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#1 |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jul 2000
Posts: 369
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The mythological creation of the Sun and Moon from the Two Trees is not present in LotR or the Hobbit.
Tolkien deliberately revised the Hobbit to have an extant sun and moon while the High Elves were dwelling in Aman, before the return of the Noldor. Durin wakes with a moon, and is able to capture moonlight and sunlight in lamps. Galadriel sings of her time in Valinor, beyond the sun and moon (not before the sun and moon). Beyond is probably a reference to the Dome of Varda. Gandalf says the Ents were walking in forests, with a moon overhead, before any tree was cut down, or iron found. In the mythological tale: Durin woke thousands of years before the Sun and Moon. Galadriel could not have sung of leaves in Valinor, beyond a sun and moon (which did not exist until after she left). Iron was found and trees cut down long before the Sun and Moon were created, in the myth version. These are consistent with the (so called) 'round-world cosmology' (deliberately so in the case of the Hobbit). Hence a contradiction to LotR and The Hobbit. (As Amazon only has rights to the Hobbit and LotR, I do wonder if they had to get permission from the Estate to refer to the 'Sun and Moon creation myth', or if the show-runners are ignorant of the fact that the creation of the sun and moon myth is contradicted by LotR and, quite deliberately, The Hobbit.)
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Tar-Elenion Last edited by Tar Elenion; 07-15-2022 at 11:30 AM. |
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#2 | |
Blossom of Dwimordene
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: The realm of forgotten words
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You passed from under darkened dome, you enter now the secret land. - Take me to Finrod's fabled home!... ~ Finrod: The Rock Opera |
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#3 | |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jul 2000
Posts: 369
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(Both Telperion and Laurelin are mentioned in LotR, App. A) I rather doubt that they are that concerned with 'people shouting from the roof-tops', considering all the bending and twisting done.
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Tar-Elenion Last edited by Tar Elenion; 07-15-2022 at 08:41 PM. |
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#4 | |
Blossom of Dwimordene
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: The realm of forgotten words
Posts: 10,513
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As for rights, wasn't there a clause somewhere that they couldn't contradict published material?
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You passed from under darkened dome, you enter now the secret land. - Take me to Finrod's fabled home!... ~ Finrod: The Rock Opera |
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#5 | ||
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jul 2000
Posts: 369
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My understanding is that they can, on a case by case basis, get permission to use some items from the posthumously published works (e.g. the Numenor map), as long as it does not contradict what they have the rights to (Hobbit, LotR).
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Tar-Elenion |
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#6 |
Wight
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: The best seat in the Golden Perch
Posts: 219
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I'd take issue with the claim that LotR has the Sun coexisting with the Trees; for example on the basis that Gildor's party's song has a reference to Varda's creation of the Stars in "the Sunless year". Unless you can give a reference that establishes otherwise, there seems no reason to suppose that the cosmology of LotR, as presented in the book and the book only, is any different to that of the published Silmarillion.
Nonetheless LotR doesn't include any explicit references to the myth of the Sun and Moon, so far more interesting to me is the fact that the trailer references it. That's information the show is not supposed to have, and must surely be a knowing wink for us to pick up on.
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Then one appeared among us, in our own form visible, but greater and more beautiful; and he said that he had come out of pity. |
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#7 |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jul 2000
Posts: 369
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I did already give references. See my post with the quotes.
Tie that in with Tolkien's deliberate revision of the Hobbit.
