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Fantasy » alt.fan.tolkien » Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
| Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32763] |
Di, 10 Mai 2005 13:01 |
|
(Forwarded to AFT, too--BB)
On Tue, 10 May 2005 05:52:44 GMT, "Gregory Hernandez"
<gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
>Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
>
>The Southern Line
>
>Heirs of Anarion
>
>
>
>SUMMARY
>
>This section deals with the growth of the kingdom of Gondor accompanied
>however by the decline of the Dunedain bloodline. The efficacy of the great
>Numenorean heritage dissipated more swiftly in Gondor then in Arnor, not
>only in the duration of the lifespans of the kings, but also in that many of
>them did not in fact sire any children.
>
>
>
>The Gondorians begin to build up a substantial navy and their influence
>increases to the greatest point in their history. The Easterlings and the
>Haradrim begin to become more of a threat, but are easily dealt with.at
>least at first.
>
>
>
>During the reign of Hyarmendacil, Gondor reached the height of his power.
>Hyarmendacil dies in the year 1149 of the Second Age and is succeeded by his
>son Atanatar, a man who as Tolkien puts it "loved ease and did nothing to
>maintain the power that he had inherited". And so the decline of Gondor
>accelerated. During his reign, the watch that had been put on Mordor was
>neglected. Atanatar died childless and the crown passed to his brother
>Calmacil, who in time made his son Minalcar Regent of the realm, a position
>he held for 64 years until he in turn ascended to the throne. During his
>time as Regent, Minalcar became concerned about the Northmen, who had been
>used by the Kings of Gondor as buffers against the Easterlings. In the
>period between the end of Hyarmendacil's reign and Minalcar's ascension as
>Regent, the Northmen had become less staunchly loyal and sometimes turned a
>blind eye to the Easterlings' raids. Minalcar sought to solidify his
>position with the Northmen and impress upon the Easterlings the cost of any
>forays into Gondor. In 1248 S.A., Minalcar defeated the Easterlings at sea
>and burned all of their camps and settlements east of the Inland Sea.
>Minalcar fortified positions along the Anduin River and it was he who built
>the Argonath.
>
>
>
>Ties between Gondor and the North were strengthened and many Northmen came
>to serve in Minalcar's forces. A special friendship developed between
>Minalcar (who took the name Romendacil "east-victor") and Vidugavia, the
>most powerful of the Northmen. Some years after Romendacil had assumed
>kingship of Gondor, he sent his son to live with Vidugavia and learn more of
>the Northmen's language and customs. Romendacil's son became enchanted with
>the North and in time married the daughter of the Northern chief. This was
>to lead to the first great tragedy of Gondor. Many Gondorians looked
>askance at the Northmen and found it unconscionable that one of their own
>would marry with them. When Romendacil's son grew old and his grandson was
>set to take the throne, civil war broke out in Gondor.
>
>
>
>Eldacar, grandson of Romendacil, was deposed in 1437, and for the next ten
>years the usurper Castamir held the crown. A cruel and ungenerous man,
>Castamir lost the love of his own people mostly by his own actions. He
>caused Eldacar's son, who was captured in Osgiliath, to be put to death; he
>savaged the defenders of Eldacar and destroyed the city he had laid siege
>to; further, as a former master of ships, he showed that he cared more for
>the sea than for Gondor's lands.
>
>
>
>Finally after ten years (1447 S.A), sensing that the time was right for his
>return, Eldacar came back from the North where he had fled, with Northmen
>and the Dunedain of the north, and many from Gondor joined to his cause out
>of their hatred for the usurper Castamir. Castamir himself was slain by
>Eldacar in battle, but his sons and many of his supporters were driven from
>the land and fled to Umbar in the South, where they set up an independent
>municipality and remained hostile to Gondor for many years.
>
>
>
>Many feared that the interbreeding between Gondor and the North would
>diminish the long lives that were their Numenorean heritage, but this did
>not at first turn out to be true. Eldacar lived for 256 years and was king
>for 58 of those years, although the first ten years he spent as an exile in
>the North. The battles that arose when Eldacar ascended the crown and later
>returned to reclaim it, were called the Kin-Strife, and it was the first
>evil to befall Gondor.
>
>
>
>The second evil to befall Gondor occurred in 1636, during the reign of
>Telemnar, grandson of Eldacar. A great plague swept in out of the East and
>killed the King and his family, along with a great many of the people of
>Gondor and elsewhere. Some don't see it as a coincidence that the plague
>befell Gondor as Sauron's power grew stronger in Mordor. Many who fled the
>plague to Ithilien and elsewhere never returned to Gondor, even after the
>plague abated.
>
>
>
>After the plague and the death of King Telemnar and the royal heirs, the
>crown passed to a nephew of the King, and then his son. It was this son,
>Telumehtar, who gathered his forces and made it his point to take back the
>city of Umbar. The corsairs of Umbar had managed to kill Eldacar's son many
>years before. The Corsairs of that city continued to pester and raid the
>Gondorian coast and in 1810 Telumehtar assembled a great force and took back
>the city.
>
>
>
>There was barely time to rejoice in the victory, as in less than fifty
>years, Gondor would lose two kings. First, Telumehtar died in 1850; six
>years later his son Narmacil II died in battle with the Wainriders, a new
>and better armed horde of peoples who had come suddenly out of the East.
>Like (perhaps) the great plague that had struck earlier, Sauron was seen to
>be the cause of the Wainriders' sudden attack on Gondor. Calimehtar, son of
>Narmacil II, avenged his father, but his triumphs were a brief respite from
>the strife to come.
>
>
>
>It was during the reign of Ondoher, Calimehtar's son, that the Northern and
>Southern Kingdoms began to communicate again after a long period of
>estrangement. It was then that they came to the conclusion that it seemed
>as if there was a central power behind the attacks on the surviving heirs of
>the Numenorean bloodline. It was during that time of counsel between the
>kingdoms in a period of relative peace that Arvedui, son of King Araphant of
>the Northern Kingdom of Arnor married Firiel daughter of King Ondoher of the
>Southern Kingdom of Gondor. When Ondoher and his sons died in battle in
>1944, Arvedui claimed the kingship of both kingdoms, but was rejected by
>Gondor. He ruled in Arnor only and was in fact their last King. Gondor
>chose as king Earnil, grandson of the brother of Narmacil II. He would fare
>little better than Arvedui as he would turn out be Gondor's penultimate King
>until Elessar's ascension to the throne. The Northern Kingdom is overrun by
>the forces of Angmar in 1974. Nearly sixty years later Earnil's son Earnur
>becomes King and is challenged by the Witch-King of Angmar. Seven years
>later, the challenge is repeated. The rash king rides to Minas Morgul to
>face the Witch King and is never seen again. He is presumed killed, but as
>no word comes of his death. The King, dies childless, and the Stewards
>begin to rule in Gondor.
>
>
>
>CONCLUSION
>
>
>
>There is much much more that I have glossed over in this brief summary and
>reading it is like being swept up in a history book digested to a few pages.
>The sweep of the events in Tolkien's backstory is exciting enough for
>several books in and of themselves. It is a testament to Tolkien's
>imagination that he can afford to throw all of it into appendices at the end
>of his huge book.
