I have two footnotes to this chapter which came to my attention:
First of all, was Boromir's disdain of Faërie one of the causes of his downfall?
Quote:
But what I have heard seems to me for the most part old wives' tales, such as we tell to our children.
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Celeborn, a personage of living legend for a Gondorian, reprimands him, and that seems to me to echo Tolkien's sentiments in his essay
On Fairy Stories and his poem
Mythopoeia, where he defends the value of fairy tales and myths,
especially for adults.
The second thing I noted is Galadriel's selflessness; in promoting Aragorn's cause and his courtship of Arwen, she knows that she will lose her granddaughter eternally (or whatever is equivalent to that with the Elves). Perhaps this is noticeable especially in contrast to Movie-Elrond's attitude, although his book character is nowhere near to being that negative. This is a sacrifice that we cannot measure.