One thing I’ve always wondered about Lord of the Rings is whether there were Ents in or around the Shire.
The most obvious evidence for this is the fact that there were clearly some very lively trees in the Old Forest. Merry indicated that it was the belief of the Bucklanders that the trees “shifted”, and says ‘These trees do shift’ after noting that the Bonfire Glade had moved to a different location. The question is whether these are tree-like Ents or Ent-like trees (Treebeard mentions that both of these exist in Fangorn). I suppose it makes the most sense to assume that they are Ent-like trees… however, I don’t recall any specific claim in the trilogy that Ent-like trees have the ability to pick themselves up and move to a different location. (The Huorns do this, but although it is never made definitively clear what these are, Merry says that they seem to be tree-like Ents… which suggests that at least some of the “trees” in the Old Forest might possibly have been Huorns.)
What I find even more intriguing, however, is a suggestion that comes from two brief and widely spaced references in the trilogy. In the Shire, Sam says, ‘But what about these Tree-men, these giants, as you might call them? They do say that one bigger than a tree was seen away beyond the North Moors not long back.’ Then, in Fangorn, you have this exchange between Treebeard and Pippin:
‘You never see any, hm, any Ents round [the Shire], do you?’ he asked. ‘Well, not Ents, Entwives I should really say.’
‘Entwives?’ said Pippin. ‘Are they like you at all?’
‘Yes, hm, well no: I do not really know now,’ said Treebeard thoughtfully. ‘But they would like your country, so I just wondered.’
The conversation with Treebeard seems not particularly unusual. But that question of Sam’s always struck me as odd. Tolkien never throws stuff in at random (at least, not in LotR). He clearly envisioned the existence of some type of creatures called “Tree-men” in the vicinity of the Shire, that were seen by hobbits often enough to at least be familiar as mythological creatures (the phrase “these Tree-men” implies that the concept is a familiar one); they never get mentioned anywhere else, though. From the story Treebeard tells later, however, we know that the Entwives and Ents originally lived in Beleriand, which was just west of Eriador; that the Entwives loved quiet, well-ordered places (like the Shire and its environs); and that the Entwives did not die, but were “lost”. I know this is wishful thinking, but putting this all together, I like to think that Tolkien was hinting that there were in fact Entwives somewhere in Eriador at the time of the War of the Ring. (I also like to think that, some time in the Fourth Age, Treebeard made his way up there and found his love from ages past, Fimbrethil.)
Anybody have any thoughts about this? Is this something that’s already been discussed to death on Tolkien boards?