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01-10-2005, 08:23 PM | #1 | |
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Boldogs, Gothmogs and Sauron's New Clothes
Two things leading up to this thread: I was reading through the orc material in Myths Transformed and the discussion on the Ring's part in Sauron's several re-embodiments that was taking place in Rings of Power & Osanwe-Kenta.
It becomes a huge problem to assert validity with the texts, especially for some of the short working notes in Myths Transformed. My preference is to defer to the most recent and more polished parts whether internal or external to the story. So this from the Orcs section of Quendi and Eldar carries lots of weight Quote:
But I have a feeling he meant for Boldog to be applied in the latter sense: as a class-name for Orkish Úmaiar. It seems clear from the piece above that being killed is hardly an end for certain Úmaiar, and in doing so it diminishes them. So considering this, are there any possible Boldog candidates out there? There aren't many. One name from older legends seems to intrude into later ones: Gothmog. Could a Balrog become a Boldog? There is no textual evidence the second Gothmog was the same as the first, or that he was a Boldog, or that he was an orc, or a Ring-wraith either. So the floor is open to suggestions. It seems if there were any Úmaiar powerful enough to rehouse themselves Balrogs would have been able to do it. Of course it would take very long, much longer than Sauron took to rehouse himself, but he had the Ring. That makes his case special. I doubt Sauron would have died the same death as Thû had the revision of the Lay of Leithian continued. It's more than likely that the first time Sauron died was in the Downfall.
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01-10-2005, 09:42 PM | #2 |
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How about we do as Tolkien hints we might, and use the term "Boldog" to refer to a very minor Úmaiar, one that is below Sauron, below Gothmog and the other Balrogs, and certainly WAY below their mutual master, Melkor-Morgoth? In other words, let's use it as generic term for the fourth tier of Ainur-gone-bad.
The First Tier is Melkor-Morgoth, the Alpha and the Omega of Evil. Peerless in all Arda, and that's taking the good guys into account. Then we have the Second Rank, the powerful Maiar gone bad. Sauron, Ungoliant, and maybe one or two others that we don't know about fit in here. Then we have the Third Rank, the Balrogs. We could also put them in the Second Rank, as junior partners. Gothmog (the Balrog), after all, seems close in importance to Sauron in command of the First Age's armies. Now we come to a less easily proven level, what I shall call 4th Tier Úmaiar. These are the ancient spirits, Ainur who came into Arda, and who formed the bulk of the "many" Maiar who were seduced to evil by Melkor, but who don't seem to have been powerful enough to individually become a menace or threat. Thuringwethil and Draugluin might well fit into this category. So also would these Ork-Captains that Tolkien writes about, these powerful, strong, extra-large-and-nasty Orks that formed the original Ork hosts and commanded and interbred with the later ones. Let us use Boldog as a generic term for any of these Ork-captains, just as Balrog may be used for any Úmaiar of the Third Rank. Being so low on the scale of power, these Boldogs would likely have been tied to a single incarnate form (hence their ability to reproduce and mate with other proto-Orks), and would thus have definitely been "slay-able", just as the more powerful Balrogs were. Also, as with the more powerful Balrogs, these Boldogs would not have been like to reincarnate themselves. Most therefore, would not have survived the First Age. Those who did would likely have become the great Ork-lords of the Second. What with Sauron's invasion of Eregion, attacks from Westernesse, the War of the Last Alliance, and their own infighting, it would appear doubtful that many would have survived into the Third Age. Perhaps Gothmog II was one of the last (or THE last) of these petty-Úmaiar, these minor Ainur-gone-bad. Still quite fearsome compared with men, but certainly within a man's power to kill, and certainly able to be dominated by Sauron, and even the Witch-king. On the same topic, is it possible that Azog of Moria was another surviving Boldog? Hence his "kingly" status. Also, his son Bolg, as at least a half-Úmaiar, would then have had enough of a headstart on the competition in what was surely a mean and deadly fight for the leadership of the Orks. Neither Azog nor Gothmog II need have been "the" Boldog, the one who fought Beleg and the wardens on the Marchs of Doriath, but surely it is possible that one or both them were "a" Boldog, or at least Orks with a stronger strain of Boldog in their blood. A kind of Orkish Line of Elros, so to speak. *By the way, nice to see a fellow Lego/Tolkien fan.
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01-10-2005, 09:59 PM | #3 | |
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There are some who hold that Gorbag's reference, in his conversation with Shagrat, to the "bad old times" and the "Great Siege" derives from first hand experience, suggesting an extraordinary longetivity. Might they perhaps be candidate for Boldog-ship?