>
>
>
>SOME POSSIBLE DISCUSSION POINTS
>
>1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings bore many
>traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One example was his
>revising the Ainulindale so that creation was actualized by Illuvatar/Eru
>speaking the universe into being. One wonders if his having the twin realms
>of Arnor and Gondor was a deliberate mirror of the history of ancient
>Israel, which for a time was also divided into two kingdoms, north and
>south. The Southern Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the Northern
>Kingdom of Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed. (What is
>perhaps less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the general editor
>of the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his principle
>collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a number of
>other prominent scholars).
>
>
>
>2. Some have looked at Tolkien as being a racist. How does that view fit
>in with the Kin-Strife, which is seen as a tragedy for Gondor?
>
>
>
>3. What other narratives have you found that have been similar to the
>histories in the appendices? For me, the royal chronicles in the 1&2
>Samuels and 1&2 Kings in the Bible and Geoffrey of Monmouth spring to mind.
>
>
>
>4. There are people who have recommended a variety of different ways to
>approach reading Tolkien, or have preferences for one or another volume he's
>written. One of the most exciting things for me has been to read these
>appendices by themselves. Is that something you've ever tried or
>considered?
>
>
>
>5. There is very little variant material of these sections (at least that's
>how it seems in HoME XII). Why do you think that is?
>
>
>
>
>
|
|
|
| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32780 ] |
Di, 10 Mai 2005 20:58 |
|
Belba Grubb From Stock (or somebody else of the same name) wrote thusly in
message <h251815vv2r5rek3clhtrsh2sifk4tfqns [at] 4ax.com>:
>>Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
>>SOME POSSIBLE DISCUSSION POINTS
>>
>>1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings bore
>>many
>>traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One example was his
>>revising the Ainulindale so that creation was actualized by Illuvatar/Eru
>>speaking the universe into being. One wonders if his having the twin
>>realms of Arnor and Gondor was a deliberate mirror of the history of
>>ancient Israel, which for a time was also divided into two kingdoms, north
>>and
>>south. The Southern Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the
>>Northern Kingdom of Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed.
>>(What is perhaps less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the
>>general editor of the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his
>>principle collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a
>>number of other prominent scholars).
See my post in the earlier thread, re Arnor.
>>3. What other narratives have you found that have been similar to the
>>histories in the appendices? For me, the royal chronicles in the 1&2
>>Samuels and 1&2 Kings in the Bible and Geoffrey of Monmouth spring to
>>mind.
G of M has always seemed to me to be writing in imitation of the Biblical
account of the Kings, as though saying to the British, "Here is *your* Book
of Kings".
In later years the style was imitated again in "1066 And All That".
>>5. There is very little variant material of these sections (at least
>>that's how it seems in HoME XII). Why do you think that is?
In such an appendix, most of the kings' reigns must be reduced to bare notes
of names and dates, perhaps with just a sentence or two of the most
important events of the reign. Imagine if British history of the 20th
century were compressed to something like this:
.. . . Edward 1910. He was sixty-eight years old when he came to the throne.
George 1936. The Great War in Europe occurred in his time. Edward. He
reigned ten months in 1936, yielded the throne to his brother George and
married a lady of America, died 1972. George 1952. War against Germany and
Japan, Hitler defeated. He left no son so his elder daughter Elizabeth
ascended the throne. . .
But an entire encyclopedia could be written about British 20th century
history, and no doubt Tolkien imagined an entire encyclopedia being
maintained at Osgiliath then at Minas Tirith where three millennia of
Gondorean history were set out in full.
--
A couple of questions. How do I stop the wires short-circuiting, and what's
this nylon washer for?
Interchange the alphabetic letter groups to reply
|
|
|
| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32795 ] |
Di, 10 Mai 2005 23:08 |
|
Belba Grubb From Stock <barbb [at] dbtech.net> wrote:
> (Forwarded to AFT, too--BB)
Greg's original post was just to RABT. I'm not sure if posting his post
_just_ to AFT will help. Cross-posting seems to be required. I think you
may have spawned two separate threads, but I'm not sure yet.
It is not a serious problem (others have done it before), but I'm not
quite sure what to do now. I wonder if there is any way to unify the two
separate threads?
Does anyone know how to do this?
Christopher
--
---
Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
|
|
|
| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32803 ] |
Di, 10 Mai 2005 23:25 |
|
Hopefully I've managed to resolve the problem. I'll cross my fingers. And
eyes.
"Christopher Kreuzer" wrote:
>> (Forwarded to AFT, too--BB)
>
> Greg's original post was just to RABT. I'm not sure if posting his post
> _just_ to AFT will help. Cross-posting seems to be required. I think you
> may have spawned two separate threads, but I'm not sure yet.
>
> It is not a serious problem (others have done it before), but I'm not
> quite sure what to do now. I wonder if there is any way to unify the two
> separate threads?
>
> Does anyone know how to do this?
>
> Christopher
>
> --
> ---
> Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
>
|
|
|
| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32810 ] |
Di, 10 Mai 2005 23:44 |
|
Gregory Hernandez <gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
> Hopefully I've managed to resolve the problem. I'll cross my
> fingers. And eyes.
Nope. Still only in AFT.
I'm going to try something now...
Then check in Google Groups tomorrow to see where all the posts end up.
It is entirely possible Google Groups will unify all the threads (it
does things by title of post) but people will see different threads in
their newsreaders. Oh well.
Christopher
--
---
Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
|
|
|
| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32811 ] |
Di, 10 Mai 2005 23:46 |
|
[Cross-posted to AFT as well as RABT]
Gregory Hernandez <gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
> Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
>
> The Southern Line
>
> Heirs of Anarion
>
>
>
> SUMMARY
>
> This section deals with the growth of the kingdom of Gondor
> accompanied however by the decline of the Dunedain bloodline. The
> efficacy of the great Numenorean heritage dissipated more swiftly in
> Gondor then in Arnor, not only in the duration of the lifespans of
> the kings, but also in that many of them did not in fact sire any
> children.
>
>
>
> The Gondorians begin to build up a substantial navy and their
> influence increases to the greatest point in their history. The
> Easterlings and the Haradrim begin to become more of a threat, but
> are easily dealt with.at least at first.
>
>
>
> During the reign of Hyarmendacil, Gondor reached the height of his
> power. Hyarmendacil dies in the year 1149 of the Second Age and is
> succeeded by his son Atanatar, a man who as Tolkien puts it "loved
> ease and did nothing to maintain the power that he had inherited".
> And so the decline of Gondor accelerated. During his reign, the
> watch that had been put on Mordor was neglected. Atanatar died
> childless and the crown passed to his brother Calmacil, who in time
> made his son Minalcar Regent of the realm, a position he held for 64
> years until he in turn ascended to the throne. During his time as
> Regent, Minalcar became concerned about the Northmen, who had been
> used by the Kings of Gondor as buffers against the Easterlings. In
> the period between the end of Hyarmendacil's reign and Minalcar's
> ascension as Regent, the Northmen had become less staunchly loyal and
> sometimes turned a blind eye to the Easterlings' raids. Minalcar
> sought to solidify his position with the Northmen and impress upon
> the Easterlings the cost of any forays into Gondor. In 1248 S.A.,
> Minalcar defeated the Easterlings at sea and burned all of their
> camps and settlements east of the Inland Sea. Minalcar fortified
> positions along the Anduin River and it was he who built the
> Argonath.
>
>
>
> Ties between Gondor and the North were strengthened and many Northmen
> came to serve in Minalcar's forces. A special friendship developed
> between Minalcar (who took the name Romendacil "east-victor") and
> Vidugavia, the most powerful of the Northmen. Some years after
> Romendacil had assumed kingship of Gondor, he sent his son to live
> with Vidugavia and learn more of the Northmen's language and customs.
