Nilpaurion Felagund:
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Because of this, now I think Goldberry has something to do with Uinen, whose hair is spread throughout the waters of Middle-earth.
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I have always felt that Goldberry as River-daughter had to do with Uinen; ever since I first read
The Silmarillion. Does it make Goldberry a Maia? Maybe. If she's a daughter of the river, which is feminine, does she have a father? Does she need one? Who can say? One of those mysteries. Is she perhaps a lock of Uinen's hair, come to life?
Lalwendé:
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But is Goldberry treacherous in any way? Does she 'lure' Tom? And does she lure him into a negative situation?
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Have you read the two
Adventures of Tom Bombadil poems? In the first one, Goldberry trickes him, pulling on his beard that dangles over the Withywindle (that she is apparently swimming or living in, and steals his hat. Is she flirting?
Back to her mother's house in the deepest hollow
swam young Goldberry. But Tom, he would not follow;
This suggests that Goldberry is trying to lure Tom to her mother's house, whatever that might mean.