![]() |
Yavanna's "thoughts"
I have a question for those who have access to HoME. Tolkien breifly discusses the origin of the ents in the Silmarillion in Quenta Silmarillion ch. 2, but he also speaks of similar guardians for animals.
Quote:
*tentative* the only vaguely related concept I can find that might correlate with ents is the Beornings? Thanks much [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img] Sophia |
The Beornings were men.
|
Yes, men, but men who could turn into bears. What gave Beorn his special power, and do we know of any other man who had a similar power?
Interesting question about animal guardians, Sophia, but apart from very smart animals like Huan, I don't know quite where to look... |
I'd never thought of that either, Sophia. What plans does Iluvatar have for Ents, I wonder? Are they like elves, immortal except when they meet death in war, or do they just have immensely long but mortal lives?
|
Quote:
[ March 25, 2003: Message edited by: Inderjit Sanghera ] |
That's a very good point, Sophia, and one which had occured to me when I first read that paragraph, but which I had since forgotten. [img]smilies/rolleyes.gif[/img] I was vaguely annoyed when reading the Silmarillion that we hear very little of the origins of "Yavanna's children".
I was intially attracted by the idea of Beorn's line being Yavanna's protectors of the Kelvar (Beorn is, after all, a vegetarian). However, I think that we can discount them on the basis that they are Men, their skin-changing powers notwithstanding, and theerefore a "sub-set" of the Second Children of Iluvatar. But there are references in JRRT's works to animals capable of intelligent and independent thought. I am not sure of the exact terminology, but I believe it might be said that they had "fea" (souls?). I am thinking here of the Ravens of Erebor, the Fox that witnesses Frodo, Sam and Pippin pass, and possibly even the Crebain. There may well be others - I cannot recall offhand. Perhaps there was in ME a variety of these "intelligent" creatures (representatives of the various species?), whose presence there was the product of Yavanna's wish that there be guardians to protect the birds and the beasts. |
Quote:
And in the same essay here are some of Tolkien's latter view on Orcs and what they are. Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:21 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.