Quote:
Originally Posted by Inziladun
Upon further examination, it seems 'High Elves' in LOTR does refer exclusively to the Noldor.
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I don't think this is necessarily so. An instance in Appendix B appears to include the Sindar, and is arguably (in part) the source for Robert Foster's comment below. And the Sindar would used the name
Elbereth too -- with reference to the statement from Frodo that you raised.
In my opinion a stronger statement for your case appears in Appendix F. But my point is, since two applications appear to exist, even if one outweighs the other in number, one cannot assume an exclusively Noldorin application exists for all occurances in
The Lord of the Rings.
Quote:
Robert Foster's guide (a version written before Silmarillion was published): 'High Elves The Eldar.'
Hammond And Scull (The Lord of the Rings Reader's Companion, chapter Three Is Company).: '(Elsewhere Tolkien equates Eldar with the High Elves (see note for p. 43),...'
Christopher Tolkien (Introduction to Children of Húrin): '... and they are called the Eldar, the Elves of the Great Journey, the High Elves: distinct from those who, refusing the summons, chose Middle-earth for their land and their destiny. They are the 'lesser Elves', called Avari, the Unwilling.
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So again, what about
The Lord of the Rings alone? Perhaps one can
interpret the term to refer to the Exiles at all instances, but I don't see this as a given necessarily.