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Tar-Elenion |
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#8 | |
Overshadowed Eagle
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: The north-west of the Old World, east of the Sea
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Without invoking the idea that the Valar just shoved a giant lid on Valinor because, by golly, they'd had this idea for shiny trees and didn't want to let a ball of flaming gas ruin it, it's perfectly possible to reconcile the LotR and Hobbit texts you reference with the "young Sun" worldview: - The Hobbit is written in Bilbo's editorial voice, and was written before he read the Elvish tales; Hobbit folk-tales make no mention of the creation of the Sun and Moon. (It is clear that Tolkien was thinking of the Dome of Varda/Melkor's smokes cover the Sun story here, but that doesn't mean it's the only possible interpretation.) - Durin: there was no stain on the Moon because there was no Moon. The "light of sun and star and moon" is either a later metaphor (like the Winged Sun on Finwe's heraldic device), or an indication that Durin ruled until after the Sunrise. - Galadriel says "beyond" and means in time. - Gandalf is explicitly covering a broad timeline in his riddle - he mentions rings, which is the mid-Second Age! Or: he's referring to mountains that are now under the Moon. Or: he's saying that Treebeard and the Ents came to Fangorn after the Moonrise, leaving the lands where iron and hewing and woe were found. (Heck, Woe Was Wrought by Melkor before the land was even solid!) Or even: 'when young was mountain under moon' is a Rohirric idiom not otherwise attested. And there are references which imply (but again do not state) the Silmarillion cosmology: - The "stain on the moon" from the Durin rhyme is only ever explained in terms of Tilion and his ship, not a giant orbiting rock. - There are explicit references to a Man in the Moon throughout Hobbit lore (and indeed a woman in the Sun). - The "Sunless Years" reference from Gildor's song. - Tom Bombadil talks of "the young Sun" shining down on battles on the Barrow-Downs. - Bilbo's song tells of Earendil flying behind the sun; for a Silmaril to be visible at that distance the Sun must be pretty close (or the Silmarils once lit the entirety of Beleriand!). - Haldir mentions that the light of the Sun is not as it was aforetimes, which actually sounds most like one of the very old legends about the death of Arien. It definitely doesn't make sense with an Old Sun model, unless Haldir is complaining that the sun isn't washed-out and obscured enough. (Perhaps he is English and longing for grey summers?) And that's only from Fellowship! I'm sure you could find more in the other volumes. This isn't an obvious "the Sun always existed" situation by any means. hS
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Have you burned the ships that could bear you back again? ~Finrod: The Rock Opera |
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#9 |
Wight
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: The best seat in the Golden Perch
Posts: 219
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"The sun always existed" was the "destructive idea" that CJRT referenced in a number of places in HoME. It's certainly not as simplistic as saying "the sun always existed, get over it, move on" - and it's incredibly disingenuous to imply so.
If nothing else, consider everything that would need to be rewritten to support it:
Whichever way you slice it, you're going to need to handwave away something. So which is easier to handwave away? Some oblique references, some of which came in via subsequent edits or editions, and most of which can be easily explained away? Or the entire first half of the Silmarillion? And so much other important stuff? Nope, not buying it. Tolkien may have had intentions towards rewriting everything, but the key thing is: he never did. Ultimately all that we're left with is the latest completed cosmology, and, despite some offhand references and subsequent edits, that is the Cosmology.
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Then one appeared among us, in our own form visible, but greater and more beautiful; and he said that he had come out of pity. |
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#10 | ||||||||
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jul 2000
Posts: 369
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And it all fails on Tolkien's deliberate revision.
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Tar-Elenion Last edited by Tar Elenion; 07-21-2022 at 02:28 PM. |
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#11 | |
Guardian of the Blind
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Where The Skies End
Posts: 899
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I haven't read this entire thread, but I have a feeling that lawsuits will come out of this show. I think, visually, the RoP series looks great. I am tentative about the story. In my head, I'm thinking of this entire Amazon series as a giant myth, which makes it a little better and easier to ignore any inconsistencies. I actually enjoy reading different myths when told by different cultures. You know, I've been trying to get a copy of the Sil as an eBook. I have access to 3 libraries and NONE of them have it. I am 21 on a waiting list in OR, ? in Hawaii (their website is crap and doesn't even tell you what you've requested), and 6 in AZ. I have a physical copy in AZ but I'm in HI right now ![]() Edit: libgen has the Sil! WAHOO!
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Adjust and calibrate when the memories start to fade; Into a carrier signal, origin unknown Last edited by Blind Guardian; 07-22-2022 at 08:04 PM. |
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#12 |
Spirit of Mist
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Tol Eressea
Posts: 3,396
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Good to see you Blind Guardian.
Pretending that RoP is a myth or tale independent of (or unreported by) Tolkien may be an option available to some here. However, the series is using characters, places and a general mythological setting familiar to me. The Hobbit movies almost lost me at the depiction of Radagast, and did lose me in goblin town. Tauriel was simply annoying to me, though perhaps I would have enjoyed her character in a non-Tolkien setting. Attempting to view RoP as if it were unrelated to or independent of Middle Earth is not an option for me. For this reason, I hope that its quality and faithfulness to at least the spirit of the Legendarium is enough to let me enjoy it. There are gaps in the "history," particularly in the Second Age, broad enough to craft a believable effort to fill in the empty spaces so long as some creditable attempt at consistency is made.
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Beleriand, Beleriand, the borders of the Elven-land. |
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#13 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,036
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I think Tolkien's recharacterization of The Silmarillion as a mostly Mannish work solved his problem.
The revision to The Hobbit was, in my opinion, done in order to take out an explicit mention of a time before a sun. . . although that said, I think we can add what I'll call the Treebeard Tradition* from The Lord of the Rings, which to my mind, agrees with the Western Elvish traditon of a pre-existing Sun. *Treebeard's story of the Entwives read in consideration of his chronology regarding both the Great Darkness and his reference to the Elves passing over Sea. |
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