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View Poll Results: Do balrogs have wings? | |||
Yes |
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114 | 58.16% |
No |
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82 | 41.84% |
Voters: 196. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1 | ||
Deadnight Chanter
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! Last edited by HerenIstarion; 01-10-2005 at 05:02 PM. Reason: cross-posting with obloquy |
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#2 |
Dread Horseman
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Behind you!
Posts: 2,744
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I'll hold you to that, HI, since the "vampire form" is certainly a bat or bat-like creature.
oblo, I think it was that old shoulder wound, and not a class on Balrog physiognomy that he audited in Rivendell, that told Frodo that the flying thing was a Nazgûl on the wing. (Look at me, I'm a poet and I didn't even know it.) EDIT: Ai, cross-posting domino-effect with HI. Forgive the redundancy... |
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#3 | ||
Spirit of the Lonely Star
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 5,133
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Everything that Tolkien tells us indicates that the chamber was very large. Certainly, a term like "cavernous" suggests a hall of immense proportions. I agree that the Balrog would be able to fold his wings back. The real issue here is the wingspan to body ratio. It's my understanding that every flying creature in existence has a ratio of roughly 3 to 1 in terms of wings and body. Let's make the width of the hall smaller just to be fair, since we do not have specific dimensions. If the hall was 75 feet across instead of 100, that would make the wings 75 feet outstretched, and the Balrog 25 feet high. There's no way a 25 foot Balrog gets through that door, even if his wings (which he doesn't have ![]() Also, a twenty-five foot Balrog doesn't seem to fit well with anything else we know. I believe we have just two references to how tall Balrogs were. One early passage in HoMe describes a Balrog as "no more than man-high yet terror seemed to go before it." Another description from BoLT states that the Balrog was "double his stature", 'his' in this context refers to Glorfindel. The latter quote would make a Balrog 13-14 feet tall. It was not so much the physical size of the Balrog as the fear he instilled and the shadow he carried along. Such creatures of 6-14 feet could get through that door, but their wings could not possibly have touched the sides of a "cavernous" hall when stretched out from wall to wall. Hence, the reference in the text must be figurative rather than literal. Helen - - I'll stick with Obloquy's answer here. Note that the only real description we have of the creature is this: Quote:
Regarding time ill spent....don't feel bad. This is a subject I swore never to touch. I promise never to think about Balrogs after today.
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Multitasking women are never too busy to vote. |
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#4 | ||
Gibbering Gibbet
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Beyond cloud nine
Posts: 1,844
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#5 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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And I agree with you both, Underhill and HI, but my suggestion is not a ludicrous one and the possibility that there is another explanation should at least weaken what others have found to be firm proof.
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#6 | |
Scion of The Faithful
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: The brink, where hope and despair are akin. [The Philippines]
Posts: 5,312
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![]() Re Mr. Underhill's thesis: It was a bias on part of Frodo and Gimli: they saw wings (which may be real or ephemeral), and they assumed flight. It's nature: I see cigarette, I think smoker.
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フェンリス鴨 (Fenrisu Kamo) The plot, cut, defeated. I intend to copy this sig forever - so far so good...
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#7 | |
Haunted Halfling
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: an uncounted length of steps--floating between air molecules
Posts: 841
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Quote:
![]() Cheers! Lyta P.S. There's no point in asking whether it is an African or European Balrog, as this is Middle Earth we're talking about! ![]()
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“…she laid herself to rest upon Cerin Amroth; and there is her green grave, until the world is changed, and all the days of her life are utterly forgotten by men that come after, and elanor and niphredil bloom no more east of the Sea.” |
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