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01-10-2005, 10:06 PM | #4 | ||
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Let me check.... Quote:
I, personally, wouldn't have picked Gorbag out as a Boldog, but maybe they are more common than I am supposing. Or perhaps, being a captain, he has Boldog-blood, and thus greater longevity?
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01-11-2005, 12:22 AM | #5 |
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Formendacil's Analysis
I like it, I think it captures the potential for evil spirits and such. Another source in all this would be the fea of dead elves who refused to go to Mandos and were corrupted and rehoused, which I increasing except as the essence of the Barrow-wrights, and other necromancy in Middle-Earth.
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01-11-2005, 03:33 AM | #6 | |||
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*Saucepan skulks off to write "I must read posts properly before responding" 100 times* I do seem to recall discussion around here at some time to the effect that fallen Ainur could not reproduce, though. Didn't Tolkien speculate that Morgoth was rendered sterile in consequence of his fallen state? I will provide a link if I can find it. Quote:
Edit: Here is the quote that I was thinking of (from Morgoth's Ring - Myths Transformed): Quote:
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01-11-2005, 10:54 AM | #7 | ||
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01-11-2005, 11:39 AM | #8 | ||
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I also don't think a Boldog was very much further down from a Balrog. They were described as "only less formidable than the Balrogs". Read with the emphasis on the "less". The greater ones at least were horrifying, and probably more trollish than orkish. So could a Balrog become a Boldog in rehousing? Quote:
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01-11-2005, 11:51 AM | #9 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I think your rankings are more complicated than they need to be. Morgoth was obviously the most powerful of the Fallen. Sauron was an especially powerful Umaia, but I do not see any reason to put him in a different class than the Balrogs. They were all the same, they just possessed varying degrees of power.
Also, Ungoliante was not an Umaia. I think that it was possible for a spirit that had died as an Incarnate to be reembodied by a more powerful being. |
01-11-2005, 12:20 PM | #10 | ||
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I don't think that the two Gothmogs are the same, the Lord of Balrogs was just a little to great to be associated with a mere Boldog.
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01-11-2005, 12:49 PM | #11 | |||||
Beloved Shadow
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01-11-2005, 01:06 PM | #12 | |||
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As for Ungoliant, she HAS to be an Úmaia, since how else does one explain that she joined the service of Melkor early on, and she recognised him as the Lord of Utumno? She's also quite powerful in her own right, and once she devours the power of the Trees, she has enough power to threaten Melkor himself (although his power is, of course, much dispersed by now throughout the matter of middle-earth). It might be possible to debate whether or not Ungoliant was an Úmaia, but I think it has to be agreed on that she was an Ainu in origin, and since she was clearly not of Vala status, she must have been a Maia. Whether or not the "Ú" should be tacked on is pretty unimportant... Quote:
Boldogs, on the other hand, were in charge of waging war against Doriath, something that Morgoth surely must have seen as near-impossible in his then-current situation. Had he REALLY been intent on crushing Thingol, surely he would have sent Sauron or Gothmog with the Balrogs against its borders. As it is, we only hear of ONE Boldog leading the skirmishes. In addition to which, it would seem that Beleg and Turin were both quite successful (above and beyond Melian's aid) in holding off his threat. So personally, I don't think that the Boldogs were all that fearsome compared with Balrogs. Perhaps the analogy of the little-known Lesser Rings can be applied: "Mere trifles to the Elves, but essays in the craft, but still perilous in my mind to mortals" [Paraphrased from memory from the Lord of the Rings Not intended to be completely accurate.]
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01-11-2005, 01:30 PM | #13 |
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Here is a thread that explains the definition of Maia and explains the theory of why Ungoliant was not one.
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01-11-2005, 01:33 PM | #14 | ||
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Eight Legged Freak
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I have not yet read HoME but the only reference to Ungoliant's origins of which I am aware is in The Silmarillion: Quote:
Is there any other evidence as to Ungoliant's origins? In particular, is there anything that establishes that she was Ainu in origin? Edit after cross-posting with Kuruharan: Thanks for the link. That thread suggests that Ungoliant was an Ainu but not a Maia, as she did not serve the Valar. But is it not possible to argue that she came into existence with the creation of Arda and was therefore not an Ainu?
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01-11-2005, 01:35 PM | #15 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Ungoliante was an eala in her beginnings, yes, but other than that we know nothing about her. She came into Arda uninvited, and so does not fall into the categories of those who were stationed in Arda by Eru. The distinctions "Vala" and "Maia" are given to Ainur (which may itself be an Arda-specific class of beings) who occupy specific stations appointed to them by Eru.
