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11-15-2012, 01:35 PM | #1 |
Haunting Spirit
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Does Eru care?
In The Silmarillion it is said that the entire history of the world is the product of the music of the Ainur, and they helped to shape the world and it's history through the Music they made, whose utmost source was the Theme given to them by Eru; The Ainur are the offspring of Eru's thought; Each Ainur being part or understanding only of that part of the mind of Eru from whence he or she came...So, logically, would it not be that the vanity and pride of Melkor came from a part of Eru's mind? What Melkor understood--vanity, a desire for power, a creative urge at best--would that not have come from some part of Eru's thought?
And also logically following, would not all the horrors (and beauty) of Middle Earth's history be, indirectly, the product of Eru's vision, of His music? Also, from what I remember, Eru did not seem to intervene much in the affairs or woes of Arda or his Children, but instead, the Valar and Maia seemed to be more responsible for Arda...Eru seems to have sort of taken a distance to the world he created, whereas the Valar (of both kinds) seem to be more involved and hold more a care to it. But even the Valar--Did they not cease intervening and helping directly in the affairs of the Children of Illuvatar after Aman was attacked? In their last action, they sent the Istari--but only to act as messengers or as guiding figures to the Children; Not to use their might to contend with Sauron and defeat him and set the world to right, and also they placed strict limits upon the Istari's use or display of their power. It's obvious some of the Maia and Valar did care; Gandalf being perhaps the best, most direct example...But what of the Valar as a whole? Or Eru? What regard do they hold for the fate of Arda and it's peoples? A last off topic question but: Who would be more responsible for Arda's creation? Eru or the Ainur? Eru laid the Foundation--the Theme--for them to play and by which create and shape the World, but it was their Music--each intricate, individual part which they themselves crafted based on Eru's theme--which directly shaped the world. Last edited by TheLostPilgrim; 11-15-2012 at 01:39 PM. |
11-15-2012, 01:50 PM | #2 |
Gruesome Spectre
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I think the example of the Istari you give is enough of an indication that the Valar (and by proxy, Ilúvatar,) "cared".
No, the Valar did not choose to directly confront Sauron, and that was a deliberate effort to avoid past mistakes. They thought the defeat of Sauron important enough, though, that they asked their own servants, the Maiar, to become truly embodied peers of the afflicted Children of Ilúvatar and commit themselves to a long-term exile in Middle-earth, enduring its pains, discomforts, and dangers. In order to do this, the Valar had to ask, and did receive permission from the One. It could be argued that Ilúvatar himself put the idea into their heads, or at least knew that it would occur to them. The "caring" of the Valar was directly connected to the "caring" of the One, for the Valar were merely the Governors of Arda, not themselves rulers. They were charged with overseeing the world and accomplishing Ilúvatar's will, making them the "hands" to his "brain". The larger theological issue is a question of why the One allowed evil to exist, and what was the connection to his Music. Good luck with that one. If one accepts Eru as the Creator of Arda, one must also accept his carte blanche to order his creation as he willed, though I think that his ultimate benevolence is in evidence in the books.
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11-16-2012, 09:46 AM | #3 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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NOTE: A Lot of this post is from memory I've done my best to make sure it's coherent and not rambling...
Eru does not intervene because everything has its purpose even evil. Because without evil there is no good. For example, apples to oranges if you'll allow me, in "The Invention of Lying" the world doesn't seem better off because of a lack of lying(something most consider wrong). Alternatively it's impossible trully to consider one side evil and another good. Consider a Goblin for a moment would you dub them evil for being against the dwarves? Possibly, we are afterall following their tale in The Hobbit. But from the Goblin's view the dwarves are trespassers and consider the wielder of Glamdring a villain. While it can and usually is argued Melkor's desire for power is evil or at least very wrong, it could also be countered that it's simply ambition. After all we don't consider Manwe as desiring power yet when challenged by Melkor he defends his crown, surely if he had no desire to rule he would have surrendered the crown. Also we consider Melkor's destroying the trees as eviul yet without it the balance of the world's night and day do not exist. We considered it evil but it was neccessary. If you remove sin from the equation(as it may be argued a mere perception) you'd have to consider sickness and drought and winter, perhaps even Death itself as evil. But without these neccesities overpopulation and mass famine would occur which perhaps is even worse. |
11-16-2012, 11:49 AM | #4 |
Wight
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Manwe, upon hearing the final choice of Feanor to rebel (and do deeds to live in song), put it this way.
