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08-20-2003, 02:51 PM | #81 |
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Well, maybe I know older songs, but that's all I could think of at the moment. My point was that songs that don't mean anything, as far as most people can tell, are usually the most recognized by the most people, and among the oldest that most people will know.
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08-22-2003, 11:36 AM | #82 |
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hey I think that Tom being silly has more to do with why he was not chosen to guard the ring.... And yes sillyness gets me through some hard times. So I think that Tom could have used silly and wimsical songs to keep him afloat as his world shrank.
As for Goldberry I have no idea. And as we all should know 'ring around the roses' is a song that came about during or after the black plauge. A silly and wimsical song if ther ever was one. The song that I remeber singing alot was 'Jesus loves me'...
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09-03-2003, 04:02 PM | #83 |
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Burrahobbit's "theory" has one fatal, if perhaps somewhat elusive flaw – the equation of "songs" with the Ainulindale, and the conclusion that Tom, knowing all such "songs", necessarily has to have full understanding of the Music.
However, the real nature of the Ainulindale is such that we cannot associate it with such degree of certainty and in such bold interpretation with Tom. The Ainulindale came from the Ainur, and Eru. We do know that the Ainur were given a vision of Eä, their Music put into being; however, we also know this was incomplete. This is one reason why no Ainu, not even Manwe, would have complete knowledge of the Music; the other reason is that Eru brought in themes which are solely his (sc. the Children and others, depending on how meaning is attributed to the Themes, cf. HoME X, I). These were not then understood by the Ainur, and, as can be assumed with great certainty, Eru might have presented aspects of the Themes not perceived by the listeners, or Eru might still add to the Music afterwards, since that was certainly in his power (cf. Athrabeth). Burrahobbit circumvened this problem of the Ainur's incomplete knowledge of the Music by making Tom not an Ainu, but Eä itself. As I have argued above long ago (though apparently not convincingly or strikingly enough), Eä is itself only creation and therefore can not only not be assumed to have a full understanding of itself at any time of its existance, but it also cannot be plausible that there could be a perfect simulacrum of itself in itself; in a very peculiar, fixed form (Tom) on top of that. A painting neither knows how it was painted, nor knows how it looks to the beholder; nor is music able to comprehend itself. If, however, we are to make Eä a completely different case, not applicable to those comparisons, we are still faced with the difficulty that Eru the One alone and solely possesses full knowledge and understanding of all the the themes of the Music, especially since it is still unfolding, and gradually and perpetually so. Eä, while a finite thing by necessity (cf. Athrabeth), can in its vast boundaries of space and time and drama only be comprehended, more importantly, only be mastered by Eru the Creator alone, as only he can know how and what it is, and how it is going to unfold. (Furthermore, Tom does not, when tempted by the Ring and the Barrow-Wight, show any sign of corruption, even though we know that Arda, and thus an important part of Eä [even more so with the image prevalent at the time of the writing of the Lord of the Rings that the globe of Arda was pretty much all there was to Eä] was marred. "Arda umarred does not exist." (MT VII). That Tom, if he was to be, represent, or, as a matter of fact, even be within Eä, would have to show at least signs of Marring [though not necessarily at the above mentioned occassions] is evident from the following: "[Melkor] had introduced evil […] into all physical matter of Arda" (Athrabeth commentary). "Latent evil" would have been "roused" by "evil minds" (ibid.) such as the Ring or the Barrow-Wight. Of course, we cannot say whether Tom is marred, flawed or corrupted or not on the textual basis concerning him, but the texts we have are a firm pointer in the firection that aids my argumentation.) Therefore, Tom cannot be Eä, and we know Tom is not Eru. Tom cannot be master of the Music, and cannot "know" all songs of the Ainulindale. On a scientific scale, the absence of Tom from all philosophical or cosmogonical writings of Tolkien only further disproves any interpretation of Tom beyond the old "spirit of the vanishing Oxford countryside", which did not exist until much later ages. About Tom not as Eä as a whole, but as a mere representation of it, I have said all there is to it in my post near the beginning of this very thread. All parts of Eä, however small or great, evil or glorious are representations of Eä, the end of which is always to add to its greatness as a praise unto its creator. Tom may be, but Eä is, and Tom is not Eä. |
09-03-2003, 04:55 PM | #84 |
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Mondieu Burrahobbit, it's like a riddle that once you know the answer it is so obvious. You've convinced me of your theory, I never really thought he could have been a Maiar anyway. You did an impressive amount of research for all this, all I can say is "Wow!"
