#Lay of Luthien
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thelien-art · 6 months ago
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Lúthien Tinúviel
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"-for Lúthien was the most beautiful of all the Children of Ilúvatar. Blue was her raiment as the unclouded heaven, but her eyes were grey as the starlit evening; her mantle was sewn with golden flowers, but her hair was dark as the shadows of twilight."
The Silmarillion - J.R.R. Tolkien
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elena-kukanova · 2 months ago
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In the meantime, a whole plot bundle has come together
Fen of Serech
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thetiredprometheus · 3 months ago
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Celegorm and Curufin explaining the Luthien situation to Maedhros
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tanoraqui · 5 months ago
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my real Leithian hot take is that Thingol did not mean it. He did not value his daughter at 1 Silmaril - he did not "value" his daughter like a thing to be paid for, ever. He did not mean to set her would-be-betrothed a politically fraught and inevitably deadly task, or even a Legendary Impossible Task. He did mean to tell Beren to fuck off and never darken their treestep again, but he said, "Bring to me in your hand a Silmaril from Morgoth’s crown; and then, if she will, Lúthien may set her hand in yours." the same way you or I would sarcastically say, "I'll do that when Hell freezes over" - and the great and terrible harmony of the Music of Ëa itself rose to back his words, in a chorus that would echo throughout Arda and reprise until the very End of Days, and every since person in the room with the faintest Song-sense went, oh fuck; except Beren, who, being a Man, had only the very faintest Song-sense anyway, just went, "Bet."
(This didn't entirely help Thingol's case in his daughter's eyes, because he very much had intended for Beren to fuck off and die, albeit only in the way that Men always do and Lúthien, in her father's eyes, was never supposed to; and when it was clear that this was now a Legendary Impossible Task, he very much did have her locked in a treehouse rather than let her go help her lover. He still made some Choices. But he didn't start All Of That; That just happened.)
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tolkien-povs · 2 months ago
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Reading The Hobbit has a warm, cozy feeling to it, like sitting by a fireplace and downing a warm mug of hot chocolate. There are times when you want to cry, times when you want to laugh, times when you want to fight alongside Thorin’s Company. But at the end of the story, you realise that you will never experience that, because The Hobbit is fictional in reality, but so real in the heart and mind.
Reading The Lord of The Rings has a cool feeling, neither warm nor cold, but a comfortable one; it’s as if you’re sitting by a window, staring into the rain, and wishing you could go outside and relish in the rain but you can’t because it’s cold. There are times when you want to laugh, cry, dine with the Fellowship, fight with the Fellowship. But you can’t, because The Lord of The Rings is only a figment lodged in your heart, tucked away in a cozy spot.
Reading The Silmarillion has the feel of sitting in an enormous library almost abandoned, and fishing out an old, dusty book from a nook long forgotten, written about the history of the world. There are cases when you want to delve into that world and explore it, revel in it, fight it, love it, yell at the people in it. But you can never do that, because it is a history long past, existing only in the minds of very few.
Reading the old stories narrating the entire history of Arda has the feel of travelling back in time to the Library of Alexandria, reading and studying all the library can give. There are times when you want to cry, mourn, grieve, celebrate, laugh, revel in the world. But you can never, as that world, those people, are all part of your heart and mind, tucked away into the most precious part of you.
Reading the legendarium doesn’t make you want to be a part of that world because you love it. It makes you want to be a part of that world because the characters are normal people, like you, who got roped into an unlikely adventure, forever narrated in song, poems, ballads and laments.
They are simple stories, of simple people, in a simple world, where if you existed, you could have been one of those souls both fortunate and unfortunate.
Reading the legendarium makes you want to be part of it, because it makes you think you can survive it.
And certainly, if you have read this amazing mythological masterpiece, you absolutely can survive it.
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sesamenom · 3 months ago
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I feel like it should be more common knowledge that faramir has the Luthien Hair
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literally the only other people with "raven" hair are feanor and luthien! he has the Luthien Hair!