> Romendacil's son became enchanted with the North and in time married
> the daughter of the Northern chief. This was to lead to the first
> great tragedy of Gondor. Many Gondorians looked askance at the
> Northmen and found it unconscionable that one of their own would
> marry with them. When Romendacil's son grew old and his grandson was
> set to take the throne, civil war broke out in Gondor.
>
>
>
> Eldacar, grandson of Romendacil, was deposed in 1437, and for the
> next ten years the usurper Castamir held the crown. A cruel and
> ungenerous man, Castamir lost the love of his own people mostly by
> his own actions. He caused Eldacar's son, who was captured in
> Osgiliath, to be put to death; he savaged the defenders of Eldacar
> and destroyed the city he had laid siege to; further, as a former
> master of ships, he showed that he cared more for the sea than for
> Gondor's lands.
>
>
>
> Finally after ten years (1447 S.A), sensing that the time was right
> for his return, Eldacar came back from the North where he had fled,
> with Northmen and the Dunedain of the north, and many from Gondor
> joined to his cause out of their hatred for the usurper Castamir.
> Castamir himself was slain by Eldacar in battle, but his sons and
> many of his supporters were driven from the land and fled to Umbar in
> the South, where they set up an independent municipality and remained
> hostile to Gondor for many years.
>
>
>
> Many feared that the interbreeding between Gondor and the North would
> diminish the long lives that were their Numenorean heritage, but this
> did not at first turn out to be true. Eldacar lived for 256 years
> and was king for 58 of those years, although the first ten years he
> spent as an exile in the North. The battles that arose when Eldacar
> ascended the crown and later returned to reclaim it, were called the
> Kin-Strife, and it was the first evil to befall Gondor.
>
>
>
> The second evil to befall Gondor occurred in 1636, during the reign of
> Telemnar, grandson of Eldacar. A great plague swept in out of the
> East and killed the King and his family, along with a great many of
> the people of Gondor and elsewhere. Some don't see it as a
> coincidence that the plague befell Gondor as Sauron's power grew
> stronger in Mordor. Many who fled the plague to Ithilien and
> elsewhere never returned to Gondor, even after the plague abated.
>
>
>
> After the plague and the death of King Telemnar and the royal heirs,
> the crown passed to a nephew of the King, and then his son. It was
> this son, Telumehtar, who gathered his forces and made it his point
> to take back the city of Umbar. The corsairs of Umbar had managed to
> kill Eldacar's son many years before. The Corsairs of that city
> continued to pester and raid the Gondorian coast and in 1810
> Telumehtar assembled a great force and took back the city.
>
>
>
> There was barely time to rejoice in the victory, as in less than fifty
> years, Gondor would lose two kings. First, Telumehtar died in 1850;
> six years later his son Narmacil II died in battle with the
> Wainriders, a new and better armed horde of peoples who had come
> suddenly out of the East. Like (perhaps) the great plague that had
> struck earlier, Sauron was seen to be the cause of the Wainriders'
> sudden attack on Gondor. Calimehtar, son of Narmacil II, avenged his
> father, but his triumphs were a brief respite from the strife to come.
>
>
>
> It was during the reign of Ondoher, Calimehtar's son, that the
> Northern and Southern Kingdoms began to communicate again after a
> long period of estrangement. It was then that they came to the
> conclusion that it seemed as if there was a central power behind the
> attacks on the surviving heirs of the Numenorean bloodline. It was
> during that time of counsel between the kingdoms in a period of
> relative peace that Arvedui, son of King Araphant of the Northern
> Kingdom of Arnor married Firiel daughter of King Ondoher of the
> Southern Kingdom of Gondor. When Ondoher and his sons died in battle
> in 1944, Arvedui claimed the kingship of both kingdoms, but was
> rejected by Gondor. He ruled in Arnor only and was in fact their
> last King. Gondor chose as king Earnil, grandson of the brother of
> Narmacil II. He would fare little better than Arvedui as he would
> turn out be Gondor's penultimate King until Elessar's ascension to
> the throne. The Northern Kingdom is overrun by the forces of Angmar
> in 1974. Nearly sixty years later Earnil's son Earnur becomes King
> and is challenged by the Witch-King of Angmar. Seven years later,
> the challenge is repeated. The rash king rides to Minas Morgul to
> face the Witch King and is never seen again. He is presumed killed,
> but as no word comes of his death. The King, dies childless, and the
> Stewards begin to rule in Gondor.
>
>
>
> CONCLUSION
>
>
>
> There is much much more that I have glossed over in this brief
> summary and reading it is like being swept up in a history book
> digested to a few pages. The sweep of the events in Tolkien's
> backstory is exciting enough for several books in and of themselves.
> It is a testament to Tolkien's imagination that he can afford to
> throw all of it into appendices at the end of his huge book.
>
>
>
> SOME POSSIBLE DISCUSSION POINTS
>
> 1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings
> bore many traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One
> example was his revising the Ainulindale so that creation was
> actualized by Illuvatar/Eru speaking the universe into being. One
> wonders if his having the twin realms of Arnor and Gondor was a
> deliberate mirror of the history of ancient Israel, which for a time
> was also divided into two kingdoms, north and south. The Southern
> Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the Northern Kingdom of
> Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed. (What is perhaps
> less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the general editor of
> the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his principle
> collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a
> number of other prominent scholars).
>
>
>
> 2. Some have looked at Tolkien as being a racist. How does that
> view fit in with the Kin-Strife, which is seen as a tragedy for
> Gondor?
>
>
>
> 3. What other narratives have you found that have been similar to the
> histories in the appendices? For me, the royal chronicles in the 1&2
> Samuels and 1&2 Kings in the Bible and Geoffrey of Monmouth spring to
> mind.
>
>
>
> 4. There are people who have recommended a variety of different ways
> to approach reading Tolkien, or have preferences for one or another
> volume he's written. One of the most exciting things for me has been
> to read these appendices by themselves. Is that something you've
> ever tried or considered?
>
>
>
> 5. There is very little variant material of these sections (at least
> that's how it seems in HoME XII). Why do you think that is?
|
|
|
| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32812 ] |
Di, 10 Mai 2005 23:49 |
|
<snip>
If possible, unless replying to points already raised in the other
threads, please use the cross-posted verion of this thread that points
at both AFT and RABT. This one is an AFT-only version of this thread.
There is also a RABT-only version as well.
Christopher
--
---
Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
|
|
|
| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32817 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 00:25 |
|
> Gregory Hernandez <gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
>> Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
>>
>> The Southern Line
>>
>> Heirs of Anarion
<snip>
>> SOME POSSIBLE DISCUSSION POINTS
>>
>> 1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings
>> bore many traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One
>> example was his revising the Ainulindale so that creation was
>> actualized by Illuvatar/Eru speaking the universe into being. One
>> wonders if his having the twin realms of Arnor and Gondor was a
>> deliberate mirror of the history of ancient Israel, which for a time
>> was also divided into two kingdoms, north and south. The Southern
>> Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the Northern Kingdom of
>> Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed. (What is perhaps
>> less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the general editor of
>> the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his principle
>> collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a
>> number of other prominent scholars).