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09-03-2003, 05:07 PM | #85 |
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(Sorry, edit button isn't working)
Sharku, what you say makes sense too, but it's missing something... Like I said above, what burrahobbit says just clicks and makes sense to me, however I may be wrong. These questions that are not answered in Tolkiens books, probably can't be answered at all. Tom may be just a representation of some aspect of Tolkien's personal life, no one knows, and if they do, they haven't said anthing. So, because no one knows for sure, I will side with burrahobbit because that's what fits the best to me. It's almost like religious faith really.
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09-04-2003, 05:39 AM | #86 | |
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09-04-2003, 05:56 AM | #87 |
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umm... next paragraph?
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09-04-2003, 06:51 AM | #88 |
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Yes, if Tom was the physical representation of Eä, then it follows that he, like Eä, would be partially marred. But isn't this true of any theory which involves Tom being part of Arda? If he was of Arda, like Elves, Men, Ents and the like, then he was tainted by the marring of Arda. If it is the case that Tom was not marred in any way, then this can only mean that he originated outside Arda. If it is not, then burra's theory holds.
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09-04-2003, 07:05 AM | #89 |
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My point about the Marring, in the post already given in meaningful parenthesis, only becomes truly valid when you make the simple mental realization that Tom, if he were Eä, would not simply be marred to the degree other inhabitants are, but incorporate all Marring and the Marrer itself. I cannot see that.
I, perhaps too obliquely, implied the possibility of Tom being outside of the whole matter when I said " if he was to be, represent, or, as a matter of fact, even be within Eä" and hinted on the old Tolkien quote of the Oxford countryside, which is very clearly not a work of his fiction and thusly not of Eä. |
09-04-2003, 07:41 AM | #90 | ||
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Also, I do not see that it follows that if Tom were the representation of Eä he would necessarily have to incorporate all of its inhabitants, including "the Marrer itself". Quote:
[ September 04, 2003: Message edited by: The Saucepan Man ]
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09-04-2003, 08:04 AM | #91 |
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Yes, S, on the incomplete nature of the potential self-knowledge in question, I have seen and understood your logic. My point was based as I said, purely on that which I quoted, that created matter cannot be fully aware of itself. Inclined to a slight degree though I am to agree with that, it is a fairly bold statement, paticularly in (what is for me) an atheistic mode of enquiry.
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09-04-2003, 08:11 AM | #92 |
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Of course there is a difference, since, while all physical matter was marred, not all and everybody was marred to the same degree. Unlike relatively pure Quendi, Bombadil would in this theory have to incorporate all the other stuff as well.
I did not say a representation of Eä would have to be all that, but Eä itself. The representation idea is not explaining anything anyway. Of course we are not discussing the significance of Bombadil on any level, literary or mythological. No matter what or who he is, it is bound to be a wholly different question, one I am not remotely interest in, what that means. |
09-04-2003, 08:56 AM | #93 |
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As Sharkû has mentioned, the statement “Tom is Eä or an embodiment thereof” doesn’t have much meaning. Eä is Eä. Tom is Tom. How can Tom be “the earth” or “the material universe”? And if he’s an “embodiment” of it only, again what does that mean? As the Old Man has stated, this may be said in some sense of all things: “For dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.” (Gen 3:19) There are river spirits, mountain spirits, tree spirits, rock spirits (apparently – c.f. Rimb’s reference to rock memories) – where does a generalized “embodiment of Eä” fit in to all this? What aspects of Eä does he personify?
In any case, I would add these few items which seem problematic for the theory, such as it is:
[ September 04, 2003: Message edited by: Mister Underhill ] |
09-04-2003, 09:24 AM | #94 |
Shade of Carn Dûm
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I still think that he is a creation that is pure. His sillyness may have been a way to keep him afloat with willfull nievity, or just part of his nature. Other than that I am baffled. I mean Tom probably would have some sourt of power over the ring but since the ring has no power over him he sees no need to do anything with it. He is only concerned with those lives within his shrinking land. He is powerfull ,though; you have to give him that. He was able with out the slightest problem to get rid of the Barrow Wight, without even flinching. So there is power in him as a created beeing.