Apart from this, she was never actually in Melkor's service, but that point is moot. Edit: And it's a good thing the point is moot, because Tolkien disagrees with me. Here's his latest word on the subject from Annals of Aman: Quote:
Last edited by obloquy; 01-11-2005 at 01:51 PM. |
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01-11-2005, 01:39 PM | #16 |
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uh.. wots an eala ???/
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01-11-2005, 01:56 PM | #17 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Additionally, I think her ability to consume light is unusual enough for us to label her an enigma instead. This ability and hunger of hers puts her at odds with Arda, and furthers the point that her presence was unsanctioned by Eru.
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01-11-2005, 03:00 PM | #18 | ||
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01-11-2005, 03:10 PM | #19 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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01-11-2005, 06:25 PM | #20 |
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Okay, I'll admit that I was going out a bit on a limb with Ungoliant...
Perhaps it would be wrong to call her a Maia, as such... She is definitely an Ainu, though. There is no debating that all the spirits created by Eru in the beginning, in time for the Music, were the Ainur, and that all the spirits who came to Arda in the beginning of the world were, of necessity, Ainur. Here's where I perhaps made my mistake, that of automatically classifying each and every Ainu who came to Arda as either a Vala or a Maia. This strategy would seem to be born out by the Valaquenta, but I'll admit that it might be more accurate to say that all the Ainur in Arda were ORIGINALLY classified as either Valar or Maiar, and that those who turned evil lost the designation. In any event, I am willing to admit that I could have been wrong in my application of the term. Perhaps she wasn't a Maia, persay, but she MUST have been an Ainu. She must have been one of the those spirits who created the Music for Eru, or at least the offspring of such. What else can she have been? And while the term Ainur is not really used in the context of the spirits attendant at the Music once they are in Arda, where the terms Valar, Maiar, Balrogs, Istari, etc. are more proper and correct, the fact remains that all of these must have in origin been Ainur.
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01-11-2005, 06:31 PM | #21 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Why must she have been an Ainu?
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01-11-2005, 06:36 PM | #22 | |
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What ELSE could she have been? Elf? No. Man? Weren't even awake, but No anyway. Dwarf? See above. Ent? A tree that eats trees? No. Ork? Maybe. But in spider shape? Besides, with Ainur thrown in, Orks would appear to be one of the above. Fea-less creature: Only possibility left. However, it would seem apparent (at least to MY deranged imagination) that Ungoliant had thoughts and a fea. What else is left? Plant? Mineral?
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01-11-2005, 06:56 PM | #23 | |
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What about the Stone Giants that Bilbo sees in the Misty Mountains and Gandalf refers to? What about the infamous fox that note the Hobbits' journey through the Shire? They can be explained by putting them down to the fictional author's whimsy, but that is only one explanation. And what about Huan, the Eagles and Shadowfax? Can we be sure that they were Maiarin in origin? Moreover, Neithan's helpful (for me) explanation of Ealar indicates that there were spirits originating outside Arda who were not Ainur.
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01-11-2005, 07:02 PM | #24 |
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On the other hand, Ungoliant could be a vague allusion to another character from deep back in the misty dawn of mythological lore. Who has uncontrolled appetites, who harbours a vile appearance, who is the epitome of disobedience and willfulness and even bestiality? No, not Eve, but Adam's first wife, lost in the nether reaches of time. Lilith. At least according to some of the versions of the legends we have. How to fit her into the Legendarium, of course, is another problem.
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01-11-2005, 07:03 PM | #25 |
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Yes, I will try to find the quote that I based that Ealar assertion on.
SpM, glad I could help. If anyone wants more information on Ealar try here Edit: I am having a hard time finding the quote. I don't have the book that it is from, but if memory serves than it was posted at one point during a Bombadil debate in order to say that he might be such a being. If anyone knows what quote I am talking about will they help me out?
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01-11-2005, 10:55 PM | #26 | |
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I'd also like to see the references for these ealar. Not just hte quotes, but where to find them. Cause I've never heard of them before, and I consider myself fairly well-read Tolkienwise. Not that a new text to devour would go amiss, by any means, and certainly I don't have the entire HoME commited to memor, but I'm still completely unable to recall having heard of them before...
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01-12-2005, 12:22 AM | #27 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Discussion of ealar is in the latter three HoMe volumes, but which texts specifically I cannot recall at the moment. Tomorrow I may be able to provide more specific information.
Saucepan Man is right, though. There is no evidence of other classes of ealar besides Ainur, but there is also no reason to believe Ainur were the only kind of ealar. Why call them Ainur if they're the only kind of ealar anyway? Wouldn't one term or the other suffice? |
01-12-2005, 02:39 PM | #28 | |
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As for the variation of terms... Different languages, different applications... Think humans vs. people. They're the same things in our world, right? But we have two words. In the same language. Besides which, one has to remember that Tolkien often replaced terms with new words, then switched back, or forgot, or invented yet another term... Whatever the case, I'm looking forward to seeing this reference.
