A marathon of stories without women except for one shieldmaiden, an elf who had to be written in from the footnotes and a walk-on part for the elf queen.
Yeah, without women, except for one of the most badass female characters ever created.

A marathon of stories without women except for one shieldmaiden, an elf who had to be written in from the footnotes and a walk-on part for the elf queen.
A marathon of stories without women except for one shieldmaiden, an elf who had to be written in from the footnotes and a walk-on part for the elf queen.
Yeah, without women, except for one of the most badass female characters ever created.![]()
And since we're talking about the Hobbit here, y'know all those wonderful stills of the dwarves and all the other cool pics of wizards and hobbits and elves? Just have a look at them all again and tell me if there isn't something strange about tales of Middle Earth.
Two words: Boy Bands.I honestly have never heard even the faintest whisper of concern on this matter. Wouldn't you think that there'd be a considerably smaller number of female fans if there was something "strange" about the small number of female characters?
was Pipe-weed that "funny weed"
While it is called "tobacco" in The Hobbit and The Two Towers, pipeweed can't be tobacco because tobacco isn't native to northern Europe, and Middle-Earth was intended by Tolkien as a pre-historical Europe.was Pipe-weed that "funny weed"
In the films? Maybe.
In the books? No - it was called "nicotiana", meaning tobacco.
If they can have potatoes in Middle-earth (which IRL weren't introduced into Europe until the 1500s), why not tobacco? Maybe the Númenóreans brought some foreign crops to Middle-earth when they were colonizing it in the Second Age.While it is called "tobacco" in The Hobbit and The Two Towers, pipeweed can't be tobacco because tobacco isn't native to northern Europe, and Middle-Earth was intended by Tolkien as a pre-historical Europe.In the films? Maybe.was Pipe-weed that "funny weed"
In the books? No - it was called "nicotiana", meaning tobacco.
So "tobacco" is probably a mistranslation from Westron.
Or, it's an anachronistic mistranslation of the Red Book.If they can have potatoes in Middle-earth (which IRL weren't introduced into Europe until the 1500s), why not tobacco? Maybe the Númenóreans brought some foreign crops to Middle-earth when they were colonizing it in the Second Age.
For instance, there's a reference to trains in the first chapter of The Fellowship of the Rings
Hanukkah Solo said:Maybe the Númenóreans brought some foreign crops to Middle-earth when they were colonizing it in the Second Age.
FOTR said:'All the same, observations that I have made on my own many journeys south have convinced me that the weed itself is not native to our part of the world, but came northward from the lower Anduin, whither it was, I suspect, originally brought over Sea by the Men of Westernesse.'
I do mean Fellowship of the Ring, thanks for correcting me. I typed too fast.For instance, there's a reference to trains in the first chapter of The Fellowship of the Rings
If you mean The Fellowship of the Ring...
No, there isn't.
The lights went out. A great smoke went up. It shaped itself like a mountain seen in the distance, and began to glow at the summit. It spouted green and scarlet flames. Out flew a red-golden dragon -- not life-size, but terribly life-like: fire came from his jaws, his eyes glared down; there was a roar, and he whizzed three times over the head of the crowd. They all ducked, and many fell flat on their faces. The dragon passed like an express train, turned a somersault, and burst over Bywater with a deafening explosion.
But, he did like to watch the trains after smokin' the Pipe-WeedThere's a difference between a simile referencing something anachronistic, which isn't actually present except as metaphor, and a direct reference to something which is actually there. Tolkien doesn't say that pipe-weed is like tobacco, just as he does not say "Bilbo liked to sit and watch the express trains go by".
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