"Thus, even as Eru said to us shall beauty not before conceived be brought into being, and evil yet be good to have been." To which Mandos added "And yet remain evil." Which is a difficult concept for (at least) Western thought since we tend to want either:
He also proposes that Eru is great such that even EVIL deeds will always result in eventual and greater good results - because that's the way Eru is managing it. I think the key idea to consider in approaching this conundrum is that we do not see the final end results, and so cannot accurately judge whether the "evil" that we see is worth it to have gone through. Tolkien described the history of Middle Earth as Eru's "Drama". Think in terms of Shakespeare, or Homer, or Mark Twain writing a story or play.
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11-16-2012, 11:58 AM | #5 |
Haunting Spirit
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Tolkien was truly a genius. It's actually sad, in a way, that he is most known for The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings. Those works, while beautiful, are shallow compared to The Silmarillion and his other writings. They pigeonhole him as simply a writer of fantasy works, which aren't taken seriously by some, or are dismissed as childish whimsy simply because they are fantasy works. He has an amazing, inspiring, beautiful cosmology and philosophy within those lesser known works, something truly inspired and beautiul. He created more than simply "fantasy" works--He created a universe, which I believe he on some level himself believed in.
If Tolkien had lived and had written The Silmarillion and his other works in ancient times, we'd probably consider them holy scripture today. That's how beautiful it is, and how much of a brilliant, insightful, gifted man he was. |
11-16-2012, 03:19 PM | #6 | ||
Gruesome Spectre
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If Eru does not "plant to no purpose", neither does he capriciously allow the "crop" to be wantonly destroyed for no reason.
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11-16-2012, 06:27 PM | #7 | ||
Shade of Carn Dűm
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See Morgoth’s Ring (HoME X), page 370 (emphasis mine): This descends from the oldest forms of the mythology – when it was intended to be no more than another primitive mythology, though more coherent and less ‘savage’. It was consequently a ‘Flat Earth′ cosmogony (much easier to manage anyway): the Matter of Númenor had not been devised.Tolkien’s story of Elvish kings and nobles is not supposed to be true even within his imaginary world. Fëanor presumably really existed in this imaginary world, but much that is told of him in these Manish tales were deeds of other folk that were later “personalized and centered” on Fëanor. Tolkien certainly knew that in reality Fëanor was invented by him. Tolkien tried to rework his Silmarillion material to fit with scientific findings, which Tolkien himself really believed. However, in trying this, he found that he was destroying most of the basis of the Silmarillion story. So he ended up accepting it as yet another false Mannish mythology. Occasionally in his later writing Tolkien refers to what must have supposedly really happened. Quote:
I personally resent being told by anyone what I would believe, especially when it is something I very much do I not believe. Speak for yourself only and for others who you have reason to believe agree with you, and speak clearly. As to people who believe in religions, there are thousands of differing contradictory religious beliefs in the world. It is possible that somewhere there are some people who believe in Manwë and Varda as non-fictional entities, just as occasionally one discovers that some people believe that Sherlock Holmes is real. I don’t find either belief at all uplifting. I very much doubt that Tolkien would. Tolkien often makes it clear that he knew quite well that he was inventing, though at times he hoped that his inventions would prove pleasing to God. Tolkien certainly believed his fictional creations were in some way true, in the same way that almost every writer believes that his or her fictional creations are true in some way when they are writing them. But the same writers also know that their creations