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11-09-2008, 06:47 AM | #1 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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Aldarion and Erendis (UT) revisited
Let us discuss again this wonderful story and all its aspects.
Yes, I know there was an old thread on the same subject HERE, but on 5 pages of it there are few serious posts - mostly banter. I think a new thread is in order - with new participants. And in the 5 years that passed, even those who have given their opinion in the old thread (like Earniel) may have changed them. How about discussing the following things?
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11-09-2008, 12:44 PM | #2 |
The Chocoholic Sea Elf Administrator
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Since you mentioned changing of opinion, I just had to go and see what I wrote over five years ago. But I should re-read the story again first, before starting to discuss it again. We never did an UT chapter by chapter discussion, did we? Shame, we should, one day.
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11-10-2008, 05:56 AM | #3 | |
Lady of the Ulairi
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Quote:
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11-10-2008, 01:01 PM | #4 |
The Chocoholic Sea Elf Administrator
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Indeed there is, and a lot of interesting information. How about we start one up?
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11-16-2008, 06:27 AM | #5 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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Good idea to start discussing UT, Earniel.
Only at the beginning there is all this Silm-connected stuff. I am not too fond of it, but I am sure many here would like to open the discussion on the first chapters. I am most eager to join when we are at the Numenor part and further. DPR - you are quite right. Unfinished Tales seems to be a rather motley assemblage of stories, some of which clearly belong to the Silm. On the other hand, the UT contains only some chosen parts of "the Hunt for the Rings" manuscripts, other random parts of it are now published in Reader's Companion, but most of it remains unpublished. And now to the main question: Aldarion and Erendis. I am completely on Aldarion's side and think that Erendis was nothing but a silly shrew. How about the rest of you? Perhaps we can do something new for this forum: form two opposing teams and have a debate? |
11-10-2008, 11:07 AM | #6 |
Elf Lord
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I've often wondered why the UT's Tuor stuff wasn't in Silm. I'd love to see a complete Tuor story rather than having to jump from book to book.
And relating to this topic, I am firmly in support of Erendis, though I haven't read the story in a couple years. Aldarion was selfish, IMO.
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11-17-2008, 12:15 PM | #7 | ||
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Quote:
I would love it if Christopher (or even someone commissioned by him) would try to make one relatively coherent whole of all the Gondolin texts, though. Even if it will have to vary a lot more in style than Children of Hurin does. Quote:
And I haven't read the story for quite a while either.
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11-17-2008, 12:42 PM | #8 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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Ha, another female poster sides with Aldarion.
What about the rest of you? Vote please! |
11-17-2008, 10:35 AM | #9 |
Elf Lord
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Funny how a female poster sides with the husband and a male poster sides with the wife.
I wonder what the psychology behind that is...
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11-17-2008, 02:29 PM | #10 |
the Shrike
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I haven't read it in a while either, but my recollection says that I sided with Aldarion as well. I'll have to re-read though & 'git back ta ya!'[/palin]
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04-06-2009, 09:59 AM | #11 |
Elf Lord
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So it's ok for a husband to disappear for months at a time, endangering his life on a hobby while neglecting his family? Wow.
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04-07-2009, 12:47 PM | #12 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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It is very silly and callous for a wife to believe she can change the character of her husband - any husband - but especially such a strong-willed and stubborn man as Aldarion.
She knew full well he loved the sea prior to the marriage. It was selfish and inconsiderate for her to agree to the marriage if she was not going (not even trying ) to put up with his "hobby." Last edited by Gordis : 04-07-2009 at 02:02 PM. |
04-07-2009, 01:31 PM | #13 |
Deus Ex Machina
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It's been a very long time since I read Aldarion and Erendis, and the reason that I haven't gone back to re-read it is that I didn't find a single one of the characters sympathetic. Both of them are too selfishly stubborn and uncompromising to make me believe that they actually cared for one another enough in the first place for the result of their marriage to be tragic. I can't even sympathize with Ancalime, who should be the character we're rooting for to break the pattern her parents started and who fails miserably in doing so.
