Why is gimli blindfolded




















I have done much in letting youset foot over Celebrant. He planted his feet firmly apart, and laid his hand upon the haft of his axe. They shall judge you, to hold you or to give you leave, as they will. You cannot cross the rivers again, and behind you there are now secret sentinels that you cannot pass.

You would be slain before you saw them. Haldir and his companion bent their bows. When the hobbits descend, they find Aragorn in a powerful and blissful daydream. In the previous chapter, the Fellowship moves from the quiet, spooky tunnels into the dark, silent hall, occasionally hearing strange, distant noises. As the tension builds throughout Chapter 5 , so do the noise and the visuals, until finally at the bridge itself there converge roaring Orcs, flying arrows, leaping flames, Trolls, a fearsome demon, a sword and whip of fire, and the bridge itself, thin and arching over a gaping chasm of nothingness.

After Gandalf and the Balrog fall, the flames die and the noise fades accordingly. Like a director, Tolkien adds significance to the action of his characters by augmenting the scene with the equivalent of stage directions of all kinds. It is not of the Ring, nor of us others that I am thinking now, but of you, Gandalf.

And I say to you: if you pass the doors of Moria, beware! In any case, he is proven prescient when Gandalf falls into the chasm. These prophecies not only create a sense of anticipation that moves the plot forward, but also tie The Lord of the Rings to the mythological tradition that precedes it.

Greek myth is one of the most familiar arenas of prophecy, as seemingly every mortal and god in Greek myth is subject to the predictions of the fabled oracles. Numerous characters in the Greek myths live out prophecies made long before their births, usually unwittingly.

Elrond is such a polyglot that he doesn't even have any trouble reading the secret language of dwarves on their heavily encoded map. And Elrond even hires a hobbit Bilbo to help translate elvish works into the common tongue, in addition to his other job of writing hobbit history as it happens "Translations from the Elvish, by B.

I mean "hire" in a loose sense, of providing food, shelter, and all amenities while Bilbo goes about this work--even so, not every elderly hobbit gets to retire in Rivendell--Elrond does get something back. I also notice that all languages save for the Black Tongue are welcome in the songs at the Halls of Fire. Other than that, I have observed before that Rivendell is an airy place, whereas Lothlorien is a watery place, though both have fresh air and running water in abundance.

They march on all day until noon the day after, when a marching host comes to report that the orcs have been almost all destroyed and that a strange creature has been seen, vanishing down the Silverlode. Haldir also has had news that all members of the Company are allowed to walk freely from now on.

To be honest, I do not understand why the animosity between Elf and Dwarf here at all. Why should Elves get along better with Men than with Dwarves?

It just doesn't make sense. The policy may extend back to the Dwarves killing King Thingol of Doriath, and then returning with a great host to sack the caves. That ended the Kingdom of Doriath. An Ent juggling spikey things? In Reply To The policy may extend back to the Dwarves killing King Thingol of Doriath, and then returning with a great host to sack the caves. The primary problem is this: the Elves and Dwarves did indeed have troubles in the past, no arguments there.

However, they have been fighting side-by-side against the forces of evil repeatedly since then. Their relationship I see as being more akin to the United States and Brittain: the US and UK have fought wars against each-other in the past, but far more recently they have been standing together against other enemies, other enemies whose behavior was far more atrocious than what the US and UK ever did to each-other.

Why don't the Elves and Dwarves feel similarly? I think, honestly, that this is a throwback to when Tolkien was writing The Hobbit , and he had not created the backstory that included the wars with Sauron in the Second and Third Ages, so the rape of Doriath by Nogrod and Belegost was much more recent and more importantly had many fewer alliances in-between.

Either that or, as Tolkien might claim, Celeborn saw the rape of Doriath first-hand and can't get over it, which seems out of character. He didn't. Again, this seems out of character for Celeborn to harbor such a hatred Finally, it makes all the difference in the world that Celeborn's son, Amroth, died because of the evil that the dwarves stirred up. True, he was also Galadriel's son, but she had a deeper understanding of dwarves, having studied under Aule as well as Yavannah in Valinor, and so could forgive them with more insight--she had grown close to their maker, and her feelings about her son's death might have resembled what we might feel if our own son had been killed by the stupid accident of a revered teacher's children.

To Celeborn, on the other hand, they were nothing but weird, ugly beings who lived underground like orcs, who destroyed his homeland, his greatest leader, and then his own son. In Reply To. Dreamdeer Valinor Mar 7 , pm Views: Blind Trust.

Darkstone Immortal Mar 7 , pm Views: Souls of Hobbits and Elves. Hard bargains. Dreamdeer Valinor Mar 8 , pm Views:



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