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Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
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Spectre of Decay
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Robert Graves, following Apollodorus, Homer and Hagias, gives us another example of a battle between hero and shape-changer.
On the way home from Troy, Menelaus' ships were caught in a storm raised by Athene, and those that survived were trapped in southern waters for eight years, unable to return. Eventually the Achaeans came to Pharos, where Menelaus met the nymph Eidothea, who advised him to capture her father, Proteus and force him to use his gift of prophecy. Accordingly, Menelaus and his men disguised themselves in seal skins and waited until more of the creatures joined them. When Proteus came to sleep among them, Menelaus and his men seized and held him even though he changed into a lion, a serpent, a panther, a boar, running water and a tree, and eventually he told them what must be done to obtain a favourable wind. It's certain that Tolkien heard both of these myths at a young age, and shape-changing wizards are common mythological fare in any case. I certainly couldn't help thinking of the various metamorphosing Greek deities when I read the scene between Sauron and Huan, and I don't think it unlikely that Tolkien drew some of his inspiration from them. An interesting point well raised. On a partially related note, Tolkien and Graves held chairs at Oxford during the same era, and Tolkien gives an account of a meeting with his contemporary in one of his letters that sheds an interesting light on both men: Quote:
EDIT: Can it be true? Can the inspiration for this site and the subject of our discussions have fallen foul of the obscenity detector? To an Englishman, of course, the word in question is merely disparaging, not obscene. [ July 24, 2003: Message edited by: The Squatter of Amon Rûdh ]
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Man kenuva métim' andúne? |
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