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#6 | |
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Stormdancer of Doom
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Allegory specter? It doesn't look that way to me at all. Allegory is one-to-one correspondence of character to character, and I don't see that in the author's introduction to the book. The review, maybe, but not the author's introduction.
I agree that the genuflection thing in the review (Aragorn at Boromir's death ) is a bit of a stretch, but I can see how many Catholics would immmediately associate the two. Regarding the "Christian Humanism" thing, this definition from the introduction clarifies the author's use of the phrase for me: Quote:
For a mystical Catholic such as Tolkien, fire naturally comes to represent the Holy Spirit, and all references to fire will be examined in that light-- is this a foreshadowing of the Holy Spirit? Likewise, water. I certainly agree that all myths regarding water were not written by Christians. However, if a mystically-oriented Christian takes Tolkien's mindset that all myths point toward the Gospel, then that Christian will consider many, many myths about water, and wonder "Is this a foreshadowing of The Holy Spirit?" If all truths point to the supreme Truth, and that Truth is the gospel, then a Christian would expect many, many truths to foreshadow it. And that was Tolkien's point of view, as I understand it, from reading "On Fairy Stories", and from what I have gathered in his letters, and from an article detailing parts of his conversation with C. S. Lewis. I'm seriously considering ordering the book; after reading the introduction (Thanks Pat!) it seems quite worthwhile to me.
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...down to the water to see the elves dance and sing upon the midsummer's eve. |
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