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01-21-2003, 04:17 AM | #1 |
Blithe Spirit
Join Date: Jan 2003
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Who buries Arwen?
After Aragorn dies, Arwen goes to Lorien, lays herself upon Cerin Amroth and dies. We are told that Lorien is now deserted. However, subsequently we are told about Arwen's grave. Who dug it and marked it?
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01-21-2003, 08:13 AM | #2 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I don't think Tolkien literally meant 'grave', as in she was buried six feet under, but that it was her final resting place/deathbed.
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01-21-2003, 12:56 PM | #3 |
Corpus Cacophonous
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Maybe she had handmaidens (perhaps a heriditary role, as she would have outlived the originals) whose last duty to her was to lay her to rest?
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01-21-2003, 01:31 PM | #4 |
Beholder of the Mists
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Interesting question, I never thought of that, I would think it could be handmadiens, but the story of Arwen's death was so brief that maybe Tolkien never put that much detail into it.
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01-21-2003, 03:20 PM | #5 |
Blithe Spirit
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I just don't like the idea of the poor woman rotting on a hillside as meat for carrion. And I don't think Tolkien would either. Maybe there were still some Silvan elves around in the area, even though Celeborn had gone.
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01-21-2003, 03:24 PM | #6 |
Wight
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I hold with Inderjit Sanghera. Grave = final resting place. I remember the glossaries speaking of a grassy hill that marks her grave... perhaps I'm coming up with that on my own. A grassy hill could form over her body, of course.
Though maybe elves don't rot...? -'Vana
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01-21-2003, 03:54 PM | #7 |
Blithe Spirit
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Ah, but she wasn't an elf anymore, was she?
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01-21-2003, 04:04 PM | #8 |
Haunting Spirit
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did tinuviel (sp?) become a human? did arwen? me thinks not.they only chosea mortal life, to meet their loved ones outside the circles of the world.
please correct me if i'm wrong.
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01-21-2003, 04:53 PM | #9 |
Wight
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I agree. Arwen didn't stop being an elf, or actually half-elven to be precise. Like all half-elven, she was given a choice between man's ultimate fate or elves'.
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01-22-2003, 03:30 AM | #10 |
Delver in the Deep
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My first reaction was that a kind-hearted passerby did it, either digging a grave or raising a cairn (I can't recall which would be more applicable to an elf, probably a cairn). But I now think not. If a cairn or something had been built for her, doubtless this would have been mentioned, maybe even referred to as standing there to this day. Final resting places are often described in detail by Tolkien - Helm, Snowmane, Elendil, Fingolfin, Finduilas.
I think that the lack of a description of Arwen's grave/cairn/howe/barrow/whatever must mean that there was none. She received no burial. I agree with Lalaith that her fate would not be to be devoured by hungry animals (who are only filling their niche in the ecosystem, and shouldn't be unfairly judged!). I think that either the place was so hallowed that no scavenger would come near her for many years afterwards (remember animals have a good sixth sense), or that she disappeared like Saruman, Fëanor or Obi-Wan Kenobi.
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01-22-2003, 04:25 AM | #11 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Yes, Luthein and Arwen forsook their immortaility, and became human. They passed to beyond the circles of the world. I think I remember reading that Arwen's body went untouched since her death.
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01-22-2003, 05:15 AM | #12 | |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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The tale of Aragorn and Arwen, like the rest of The Lord of the Rings, is presented as part of the Red Book of Westmarch. The end of the Tale of Aragorn and Arwen reads thus:
Quote:
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01-22-2003, 05:32 AM | #13 |
Wight
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The hill of Cerin Amroth was hallowed long before Arwen kicked the bucket. Her death may have been inglorious, but I've always been of the impression that she quite literally lay down to sleep, and did. As for whether she became human, the answer is no. She decided to have her spirit judged with men, but her flesh could not be changed by any act short of a direct intervention of Iluvatar. After she died she was judged as mortal and her spirit left the confines of Arda to seek after her hubby.
As for her grave, I've always imagined that she lay there for a time, untouched, and eventually a hill formed over her in the same way a mound formed over the fallen bodies of the Battle of Unnumbered Tears in the Silmarillion.
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01-23-2003, 02:20 AM | #14 |
The Perished Flame
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It's actually not the body that determines whether one is Elf or Man, it's the fea. Elves' feas are so much stronger than Men's that they prevent the body from aging and sickening. The bodies are the same for Elf and Man, that's how they can produce viable offspring.
