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Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
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#1 | |
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A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: under the bed
Posts: 4,737
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Whoever says that Tolkien's characters are flat and dull ought to be pointed to look at these two (and, for that matter, Gollum and Frodo). One thing to remember about Eowyn is that she is a young woman, and Tolkien underlines this fact. She still seems to be learning about the ways of the world, and she still has her dreams. Those dreams have been damaged at an early age, and she is filled with anger by this. Perhaps an older woman may have taken this more stoically? Perhaps not? It might be worth discussing if Eowyn's age is relevant to her actions, as I have found that as I grow older myself, I feel differently about her in the light of my own experience.
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Gordon's alive!
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#2 |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Wandering through Middle-Earth (Sadly in Alberta and not ME)
Posts: 612
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As a fan of Eowyn and Faramir I also would have liked to read more about their relationship and how Faramir healed Eowyn.
I always shed a few tears because it is all so beautiful. The romance, the crowning, the fellowship as close to complete as it can be if only for a little while. And Faramir...well, his relationship with Eowyn is so Romantic! If that happened to me I would swoon. (read the last part of Morte D'arthur, all the characters do there is swoon) Well maybe not but I would certainly be very touched. I have no problem with Eowyn denouncing her former want to be a queen because I think it would not make her happy at all. She wanted to be queen before so that she wasn't helpless and she hoped it would bring her happiness. However, when Faramir came along she realized that that was no longer the caseand she also realized that she would never find true happiness with Aragorn. After Theoden's death and the other horrors she experienced I don't think it is a good idea to return to the battlefield. Although she has been healed she will always remember the trauma she went through during and after the Pelennor fields.
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#3 | ||||||
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Banshee of Camelot
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Switzerland
Posts: 5,830
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I started writing this contribution ages ago, but got interrupted at the time, and now I suddenly found the draft gain, so I decided to post it after all. (I don't know if anyone will read this, after all that time...
)This is one of my favourite chapters, since I belong to the category of “Faramir swooners” and am a hopeless romantic. So this beautiful, subtle lovestory appeals very much to me!Here is something I noticed but nobody here commented on it: As I read Eowyn’s words to the warden . Quote:
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I read with interest the discussion about Eowyn “forsaking her previous identity” and “diminishing” by marrying Faramir and becoming a healer. Quote:
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And then I browsed in the Appendices long before finishing the book (I was just too curious ) and read the story of Aragorn and Arwen. So the wedding didn’t come as a surprise to me, but too bad I read the sad ending too! Quote:
Well, he may be an ideal, but he came very much “alive” for me in the book. So I quite agree with Lalwendë! I think Faramir’s most extraordinary character trait is his perceptiveness and compassion.(Also commented upon by Beregond) He recognizes better than Eowyn herself what is going on in her mind! I thought it also interesting that he, as a descendant of Númenor, had this recurring nightmare about the great dark wave drowning everything. (And stupid of the scriptwriters to give those words in the movie to Eowyn, in quite a different setting¨) Even more interesting is what Tolkien writes in one of his letters Quote:
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Yes! "wish-fulfilment dreams" we spin to cheat our timid hearts, and ugly Fact defeat! Last edited by Guinevere; 02-19-2006 at 12:29 PM. Reason: half a sentence got deleted by accident... |
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#4 |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Wandering through Middle-Earth (Sadly in Alberta and not ME)
Posts: 612
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Well, Guinevere, I did read your post and I really liked it.
I read somewhere that somebody(sorry don't remember who) said that he/she didn't see the marriage of Arwen and Aragorn coming. I di see it somewhat since there were hints. However, I like it that Tolkien didn't tell us straight off that Arwen and Aragorn were engaged because this adds more suspense(for lack of a better word) to the story of Eowyn and Aragorn.
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#5 | |
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Loremaster of Annúminas
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 2,330
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The entire plot of The Lord of the Rings could be said to turn on what Sauron didn’t know, and when he didn’t know it. |
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#6 |
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Dead Serious
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Rereading the previous chapter, I was struck by the number of those for whom "The Field of Cormallen" was their most deeply moving chapter. And I get it, but that sentiment for me is far stronger in "The Steward and the King." At least this time through, this was the chapter that made me emotional as I read it.
Some of this, no doubt, is the romance of Faramir and Eowyn, which receives the barest of glances in the film (and I tend to cherish whatever the films neglected), and some of it is the wonder of the Elves coming and Aragorn's midsummer night dream, but I think it is, more than anything else, the restoration of the King that affects me. Minas Tirith is the one character present throughout the chapter. She waits, with Faramir, Eowyn, and Merry for tidings of the army, and rejoices when the eagles bring word. She is the one reborn and made glorious, welcoming back all her children (side-note: what a bittersweet moment the return of the newly-widowed and half-orphaned must have been. Many men of Gondor had died since they were sent away to Lossarnach and beyond). She is the one hallowed by a new White Tree and the visit of the Elves, who enters a new, unrivalled golden age.
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I prefer history, true or feigned.
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