are fictional. Tolkien himself when writing about his fiction often appears to take it less seriously than some obsessive fans. Tolkien was no different from most writers. Sometimes he was very into playing the game and sometimes he was not. But he knew at some level that it was a game. From an interview with Henry Resnik, published in Niekas 18, page 38 (http://efanzines.com/Niekas/Niekas-18.pdf ): T: Yes I do. I shouldn't call it a fad; I wouldn't call it underground. I'd call it a game.Christopher Tolkien, who should know, writes in The Children of Húrin, page 7: It is undeniable that there are a great many readers of The Lord of the Rings (as previously published in varying forms in The Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales, and The History of Middle-earth) are altogether unknown, unless by their repute as strange and inaccessible in mode and manner.It was Christopher Tolkien’s hope that by publishing The Children of Húrin in full for the first time, with little commentary, he might present some of this “inaccessible” material more accessibly. Other fantasy writers have created what one might call universes in more than one book before Tolkien: William Morris, George MacDonald, James Branch Cabell, Lord Dunsany, Robert E. Howard, Mervyn Peake, E. E. Eddison, and probably others. I do not think it does the works of Tolkien or any of these writers any favours to compare them with numerous books that disagree with one another: the Qurʼan, the Book of Mormon, the Mahabharata, the Gathas of Zarathusta, any of the Christian Bibles, Jewish scriptures, Buddhist scriptures, the Norse Eddas and so on. |
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11-16-2012, 10:07 PM | #8 | |||||||
Curmudgeonly Wordwraith
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Who peed on your lembas, Jallanite? Here you have a poster, TheLostPilgrim, who I will assume is young (if that is not the case, please excuse me), and who has just read The Silmarillion for the first time within the last year (and I believe I remember Pilgrim saying so). The poster is excited, as excited as I was when I first read The Silmarillion, a far different book than The Hobbit or Lord of the Rings. When Pilgrim said:
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For instance, in the same letter to Waldman, Tolkien makes no reference to the cosmological mythos as a "mannish affair"; on the contrary, he states the early myths are literally devoid of mannish thought and intention: Quote:
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When TheLostPilgrim said: Quote:
Taken in context with that Pilgrim actually said, if Tolkien's work was written during the time of the writing of the Mosaic Laws in the Babylonian exilic period, why wouldn't his cosmology be taken as scripture now? It certainly not as boring as the Bible or the Quran. The breathtaking description of Creation in the Ainulindalë is more stirring than Yahweh plopping down cows on the Fifth Day. The stories in The Silmarillion are far-fetched, certainly, but then so is most scripture from the Bible, Quran or the Vedas. In its mode of storytelling, The Silmarillion is a unique synthesis of biblical, Icelandic, Norse and Finnish legends with a bit of the Greek Pantheon sprinkled on top, and I don't see Snorri Sturluson or the writer of Beowulf being at odds with what was presented. And as far as a synthesis, it is less dependent on source material than the huge amount Mohammed lifted from the Torah when he cobbled together the Quran (amounting to plagiarism in the current litigious climate). When you made the comment (with the finality of a patriarch): Quote:
But I do love Tolkien's ironic quote: Quote:
So, TheLostPilgrim, revel in The Silmarillion. Enjoy the reading. Just remember, a wet blanket will never keep you warm.
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And your little sister's immaculate virginity wings away on the bony shoulders of a young horse named George who stole surreptitiously into her geography revision. Last edited by Morthoron; 11-17-2012 at 06:26 AM. |
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11-17-2012, 06:44 AM | #9 | |
Pilgrim Soul
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“But Finrod walks with Finarfin his father beneath the trees in Eldamar.”