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abomination-unto-nuggan · 12 days ago
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Fingon: Why is Beren crying on the floor?
Lúthien: He took one of those 'what person are you?' quizzes.
Fingon: And?
Lúthien: He got Maedhros.
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chaos-of-the-abyss · 21 days ago
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beren is literally a war refugee who lost his entire family as a young man; spent years afterward in guerrilla warfare against morgoth's forces by himself and was so persistent and dedicated and competent at it that the price on his head was equal to that of fingon, the high king of the noldor in beleriand. yet somehow we've got idiots yapping about how he "had it too easy." sorry he's a good person, remains a good person even through immense loss and grief, and in the end is rewarded for it with final years full of peace and fulfillment and love and a positive legacy that endures for centuries and centuries after his death
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sometimesartmostlychaos · 4 months ago
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I made this concept art recently for the outfits of Thuringwethil, the vampire and messenger servant of Sauron in the Silmarillion! They were for a little presentation I gave at the Hern Ennorath (Australian Tolkien fan club) zoom meeting, just about my plans for cosplaying her again! Hope you like these 🥰🦇🖤
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haladriel · 27 days ago
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Spell-wronged monsters about him thronged, working his bidding dark and vile: the werewolves of the Wizard's Isle THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RINGS OF POWER // EP II.I
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thelien-art · 2 months ago
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December; the 15th
Advent Game: Lúthien x Beren
Where is Beren´s hat?
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Join the Advent and Yule calendar to win a drawing - rules here and all the other drawings here
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serene-faerie · 6 months ago
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Was thinking about Celebrimbor and Lúthien's friendship again
And then I had this thought
Sometime in the Second Age, Celebrimbor is telling Annatar all about how he was once friends with Lúthien Tinúviel. He helped her escape from Nargothrond, and turned against his uncle and father after that. He speaks of Lúthien so fondly, wishing that he could've seen her again before she died.
Meanwhile, Annatar's just having a 'Nam flashback to the time when Lúthien and Huan completely kicked his ass and took Tol-in-Gaurhoth from him, but he's desperately trying to hide it behind the most tense smile he's ever had on his face.
And Celebrimbor is just completely oblivious to his discomfort lmao
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kindlythevoid · 1 year ago
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Book One of The Fellowship of the Ring is Done!
In honor, I made a list (a playlist if you will) of all the songs!
The Road Goes Ever On
The Road Goes Ever On (Reprise)
Edge of Night
Elbereth
Rain Song
Bath Song
Misty Mountains (Shire Remix)
Old Forest Song
The Song of Tom Bombadil
The Song of Tom Bombadil and Goldberry
Fair River-Daughter
Errand Running (The Ballad of Goldberry)
Ho! Tom Bombadil
Barrow-wight Song
Banishing Song
Awaken
Horses
Another Hobbit Drinking Song
All That Is Gold Does Not Glitter
The Fall of Gil-galad
Lay of Luthien
Sam’s Troll Rhyme
The Lord of the Rings is a Musical
Song Counter: 19
Poem Counter: 2
Total: 21
Bonus (times singing was mentioned but not spelled out): 11
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velvet4510 · 5 months ago
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Please never forget the huge number of people who Lúthien Tinúviel saved.
Of course, her getting the Silmaril eventually allowed Elwing and Eärendil to bring salvation to all of Middle-earth years later; we all know that. But that’s not what I’m referring to.
Never think that Beren was the only person saved by Lúthien’s direct actions during her lifetime. An entire tower full of Sauron’s captives in Tol-in-Gaurhoth were saved and set free when she took control of the island.
She didn’t just grab her boyfriend and run. She tore open all of the dungeons and enabled dozens, if not hundreds, of people to escape with their lives. If it weren’t for her, all of those prisoners would’ve died in torment.
Lúthien is far more than a devoted girlfriend; she’s a true hero of Middle-earth who single-handedly saved at least a dozen lives!!!
