Melahny_oftheWoods wrote: ↑Mon May 20, 2024 8:40 pm
The Ainur communicate through song, right? Or they can. I don't know too much on the lore of them, I only read the Sil once. xD
My guilty secret on this site is that when I was about 13 and obsessed with LotR I purchased the Silmarillion and could not get past the beginning of the world. I do like reading people on Beren and Luthien and all that, but I don't really get those stories.
But I have read LotR more times than you have drunk blueberry tea! And I've been writing a series of posts for a website - ironically titled, the Silmarillion Writers Guild - that circles the encounter in the Woody End between 3 Hobbits and a company of Elves as the foundation stone of the story. In a late publication (1967) Tolkien discloses that the Elves are returning from Elostirion, the western Elf-tower referred to in the Prologue, and suggests that in the palantír in the tower they have gazed on a vision of Elbereth standing on the high mountain of Valinor. The first sign of these Elves in the story is their song to Elbereth, and in the conversation Gildor blesses Frodo in the name of Elbereth.
After the night that Frodo spends with the Elves in the Woody End, he sleeps in the house at Crickhollow, and dreams of a tall tower that he desires to climb to look on the sea. The next night, the first in the house of Bombadil, he dreams of Gandalf rescued from Orthanc. And the next night, the second in the house of Bombadil, he has the song-vision of Valinor that we are talking about here.
(Now you know why I am so concerned with the Elf-tower in the Westmarch. It is hidden in the story but somehow - I think - the foundation of its design.)
So I have a sense of an odd series of steps between song and vision - as if the song plants a seed of vision in the minds of Frodo when he hears the Elves sing. But I cannot see clearly. I can make no sense of what is really going on here. When I started writing this post I thought I would conclude that the song is that of Elbereth. But I am not sure at all.