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#1 | |
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Wight
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Mordor
Posts: 150
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I am Annatar, the Lord of Gifts. |
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#2 | ||
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Gruesome Spectre
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Heaven's doorstep
Posts: 8,039
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I don't know which is the 'true' version, but I think there's room for debate anyway. Regardless, I don't think you can put the Noldor and the Lórien elves in the same boat (no pun intended ). When I said the Galdhrim likely went to Mirkwood, I was including Celeborn's East Lórien there. Once he deserted them, why wouldn't they have stayed in Mirkwood? They had kinsfolk who spoke their language, a Sindarin king, and they weren't bound to hang around in Lórien and watch it decay.
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Music alone proves the existence of God. |
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#3 | |
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Wight
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Mordor
Posts: 150
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Miscellaneous question: The elves that beautified Ithilien... could they have been of the Galadhrim who carried some of the earth from Galadriel's orchard?
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#4 | |||
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Gruesome Spectre
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Heaven's doorstep
Posts: 8,039
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'The Wood' could mean Mirkwood, I guess, but the 'trees that do die'? That certainly has a Lórien connotation.
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Music alone proves the existence of God. |
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#5 | |
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Stormdancer of Doom
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...down to the water to see the elves dance and sing upon the midsummer's eve. |
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#6 |
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Wight
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Mordor
Posts: 150
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Sure, Mirkwood was cleansed but I doubt it was more beautiful than the Galadhrim's former abode. Maybe they too were affected by Nenya, ring of water, like Galadriel, and awoke their desires to cross the Sea. It doesn't make sense for them to adapt back into their rustic lifestyle like the elves of Mirkwood.
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#7 |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Could perhaps Nenya have actually rendered Lorien unsustainable as a homeland without its power? I suppose you could take this environmentally, but even in a more spiritual sense--that much unchanging for so much time would have been devastating when change actually happened. Compare with when a dam bursts--yes, the land and the people living there seem to have done well before the dam was built, but the sheer destructive force that the dam's absence creates makes it much, much more difficult to go back to the way things were. When an entire society becomes dependent on one thing, and that thing is lost, the society doesn't survive too long--compare with how Doriath fared after the departure of Melian and her girdle.
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#8 |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,036
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Since the language has been mentioned... the matter of the speech of Mirkwood seems a bit knotty...
A) In a 'late' text published in Unfinished Tales it was said Oropher (father of Thranduil father of Legolas) and some Sindar merged with the Silvan Elves 'adopting their language'. B) In another late text (same book) it was said that by the end of the Third Age the Silvan tongues had probably ceased to be spoken in Lórien and the Realm of Thranduil. 3) According to another passage ('late' again) Sindarin was said to be used in Thranduil's house -- thus used by his son Legolas one would expect -- 'though not by all his folk.' §) And in a letter dated Dec. 1972 (another late example!) Tolkien explained that: 'The Silvan Elves of Thranduil's realm did not speak S. but a related language or dialect.' This last mention is pretty late, but anyway Tolkien himself published (Appendix F) that in Lórien (at least) at this period Sindarin was spoken, though with an 'accent', since most of its folk were of Silvan origin. So we can say this much, I guess. |
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#9 | ||
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Gruesome Spectre
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Heaven's doorstep
Posts: 8,039
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Frodo would likely have understood Sindarin, so they had to have been speaking the Silvan dialect.
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#10 |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,036
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Yes, but without going into the detail of Words, Phrases, And Passages, Tolkien decided, for the second edition IIRC, to add...
'In Lórien at this period Sindarin was spoken, though with an 'accent', since most of its people were of Silvan origin. This 'accent' and his own limited acquaintance with Sindarin misled Frodo (as is pointed out in The Thain's Book by a commentator of Gondor). All the Elvish words cited in book I, ii, chs 6, 7, 8 are in fact Sindarin, and so are most of the names of places and persons. But Lórien, Caras Galadhon, Amroth, Nimrodel are probably of Silvan origin, adapted to Sindarin.' Footnote to Appendix F (I'm pretty sure this was added for the second edition) |
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#11 | |
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Gruesome Spectre
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Heaven's doorstep
Posts: 8,039
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Music alone proves the existence of God. |
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#12 | |
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Stormdancer of Doom
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Now he comes down east to Maine (Ayuh, a staar shiines on the owah of owah meet'n.) Then he goes to Manhattan, and thence to New Jersey. I won't try to type those in. But you get the idea. "These people don't speak English at all...."
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...down to the water to see the elves dance and sing upon the midsummer's eve. |
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#13 |
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Wight
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 145
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Yea, as in Prof Henry Higgins (My Fair Lady) "There even are places where English Completely disappears. In America, they haven't used it for years!"
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