| Shade of Carn Dûm 
				 
				Join Date: Jan 2002 Location: Long Island, New York 
					Posts: 259
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	Quote: 
	
		| In that vast shadow once of yore Fingolfin stood: his shield he bore
 with field of heaven's blue and star
 of crystal shining pale afar.
 In overmastering wrath and hate
 desperate he smote upon that gate,
 the Gnomish king, there standing lone,
 while endless fortresses of stone
 engulfed the thin clear ringing keen
 of silver horn on baldric green.
 His hopeless challenge dauntless cried
 Fingolfin there: 'Come, open wide,
 dark king, you ghatsly brazen doors!
 Come forth, whom earth and heaven abhors!
 Come forth, O monstruous craven lord,
 and fight with thine own hand and sword,
 thou wielder of hosts of banded thralls,
 thou tyrant leaguered with strong walls,
 thou foe of Gods and elvish race!
 I wait thee here. Come! Show thy face!'
 
 Then Morgoth came. For the last time
 in those great wars he dared to climb
 from subterranean throne profound,
 the rumour of his feet a sound
 of rumbling earthquake underground.
 Black-armoured, towering, iron-crowned
 he issued forth; his mighty shield
 a vast unblazoned sable field
 with shadow like a thundercloud;
 and o'er the gleaming king it bowed,
 as huge aloft like mace he hurled
 that hammer of the underworld,
 Grond. Clanging to ground it tumbled
 down like a thunder-bolt, and crumbled
 the rocks beneath it; smoke up-started,
 a pit yawned, and a fire darted.
 
 Fingolfin like a shooting light
 beneath a cloud, a stab of white,
 sprang then aside, and Ringil drew
 like ice that gleameth cold and blue,
 his sword devised of elvish skill
 to pierce the flesh with deadly chill.
 With seven wounds it rent his foe,
 and seven mighty cries of woe
 rang in the mountains, and the earth quook,
 and Angband's trembling armies shook.
 
 Yet Orcs would after laughing tell
 of the duel at the gates of hell;
 though elvish song thereof was made
 ere this but one - when sad was laid
 the mighty king in barrow high
 and Thorndor, Eagle of the sky,
 the dreadful tidings brought and told
 to mourning Elfinesse of old.
 Thrice was Fingolfin with great blows
 to his knees beaten, thrice he rose
 still leaping up beneath the cloud
 aloft to hold star-shining, proud,
 his stricken shield, his sundered helm,
 that dark nor might could overwhelm
 till all the earth was burst and rent
 in pits about him. He was spent.
 His feet stumbled. He fell to wreck
 upon the ground, and on his neck
 a foot like rooted hills was set,
 and he was crushed - not conquered yet;
 one last despairing stroke he gave:
 the mighty foot pale Ringil clave
 about the heel, and black the blood
 gushed as from smoking fount in flood.
 
 Halt goes for ever from that stroke
 great Morgoth; but the king he broke,
 and would have hewn and mangled thrown
 to wolves devouring. Lo! from throne
 that Manwë bade him build on high,
 on peak unscaled beneath the sky,
 Morgoth to watch, now down there swooped
 Thorndor the King of Eagles, stooped,
 and rending beak of gold he smote
 in Bauglir's face, then up did float
 on pinions thirty fathoms wide
 bearing away, though loud they cried,
 the mighty corse, the elven-king;
 and where the mountains make a ring
 far to the south about that plain
 where after Gondolin did reign,
 embattled city, at great height
 upon a dizzy snowcap white
 in mounded cairn the mighty dead
 he laid upon the mountain's head.
 Never Orc nor demon after dared
 that pass to climb, o'er which they stared
 Fingolfin's high and holy tomb,
 till Gondolin's appointed doom.
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				__________________Yet the lies that Melkor, the mighty and accursed, Morgoth Bauglir, the Power of Terror and of Hate, sowed in the hearts of Elves and Men are a seed that does not die and cannot be destroyed; and ever and anon it sprouts anew, and will bear dark fruit even unto the latest days.
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