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naarisz · 11 months ago
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Lúthien doodle :)
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warrioreowynofrohan · 4 months ago
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Character Analysis – Huan
I was thinking about why Huan leaves Celegorm when he does, and it’s clearly not just “he likes Lúthien better.”
The first question to answer is, why does it happen during the Leithian and not during or after Alqualondë? And while the Doylist (out-of-universe) reason for that is provably that Tolkien thought up the character of Huan specifically for the Leithian and didn’t think much about his role in the story before then, I think there’s a decent Watsonian (in-universe) one as well. Huan is a dog; an intelligent dog, yes, but a dog. He thinks like a dog, and he has the political understanding of a dog, which is to say: not much. If he wasn’t involved in the fighting at Alqualondë himself – and there’s no textual reason to think he was – I don’t think he would have had much understanding of what was going on beyond “people are fighting”.
But in Nargothrond Lúthien is talking to him, and she’s saying, “Someone that I love and am devoted to is in terrible danger from Sauron and his werewolves, and Celegorm is holding me prisoner and won’t let me help him”. That is something a dog can understand. And Celegorm understands the speech of animals – Huan can talk to Celegorm without needing elven or hunan language – but Celegorm isn’t listening. So Huan decides that Celegorm is doing sonething wrong, and that he’s going to help Lúthien rescue Beren.
And then, this is crucial, Huan goes back. He goes back to Celegorm, despite Celegorm being mad as hell at him for helping Lúthien escape. If he was just leaving because he liked Lúthien better, he wouldn’t have done that; he could have just gone with her and Beren then. He is actively choosing to renain loyal.
My understanding of Huan’s decision there is that he’s going to continue as he’s started: he’s going to be loyal to Celegorm and follow him, but if Celegorm tries to do things that Huan cannot morally countenance, Huan will try to stop him, and accept the consequences if Celegorm is angry at him for that.
So now let’s go to Celegorm and Curufin’s final attack on Beren and Lúthien. What changes then? The argument I’ve seen is, ‘But why at that precise moment? Celegorm wasn’t even doing anything particularly problematic compared to his other actions at the moment Huan changed sides! He was just trying to stop Beren from strangling Curufin!’
So, walking through what happens. Everything is happening extremely fast at the beginning – this isn’t an isolated sequence of events. Celegorm and Curufin see Beren and Lúthien walking unawares; they suddenly spur their horses at them, Celegorm comes at Beren with a spear while Curufin grabs Lúthien, and right when Celegorm’s about to spear Beren, Beren makes a jump and tackles Curufin off his horse. Huan doesn’t know what Celegorm and Curufin are doing until they do it, and there’s about a second between that and Beren tackling Curufin off his horse.
And what’s changed now is that Huan’s previous choice of action is no longer possible. He can’t just choose to oppose specific actions. Working for or with Celegorm means being complicit in good peoples’ deaths; there’s no opt-out, nobody-gets-hurt option. If Huan does nothing, Beren dies, in a fight that was caused by Celegorm and Curufin attacking two unarmed people at unawares.
And that’s when Huan changes sides. Not because he’s just decided he likes Beren and Lúthien better than Celegorm (he clearly likes them, but he stayed with Celegorm all the same after Tol-in-Gaurhoth), but because Celegorm has become someone who cannot be served innocently. The options are to let Celegorm kill people, or to stop serving him.
And crucially, this does not lead to Curufin dying – because Lúthien asks Beren to spare him, and Beren listens to her. Because Lúthien and Beren are good people whose character can be relied on, and heling them doesn’t mean people die – not even their enemies. If that hadn’t happened, I don’t think Huan would have stayed with them, even if he had still left Celegorm.
A lot of the story of the Fëanoreans and their followers can be fit into a framework of the question “At what point does loyalty become immoral?” It’s evoked in Maedhros defying Fëanor at Losgar; in some of the Fëanorean forces changing sides at Sirion and dying in defence of their victims; in the final conversation between Maedhros and Maglor. Loyalty to your father, to your liegelords, to your brother; and loyalty of a dog to his master.
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