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Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
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#1 |
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Wight
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 121
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1) Ahh, got it, I missed the fact that it was repeated.
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#2 | |
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King's Writer
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 1,721
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1) I don’t think that the info is quiet the same, so I would let that last sentence stand as gandalf85 edited it.
2) Agreed. But I would like to a bit more, found in a quiet different place: Quote:
Findegil |
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#3 | |
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Wight
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 121
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I like the addition of the bit about Gandalf. If my username doesn't give it away, he's my favorite character from any work of fiction, so I'm absolutely on board with ending the entire mythology with a discussion of Gandalf. But I think Fin's placement of it breaks the flow of the discussion about the ending of the New Shadow. I would place it after the discussion, like so:
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#4 |
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Quentingolmo
Join Date: Aug 2017
Posts: 525
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I agree with gandalf's placement much more. it flows better.
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#5 |
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King's Writer
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 1,721
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Okay, I agree to the placement. My placement was based only on the one important statement that I wanted to include, that there was again a fraction of the people calle “Faithful”. And that would have fit probabaly better before the end of Eldarions regin is mentioned. But it is okay at the end as well, since I agree that the part about Gandalf feels out of sequence at the earlier placement.
Respectfully Findegil |
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#6 | |
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Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Tol Morwen
Posts: 380
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I have severe reservations about the 200+ year old Borlas, and I think this thread is giving way too much weight to the statement of Borlas' presence at the time of the fall of Barad-dur.
Not only is there no indication that Borlas or Beregond were of "pure" Numenorean ancestry, but even if they were, it would still make Borlas older than Aragorn! And Aragorn's longevity was in itself an exception to the rule (as Findegil has already mentioned), given that in Aragorn a bit of old Dunadan majesty was restored. So why would some (frankly) random Gondorian have a lifespan longer than Aragorn (or even Eldarion)? Nothing about this makes a lick of sense - not to mention that in the 1972 letter in which the c. FO 220 date appears, nothing whatsoever is said about Borlas or any character in the story for that matter. Which makes me think that we should remove the statement about Borlas being Beregond's son, as well as the mention of Borlas being alive during the fall of Barad-dur. Perhaps we could say that he was a descendant of Beregond? He could (and should) still be very old - old enough to at least be a child during the final years of Aragorn's reign.
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Last edited by Arvegil145; 09-04-2023 at 04:21 AM. |
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#7 | ||
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Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Tol Morwen
Posts: 380
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Also, what do you think about the possible inclusion of a c. 2,700 year Fourth Age?
I posted this in another forum, but here it is again: Quote:
So, if we take a normal human 'generation' to mean something like, say, 25 years - that would equate to c. 2,500 years. And if we take Eldarion's death to be c. FO 200, that means that the Fourth Age lasted for about 2,700 years - which checks out with Tolkien's hastening Ages.
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