Actually, the consensus seems to be that Tolkien didn't do much work on
the Jerusalem Bible. It seems he agreed to do some of the work, but in
the end did so little (due to pressures of other work) that he was
almost embarassed to be listed. IIRC, this is in a Letter somewhere, but
there are red herrings in the trail. The Biography (by Carpenter) and
Letters list Jonah, but other sources list Job. And to make matters even
more confusing, some publisher wrote a letter to someone with (probably)
the wrong information in it. I can look up the details if needed, but
search for Tolkien, Jonah, Job and Jerusalem, for more information. [1]
Having said that, your point about the Appendices reading like the Bible
is probably a good one. I wouldn't really know, not having read the
Bible.
<snip>
[1] Some starting points:
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/rec.arts.books.tolkien/m sg/8b317128877b689f?hl=en
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/rec.arts.books.tolkien/m sg/03eb1a616e832771?hl=en
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/soc.history/msg/f3b8d118 c2637bc7?hl=en
And the final comment here probably explains how the Amon Hen quote
confused matters. It was a quote of a letter written to the TS secretary
from Longmans. It seems Longmans, the publishers of the Jerusalem Bible,
got confused and said Job in this letter, when they shouldt have said
Jonah.
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/rec.arts.books.tolkien/m sg/58b9d1e446e63162?hl=en
Christopher
--
---
Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32825 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 02:40 |
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Christopher Kreuzer wrote:
> > Gregory Hernandez <gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
> >> Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
> >>
> >> The Southern Line
> >>
> >> Heirs of Anarion
>
>
> <snip>
>
> >> SOME POSSIBLE DISCUSSION POINTS
> >>
> >> 1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings
> >> bore many traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One
> >> example was his revising the Ainulindale so that creation was
> >> actualized by Illuvatar/Eru speaking the universe into being. One
> >> wonders if his having the twin realms of Arnor and Gondor was a
> >> deliberate mirror of the history of ancient Israel, which for a
time
> >> was also divided into two kingdoms, north and south. The Southern
> >> Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the Northern Kingdom of
> >> Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed. (What is perhaps
> >> less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the general editor
of
> >> the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his principle
> >> collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a
> >> number of other prominent scholars).
>
>
> Having said that, your point about the Appendices reading like the
Bible
> is probably a good one. I wouldn't really know, not having read the
> Bible.
>
I wouldn't say so. Tolkien's histories and annals are selected sources
designed to provide a broad overview of the history of the Third Age,
and added depth to the narrative. Biblical "history" even if one wants
to read the Bible as literally as possible, is clearly an ideological
treatise. Nothing wrong with that of course, but not exactly what
Tolkien was looking forward. Tolkien's prose is also generally easier
to read (though I confess parts of the Bible, especially the poetry, do
make great literature-I did an undergrad Hebrew Scriptures course last
semester).
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32826 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 02:56 |
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Christopher:
Thanks for your links to the various posts which mention the subject. They
added to my stock of knowledge and to my respect for the man. I honestly
thought that the most Tolkien did was to provide guidance on certain
elements of style, not that he translated anything at all, and that he was
listed to capitalize on the Prof's fame. I was completely unaware that
Tolkien knew of was familiar enough with Hebrew to do some actual
translation, whether it be Jonah or Job (and you're right, there do seem to
be some points of confusion as to which book he might have in fact
translated). Thanks for helping to bring out more on a topic that perhaps
not many were aware of at all.
Best Regards,
Gregory H.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32827 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 02:59 |
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"Mark Edelstein" wrote:
>[snip] I wouldn't say so. Tolkien's histories and annals are selected
>sources
> designed to provide a broad overview of the history of the Third Age,
> and added depth to the narrative. Biblical "history" even if one wants
> to read the Bible as literally as possible, is clearly an ideological
> treatise.
There are royal annals which read much the same way that some of Appendix A
does, and are not of an ideological bent at all. Some trace these to actual
annals written during the time of both kingdoms Israel proper and Judaea.
GRH
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #32829 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 03:06 |
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"Mark Edelstein" wrote:
[snip]
> Personally; I enjoyed Morgoth's Ring more than WoJ (the latter was more
> textual history then new content, though there are interesting things
> to be gleaned from it, especially about how much we missed from a truly
> published Silmarillion).
Given what we now know (and have available, thanks to HoME) it is easy to
second guess what Christopher Tolkien did or might have done to put the
Silmarillion together, but to be fair, even the elder Tolkien seemed to get
boggled as to what to do.
> I haven't read anything else, save BoLT I,
> which I couldn't get through. The Lays sound interesting, though I'm
> not sure I'd buy it, and I have similar feelings about The Lost Road.
>
Yeah, I'm not sure about that either. I've always had the hardest time in
reading poetwry generally speaking, whether by JRRT or anyone else.
GRH
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33587 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 14:41 |
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"Mark Edelstein" wrote:
>> "Mark Edelstein" wrote:
>> >> [snip] Definitely different than the First Age material, which went
> through
>> >> numerous revisions.
>> >
>> > It helps that the 3rd age involved no vast gaps between the
>> > possibilities of a created "Catholic" universe and the realities of
> a
>> > created "Catholic" universe. There are no issues regarding the
> creation
>> > and nature of sentient beings, or any great issues of cosmology.
>>
>> I'm not sure, do you mean Catholic in the sense of 'universal', or in
>
>> reference to the religion?
>
> Religion. Philosophically Tolkien wanted his universe to ultimately;
> reflect physical reality as much as possible (especially in terms of
> cosmology) and reflect Catholicism's worldview.
>
Although his writing reflected his philosophy, I would say that his First
Age material is quite a bit more universal than that. For instance, when he
changed the Ainulindale from having the universe created thru music to
having the universe created by Eru speaking it into being, he was reflecting
the Hebrew concept of the "ruah", the spirit or breath of God which did the
same thing. The ruah concept was later incorporated into Christianity as
the Holy Spirit and (via the Greek idea of the Logos), the idea of the Word
made Flesh.
But Tolkien's conception of evil is of a corruption of nature, as in Morgoth
beasically suborning the natural order of things, and how evil tended to
spring forth from Mordor as Sauron's power grew (in appendix A). This
concept is very Eastern in nature, especially Hinduism.
I think, like the whole debate about allegory, his concepts were broad
enough to allow for applicability, without making it necessary.
IMHO, of course,
GRH
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33591 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 16:09 |
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> > It helps that the 3rd age involved no vast gaps between the
> > possibilities of a created "Catholic" universe and the realities of
a
> > created "Catholic" universe. There are no issues regarding the
creation
> > and nature of sentient beings, or any great issues of cosmology.
> I'm not sure, do you mean Catholic in the sense of 'universal', or in
> reference to the religion?
> >Religion. Philosophically Tolkien wanted his universe to ultimately;
> >reflect physical reality as much as possible (especially in terms of
> >cosmology) and reflect Catholicism's worldview.
> Although his writing reflected his philosophy, I would say that his
First
> Age material is quite a bit more universal than that. For instance,
when he
> changed the Ainulindale from having the universe created thru music
to
> having the universe created by Eru speaking it into being, he was
reflecting
> the Hebrew concept of the "ruah", the spirit or breath of God which
did the
> same thing. The ruah concept was later incorporated into
Christianity as
> the Holy Spirit and (via the Greek idea of the Logos), the idea of
the Word
> made Flesh.
>
> But Tolkien's conception of evil is of a corruption of nature, as in
Morgoth
> beasically suborning the natural order of things, and how evil tended
to
> spring forth from Mordor as Sauron's power grew (in appendix A).
