmingham Oratory community.[2]

Relationship with the Tolkiens

Although he initially taught at the Oratory school, he spent most of his life doing pastoral work in the parish run by the Oratorians. It was there that he met a widow who had recently converted to Catholicism and who came to the Oratory for spiritual comfort: Mabel Tolkien (née Suffield), along with her children Ronald and Hilary. By September 1900 Mabel had managed to enrol Ronald at the prestigious King Edward's School in Birmingham, and on Sundays the family attended Mass at the Oratory.

In a 1965 letter to his son Michael, Tolkien recalled the influence of the man whom he always called "Father Francis": "He was an upper-class Welsh-Spaniard Tory, and seemed to some just a pottering old gossip. He was—and he was not. I first learned charity and forgiveness from him; and in the light of it pierced even the 'liberal' darkness out of which I came, knowing more about 'Bloody Mary' than the Mother of Jesus—who was never mentioned except as an object of wicked worship by the Romanists."[7]

The Tolkiens had been living in a rather unstable situation since the death of the head of the family, Arthur Tolkien, who had worked in the Orange Free State as a branch manager of the Bank of Africa Limited. When their financial difficulties made it impossible for her to continue paying for Ronald's tuition at King Edward's School, Father Francis took him into the school run by the oratorians. Consequently, Mabel and her children moved close to the Oratory, to Oliver Road, and there the young boy remained in school until September 1903, when he won a scholarship to return to King Edward's School.

In April 1904 Mabel Tolkien fell seriously ill with diabetes, having great difficulty fending for herself.[1] Father Francis arranged for her to rent two rooms in a cottage in Rednal, to the south of Birmingham, near the estate where the Oratorians had their cemetery and a retreat house. There Mabel would have the landlady's help with the housework; the landlady would also provide food, and the children could enjoy the countryside setting of the Lickey Hills. Rednal seems to have inspired Ronald's imaginary Rivendell.[8]

In November 1904, seven months after being diagnosed with diabetes, Mabel Tolkien died at Rednal cottage in the care of Father Francis. In her will she appointed him legal guardian of her two children.[1] The financial means the late Mrs. Tolkien left for the upbringing of the children were rather meagre, but Father Francis was to supplement them with money from his share of his family's sherry business in El Puerto de Santa Maria.

Father Francis took the Tolkien brothers to live with him at the Oratory. The library that the priest kept in his cell was frequently used by Ronald, who learned some Spanish from his tutor, a knowledge that enabled him to create a language he called "naffarin". In all probability, thanks to Father Francis's library the young Tolkien had access to the works of Fernán Caballero, the pseudonym used by the writer Cecilia Böhl de Faber, the priest's great-aunt. This has been suggested because of the similarity between Gollum's second riddle in The Hobbit concerning the wind, and the 187th riddle.[lower-alpha 1][6][9]

Soon after taking them in, Father Francis allowed Roland and Hilary to live with a sister-in-law of their late mother, Beatrice Suffield. After three years, the priest realised that Mrs Suffield, widowed and deeply depressed, could not offer the most suitable environment for the Tolkien brothers to grow up in. He looked for something more like a home for them, and so he decided to put them up in Mrs Faulkner's boarding house, right next door to the Oratory. Ronald, aged 16, met Edith Bratt, aged 19, who had been living alone with Mrs Faulkner since the death of their mother, and a special friendship began between the two teenagers. Francis Morgan objected to Ronald having any romantic relationship before he came of age at 21, and Ronald obeyed him.

Father Francis again found new lodgings for the two boys, this time with the McSherry family, parishioners of the Oratory. From there, Ronald prepared for entry to Oxford University, after which he moved to Oxford, but later returned and married Edith.

Francis Xavier Morgan died at the Birmingham Oratory in 1935 leaving each of the Tolkien brothers £1,000 as an inheritance.[5]

Notes

  1. Fernán Caballero's 187th riddle is: "Vuela sin alas, silva sin boca, azota sin manos, y tú ni lo ves ni lo tocas." In English: "Flies wingless, hisses/whistles mouthless, lashes handless, and you neither see it nor touch it." This has been compared to Gollum's second riddle: "Voiceless it cries, Wingless flutters, Toothless bites, Mouthless mutters." From Fernán Caballero's Cuentos, oraciones, adivinanzas y refranes populares (Madrid, 1877).[6][9]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment. ed. Michael D. C. Drout. Nueva York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-4159-6942-0.
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  3. F. Francis Xavier Morgan A reminiscence during a 16th November 1987 chapter address by F. Philip Lynch of the Birmingham Oratory.
  4. F. Francis Xavier Morgan A reminiscence during a 16th November 1987 chapter address by F. Philip Lynch of the Birmingham Oratory.
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