It is hard to pin any explination on him as Tolkien doesn't even tell us much in his letters or anything else for that matter. I think Bombadil will forever be a mystery.
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09-04-2003, 09:33 AM | #95 | ||||
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If we were to determine from Tom's depiction in the books that he is marred, then that would be consistent with burra's theory of Bombadil as the embodiment of Eä. It would also be consistent with any theory of Bombadil as an inhabitant of Arda. But I do not believe that we would be able to tell from such depiction the extent of the marring such that we would be able to ascribe a greater likelihood to one theory or the other. That is what I meant when I questioned whether there was really any difference between the two "types" of marring. If, on the other hand, we were to determine from Tom's behaviour that he is not marred, then neither burra's embodiment of Eä theory nor any Bombadil as Arda inhabitant theory can explain his existence. In those circumstances he would have to have originated from outside Arda. The question is, can we tell from Tom's portrayal in the books whether or not he is marred? You are of course right to allude to the fact that he is not tempted by the Ring as relevant in this regard, Sharkû. To me, this suggests that he is not marred, since the Ring works by appealing to the evil, ie marred, side of those with whom it comes in contact. If Tom has no marred side, the Ring cannot appeal to him. Indeed, it has no effect on him whatsoever. Anyone else have any views on this issue? Quote:
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09-04-2003, 11:46 AM | #96 | |
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Tolkien freely admits on a number of occasions that Tom was inserted, nearly as-is, in his pre-existing form. To the extent that he is “integrated” with the legendarium, it was done after the fact, an exercise which Tolkien seemingly didn’t feel compelled to spend too much energy on. |
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09-04-2003, 04:25 PM | #97 | |
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Of course, "enigma" is also defined as "paradox" and a paradox is an inconsistency, something which is not explicable by reference to its surroundings, so the argument does not necessarily work on every level. But it does nevertheless have a certain appeal to me - and to many others judging by the amount of bandwidth devoted to this question on this forum (and no doubt many others). [img]smilies/wink.gif[/img]
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09-05-2003, 09:58 AM | #98 |
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I beg to differ, Saucepan Man. A paradox is a seeming inconsistency that, apon closer inspection turns out not to be inconsistent. thus the phrase "an apparent paradox" is redundent. [img]smilies/evil.gif[/img]
I would also like to suggest that, as I am of the opinion that Tom is unmarred, he is the memory of Arda unmarred. That is why his country is shrinking as the bounds of relatively unmarred land shrink. This still leaves it unclear as to how Tom escaped marring, but perhapse that has something to do with the power of music he has. I don't know, but it's what occured to me.
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09-05-2003, 10:45 AM | #99 |
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Arda Unmarred never existed. That is why it is impossible that the memory of Arda Unmarred existed (there is nothing to remember). [img]smilies/wink.gif[/img]
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09-05-2003, 10:54 AM | #100 | |
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In it the planet Zonama has a sentient soul, 'Sekot'. It is able to materialize in human form, converse with sentients, guide the re/actions of the planet etc. If we have a similar thing in Bombadil, then it does beg the questions: - Could not Tom/spirit of Ea then manifest orudruin in his palm for a moment? - and as already posited, 'what of the Marring'. Fot the first question, we could answer that Tom inutively or otherwise felt it was not his job to destroy the ring even if he could. For the second, I will propose a sort of Aquinasish dualism of Ea having a Hroa and Fea, and that TOm is the Fea, and that it is the Hroa that has fallen. Tom's 'body' i.e. the world, has developed a viral sickness due to Melkor's dissemination of his fallen will into the fabric of Ea, but Tom has remained more or less resistant to it. HE can not overcome it in his body [Ea] but he being the spirit of Ea is not harmed by ti either. As a final analogy, does a man's soul become ill if the man does? In some cases perhaps, but it certainly not be considered a given. BTW - I do not personally ascribe to the 'the body is fallen, but the mind and soul and spirit are not' theology [it is specifically contradicted in Orthodox Christian theology] which I have seen [correctly or not I can not say] ascribed to Dr. Aquinas. But if it is true, JRRT may well have agreed. As for the a creature being able to 'fully know itself'. I think that this is all extremely relative, with near self-oblivioousness and near perfect self-knowledge [being a gift of grace] being possible for sentient creatures. To support this would require quite alot of background citations from Hagiographical and metaphysical sourcetexts, and it is in any case, as a discussable theory{ not in reality} dependant on one's belief system, so I will not elaborate.