This
> concept is very Eastern in nature, especially Hinduism.
>
> I think, like the whole debate about allegory, his concepts were
broad
> enough to allow for applicability, without making it necessary.
>
> IMHO, of course,
> GRH
I think it is precisely this problem that helped hold up publication.
As he grew pulled in deeper and deeper into sub-creation, it became
harder and harder to "create."
(With my earlier remarks added so AFT readers get the gist)
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33599 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 21:02 |
|
Christopher Kreuzer wrote:
>>Gregory Hernandez <gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
>>
>>>Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
>>>
>>>The Southern Line
>>>
>>>Heirs of Anarion
>
>
>
> <snip>
>
>>>SOME POSSIBLE DISCUSSION POINTS
>>>
>>>1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings
>>>bore many traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One
>>>example was his revising the Ainulindale so that creation was
>>>actualized by Illuvatar/Eru speaking the universe into being. One
>>>wonders if his having the twin realms of Arnor and Gondor was a
>>>deliberate mirror of the history of ancient Israel, which for a time
>>>was also divided into two kingdoms, north and south. The Southern
>>>Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the Northern Kingdom of
>>>Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed. (What is perhaps
>>>less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the general editor of
>>>the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his principle
>>>collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a
>>>number of other prominent scholars).
>
>
> Actually, the consensus seems to be that Tolkien didn't do much work on
> the Jerusalem Bible. It seems he agreed to do some of the work, but in
> the end did so little (due to pressures of other work) that he was
> almost embarassed to be listed. IIRC, this is in a Letter somewhere, but
> there are red herrings in the trail. The Biography (by Carpenter) and
> Letters list Jonah, but other sources list Job. And to make matters even
> more confusing, some publisher wrote a letter to someone with (probably)
> the wrong information in it. I can look up the details if needed, but
> search for Tolkien, Jonah, Job and Jerusalem, for more information. [1]
>
> Having said that, your point about the Appendices reading like the Bible
> is probably a good one. I wouldn't really know, not having read the
> Bible.
>
> <snip>
>
> [1] Some starting points:
>
> http://groups-beta.google.com/group/rec.arts.books.tolkien/m sg/8b317128877b689f?hl=en
>
> http://groups-beta.google.com/group/rec.arts.books.tolkien/m sg/03eb1a616e832771?hl=en
>
> http://groups-beta.google.com/group/soc.history/msg/f3b8d118 c2637bc7?hl=en
>
> And the final comment here probably explains how the Amon Hen quote
> confused matters. It was a quote of a letter written to the TS secretary
> from Longmans. It seems Longmans, the publishers of the Jerusalem Bible,
> got confused and said Job in this letter, when they shouldt have said
> Jonah.
Hi Christopher,
I'm going to try and straighten this one out if I can. I've tried here
before, but.....
At the beginning of the Jerusalem Bible translation project headed up by
Fr. Anthony Jones in English, the idea was to quickly provide good
English translations of the French text of La Bible Jerusalem, completed
and published in 1954, but to provide new commentary by English, Roman
Catholic scholars and authors. It was in this context that Jones wrote
to Tolkien inviting him to be part of the project. Because of time
Tolkien accepted the book of Jonah which he then seems to have
translated from French, which Jones himself then checked against the
Hebrew and Greek and revised it. Jones' initial letter to Tolkien
assures T more than once that knowledge of the languages was not
necessary. The aim of the JB was to have an eye on English style as
much as accurate translation. Jones makes it clear that he was inviting
Tolkien on board because of his expertise in English philology and
because of the fact that Jones was taken with LoTR, not because of any
supposed expertise in Hebrew. This wasn't unusual. There are other
members of the JB board who were like Tolkien--not expert in the
original languages of the Bible but were desireable for their expertise
in English, and quite frankly, because they were prominent Roman
Catholic thinkers/writers in England.
In the end, as Tolkien says, he was able to contribute very little in
spite of writing to his grandson Michael in 1957 that he hoped to take a
much larger role in the JB and was learning Hebrew (note that this is
AFTER he had submitted the translation of Jonah), but as he indicates
elsewhere he never got very far because of the demands of other work.
Jones, wanting to keep Tolkien on the board and involved in the project,
offered to Tolkien the task of revising some of the translation--not in
comparison to the originals--but by making comments on improving the
English style of some of the translations. Tolkien received the copy of
Job that had been translated by Andrew Keeney, Jones' nephew and also a
board member in the end. Tolkien held up the work for a long time not
being able to complete his revisions in part due to other work, in part
due to Tolkien's perfectionism. According to Keeney, when he and Jones
went to Tolkien's home to discuss the translation, Tolkien proved to be
difficult and intractable on some of the issues of the translation's
English expression and forced through the changes. This resulted in yet
more delay in publication. This isn't to lay the fact that it took 10
years to complete the project on Tolkien....many other factors
contributed to delays of all kinds, chiefly that Jones undertook most of
the work himself and he ended his career in parish life if I recall
correctly. But it is to say that Tolkien's revisions were late and did
delay crossing Job off the list of completed books. Tolkien esp. in
later years, was seldom on time with a publication, in large part due to
his perfectionism.
The note from the publisher reproduced in Amon Hen in 1977 and taken up
elsewhere is mistaken. The author conflates Tolkien's tardiness in
preparing a revision of the translation of Job with which the author
states Tolkien was important, with Tolkien actually providing the
translation, which he didn't. Not unless Jones and Keeney are lying.
So the upshot is this:
Tolkien translated Jonah from French and this was revised by Jones in
comparison to the Hebrew
Tolkien REVISED the English translation of Job, but the translation was
done by Keeney.
Tolkien's name is listed as among the board members, but he thought it
generous considering how little he had done.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33600 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 21:04 |
|
Gregory Hernandez wrote:
> "Mark Edelstein" wrote:
>
>>>"Mark Edelstein" wrote:
>>>
>>>>>[snip] Definitely different than the First Age material, which went
>>
>>through
>>
>>>>>numerous revisions.
>>>>
>>>>It helps that the 3rd age involved no vast gaps between the
>>>>possibilities of a created "Catholic" universe and the realities of
>>
>>a
>>
>>>>created "Catholic" universe. There are no issues regarding the
>>
>>creation
>>
>>>>and nature of sentient beings, or any great issues of cosmology.
>>>
>>>I'm not sure, do you mean Catholic in the sense of 'universal', or in
>>
>>>reference to the religion?
>>
>>Religion. Philosophically Tolkien wanted his universe to ultimately;
>>reflect physical reality as much as possible (especially in terms of
>>cosmology) and reflect Catholicism's worldview.
>>
>
> Although his writing reflected his philosophy, I would say that his First
> Age material is quite a bit more universal than that. For instance, when he
> changed the Ainulindale from having the universe created thru music to
> having the universe created by Eru speaking it into being, he was reflecting
> the Hebrew concept of the "ruah", the spirit or breath of God which did the
> same thing. The ruah concept was later incorporated into Christianity as
> the Holy Spirit and (via the Greek idea of the Logos), the idea of the Word
> made Flesh.
>
> But Tolkien's conception of evil is of a corruption of nature, as in Morgoth
> beasically suborning the natural order of things, and how evil tended to
> spring forth from Mordor as Sauron's power grew (in appendix A). This
> concept is very Eastern in nature, especially Hinduism.
>
> I think, like the whole debate about allegory, his concepts were broad
> enough to allow for applicability, without making it necessary.
