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#1 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,036
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#2 | |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 276
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As for the Elessar if Gandalf had brought it in the 3rd Age then Galadriel would have had no use of it. From the way Earendil used the Elessar, it seems to me like it had similar powers to the Silmarillion. They were similar in design. The Elessar captured the light of the corrupted sun, but the Silmarillions were not only superior in make but had the pure uncorrupted light. |
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#3 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,036
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But that alone doesn't necessarily mean that two competing [and never published by Tolkien himself] versions of the history of Dol Amroth, despite that both can be connected in some way to this legend, are intended to be two, purposeful variations within the subcreated world. |
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#4 | ||
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 276
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3,000 years is a long time and lots of lore had been lost in Gondor. Quote:
Without the gift of Numenor (a land freed from Morgoth's taint and blessed by the Valar) the Numenoreans would never reach that height again no matter how pure or loyal they were. |
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#5 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 1,036
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The use of quotation marks ['traditions'] by Christopher Tolkien is interesting here: does he mean he thinks they are internal, or that they are different traditions, full stop, even if they might be intended as in-story traditions? We've no way of knowing that at the moment... ... but in any case even Christopher Tolkien cannot be sure here. |
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#6 |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Feb 2014
Posts: 430
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I've refreshed my reading on the Elessar, after having read materials here on thread as well, found that eye opening, because I also discovered why memory encoding tends to go the way it does, by looking at materials here and books at hand. And comparing.
For the Elessar version as: Olorin chatting to Galadriel in the woods, and Olorin bringing back an item for her from the West--after an obscure name we'll never hear anywhere else 'Enerdhil' made it FA and when it passed away. Where has that occurred elsewhere (artefact return from Valinor), post FA, except for the Palantiri and for very special reason, on Numenor, nigh to the Uttermost West and for comms. The competing version has the difficult notion of Celebrimbor in Gondolin. And the idea of a second making is, um, okay-ish in my sense. The courtship jewell for Galadriel. I found some other items, on an aside very interesting. The idea that Melkor is somehow 'affecting' the sun from the Void! And, perhaps, that was what Tolkien meant by the change in Middle Earth and lessening of Elves and Men and the Dunedain over time? --and--there was reference to the Elessar somehow being exempt of the taint of the One (Ring) because it was made before it! WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? There is another in-text item I cannot square. As noted above by another poster: how or why does Arwen get the jewel (or rights to it) through Celebrian? Then I got wondering if the Elessar (doing greening/revival things) had that kind of 'radiance' effect in Gondor, upon the Dunedain of Isildur. Does this mean that Aragorn's realm was kinda being preserved longer? What of the influence on the White Tree? Did the sapling sprout because Aragorn arrived with the Elessar? And how did Gandalf know to look at Mindoluin for the new sapling? |
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#7 | |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 276
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I don't think it's any great mystery as to why Arwen would inherit the jewel through her mother. Once Galadriel had use of her Ring, she would not need the Elessar so why not pass it to her daughter. Morgoth's corruption of Middle Earth was something he did before being forced into the void and is precisely why everything outside Aman is not quite what it once was. Black magic is drawing out the essence of Morgoth to perform 'magic' and is the only kind of magic men seem to be able to use. During Aragorn's reign Gondor was greener and more beautiful than ever so it probably did. It probably not only renewed and revitalized the flora, but also the people. I imagine there was a great baby boom during the early part of his reign. Of course Aragorn would not have the power Galadriel, let alone Earendil had with the jewel. |
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#8 | ||||
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Feb 2014
Posts: 430
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![]() Yeah, could be--or perhaps Gandalf was (present) when the seed was planted? I'm imagining he had his eye on that ole tree? And maybe chatted to the then realmsmen to plant the seed for a rainy day. I wonder if he knew about when/why Galathilion bore a fruit. He was, after all, around when Telperion made a seed, and no doubt, this would have been one of those 'dinner table conversations' for Valinor. Some appreciation of the when, where and why the tree propagates may have been known to him, as the Maia he is. Quote:
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and Pukel Men magic (there are some citations I have that refer to untainted protective 'stone magic' of Pukel Men). Quote:
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#9 | |||||
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 276
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However, the biggest and main factor was that Numenor was free from the taint of Morgoth.The Numnoreans were living in a virtually Morgoth free environment unlike those of Gondor. This is something they could never get back. That being said I think you are right in some part and for a little one while the people of Gondor may have enjoyed a small renaissance in longevity. We know that Faramir is the longest lived Steward since Mardil, but this is still only 120 and a far cry from the days of Elros. I would imagine that other noble families may have started reaching 100 on a regular basis, but nothing close to the Gondorians of old let alone those of Elros' day. Eomer for instance only reached 90. |
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#10 | ||
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Feb 2014
Posts: 430
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But--Celebrian would have needed to have been in Middle Earth when Aragorn was about 50 (unless she smelled out Arwen and Aragorn much sooner, when Aragorn was "newly to manhood", i.e. about 21? in Rivendell when he called Arwen 'Tinuviel'. I'm not sure she was--or was she? About Numenorean 'magic'. I read somewhere it wasn't 'elfy magic' but a variant, was it about 'Lore' that I recall, versus a magick-y word. The contrast really stuck with me at the time, as it opened up a dimension about magical expression in Middle Earth I had not ever fathomed. But for the life of me, do you think I have ever been able to find the citation--ever--again and not for having tried! Does anyone know this material, here? (I might start a thread) ![]() |
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#11 | |
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Feb 2014
Posts: 430
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The Elessar, as I read it, also 'filters out' the taint of Morgoth in that influence upon the sun. I wonder what this meant for Gondorian citizens under its radiance. Galadriel used it as a lesser power to Nenya for the same reason. Add in that stuff about it being 'free of the One' and you have a pretty impressive Elf Stone... |
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