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09-05-2003, 11:57 AM | #101 |
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Tolkien himself somewhere stated that Tom came into his writing, without Tolkien came to think of putting tom into it, he just came during the writing. this was possible because he existed earlier. in this case, Tom is just an anomaly wich wasn't happy in his own story and thus went to another one. (I know this sounds stupid, but it's the best i can put it in words)
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09-07-2003, 06:40 PM | #102 | |||
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09-08-2003, 09:06 AM | #103 |
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We’re getting a bit outside the scope of the thread here, but I’m curious to know what leads you to think that Bombadil is a riddle with a discoverable solution. I don’t mean that question in a flip or aggressive way – I’m genuinely interested. I can understand debating, say, Balrog wings. I think if you could ask the Professor point blank whether or not Balrogs had wings, he could answer you without hesitation. It’s just an accident of grammar that has left us in the lurch, but there assuredly is an answer.
Don’t get me wrong – I also understand the impetus that drives Bombadil inquiries. People want to integrate him fully into the mythos whether Tolkien bothered to or not. I would be more inclined to sympathize with such inquiries if it weren’t for a number of factors which argue against a “secret solution” to the mystery. The most obvious of these is Tolkien’s own dismissive response to over-analysis of The Master. I think the explanations he gives in the two cited letters are about as definitive an explanation of what Tom is and what he’s doing in the story as there is. I don’t think he’s being intentionally mysterious, at least in the sense that he’s hiding the solution to a riddle. The second is that Bombadil pre-dates LotR, and the character and many events and details of his scenes are lifted whole cloth from the original poem and transplanted into LotR. Tom had nothing to do with the mythology, and was only retrofitted in later. If anything, the deliberate air of mystery surrounding Tom is used to screen his somewhat clunky integration into Middle-earth. Thirdly, traces of Bombadil are nowhere to be found in the vast writings of The Silmarillion in all its various drafts and incarnations, at least that I am aware of. As the Old Man has pointed out, Tom’s absence from any of these writings tends to argue against the idea that Bombadil had any particular hold on Tolkien’s imagination or great significance within the legendarium, or that the professor used him to pose one last grand (but solvable) riddle to his readership. If you plumb back through volumes Volumes VI and VII of HoME, you can trace Bombadil’s evolution (what little there is of it) in fair detail. Without going into a lot of particulars, you’ll find that the prof hit a six month dry spell in the early drafting of LotR, and that Bombadil, Old Man Willow, and the Barrow-Wight, characters and scenes that he already had on hand, were used to break the block. The subsequent development of Tom does not suggest any especially crafty subtext on Tolkien’s part as far as I can see. I do get that people are fascinated by the topic and are interested in advancing and debating theories about who or what Tom “really is”. Everyone is welcome to their pet Bombadil theory, and equating him with some sort of amorphous “nature spirit” is about as close as you can come to fitting him in. This specific incarnation of the debate (Tom is Eä) doesn’t stand up to textual analysis. Eä is. Tom is. “I can say 'he is' of Winston Churchill as well as of Tom Bombadil, surely?” (Tolkien) But that doesn’t make Winnie the earth or the universe or God or anything else. |
09-08-2003, 10:38 AM | #104 |
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All very nice but scary for people to follow on after such a lashing of RATHER CLOMPICATED words.
I am but a silly Hobbit and reckon the last paragraph contains the best solution to the plot. Tolkien like PJ and many great writers or directors placed himself in the book. But not wanting to be cast in a too crucial role he decided to do his bit in saving the Hobbits in the Downs and appearing as a lovely, bubbly though intriguing character that is Tom.
