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Old 12-01-2007, 11:38 AM   #6
Mithadan
Spirit of Mist
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Tol Eressea
Posts: 3,394
Mithadan is a guest at the Prancing Pony.Mithadan is a guest at the Prancing Pony.
The hallmark of Tolkien's Legendarium is internal consistency. The "awakening" of the Elves has continually been a part of Middle Earth almost since the beginning. If the tale of the awakening of the Elves were deemed a "faerie tale", the Legendarium would lose its consistency. It would lack any origin of the Elves despite the fact that it is, at bottom, a creation myth. There would be no basis for the Valar to "discover" the Elves in the East, the legends of the awakening of Men, Dwarves and Ents would also be rendered meaningless.

I recognize that, late in his life, Tolkien began experimenting with making Middle Earth consistent with the "real world". This would have required elimination of the flat Middle Earth concept, the Trees, the creation of the Sun and Moon, and a reworking or elimination of the drowning of Numenor. He did not get very far with his experimentation and whether Tolkien actually had decided to conduct this wholesale revision of his writings is, at best, a subject for debate. One might speculate that if Tolkien had gone forward with making Middle Earth more "scientific", i.e. less mythological and more consistent with our Earth, then he might have done away with the Elvish awakening myth. However, I doubt this. Tolkien was a Catholic. He certainly would not have the Elves "evolve". Nor is there any hint of an alternate tale in any published writings. So to state unequivocally that the Elvish awakening tale was a faerie story is simply speculation.

There is some slight basis for suggesting that the "old tales" were simply muddled Gondorian memories of tales told long before in Numenor; that they were "Mannish" faerie stories, corrupting the truth of the matter as known by the Elves (or at least the Noldor). But again, there is no alternate version of the tale, and The Silmarillion is itself a creation myth. How can you have a creation myth without accounting for the creation of Elves, Men, etc.

The Tale of 144 is, however, conceded to be a childrens' counting story. That does not mean the underlying myth is similarly a children's story.
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