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11-17-2012, 08:27 AM | #10 | ||
Gruesome Spectre
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11-17-2012, 08:35 AM | #11 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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In theory. I'm not sure Tolkien necessarily took up all the relevant texts and went through them line by line with this recasting in mind, but I do think such a recasting was his general answer to the problem that he believed existed. In other words, I think he tried a new Silmarillion, illustrated in part in Myths Transformed, but abandoned this in general, realizing that he could retain much of what he had already written if he 'simply' tinkered with the transmission and authorship of the tales rather, despite the older Elfwine model. I know that somewhere I have listed a fair number (not necessarily all) of the relevant citations that speak to a largely mannish Silmarillion, but who knows where I posted them if I don't. Some of them appear in this thread anyway. http://forum.barrowdowns.com/showthread.php?t=4390 Granted, as you say, it's possible that Tolkien might have come around again. He had published that Bilbo had produced his Translations from the Elvish, but I think it's easy enough to imagine that the Elvish language is meant; and JRRT (later) published a reference to the 'Numenorean factor' in connection with The Hoard from The Adventures of Tom Bombadil (noting: '... No. 14 also depends on the lore of Rivendell, Elvish and Númenorean, concerning the heroic days at the end of the First Age; it seems to contain echoes of the Númenorean tale of Turin and Mim the Dwarf.'). Last edited by Galin; 11-17-2012 at 09:10 AM. |
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11-17-2012, 11:08 AM | #12 | ||||||
Pile O'Bones
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It's important to note as well that Melkor does not begin 'Evil' nor are his first steps on that path neccessarily 'evil.' Of Melkor: Quote:
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11-17-2012, 07:02 PM | #13 | |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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But once upon a time (my crest has long since fallen) I had a mind to make a body of more or less connected legend, ranging from the large and cosmogonic, to the level of romantic fairy-story, – the larger founded on the lesser in contact with the earth, the lesser drawing splendour from the vast backcloths – which I could dedicate simply to: to England; to my country.That is not the same thing as “a mythology (for England)”. The phrase “a mythology for England” is repeated again and again by commentators on Tolkien as though it were an expression used by him, but it is never used by Tolkien. It is an invention by commentators, and distorts what Tolkien did say. Tolkien is obviously referring here to his Book of Lost Tales in which the Lonely Isle was identified with Britain, but Tolkien soon rejected that identification. Quite rightly so. That Britain was the Lonely Isle drawn back to Middle-earth during the days of the Saxon Hengest is historically absurd, as though Roman Britain never existed, or pre-Roman Britain mentioned in Classical Greek texts. Tolkien quite rightly thought better of it. And nowhere in The Book of Lost Tales are the events outside of the Lonely Island made to take place in England. A “mythology for England” surely should take place mostly in England. But the Eriol material was soon abandoned and the Ćlfwine material that was to replace it was mostly never written. The stories of Beren, Túrin, Tuor, and Eärendil were never placed in England, save vaguely where in a few mentions Britain (part of which later became England) is identified as an island among the remains of sunken Beleriand. The Hobbit takes place in previously unidentified territory. There is not sufficient detail given therein to identify the Hobbit homeland with England. Only in The Lord of the Rings is The Shire supposedly approximately in the area of later England, in days before the English Channel came to be. There indeed the Shire and Buckland and Bree are very English indeed, Edwardian English. But not the rest of Tolkien’s world. In letter 294 Tolkien complains about the use of the word Nordic in connection to his writing but this rant would almost do as well for the word English: Not Nordic, please! A word I personally dislike; it is associated, though of French origin, with racialist theories. Geographically Northern is usually better. But examination will show that even this is inapplicable (geographically or spiritually) to ‘Middle-earth’. This is an old word, not invented by me, as reference to a dictionary such as the Shorter Oxford will show. It meant the habitable lands of our world, set amid the surrounding Ocean. The action of the story takes place in the North-west of ‘Middle-earth’, equivalent in latitude to the coastlands of Europe and the north shores of the Mediterranean. But this is not a purely ‘Nordic’ area in any sense. If Hobbiton and Rivendell are taken (as intended) to be at about the latitude of Oxford, then Minas Tirith, 600 miles south, is at about the latitude of Florence. The Mouths of Anduin and the ancient city of Pelargir are at about the latitude of ancient Troy.In Tolkien’s finished conception the Shire is described by him as “more or less a Warwickshire village of about the period of the Diamond Jubilee″. And the language of the Rohirrim is Old English. Esgaroth and Dale are Norse. The rest is more-or-less general medieval European. Neither The Silmarillion as published nor The Hobbit nor The Lord of the Rings as a whole is “a mythology for England”. |
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11-18-2012, 12:45 PM | #14 |
Pilgrim Soul
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My main point which you have perhaps chosen to ignoree is that Tolkien knew that his world was created. I don't agree with your assertion that a mythology for Ngland must be set there. We are a nation of Empire builders and Tolkien was colonial born even if at heart a Warwickshre lad. Perhaps because I have roots several centuries deep in Warwickshire soil it's Englishness seems self evident.