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09-08-2003, 03:55 PM | #105 | |
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Underhill is of course quite right, I think, in stating that JRRT 'clunked' Bombadil into the LotR and that much of his mystery is really obfuscation! I don't think JRRT posed a riddle, does not one of his letters actually discount the idea? [sorry no reference books at hand]. However I admit I have fallen prey to aspects of Burrahobbits theory and find that with only a little bit of force, the shoe fits.Oh and a blind eye to the external history and context of Bombadil too. [img]smilies/wink.gif[/img] I think however the urge to locate TB more exactly into the Legendarium is due to JRRT's own meticulous attempts [not always realized] at finding a home/position in the various heirarchies for everyone/thing. Bombadil more or less breaks JRRT's own pattern of fitting everthing/one into a pattern. This of course is like a splinter in the mind for some, and thus we post...
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09-08-2003, 11:14 PM | #106 | |
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09-09-2003, 07:29 PM | #107 | ||||||
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I am afraid that I do not have Tolkien's Letters and so can only go by the quote given in the extract from the article set out above. There, it is suggested that an "intentional enigma" may be likened to a riddle with a solution. And it is interesting that earlier in the passage that makes direct reference to Tom, Tolkien said: Quote:
Of course, these "clues" may also be explained by reference to the fact that Tom needed to bear some relation to the characters and events within the story told in LotR. In that context, it seems natural for Frodo to ask questions about him, for others to talk of him and for him to have some interraction with the Ring. Since, as you say, his existence as a character pre-dated (and existed independently of) LotR and he had to be "shoehorned" into the story, it makes sense that Tolkien would keep references to him deliberately engimatic. Quite possibly, had Tolkien tried to integrate him as being explicable by reference to the “rules” of the world in which LotR is set, he would have fallen flat as a character. Indeed, you make this point very well when you say that “the deliberate air of mystery surrounding Tom is used to screen his somewhat clunky integration into Middle-earth”. So, ultimately, I do agree that Tom probably does have no “rational” explanation (in Middle-earth terms). But I still think that there is some scope for the alternative view of “Tom the riddle” (unless of course it is the case that this theory was expressly or impledly dismissed by JRRT in his Letters). And it is of course fun (and somewhat irresistable) trying to solve the riddle, even if there is ultimately no solution to it. [img]smilies/wink.gif[/img] Lindil put it quite superbly when he said: Quote:
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09-11-2003, 09:39 AM | #108 |
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Thanks for the thoughtful reply, Sauce, but since you’ve revealed this gaping hole in your Tolkien library ( [img]smilies/wink.gif[/img]), I don’t think we can get much further on the topic of Bombadil as riddle. Suffice to say that extracts like the ‘enigma’ one cited in that argument, without context, may be misleading. I urge you to check out Letters (and specifically letters 144 and 153 in relation to this discussion) when you get a chance. It is filled with gems beyond number, as I’m sure you’re aware.
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09-11-2003, 05:51 PM | #109 |
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Alas, Mister Underhill, my presence in a bookshop never seems to coincide with the presence on the shelves of the Letters. Otherwise, I would have snapped them up by now. I have indeed found those excerpts that I have read on this site illuminating. [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img]
I still feel that it's an interesting theory nonetheless. Perhaps I will be able to develop my thoughts further once I have had the benefit of the Letters. One of the extracts on the thread to which you linked seemed to me to admit scope for argument ... ... but enough digression. [img]smilies/rolleyes.gif[/img] On with the debate ...
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09-11-2003, 07:23 PM | #110 |
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I personally can see no evidence whatsoever that Tom is marred. There is also evidence to me that he is not marred. How else could the ring fail to have an affect on him?
I do think that his not being marred makes it impossible for him to be the incarnation of Arda as we were looking on it. However, I think there is a way we could find that it would work. Perhapse he is one of the strains of music that Eru did not show the Valar, and thus remained unmarred? Or perhapse he somehow has that of Arda and of Eru in him? Or perhapse, for whatever reason, Eru somehow prevented him from being marred? I oppologise if I'm being a dunderhead again, but I learn by being corrected by those more knowledgeable. [img]smilies/rolleyes.gif[/img]
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09-14-2003, 12:55 PM | #111 | ||
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