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Hope for Undomiel.
If Arwen repented after the death of Aragorn, could she have joined Legolas & Gimli to the Undying Lands and allowed access to Eldamar?
[ March 26, 2003: Message edited by: secretfire ] |
Repented? There's no repentance. She didn't do anything wrong.
Arwen was half-elf (like her father, uncle, and brothers). They were given a choice - to be mortal or immortal. Arwen had until her father left Middle-earth to decide. She made her choice, and it was undoubtedly permanent. What's the half-elven choice all about? Here's an article and a link to other threads on the same subject. |
At what time did she actually turn from elf to human? I thought that it was Elrond's choice, and that his choice would be the same one for his siblings. Meaning that Arwen was an elf, and she did not have that choice, since she was the daugther of 2 elves.
I cant understand it... Was her elfhood linked to her nearness to her father? She could have stayed here and remain elf, without any obstacle. And if she had the choice to be elf or human, so would Eldarion and thats a wild guess. Eitherway, at what time did she become human? In the moment Elrond entered Valinor? Or when? Eitherway, I think she could have entered Valinor after Aragorn's death. I mean, if Gimli was able to enter (presumably by Galadriel's support) couldn't Galadriel do the same for her grand-daughter? |
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Besides, Arwen had given her "pass" to the Undying Lands to Frodo and that at the latest made her decision final. [ March 26, 2003: Message edited by: Annunfuiniel ] |
"I mean, if Gimli was able to enter (presumably by Galadriel's support) couldn't Galadriel do the same for her grand-daughter?"
Point taken. I know this is guesswork but what if she prayed really hard to her grandmother to let her in? I mean, JRRT tells us that Galadriel was mighty among the Eldar so couldn't The Lady have found a way to supersede the choice of Arwen? C'mon, give the Evening Star some hope! [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img] On a similar note, wouldn't it be great if Tolkien depicted the leavetaking of Legolas & Gimli and Arwen? Would she have sent letters to her family? Would Legolas & Gimli be overcome with weeping and sadness? The Flame of Anor has risen in the East! Twenty three years is such a short time to live among such excellent and admirable hobbits! [ March 26, 2003: Message edited by: secretfire ] |
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Elrond too was not an elf. He was an half-elf who would share the immortal fate of the elves. Elrond's children got the choice because they had a renewed elvish strain from their mother, Celebrian. They were not the children of two elves, but rather one half-elf and one elf, making them half-elven too. Like I recommended in my initial post: Read the article I linked to. Quote:
[ March 26, 2003: Message edited by: Legolas ] |
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Oh...I've always wondered about that, but chose not to post, as I have absolutely no knowledge as to that.... [img]smilies/confused.gif[/img]
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I've always believed that the main implication of the Choice was not where or how long the half-elven were to live, but where their fea went after death. Mortals didn't stay at Mandos forever, like elves, so Arwen decided to follow Aragorn wherever he went, beyond the limits of Arda.
And by leaving M-E with Elrond or remaining there Elrond's children just declared what choice they have made. |
I just want to add one more quote from the Story of Aragorn and Arwen.
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P.S. I love that part of their story, just see my sig. [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img] |
I've always thought of Arwen as always being an elf, even when she chose not to go to the Undying Lands. I've just always thought that she died of grief from losing Aragorn.
I'd appreciate any comments or corrections, as I don't want to get the wrong idea. |
To answer the first question with a quote which I (intended to, but) failed to give:
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Tinuviel: That is a common misconception. Elrond is descended from both men and elves, and his family is known as 'half-elven' because of that. Prior to his parents, Earendil and Elwing, anyone with any mortal blood was considered mortal and would die as a man would. With Earendil and Elwing's accomplishments, they (along with their sons) were granted the choice of mortality or immortality. Elrond chose immortality, of course, and he married an elf - Galadriel's daughter - who gave birth to Arwen. Arwen was thus half-elven too because of Elrond's portion of mortal blood. She was a half-elf - not an elf. When she made her decision, she picked mortality. She was never immortal - it was just decided that she would age like the Eldar did until she decided which fate she would suffer. Tolkien explicitly states that half-elves are not the same as elves in Letter No. 345: Quote:
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Thanks for the quotes from The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen, Annunfuiniel. But I believe they must be translations back to English from your native tongue. (I believe you made mention in another thread that English is not your first language.)