I'd say that Tolkien's appendices read more like medieval historiography
than the Bible. Most of the native Hebrew narrative elements are
missing in Tolkien, whereas his writing resembles in tone, structure,
and scene, authors such as Fredegar, Jordanes, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
(see the Tale of Years), and so on.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33601 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 21:10 |
|
On Tue, 10 May 2005 05:52:44 GMT, "Gregory Hernandez"
<gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
>Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv
>
>The Southern Line
>
>Heirs of Anarion
>
<Snip excellent summary>
>
>SOME POSSIBLE DISCUSSION POINTS
>
>1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings bore many
>traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One example was his
>revising the Ainulindale so that creation was actualized by Illuvatar/Eru
>speaking the universe into being. One wonders if his having the twin realms
>of Arnor and Gondor was a deliberate mirror of the history of ancient
>Israel, which for a time was also divided into two kingdoms, north and
>south. The Southern Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the Northern
>Kingdom of Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed. (What is
>perhaps less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the general editor
>of the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his principle
>collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a number of
>other prominent scholars).
>
Interesting analogy. I'm not convinced, though; you would have to
stretch the analogy to account for the Rangers and the reunification -
there are plenty of more pertinent models throughout history that
Tolkien might have used.
>
>2. Some have looked at Tolkien as being a racist. How does that view fit
>in with the Kin-Strife, which is seen as a tragedy for Gondor?
>
It doesn't
>
>3. What other narratives have you found that have been similar to the
>histories in the appendices? For me, the royal chronicles in the 1&2
>Samuels and 1&2 Kings in the Bible and Geoffrey of Monmouth spring to mind.
>
Suetonius' _Twelve Caesars_, perhaps? It's a lot more detailed, but
the same sort of long term narrative. And now I come to think of it,
Livy's _History of Rome_.
>
--
Matthew T Curtis mtcurtis[at]dsl.pipex.com
HIV+ for 24 glorious years!
There was a roar as the shout of a camel that finished seeing
two bricks. - Terry Pratchett, translated into Spanish and back
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33602 ] |
Mi, 11 Mai 2005 21:28 |
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"Larry Swain" wrote:
[snip]
> So the upshot is this:
> Tolkien translated Jonah from French and this was revised by Jones in
> comparison to the Hebrew
> Tolkien REVISED the English translation of Job, but the translation was
> done by Keeney.
> Tolkien's name is listed as among the board members, but he thought it
> generous considering how little he had done.
Larry: thank you very very much for bringing your very detailed knowledge to
the subject and clearing up some points of confusion. Your comments were as
informative as they were entertaining and appreciated.
Greg
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33604 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 00:20 |
|
Larry Swain <theswain [at] operamail.com> wrote:
<snip>
> I'm going to try and straighten this one out if I can.
I think you can safely say you succeeded in clearing this up. Thanks!
<snip>
> The note from the publisher reproduced in Amon Hen in 1977 and taken
> up elsewhere is mistaken. The author conflates Tolkien's tardiness in
> preparing a revision of the translation of Job with which the author
> states Tolkien was important, with Tolkien actually providing the
> translation, which he didn't.
That was the 'mistaken publisher' I referred to. It is interesting
though, from looking at a Google search, just how far and wide this
little mistake has spread, (to the extent where hundreds of people say
categorically that Tolkien translated Job). It is a perfectly reasonable
source (the publishers themselves), but as you explained, the original
correspondence between Tolkien and Jones, along with Tolkien's own
comments on the matter in other letters, contradicts the assertion that
Tolkien translated Job.
Not to mention that the whole process of translation was not as simple
as it sounds, as you also clearly explained: French to English; then
checked against the original Hebrew; with some of the final English
texts being revised for matters of English style.
> So the upshot is this:
>
> Tolkien translated Jonah from French and this was revised by Jones in
> comparison to the Hebrew
>
> Tolkien REVISED the English translation of Job, but the translation
> was done by Keeney.
>
> Tolkien's name is listed as among the board members, but he thought it
> generous considering how little he had done.
Thanks again for the details, and for this nice summary.
Christopher
--
---
Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33608 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 03:59 |
|
One of the topics I didn't get into in my summary was the subject of the
Witch-King of Angmar, who played such a crucial part in the destruction of
the Northern realm of Arnor and the death of the king of the South (which
led to the custodial rule of the Stewards). What is known about the
Witch-King is that he was the most powerful of the Nine Nazgul, who were
once men, and evidently a sorceror. While it is tempting to think that at
least part of his enmity for the surviving Dunedain was that perhaps he bore
some of their blood (in some references he is listed as a Numenorean*), but
tantalizingly little is known about him. I wonder if, like much else in the
back story of Middle-Earth, there is more material filling out his story.
GRH
*Detailed info which purport to impart more of the Witch-King's story derive
ultimately from non-canonical sources, such as games produced by Iron Crown
Enterprises.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33609 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 04:04 |
|
"Gregory Hernandez" <gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:cMyge.1325$LO1.542 [at] newsread2.news.atl.earthlink.net...
> One of the topics I didn't get into in my summary was the subject of the
> Witch-King of Angmar, who played such a crucial part in the destruction of
> the Northern realm of Arnor and the death of the king of the South (which
> led to the custodial rule of the Stewards). What is known about the
> Witch-King is that he was the most powerful of the Nine Nazgul, who were
> once men, and evidently a sorceror. While it is tempting to think that at
> least part of his enmity for the surviving Dunedain was that perhaps he
> bore some of their blood (in some references he is listed as a
> Numenorean*), but tantalizingly little is known about him. I wonder if,
> like much else in the back story of Middle-Earth, there is more material
> filling out his story.
>
> GRH
>
> *Detailed info which purport to impart more of the Witch-King's story
> derive ultimately from non-canonical sources, such as games produced by
> Iron Crown Enterprises.
There is an excellent thread about the Witch-King over at alt.fan.tolkien --
check it out!
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33610 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 04:21 |
|
On Tue, 10 May 2005 21:46:36 GMT,
Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:[B
<snip>
>> 1. It is well known that Tolkien was a Christian and his writings
>> bore many traces of his faith, both overtly and innately. One
>> example was his revising the Ainulindale so that creation was
>> actualized by Illuvatar/Eru speaking the universe into being. One
>> wonders if his having the twin realms of Arnor and Gondor was a
>> deliberate mirror of the history of ancient Israel, which for a time
>> was also divided into two kingdoms, north and south. The Southern
>> Kingdom Judea survived for some time after the Northern Kingdom of
>> Israel was conquered and its residents dispersed.
I suppose there is some resemblance, but to be honest with you, I've usually
seen more resemblance between the Western and Eastern Roman Empires.
> (What is perhaps
>> less known is that J.R.R. Tolkien was listed by the general editor of
>> the first edition of the Jerusalem Bible as one of his principle
>> collaborators in translation and literary revision, along with a
>> number of other prominent scholars).
JRRT translated one book, though I can't recall which one.
>> 2. Some have looked at Tolkien as being a racist. How does that
>> view fit in with the Kin-Strife, which is seen as a tragedy for
>> Gondor?
The Kin-strife seems pretty clearly to me the product of a racist element in
Gondorian society. The desire to keep the Dunedain pure-blooded, even when
marital alliances with the Northmen would have greatly strengthened Gondor's
military and economic position is as good a demonstration of how harmful
racism can be.