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01-23-2003, 04:28 AM | #15 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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The Elvish hroa is stronger then the Human hroa. It needs to be, to support the stronger Elvish fea. The early Elves could not support their strong fea ,due to the weakness of their hroa, which was said to be like Man's hroa.
[ January 23, 2003: Message edited by: Inderjit Sanghera ]
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01-23-2003, 06:38 AM | #16 |
Wight
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That's right, the Hroa of Elves and Men were definitely different. Part of the distinct difference between the lives of men and elves can be traced to the nature of their fea(r) (how does one put an oumlaut over the E?.) But their bodies were different. Each life in M.E. (for the eruhini at least) was a marriage between fea and hroa unlike any other, and only a body for the elves could sustain their fea.
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01-23-2003, 07:36 AM | #17 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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I agree with Joe. The elven bodies did not change. The were just treated as mortals, and Elves no longer.
And, Joe, to make the ë like in my name Fëaelenawen, hold down Alt and then type 137 on the number pad. Alt and the numbers should both be held down at the same time. Then you get this: ë -Fëa
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01-23-2003, 07:40 AM | #18 |
Wight
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▒
Edit: That doesn't look quite right. ë There it is... [ January 23, 2003: Message edited by: Ultimatejoe ]
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01-23-2003, 08:16 AM | #19 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I figure that the Hroa of men was severly weakned after their rebellion. Though, I wonder if the Numenoreans had a hroa equal to early pre-fallen man?
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01-23-2003, 09:20 AM | #20 |
Wight
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Which rebellion are you referring to?
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01-23-2003, 01:14 PM | #21 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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The first 'rebellion' (I'm sorry I really couldn't think of a better word)or fall, is described in the 'Athrabeth Finrod Ah Andreth' in Morgoth's Ring HoME 10. In it, men were wooed by Melkor, and Eru said that their Hroa would be weakned so that their Fea would come to him quicker and admit that he was god, not Melkor.
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“If I’m more of an influence on your son as a rapper then you are as a father then you've got to look at yourself as a parent” ~>Ice Cube. "Life is so beautiful"->Don Vito Corleone |
01-23-2003, 04:27 PM | #22 |
Haunting Spirit
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did anyone one else pick up on this, but arwen and aragorn are related?
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01-23-2003, 04:50 PM | #23 |
Wight
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They are seperated by several dozen generations!
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01-23-2003, 04:56 PM | #24 |
Haunting Spirit
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so, they are still related. and besides, i didn't say that was a bad thing, a except for they were both descendants of the same person.
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01-23-2003, 08:54 PM | #25 | ||
Corpus Cacophonous
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Quote:
Quote:
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01-23-2003, 09:20 PM | #26 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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I always envisioned her disappeared the way Jedi do in Star Wars.
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01-27-2003, 11:28 AM | #27 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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"Wasn't Melkor Morgoth by the time Men awoke?"
No, not in the Athrabeth, because he could change his shape, and it is proable that in this tale the fall of man was put to a much earlier time, before Melkor's chaining.
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01-28-2003, 12:36 AM | #28 |
Wight
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My impression is that Lothlorien was only mostly deserted, not completely, and that the few lingering Galathrim there reported her ultimate demise, and saw to the burial of the body.
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The hoes unrecked in the fields were flung, __ and fallen ladders in the long grass lay __ of the lush orchards; every tree there turned __ its tangled head and eyed them secretly, __ and the ears listened of the nodding grasses; __ though noontide glowed on land and leaf, __ their limbs were chilled. |
01-28-2003, 08:13 AM | #29 |
Wight
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The language used throughout indicates that Lothlorien is completely abandoned.
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01-28-2003, 08:25 AM | #30 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Even if it wasn't abandoned (Though I believe it was) the Elves would've faded and have been left impotent, though these Elves would ahve been friendlier then the faded Avari and they problably would not have tried to take anyones body.
[ January 28, 2003: Message edited by: Inderjit Sanghera ]
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“If I’m more of an influence on your son as a rapper then you are as a father then you've got to look at yourself as a parent” ~>Ice Cube. "Life is so beautiful"->Don Vito Corleone |
02-01-2003, 04:26 PM | #31 |
Wight
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In the "Tale of Aragorn and Arwen," RotK, App. A, I(v), it is said that her "green grave" is at Cerin Amroth until the world is changed.