Tolkien's turn of phrase has been lost in these translations. Compare: Quote:
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And compare this
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[ March 30, 2003: Message edited by: Lostgaeriel ] |
Oooops... Thank you for the corrections, Lostgaeriel. Yes, I have used my own translations elsewhere but those quotes where from the internet. [img]smilies/confused.gif[/img] Shouldn't trust every source so blindly I see... [img]smilies/rolleyes.gif[/img] Or are there perhaps different versions of this story? I really don't know but now I'm curious. [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img]
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Even if there were other versions, Aragorn and Arwen simply don't use contractions. It wouldn't fit the style that Tolkien adopted when writing about them. Those quotations may be from a Babelfish translation, or typed in from memory; they may even be a misguided attempt to make the language "relevant to a modern audience" (i.e. modernised for the benefit of the illiterate). This is why my quotations are always copied from my books.
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Perhaps it's time you got an English-version copy? [img]smilies/wink.gif[/img] Your command of the language is excellent. If you had not mentioned it, I would never have known it's not your first language.
If you possibly can, do find an English copy; you'll get to enjoy what you've been missing - Tolkien's wonderful use of the English language. [ March 30, 2003: Message edited by: Lostgaeriel ] |
Wonderful discussion. To respond to secretfire's original thought, Hope for Undomiel, I think there is indeed hope for her, but not the hope of going to the undying lands. Her hope is that of the possibility of an eternal life, shared with Aragorn, that is not yet known by men or elves. To me, this is part of the doom of the Followers: yes they experience death, but they have an unknown fate for eternity. The doom of the Firstborn is undying life (shown to be a mixed blessing in Tolkien's writings) and a known eternity in Eressea after passing over.
It's been pointed out that Arwen made her choice of destiny when she chose Aragorn. In doing so she chose to share his fate. To me, when she speaks about "no ship that would take me there" she means not "no physical ship could be found" -- indeed Legolas and Gimli had not passed over, nor had Cirdan, to my knowledge -- but rather "given my love for you and the choice that I made, there is no ship that could take me." Kind of an extremely elegant and subtle way of saying, "Wild horses couldn't drag me to Eressea." More a comment to Aragorn on her emotional and psychological state, a reaffirming of the choice. Why and of what cause does she die? I have struggled with this as well. Why not stay in Minas Tirith, enjoy her children and eventual grandchildren and her friends for a few more decades? Or at least, staying there to be buried along side Aragorn? At the end, it's her choice, deliberately saying farewell and choosing to return to and be buried in the place of perhaps her greatest happiness - on the hill in Lothlorien where she and Aragorn had plighted their troth. Think about it...the knowledge that eventually this day would come, that she and her father would never see each other again after he passed over, because they had differnt fates, made their parting so sad. |
thank you celebrial and the others. you have given undomiel (and me as well) lots of hope by your words. would that the evenstar had you by her side after the departure of her beloved. i especially liked celebrial's theory of arwen wanting to return and die on the hill where she and aragorn renounced the shadow and the ring. i would cast my first vote for you on the downs if you allowed yourself to be rated.
[img]smilies/smile.gif[/img] by the way, don't you think "Hope for Undomiel" would be a wonderful title for a poem? Very assonantal and melodious to the ear. [ March 31, 2003: Message edited by: secretfire ] [ March 31, 2003: Message edited by: secretfire ] |
Ive always thought that her doom was a really sad one. And her parting to Lorien has always been a confusion for me. If she was so sad for the death of Aragorn, why didn't she stay with Eldarion? Her son was the closest she could get to Aragorn, and to his love and his life, not a hill on the deserted land of her grandmother and mother, where she met her dead husband.
If I had been her, I would have stayed in Minas Tirith and I would never go to Lorien... to see such a decadent realm after knowing it in it's full beauty would make me grieve a lot more... |
We must consider that Elves possess a "bittersweet knowledge that they are about to pass into myth." And Arwen being part-elf was a creature of solitude and contemplation. Arwen's retreat makes perfect sense when you read celebrial's theory on the sundering of Arwen and Elrond. Perhaps she wanted to avail of the vestiges of Lorien's healing power.
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