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Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
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#1 |
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Pile O'Bones
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Having never read Smith I cannot post with much authority, but I do know what it is that moves me about the Silmarillion. It is the tragedy about it. The utter tragedy. So many noble figures, paragons of virtue that no mere mortals could aspire to be as (Finrod Felagund, for example. Or Beren), come to such bad ends. Even the tidings of hope are frought with sadness, such as Earëndil's coming into the West, but being never to retrun amongst Men, whom he loves, and following his wife into the "immortality" of the Firstborn. The Silmarillion is probably one of the overall most depressing reads ever, yet it to creates a sense of longing... I never know what it is I long for when I'm done reading it, I just know it's there.
"Their Oath shall drive them, and yet betray them, and ever snatch away the very treasures they have sworn to pursue." |
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#2 | ||
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Late Istar
Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 2,224
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Littlemanpoet wrote:
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I agree that Smith is not just a literary treatise. Still, I do think that in certain important respects it has the character of a meditation on the nature of fantasy literature, as opposed to a work of fantasy literature. I'm still very interested to hear where others come down in the Silmarillion vs. Smith issue. |
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#3 |
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Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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Thanks, Aiwendil, for the link.
I've scanned through it once, and I think that I haven't got near deep enough into the very packed segment of stuff in about as deep a thread as, at Barrowdowns, I've read.
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#4 | ||
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A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: under the bed
Posts: 4,737
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A few thoughts about the difference between the Sil and Smith...
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Thinking about the narrator idea, Smith has a lot more in common with LotR and The Hobbit than it does with The Sil; in both of those we journey into the new worlds alongside the major characters, even in the parts of LotR where we are not with Frodo, then he is very much on our minds as everything which is done is done for the success of his mission. In Smith we also journey with the main character. These books are more like tales, while The Sil is more like scripture, if that's the correct word to use! So I can see what lmp is getting at by thinking of Smith's faerie as another offshoot of Arda; the way we get there and the sensations we get from the place are very similar. But is it really part of Arda? I think it is like it, but it is another place.
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#5 | |||||
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Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 6,003
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So much to contemplate here and reply to! If I may, I shall begin at the beginning and see where the currents lead me.
littlemanpoet quotes from that most fascinating letter, # 131, Tolkien's very long explanation to Milton Waldman about not simply the interdependence of LotR and TheSilm but of the generation of Tolkien's habits of thought and creation. I have always wished that Carpenter had not expurgated the letter: knowledge that something has been left out has always made me curious. Not to say that Carpenter mispresented anything, of course. The absence makes me fonder! ![]() So much for my preamble. I am well aware that a goodly part of the discussion here at the Downs has been to consider this same question of the interdependence of Tolkien's works and the internal consistency of the Legendarium. Much jocularity has ensued, of the sort which I suspect Tolkien himself would highly approve. And of course I have approved also. Yet picking through for strands for inconsistencies and logical conundrums has never quite been my (tea) bag, any more than has the theme of defining Reality/reality or Truth/truth, perhaps in part because when we link Middle-earth (or Tolkien's sub-creation) too closely to the 'primary world'--our world--the whole delight of fairey begins to unravel. This quotation about the Numenorians is exactly a tempest in this particular (tea) pot. Quote:
I don't want Smith to be part of Silmarillion Arda because parts of it, when I view them in the harsh sunlight of my primary world, begin to fade. This is why I laugh so sardonically when I see elves joking that all men look alike, for that gives to the elves the sorry, blinkered, parochial, fearful perspective of the western world and all it must atone for. I want to stir through the loose leaves of Tolkien's fairey without some of the cultural baggage. I want to revere his appreciation of that space where imagination is whetted and explored for its own sake and benefit. I want it to remain, as Aiwendil has called it, Quote:
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But Aiwendil also posited a theory about Smith and The Silm. Quote:
It is very, very tempting to read Smith as an allegory of Tolkien's own experience as a writer of fairey. But I wonder if this is not a believed effect of the story's structure and conventions. (Is there any kind of admission in the Letters and if so, how is it to be taken? with lemon or sugar?) The Wootton Major story follows Smith's own personal experiences far more closely than The Silm follows the personal feelings of any of the elven characters of the Legendarium. Smith is a story of personal feeling and experience and as such it is closer to the kind of narrative that has held sway in our culture for the last two hundred years or so, "realistic fiction" which examined in psychological detail character's minds. It is tempting to relate this personal view of Smith with Tolkien, but what evidence do we have for equating Smith's experience with Tolkien's? Maybe we want to think this is Tolkien because we want to find some place where we are certain he speaks to us, the reader? We want to know him and so we resurrect him in those places of his fiction which give us a sense of intimacy with the character. The Silm on the other hand is written in a different kind of style, the style of ancient mythologies and hero legends. It has a distance from the kind of emotive feeling we have come to expect in fiction. Yet who is to say that Tolkien did not in fact create "himself" as an omniscient authority, speaking/writing a world into being but withdrawing from that world? Why do we not say, here is Tolkien the artist telling us about the artist's omnisicent control? From my personal perspective, The Silm never leaves me wanting more. Admittedly, I am a late comer to its appreciation and often early on used it encyclopedically rather than for its story value. I mined it, dwarven-like, but let us hope not so deeply as to raise balrogs. I keep harping on story as construct, as convention, as work of art which is intended to make us feel as if. Perhaps this is because every one of Tolkien's texts takes a different style, different form of narrator/narration. It is almost as if he explores in each tale a different kind of story form in early literature--all the kinds for which he hungered himself. Let's look back at Letter # 131. Quote:
But who knows. Perhaps because I am not especially anamoured of elves I can't appreciate the story told mainly from their point of view. Cuppa anyone?
