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#1 |
Laconic Loreman
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Interesting ideas Lhun
I think a lot of the things we find in Mythology as well have some resemblance to events, people, or places in LOTR. There's this one Baltic Myhology story of two wizards battling it out. One was referred to as the "wicked wizard," the other the "good wizard." Even some of their powers resembled Gandalf and Saruman. They could gather storms, or make everything "darken." Also, they could grow taller, or atleast appear to grow taller, as Gandalf does to Bilbo. Now these wizards duked it out to the death, something that didn't happen in LOTR, and Gandalf and Saruman most likely didn't have a wizarding battle of karblasto beams like PJ showed ![]() |
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#2 |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Canada
Posts: 297
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Interesting topic!
The battle between Gandalf and the balrog has a striking resemblance to some old paintings in my church of St. Michael battling the dragon. I think Boromir hit on the nose saying that LotR mirrors mythology, as it is the mythology/history of a fictional world. In modern literature (if you can call any modern books "literature"), there are many, many similarities to the LotR due to the fact that it was such a cornerstone in literature. To make sure that this doesn't turn into a thread listing examples LotR being copyied, you should limit it to a pre-Tolkien timeframe. But that's your call, Lhunardawen. ![]()
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Tout ce qui est or ne brille pas, Tous ceux qui errent ne sont pas perdus. Mobilis in Mobile |
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#3 | |||
Haunting Spirit
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Haven't been too terribly active in recent months; my honors thesis and other schoolwork has been taking up a lot of my spare time!
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Hopefully I've gotten my point across without rambling. Does anyone think I'm on to something? |
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#4 |
Relic of Wandering Days
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: You'll See Perpetual Change.
Posts: 1,480
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Minas Tirith would definitely seem to be a place that highly values human reasoning, and is quite beautiful. It is imbued with the sense of the power human accomplishment and knowledge. But all the palantri, battlements and learning could not save it from darkness. Providence intervened in the simple act of a hobbit stumbling across a ring in the dark, and though the chain of events that sparked, the city was eventually saved.
I can easily see Minas Tirith in Dante's tower. |
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