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Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
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#18 | |
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Dead Serious
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Quote:
[EDIT]It just occurred to me that one could also associate the image of the "religious dragon" with various scriptural writings. I believe the Book of Daniel and Revelation have "dragons" of sorts in them--though I'm not sure that the term is actually used in both cases. These "dragons" however, are very different in conception and description from the classic western European conception exemplified in Smaug and others, other than being the biggest and most fearsome of beasts.[/edit] However, as we see with Smaug and Glaurung, Tolkien was fascinated by DRAGONS. And with those examples, certainly, we are seeing dragons in the normal pattern of dragons. But with Chyrsophylax especially, and with Smaug nextmost, I think we're seeing Tolkien's childlike fascination with "green, great dragons". And, personally, I think a lot of us find dragons fascinating for much the same reasons; these big, scaly, independent, fire-breathing, enigmatic, vainglorious flying dinosaurs are simply cool. And since I would say that Farmer Giles is an explicitly more lighthearted adventure, told for the fun and not for any epic purpose, it seems right that Tolkien allows the coolest character in the book to survive.
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Last edited by Formendacil; 05-30-2007 at 04:31 PM. |
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