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Old 12-21-2013, 06:57 PM   #3
Juicy-Sweet
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 49
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Squatter of Amon Rûdh View Post
Tempting though it is to think that Tolkien based the pillars of the Argonath on a specific statue he had seen, I notice that Bismarck is holding a sword, with both of his hands clasped on the hilt and a shield at his feet as befits a commemorative work. The statues of Isildur and Anárion hold axes in their right hands, with their left hands extended in warning, as one would expect from a statue placed as a border marker. Other than the fact that all are large statues of armed men, I can't see that they have enough in common to suggest a direct inspiration, although I suppose that some illustrations of Tolkien may have been influenced by the German statue.
The posture is different, true. And there's only one Bismarck but two argonauts

Yet the feel of the statue is so Argonaut-ish "Stern warrior-king from the past". And the size is about right too. I think he got the idea from the statue and then, naturally, adapted it.

But sure, if there's no evidence of Tolkien going to Hamburg or reading about the statue in a newspaper or (I guess it was mentioned in the general media at 1905) When I made the thread I was sort of hoping someone knew he had made a trip to Hamburg but noone's biting, so it's just a hypothesis...
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