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11-18-2012, 02:22 PM | #15 | ||
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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It's interesting that, as late as the Etymologies ('late' when compared to The Book of Lost Tales anyway)
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Anyway, in 1956 Tolkien wrote a draft letter, which included: Quote:
I happen to like the Eriol story myself, the question of the Romans aside. It seems a bold move to play England as not yet in the geographical position of England; but as noted Tolkien certainly abandoned this. |
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11-18-2012, 04:07 PM | #16 | |||
Shade of Carn Dűm
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I picked up only on a statement commonly made by Tolkien commentators as though it were by Tolkien when it is not actually by Tolkien. I find that annoying, but understandable, when this statement is wrongly attributed to Tolkien so often, because people blindly accept what they are told. I was disappointed as I would have thought you would have known better. All the more reason to indicate a slovenly error when someone as generally as intelligent as you is making it. Some claim that it doesn’t matter that Tolkien didn’t say it, because he certainly would have agreed with it. I disagree. Truth matters. And I don’t believe that he would have agreed with it. Here is an entire thread on the matter: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mythsoc/message/17214 . Quote:
A “mythology for England” surely should take place mostly in England.Tolkien’s tales of the first three ages of Middle-earth are, in their finished versions, set in a fictional era before England (or Britain) even existed. Tolkien’s early idea was to connect his legendarium with historic England through the identification of the Lonely Isle with Britain (including England) and by identifying his Eriol with the father of Hengest, Horsa, and Heorrenda (a younger brother of Hengest and Horsa invented by Tolkien). Tolkien rejected those ideas. Instead Tolkien connected his legendarium analogically with England in The Lord of the Rings by making the Shire parallel to the English countryside of his youth and giving to the Rohirrim the Old English language and Germanic heroic ideals also found in Old English writings. What most people would call the mythology of Tolkien’s legendarium (Manwë, Varda, Ulmo and all that) is not particularly English. The Elvish history is not especially English and Tolkien was later quite insistent that his Elves were his own invention, not owing much to the Elves of folklore. The history of Númenor is largely the Platonic story of Atlantis. Arnor and Gondor is largely a calc of the western and eastern Roman empires. Aragorn is more Dietrich von Bern than identical to any English figure. I think he also owes something to the fictional Natty Bumppo (Hawkeye) of the American author James Fenimore Cooper. Quote:
For I love England (not Great Britain and certainly not the British Commonwealth (grr!)), and if I was of military age, I should, I fancy, be grousing away in a fighting service, and willing to go on to the bitter end – always hoping that things may turn out better for England than they look like doing.From letter 77: I should have hated the Roman Empire in its day (as I do), and remained a patriotic Roman citizen, while preferring a free Gaul and seeing good in Carthaginians. Delenda est Carthago. We hear rather a lot of that nowadays. I was actually taught at school that that was a fine saying; and I ‘reacted’ (as they say, in this case with less than the usual misapplication) at once.From letter 100: Though in this case, as I know nothing about British or American imperialism in the Far East that does not fill me with regret and disgust, I am afraid I am not even supported by a glimmer of patriotism in this remaining war.Tolkien clearly and carefully distinguished his personal feelings for England from his personal feelings for Imperial Britain. The Englishness of the Shire is of course evident to me. It is surely evident to almost all readers. You don’t need to be born in Warwickshire to feel that. Indeed I know at least one person who was not able to read The Lord of the Rings because the early chapters were too English for her. If you wish to disagree with me, disagree with what I am saying, not with opinions I don’t hold. I am unaware that I have posted anything that would suggest ignorance of the analogical Englishness of the Shire. You rightly blamed me for ignoring most of what you were saying. But you are doing the same, inventing the ignorance that you impute to me. Tolkien did not say he had ever wished to create a mythology for England. Disagree? Then point out where he said it. He said something like it in the Waldman letter. But he did not say it, and I believe he did not intend to create a fictional mythology that would be believed by Englishmen in place of what he saw as the true religion. Nor did he intend a poetic mythology to be referred to by poets as classical mythology was by custom. Yes, it was a bold move, but one that seems very nationalistic and even racist. Last edited by jallanite; 11-18-2012 at 04:12 PM. |