In Appendix B, and I quote: "In the Greenwood the Silvan Elves remained untroubled, but in Lórien there lingered sadly only a few of its former people," (emphasis added). I think this is simply a matter of "putting '2 & 2' together." If you please, folks!
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The hoes unrecked in the fields were flung, __ and fallen ladders in the long grass lay __ of the lush orchards; every tree there turned __ its tangled head and eyed them secretly, __ and the ears listened of the nodding grasses; __ though noontide glowed on land and leaf, __ their limbs were chilled. |
02-01-2003, 04:52 PM | #32 |
Wight
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There are no dates for that passage.
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02-01-2003, 11:29 PM | #33 |
Wight
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Dates?
I suppose not; the narrative in Appendix B is not precisely delimited in terms of the exact period to which that description specifically applies. Still, it is a description of how things generally were in the aftermath of the War of the Rings. The context and the point of making the statement is to describe the situation in the early part of the Fourth Age. It would be ridiculous to assume that it became that way instantly. So, at least a few decades went by before most Lórien Elves had either removed to East Lórien (as many may have wanted to do out of sadness for the passing of the Lady and for new challenges and surroundings) or went over the Sea, as many, if not almost all, Lórien Elves were Eldar of Beleriandic or Nandorin origin. But what would be the point of making such a statement if it described matters for only a few year's time? So, it must have been an accurate description for how things prevailed until the end of what is said about the days of old, or at least the 120-some years into the Fourth Age before Arwen died, which was certainly reported somehow to Barahir Prince of Ithilien and no doubt her children, and that description of relative elvish populations should certainly have been the case for at least a few hundred years, until presumably the last Eldarin ships left Middle-Earth.
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The hoes unrecked in the fields were flung, __ and fallen ladders in the long grass lay __ of the lush orchards; every tree there turned __ its tangled head and eyed them secretly, __ and the ears listened of the nodding grasses; __ though noontide glowed on land and leaf, __ their limbs were chilled. |
02-02-2003, 03:51 AM | #34 |
Animated Skeleton
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Funny, I always thought there was some sort of dwelling on Cerin Amroth even before I read that Arwen laid herself down to 'sleep' right there. I don't know if her body is still there (though that would make sense even if she was an elf, I mean, the bodies of dead elves were used by Morgoth and Sauron as battle standards, right?) in some room or buried on the mound itself.
I will check it out once I get my books back. [img]smilies/tongue.gif[/img]
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02-02-2003, 11:53 AM | #35 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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As far as I know, only Celebrimbor's body was used as a battle standard, and that was by Sauron.
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02-04-2003, 10:21 PM | #36 |
Candle of the Marshes
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I've probably forgotten something that was written to the contrary, but what about her children? She went to Lorien alone, but there's no saying that they couldn't have come to her later on; like Aragorn, she probably had a good inkling of when it was that she would die and may even have told them ahead of time, so they could see to her body. It's hard to picture her children just leaving her body to whomever still happened to be in the area at the time.
She may not have wanted anyone with her when she withdrew to die, but that doesn't mean that her children couldn't have come to her after the event. Just a thought.
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02-05-2003, 01:55 AM | #37 |
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I've always felt sad about Arwen's death also, that she dies ("lays herself to rest")alone at Cerin Amroth, choosing to return to the place where she and Aragorn were betrothed, rather than stay with her family and eventually be buried with Aragorn. She says farewell to her children, so perhaps they knew where she was going, especially as the story survived "in the South" (i.e. Gondor) to be recorded and passed down. Tolkien tells us in the Appendix that "there is her green grave," so I take it to be a an actual grave or burial place.
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02-05-2003, 05:39 AM | #38 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Or maybe her 'grave' was a sacred place, like Elendil's and only her desendants could visit it?
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“If I’m more of an influence on your son as a rapper then you are as a father then you've got to look at yourself as a parent” ~>Ice Cube. "Life is so beautiful"->Don Vito Corleone |
02-09-2003, 01:06 PM | #39 | |
Wight
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Quote:
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The hoes unrecked in the fields were flung, __ and fallen ladders in the long grass lay __ of the lush orchards; every tree there turned __ its tangled head and eyed them secretly, __ and the ears listened of the nodding grasses; __ though noontide glowed on land and leaf, __ their limbs were chilled. |
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02-27-2003, 04:37 PM | #40 |
Wight
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I recall in the Silmarrilion that one Elf whose name I cannot remember died, and her body was laid in Lorien(in Aman), undecaying but nevertheless extremely dead. It seems the poetic thing to assume that this happened to Arwen.
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