I felt like that after my first breakup.He is instead doomed to drift, aimless and powerless until the end of time.

I felt like that after my first breakup.He is instead doomed to drift, aimless and powerless until the end of time.
At least it's not "All Around The Watchtower".Except that the Red Book of Westmarch is then difficult to explain away.![]()
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arda_(Tolkien)After the destruction of Númenor, Arda was made round. Aman was taken out of the world, and could only be reached by the Elves, following the straight road that was granted to them. As Aman was taken away from Arda, new lands and continents were created east and west of Middle-earth.
Maybe I'm missing something here, but if Middle Earth is supposed to be flat, whereas our Earth is obviously not, then...how'd they fix that?![]()
I mean that the period the books are set in May pre-date the advent of modern humans in the real world.^Then, what? The "men" in the books were dinosaurs or something?
Melkor was cast out into the Void, where he can no longer enter or affect Middle Earth.Melkor could make a comeback though and he was always a much more substantial threat the Sauron ever was.
Indeed.Best not to put too much thought into it, it is meant to be fantasy after all and so far as I can recall, the intent wasn't to propose an alternate history of the real world so much as to propose an alternate folklore history.
I think that its was more the loss of Anglo-Saxon folklore that he was trying to address, which he blamed on the subjugation of the native English population by the Normans after 1066, although it's likely much was never written down anyway and was only passed on by oral tradition. The Welsh, Scots and Irish have a very rich folklore comparatively -- for example, the Mabinogion and the Mythological and Fenian Cycles. The Normans didn't seem to destroy their culture (as much) when they got round to subjugating them. All that remains of Anglo-Saxon literature is not much more than the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and Beowulf plus a few fragments of other important poems such as The Battle of Maldon and The Battle of Brunanburh, which don't feature pagan mythology.I think I read somewhere that Tolkien often lamented the loss of the old southern Britonic and Celtic cultural folklore and tribal traditions that were almost entirely erased over the course of the various conquests & waves of colonisation from the continent, starting with the Romans and ending with the Germanic Angles & Saxons. So the stories of Middle Earth were meant to fill that gap, which is why it's so British and Euro-centric by design.
That would have been bananas! I can only imagine the masses of audience members who have no idea Middle-earth is theoretically our own world just writhing in their seats in discomfort!What might have been interesting if Middle-Earth is our Earth in the distant past is that during the time lapse scene from I want to say 'Return of the King' where Arwen is imagining what life will be like with Aragorn and it shows her by his tomb at various periods, if the last scene had been her standing in a street in our time, supposedly on the site of his tomb, surrounded by cars and other modern things.
Yup. Geoffrey of Monmouth, an influential 12th Century British historian, outright stated in his Historia regum Britanniae (The History of the Kings of Britain) that Britain was founded by a grandson of the Trojan refugee Aeneas. To nitpick Tolkien's saga with regards to what we know of human early/pre-history is to miss the point.Best not to put too much thought into it, it is meant to be fantasy after all and so far as I can recall, the intent wasn't to propose an alternate history of the real world so much as to propose an alternate folklore history.
Until I read your reply I always thought the scene (which was in The Two Towers NOT Return of the King as I erroneously said, my bad sorry about that), was for our benefit, but when you explained it, of course it was for hers and we just saw it toThat would have been bananas! I can only imagine the masses of audience members who have no idea Middle-earth is theoretically our own world just writhing in their seats in discomfort!As mind-blowing as it would have been, though, I'm glad it wasn't. After all, why would Arwen imagine our present technology? That'd make her one hell of an oracle.
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I was born and raised not twenty miles from Geoffrey's old 'stomping grounds' and we frequently visited the area when I was growing up on Sunday afternoons in the spring & summer in our car. It has beautiful countryside there and the surrounding area. If you've never been/can't go look it up on Google Street ViewYup. Geoffrey of Monmouth, an influential 12th Century British historian, outright stated in his Historia regum Britanniae (The History of the Kings of Britain) that Britain was founded by a grandson of the Trojan refugee Aeneas. To nitpick Tolkien's saga with regards to what we know of human early/pre-history is to miss the point.
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