<snip>
--
mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33611 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 04:32 |
|
"AC" wrote:
>
> <snip>
> The Kin-strife seems pretty clearly to me the product of a racist element
> in
> Gondorian society. The desire to keep the Dunedain pure-blooded, even
> when
> marital alliances with the Northmen would have greatly strengthened
> Gondor's
> military and economic position is as good a demonstration of how harmful
> racism can be.
>
Exactly. I just thought I'd phrase it as a question instead of making it a
statement. I get surprised at how often people see racism, but ignore those
elements in the same work which directly refute the racism charge.
GRH
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33612 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 04:38 |
|
"AC" wrote:
[snip
>> I keep saying that I would have the hardest time with the early
>> Silmarillion
>> texts, but as that discussion is coming up soon, the HoME books might
>> actually be beneficial in shedding light on some of the material.
>
> I think if you are truly interested in understanding not only the
> evolution
> of the mythos but also how the published Silm was produced, they are
> absolutely essential.
Looks like I may have to start saving up my shekels so I can get the set,
then. The only annoying thing is I'd like to get a matching set, but the
last couple of books are not out in Trade paperback yet (and I dunno if
there are actually any plans to do so). Nuts.
GRH
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33613 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 05:12 |
|
>
> Looks like I may have to start saving up my shekels so I can get the
set,
> then. The only annoying thing is I'd like to get a matching set, but
the
> last couple of books are not out in Trade paperback yet (and I dunno
if
> there are actually any plans to do so). Nuts.
> GRH
But they are. I own PoME (XII) and Morgoth's Ring (XI) in paperback
editions. Nice covers too.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #33614 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 06:16 |
|
On Thu, 12 May 2005 02:38:12 GMT,
Gregory Hernandez <gregrosa [at] earthlink.net> wrote:
> "AC" wrote:
> [snip
>>> I keep saying that I would have the hardest time with the early
>>> Silmarillion
>>> texts, but as that discussion is coming up soon, the HoME books might
>>> actually be beneficial in shedding light on some of the material.
>>
>> I think if you are truly interested in understanding not only the
>> evolution
>> of the mythos but also how the published Silm was produced, they are
>> absolutely essential.
>
> Looks like I may have to start saving up my shekels so I can get the set,
> then. The only annoying thing is I'd like to get a matching set, but the
> last couple of books are not out in Trade paperback yet (and I dunno if
> there are actually any plans to do so). Nuts.
I pretty much bought the first few as I could afford them, all in paperback.
I only have three hardcover Tolkien books; Morgoth's Ring, Letters and
Carpenter's biography. Letters was an incredible scoop, because it wasn't
in print at the time, but I saw a hardcover up on the top of the fantasy
shelf at my favorite used book store, and for some peculiar reason grabbed
it, and for a few bucks I had a copy.
--
mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #34266 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 19:50 |
|
Gregory Hernandez wrote:
> "Larry Swain" wrote:
> [snip]
>
>>So the upshot is this:
>>Tolkien translated Jonah from French and this was revised by Jones in
>>comparison to the Hebrew
>>Tolkien REVISED the English translation of Job, but the translation was
>>done by Keeney.
>>Tolkien's name is listed as among the board members, but he thought it
>>generous considering how little he had done.
>
>
> Larry: thank you very very much for bringing your very detailed knowledge to
> the subject and clearing up some points of confusion. Your comments were as
> informative as they were entertaining and appreciated.
>
> Greg
>
>
You're welcome, glad to be of help.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #34267 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 20:05 |
|
Christopher Kreuzer wrote:
> Larry Swain <theswain [at] operamail.com> wrote:
>
> <snip>
>
> Not to mention that the whole process of translation was not as simple
> as it sounds, as you also clearly explained: French to English; then
> checked against the original Hebrew; with some of the final English
> texts being revised for matters of English style.
>
Thanks for your comments Christopher. Just to be clear, the above is
how the project started in 1955. By late '56-early '57 from what I've
been able to piece together it was realized that this was the wrong way
to go. So for the sake of clarity here was the original design: to
translate the excellent French Jerusalem Bible into English with an eye
on the original languages to be sure the English was being true to the
original as well, and then supplying a new apparatus of commentary and
explanation by English scholars. The change was to do the opposite: to
translate into English from the original languages while keeping an eye
on the French translation--so a new translation into English and trying
to some degree to remain faithful to the French edition and rendering,
AND to be an excellent and "not your RSV" rendering in English. It was
truly an amazing task and result. And then to translate the excellent
French apparatus into English rather than supplying a completely new
one. The change was made early enough that it affected only a few of
the smaller books, such as Tolkien's Jonah, that had already been turned
in. Jones himself took on the task of revising these small texts
comparing them carefully to the Hebrew and Greek, making the necessary
revisions. In some cases this was heavy revision, in other cases, not
so much. I don't know how Jonah fared in that case, although there are
some hints by Tolkien himself that it was heavy if I read that letter
rightly. But Tolkien could be being overly humble too.
>>So the upshot is this:
>>
>>Tolkien translated Jonah from French and this was revised by Jones in
>>comparison to the Hebrew
>>
>>Tolkien REVISED the English translation of Job, but the translation
>>was done by Keeney.
>>
>>Tolkien's name is listed as among the board members, but he thought it
>>generous considering how little he had done.
>
>
> Thanks again for the details, and for this nice summary.
>
> Christopher
>
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #34268 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 20:54 |
|
AC <mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 10 May 2005 21:46:36 GMT,
> Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
<snip>
No, I didn't write any of that... :-)
I suspect you were piggybacking on my post, but I can't remember if you
are in the "attribute the poster whose post you are replying to" school,
or in the "attribute the person whose text you are replying to" school.
Christopher
--
---
Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #34274 ] |
Do, 12 Mai 2005 21:50 |
|
"Mark Edelstein" wrote:
>
> But they are [available in paperback]. I own PoME (XII) and Morgoth's Ring
> (XI) in paperback
> editions. Nice covers too.
>
Yippee!
Thanks, dude.
GRH
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #34280 ] |
Fr, 13 Mai 2005 00:09 |
|
On Thu, 12 May 2005 18:54:29 GMT,
Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
> AC <mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com> wrote:
>> On Tue, 10 May 2005 21:46:36 GMT,
>> Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
>
><snip>
>
> No, I didn't write any of that... :-)
>
> I suspect you were piggybacking on my post, but I can't remember if you
> are in the "attribute the poster whose post you are replying to" school,
> or in the "attribute the person whose text you are replying to" school.
Depends. Which school requires an apple be brought to the teacher?
--
mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #34285 ] |
Fr, 13 Mai 2005 01:43 |
|
"AC" <mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com> wrote:
> Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
<snip>
> > I suspect you were piggybacking on my post, but I can't remember if
you
> > are in the "attribute the poster whose post you are replying to"
school,
> > or in the "attribute the person whose text you are replying to"
school.
>
> Depends. Which school requires an apple be brought to the teacher?
No apple. Just a tribute.
..
..
..
..
[My first genuine pun!]
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #36577 ] |
Fr, 13 Mai 2005 21:13 |
|
Christopher Kreuzer wrote:
> AC <mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>>On Tue, 10 May 2005 21:46:36 GMT,
>>Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
>
>
> <snip>
>
> No, I didn't write any of that... :-)
>
> I suspect you were piggybacking on my post, but I can't remember if you
> are in the "attribute the poster whose post you are replying to" school,
> or in the "attribute the person whose text you are replying to" school.