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 05-08-2005 at 06:30 PM. Reason: scurge of the typos |
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#6 | |
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Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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Your insights, Lalwendë and Bethberry,
will require a second and third reading, without hurry, to sufficiently process their content. It will not be time mis-spent. Garnering quotes from the Letters, Here's Tolkien's thought on these matters. Quote:
At any rate, I've noticed that Tolkien refers to his myth in various ways. The Silmarillion is "a history" (unless that's Christopher's subtitle?), which fits, I guess, the sense of its biblicality. But there's more than that in The Sil; there's something in its lore that goes beyond, or at least otherwhere, so to speak. By contrast, LotR, is that rare thing (in our day at least), a heroic romance. What then of Smith? Not a myth? Sorry, no more rhymed verse. It's too difficult to find the right wording as it is. I notice that nowhere does Tolkien name what the story of Wootton's Smith is. A 'book' with bereavement weighted. The transition traverses both In and Out of Faery; for Alf dwells in Wootton, bringing Faery back to our(?) world while Smith of Wootton wanders wayward. Perhaps this cross-pollenation pertains to why its magic moves some of us wights.(?) Last edited by littlemanpoet; 05-08-2005 at 07:24 PM. |
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#7 |
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Illustrious Ulair
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties
Posts: 4,240
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Not sure where I'm going with this but...
Smith seems, on one level, to be a series of images, incredibly bright, colourful & intense, strung together with connecting narrative, rather like a 'necklace'. The 'storyline' seems less important than the images it contains. This thread was sparked by a single image - a scene illustrated by Pauline Baynes. In fact, I'd go so far as to ask how important Pauline Baynes illustrations are. My edition of Smith has those illustrations (& so does the upcoming Flieger edited edition I referred to earlier) & I have to admit that they are what first struck me about Smith (LMP's avatar is one for anyone who hasn't seen them). When I think of Smith it is those pictures that first come to mind - actually I remember little of the actual text itself, only the general storyline. I wonder about this. Hearing the BBC radio adaptation of Smith a few years back I remember feeling disappointed & it took me a while to work out why - the acting wasn't bad, the adatation (by Brian Sibley who had previously co-adapted the BBC LotR) was good, but it somehow wasn't the Smith that I know & loved. I realised later that it was the absence of Baynes' illustrations. Oh to see an animated version of Smith in that style! I'm beginning to wonder if it is the illustrations,not the text, of Smith that provide the real doorway into Faerie for me in terms of this story.' The one of the 'Eleven' Mariners', 'the one of Smith & Alf returning to the Great Hall', etc: these are 'Smith' to me. What I'm also beginning to wonder is whether the reason for this is that the pictures can stand alone, & thus, not necessarily being bound to the story Tolkien wrote, can spark the imagination, or open the mind & heart, to Faerie itself. I wonder if the 'split' between the 'Sils' & the 'Smiths' might have something to do with which edition of the text they have read - maybe those of us who have read the illustrated edition of Smith find it the more 'Faerielike' of the two, & I wonder how much Pauline Baynes work has to do with that. (Waits for loads of people to say they prefer Smith even though they've never seen the illustrations....) |
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