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04-07-2009, 02:08 PM | #14 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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True, both are selfishly stubborn and uncompromising. I can only sympathize with Aldarion because I like arrogant men, but not arrogant women. Also he was the future King, and she was a parvenu, so she should have been more pliable.
As for Ancalime, kids of in-fighting parents rarely become nice people. The silly thing is that there was no divorce allowed in Numenor. One has to blame dumb Elvish customs, unsuitable for Men. |
05-05-2009, 10:54 AM | #15 |
The Chocoholic Sea Elf Administrator
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I have finally managed to re-read that tale in UT. I can't quite remember what my exact opinion was the last time around, but I find I can't side with Aldarion. I do not side with Erendis either, for some of the choices she made were still wrong either way. But I do pity her whereas it strikes me that Aldarion reaped what he sowed but undeservedly got the better end of the deal anyway.
Although I can understand people siding with Aldarion, because Tolkien does seem to hint at it too. In the story, both the King and Nuneth (Erendis' mother), whom both are wise figures, both imply that things between Erendis and Aldarion could have been fixed if she had made the reconcilliary move to fix things and accepted her fate as a mariner's wife. The fact that Erendis refused to do this (which she would have considered a total defeat) looks like a strike against her, while the same is never that much implied with Aldarion. Aldarion also had the Middle-earth thing going for him. Erendis, who chose to focus solely on Númenor, seems in that way too narrow-minded. The story tells how Aldarion was far-sighted in his dealings in Middle-earth, setting up the Vinyalond harbour and his friendship and aid to Gil-Galad. We know Sauron is going to wake and grow strong at some point, so I think most automatically assume Aldarion is doing the right thing at the expense of his marriage. I think Aldarion gets too much credit in that department. In my view the troubles of Middle-earth was just a handy excuse for Aldarion to take to the seas. If these matters hadn't coincided with chances to go and sail the seven seas away from Númenor, I doubt he would have put that much work into it. And Erendis attracts much antipathy in the manner she raised her daughter, feeding Ancalimë all her own frustrations and anger. Although Aldarion is not blameless in this either, and since it is mentioned Ancalimë was as obstinate as her father, I got the impression he also encouraged these characteristics of her to get back at Erendis, and so equally attributed to Ancalimë's utterly unlikable personality. One more thing jumped out at me. Aldarion's aunt is Silmarien, from whom decended the Lords of Romenna down to Elendil, and eventually the Royal Line of Arnor and Gondor. I find myself wondering if Tolkien somewhere vaguely implied the Kingship in this case should have passed to the eldest child, which was Silmarien, instead of the first male child, which was Aldarion's father. It would have avoided this entire mess that even affected two more generations down the line. But it doesn't seem to be Tolkien's intent though, as none of the Ruling Queens of Númenor can be considered a good or successful monarch. This rather gave me the impression he didn't think women made good Rulers of Númenor.
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06-29-2009, 10:55 PM | #16 | ||||||
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The problem was that neither of them would yield. As someone else mentioned in this thread, true love (ideally) contains sacrifice. I do think they loved one another, but neither one would sacrifice anything for the other. Quote:
I can't say that i "side with" either of them, really. At first, i felt sorry for Erendis, but later in the story i thought her cold behavior toward her husband upon his return was despicable. It drove him away for good. If she hadn't been so cold and stubborn, perhaps their relationship could have been saved. But Aldarion was as much to blame. He could have tried harder to save the marriage, too. And he also could have neglected her a little bit less. Quote:
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Just adding this as a detail that i appreciated: I thought that her letting go of the birds was a heart-wrenching stroke of symbolism. You just know that when they fly away back home, that it's all *over*. So sad! All that said, of course i love it for its details about Numenor. We have so little extant that actually *takes place* there. For me it's very enjoyable on that level, even if the story itself is tragic. I wish there were more like it, perhaps happier stories. I also love the description of Numenor that preceeds the story. I could get lost there forever.
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