>
> Christopher
>
Really? The message I responded to had your name as sender from 5/11,
date marked on my software anyway as 5:24 PM. I don' tknow that I'm
in a school, but I try to be a "attribute the person whose text you are
replying to" slot. Here I guess I didn't succeed. Sorry about that.
In any case, I didn't want someone like MM to come back and accuse of
misrepresenting the history of the JB and so on, so thought that some
clarification was necessary.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #36602 ] |
Sa, 14 Mai 2005 13:11 |
|
Larry Swain <theswain [at] operamail.com> wrote:
> Christopher Kreuzer wrote:
>> AC <mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com> wrote:
>>> Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
>>
>> No, I didn't write any of that... :-)
>>
>> I suspect you were piggybacking on my post, but I can't remember if
>> you are in the "attribute the poster whose post you are replying to"
>> school, or in the "attribute the person whose text you are replying
>> to" school.
>
> Really? The message I responded to had your name as sender from 5/11,
> date marked on my software anyway as 5:24 PM. I don' tknow that I'm
> in a school, but I try to be a "attribute the person whose text you
> are replying to" slot. Here I guess I didn't succeed. Sorry about
> that.
Um. Larry, there seems to be more than a little bit of confusion here!
You don't actually have anything to apologise for, as far as I can see
(not that I'd expect anyone to really apologise over a little mistake
like this).
You seem to have replied to a post by me on 5/12 (not 5/11) that was a
response to a post by AC, who responded to a post by me that was a
cross-posting of a post by Gregory Hernandez. AC was responding to what
Greg wrote, but left in the attribution to me and lost the attribution
to Greg, which is what I was making a mild fuss about.
> In any case, I didn't want someone like MM to come back and accuse of
> misrepresenting the history of the JB and so on, so thought that some
> clarification was necessary.
That is to do with the subthread of this thread about the Jerusalem
Bible, which I did contribute to, and I think all the attributions were
correct there. You seem to be confusing different subthreads of this
thread. Maybe your newsreader is not threading things properly, or not
everything is arriving at the same time?
Christopher
--
---
Reply clue: Saruman welcomes you to Spamgard
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #36618 ] |
Sa, 14 Mai 2005 21:23 |
|
Christopher Kreuzer wrote:
> Larry Swain <theswain [at] operamail.com> wrote:
>
>>Christopher Kreuzer wrote:
>>
>>>AC <mightymartianca [at] hotmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>>Christopher Kreuzer <spamgard [at] blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:
>>>
>>>No, I didn't write any of that... :-)
>>>
>>>I suspect you were piggybacking on my post, but I can't remember if
>>>you are in the "attribute the poster whose post you are replying to"
>>>school, or in the "attribute the person whose text you are replying
>>>to" school.
>>
>>Really? The message I responded to had your name as sender from 5/11,
>>date marked on my software anyway as 5:24 PM. I don' tknow that I'm
>>in a school, but I try to be a "attribute the person whose text you
>>are replying to" slot. Here I guess I didn't succeed. Sorry about
>>that.
>
>
> Um. Larry, there seems to be more than a little bit of confusion here!
Of course!! I'm typically confused.
> You don't actually have anything to apologise for, as far as I can see
> (not that I'd expect anyone to really apologise over a little mistake
> like this).
>
> You seem to have replied to a post by me on 5/12 (not 5/11) that was a
> response to a post by AC, who responded to a post by me that was a
> cross-posting of a post by Gregory Hernandez. AC was responding to what
> Greg wrote, but left in the attribution to me and lost the attribution
> to Greg, which is what I was making a mild fuss about.
>
>
>>In any case, I didn't want someone like MM to come back and accuse of
>>misrepresenting the history of the JB and so on, so thought that some
>>clarification was necessary.
>
>
> That is to do with the subthread of this thread about the Jerusalem
> Bible, which I did contribute to, and I think all the attributions were
> correct there. You seem to be confusing different subthreads of this
> thread. Maybe your newsreader is not threading things properly, or not
> everything is arriving at the same time?
Probably. Thanks for giving me an excuse. ;)
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #36634 ] |
So, 15 Mai 2005 11:54 |
|
>>Gregory H wrote:
>>
>> I'd like to get a matching set of the
>>History of Middle Earth, but
> >the last couple of books are not out in
>>Trade paperback yet ...
To which Mark Edelstein responded:
>
> But they are. I own PoME (XII) and Morgoth's Ring (XI) in paperback
> editions. Nice covers too.
I researched this and discovered the problem: Canada and the UK do have the
books out in trade paperback, but being in America (as in so many other
things) we are behind the curve and only have the books available in
hardcover. Generic covers, too, as opposed to the lovely covers (as you
mentioned) available elsewhere. Nuts. Luckily I believe I can order the
books from Amazon Canada. Looks like I'm off to the races on this one.
thanks for the lead, mate.
GRH
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #49638 ] |
Do, 26 Mai 2005 21:39 |
|
On Tue, 10 May 2005 16:08:52 -0500, Christopher Kreuzer wrote
> Belba Grubb From Stock <barbb [at] dbtech.net> wrote:
>> (Forwarded to AFT, too--BB)
> Greg's original post was just to RABT. I'm not sure if posting his post
> _just_ to AFT will help. Cross-posting seems to be required. I think you
> may have spawned two separate threads, but I'm not sure yet.
>
> It is not a serious problem (others have done it before), but I'm not
> quite sure what to do now. I wonder if there is any way to unify the two
> separate threads?
>
> Does anyone know how to do this?
ObAppendixAI.ii&AI.iv
A choice will come to the AFTers, and if they take the one that seems less
hopeful, then this thread son will change its name and become a thread of
surpassing greatness. If not, then much sorrow and many lives of men shall
pass, until the Threads arise and are united again.
---
Graham
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #49639 ] |
Do, 26 Mai 2005 21:40 |
|
On Sun, 15 May 2005 04:54:49 -0500, Gregory Hernandez wrote
{snip}
> I researched this and discovered the problem: Canada and the UK do have the
> books out in trade paperback, but being in America (as in so many other
> things) we are behind the curve and only have the books available in
> hardcover. Generic covers, too, as opposed to the lovely covers (as you
> mentioned) available elsewhere. Nuts. Luckily I believe I can order the
> books from Amazon Canada. Looks like I'm off to the races on this one.
> thanks for the lead, mate.
I got my paperback of PoME from some UK book website too. It seems normal
enough except that it has a price stamped on it in pounds instead of dollars.
;)
---
Graham
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #49642 ] |
Do, 26 Mai 2005 22:07 |
|
Graham Lockwood <g-ng [at] yeehawgropes.com> wrote in
news:0001HW.BEBB90590028D8FAF0284600 [at] news.x-privat.org:
>
> I got my paperback of PoME from some UK book website too. It seems
> normal enough except that it has a price stamped on it in pounds
> instead of dollars. ;)
Are the numbers the same, as is customarily the case?
--
Cheers, ymt.
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| Re: Appendix AI.ii & AI.iv [message #49643 ] |
Do, 26 Mai 2005 23:31 |
|
"Graham Lockwood" <g-ng [at] yeehawgropes.com> wrote:
> A choice will come to the AFTers, and if they take the one that seems
less
> hopeful, then this thread son will change its name and become a thread
of
> surpassing greatness. If not, then much sorrow and many lives of men
shall
> pass, until the Threads arise and are united again.
ROTFL!
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