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11-19-2012, 11:44 AM | #17 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I also like the 'impossibility' of the idea of dragging the entire Isle to a new geographical position, including how Ireland became separated -- which goes well enough in hand, I guess, with my liking of Tolkien's 'less scientific' cosmology. There are other things I find charming or interesting in the Eriol tale, things that seem to have eventually dropped out or fallen away, like the drinking of limpe for example, or the Path of Dreams. That much noted, I'm not interested in any of the 'was Tolkien a racist?' threads out there, including any discussion of what seems racist to someone. |
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03-23-2014, 08:31 PM | #18 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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I was thinking the same. When I read: "The Ainur are the offspring of Eru's thought." I felt does that make Eru a flawed "character"? He is the creator of Arda. Melkor being the the offspring of his thoughts, means He also belonged to Eru. Or Eru created him purposefully, perhaps. The purpose of creation of The Dark Lord meant, that to exist good, there should be evil. Otherwise all the words we use to express goodness will have no meaning.
Eru cared for Arda, and so did Valar. They did not have to directly come and do the favor to the Children of Iluvatar.
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03-23-2014, 08:58 PM | #19 | ||
Gruesome Spectre
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Evil was no aberration, but a known quantity to the One, made for his own purpose, dark though it may often be to his creations.
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03-24-2014, 10:54 AM | #20 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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Yes! Btw, can you answer a question? What was the difference between the evil nature of Melkor and Souron?
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03-24-2014, 11:47 AM | #21 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Tolkien said that Sauron "was only less evil than his master in that [at first/for many years? - can't remember the exact wording] he served another and not himself." They were equally evil, but Melkor was a much more powerful being - the most powerful of the Ainur - whereas Sauron was of the Maiar, a less powerful angelic being. Gandalf, too, was a Maia.
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03-24-2014, 12:06 PM | #22 | |
Gruesome Spectre
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03-24-2014, 08:31 PM | #23 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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Yes, Tolkien says something like 'Souron was less evil than Melkor as long as he was serving someone else.' Did Souron's being a Maia affect his evil nature too? That is, he was less powerful (or evil) because he was a Maia.
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03-24-2014, 08:53 PM | #24 |
Gruesome Spectre
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Being a lower-degree spirit compared to Melkor, Sauron had less power to effect evil, but I do not think it had any effect on the nature of his fall. Or maybe, due to his having apparently a fairly high "rank" in relation to his position in the angelic hierarchy, he may have been more susceptible to Melkor's influence than say, a spirit of less innate power.
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03-25-2014, 12:01 AM | #25 | |
Haunting Spirit
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03-25-2014, 07:36 AM | #26 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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We must remember, as has been observed, that the chief difference was that all Evil was ultimately derived from Melkor, whereas Sauron was only a symptom of that evil, and perpetuated and profited from that evil.
That being said, by the end of the First Age the actual person 'Morgoth' has become separate from (and in a sense enslaved to) the metaphysical concept of Evil, which was his own nature divided and split from his will and control. In that sense Morgoth was scarcely in a position different to Sauron. There was still some difference, but not as much as there had been originally. "In my story Sauron represents as near an approach to the wholly evil will as is possible." -Letter 183
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