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01-12-2005, 03:31 PM | #29 | |
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In my phatty thread (linked to above) I cite HoMe X, p165 (hardback edition) as the source for the term ëalar. It's possible that this is the only text in which it occurs, but I honestly can't remember.
Here it is: Quote:
Last edited by obloquy; 01-12-2005 at 03:43 PM. |
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01-12-2005, 03:47 PM | #30 |
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Well the quote I was trying to find but couldn't said something about other beings outside Arda other than the Ainur. I don't think that it said that they were Ealar but I assumed that they were.
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01-12-2005, 03:56 PM | #31 | |
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Re: Ealar
It seems from this that these 'evil 'ealar' were the Balrogs only. I can't see from this passage (unless there's another one I've missed - there isn't a reference to 'ealar' in the index) that Ungoliant could be an ealar. I do find the reference to 'other monsters of divers shapes and kinds' interesting. It may, of course, only refer to the dragons, werewolve & vampires of the later legends, but there's an interesting passage in 'Tolkien & the Great War: Quote:
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01-12-2005, 04:16 PM | #32 | |
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01-12-2005, 04:27 PM | #33 |
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I can't help but speculate that rather than being an ealar Ungoliant seems more like a kind of 'manifestation' of the 'Void'. She comes across as an 'absence' rather than a 'presence' in so many ways. She swallows, consumes, the light.
This is pure speculation, but I wonder, as it seems the 'Void' was a 'place' where Melkor could wander before the creation of Arda, whether something of that 'emptiness' entered into the Music through him, that it was some part of the theme that he introduced - the place where he sought the Secret Fire but failed to find it. She exists because Melkor sang her into being... Of course, this drags into the realm of metaphysics in a big way This could account for Ungoliant's 'existence'...or it may just be a mad idea |
01-12-2005, 06:54 PM | #34 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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You don't think Ungoliante was a spirit? That's funny.
She was originally discarnate as evidenced by the fact that she is stated to have descended into Arda (the created physical world) from outside (where all things are necessarily incorporeal). She eventually took physical form since she is stated to have produced offspring. If she was an Ainu, she was an eala. If you believe she existed as Tolkien describes, she was an eala. No two ways about it. Quote:
Last edited by obloquy; 01-12-2005 at 07:04 PM. |
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01-12-2005, 06:54 PM | #35 | ||
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But, to return to a question which I asked earlier, is there any reason to suppose that Ungoliant was created before Eä? Could she not have come into existence, as part of Melkor's part in the song, at the same time as Eä was created? The extract from the Silmarillion quoted above talks of her descending from the shadows that lay about Arda, but those shadows would have been within Eä, and would therefore have been created with it. So it does not follow from that extract that she pre-existed Eä. The following is an extract from Of The Flight of the Noldor, in relation to Nan Dungortheb: Quote:
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01-12-2005, 08:20 PM | #36 | |
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Also, Tolkien never said for sure that she "descended from the shadows about Arda" only that the Elves believed that she did. So she could be just about anything.
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01-13-2005, 12:18 AM | #37 | |
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01-13-2005, 06:50 AM | #38 | |
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Obviously embodied, Ungoliant was no longer an ëala. As for speculation, my belief is that the ëalar of all later incarnate creatres were present before, during, or sometime in the middle of the Music. But other celestial beings coeval or greater than the Ainur? Why assume there was some other kind of being than the Ainur------what are the Ainur anyway?
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01-13-2005, 10:14 AM | #39 | ||||
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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No, the spirits of the Incarnates remain fëar even when unhoused because they are naturally incarnate, rather than naturally discarnate. The Children were created as incarnate beings whose fëa and hröa are bound to the point that the separation of the two results in 'death'. When an Incarnate dies, the being's 'fate' comes into play: for Elves it is to return to Aman; for Men it is mysterious; for incarnated ëalar it seems to be something like limbo--they kinda float around aimlessly and powerlessly. An ëala could probably be referred to as a fëa without crossing any lines, but a fëa could not be called an ëala.
At least, this is my take on it, based on the fact that Tolkien only uses the word ëalar to refer to spirits that we know were discarnate in their beginnings. This may be, of course, because the term is a new one in this emendation. Quote:
All right, davem. You have succeeded in being a pest. I thought it was clear enough so I didn't go into it, but I will clarify just for you. The portion I quoted is an emendation. This is the original text: Quote:
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This may be a bit late, but... Quote:
Last edited by obloquy; 01-13-2005 at 10:51 AM. |
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01-13-2005, 11:36 AM | #40 | |
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