The Complete Tolkien Companion
Page 75
16. Book V Chap. 10.
17. Book VI Chap. 1.
N
1. Book IV Chap. 6.
2. Appendix F I.
3. Appendix A I (iv).
4. A fascinating and detailed description of ancient Númenor may be found in UT 213–21, together with the only known map of this now lost realm.
5. Appendix A I (i).
O
1. Book II Chap. 2.
2. Book I Chap. 7.
3. Book IV Chap. 3.
4. Book III Chap. 4.
5. Hobbit Chaps. 4, 5 and 6.
6. PME 390.
7. See UT 218 for full description.
8. Book III Chap. 8.
P
1. Of varying sizes; a late source (UT 521–36) tells us that some were so large they could not be lifted by one man. Each was originally set in a stone bed and could be rotated by hand.
2. Orientation (polarisation) before use was vital; direction (of vision) could be obtained by seating oneself on the opposite side of a correctly calibrated palantír.
3. Book VI Chap. 4; the Paean to the Ring-bearers.
R
1. UT 505.
2. Published as The Hobbit.
3. The Lord of the Rings.
4. The Adventures of Tom Bombadil.
5. Appendix A I (iii).
6. Silmarillion 153–54.
7. Appendix A III.
8. Book II Chap. 2.
9. See Appendix E II for a full description of the Elvish runic system (as redeveloped by Dwarves of Moria and Erebor).
S
1. Book IV Chap. 3.
2. Book VI Chap. 4
3. Appendix B.
4. Book III Chap. 11.
5. Book I Chap. 11.
6. Book II Chap. 7.
7. In fact there were many more rivers flowing through Gondor – Anduin, Ciril (or Kiril), Celos (Kelos), Serni, Entwash, Poros and (disputably) Harnen. The term ‘Seven Rivers of Gondor’ applies strictly to Old Gondor (i.e. at the time of its founding).
8. Book VI Chap. 1.
9. Book IV Chap. 9.
10. Book VI Chap. 1.
11. Book IV Chap. 5.
T
1. MR 345–48.
2. Book II Chap. 7.
3. An interesting light on Gandalf’s difficulties in persuading Thorin to agree to his plan is revealed in UT 415–35.
4. Book III Chap. 4.
5. The monster Grendel, slain by the Anglo-Saxon warrior Beowulf, was clearly a troll.
6. A very much longer version of the Tuor legend may be found in UT 23–74.
7. Mention must be made here of a remarkable belief, recounted in several places and forms, to the effect that the Children of Húrin – Túrin and Nienor – were ‘washed clean’ of their sorrows after death and reunited in bliss in Valinor; and that, at the Last Battle at the end of the world, when Morgoth shall return, it will be Túrin’s avenging arm which deals the death-stroke. See PME 374–75.
U
1. Book III Chap. 3.
2. Appendix F.
3. Treebeard was of the opinion that it was Saruman who was responsible for this ill-starred essay in genetic engineering, but it was surely beyond his art. Besides, the race of uruks had appeared on the borders of Gondor several generations earlier.
V
1. Silmarillion 25–32.
2. The Road Goes Ever On 66.
3. Appendix A I (i).
W
1. Appendix A III.
2. According to a late source this creature was – or had been – called Khamûl, the only Ringwraith to be named in records. See UT 456.
3. Book V Chap. 4.
4. See UT 215.
5. Appendix B.
6. For more detail (and speculation) on the origins of the Istari, see UT 502–20.
7. A late source (UT 487–501) claims that the recognition of this people as True Men (by the Eldar and Edain) led to a small portion of them actually accompanying the few Haladin who went to Númenor early in the Second Age; they were also the first to sense trouble approaching, and either died out there or came back to Middle-earth long before the Downfall.
8. Ibid.
THOMAS DUNNE BOOKS.
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THE COMPLETE TOLKIEN COMPANION. Copyright © 1976 by J. E. A. Tyler. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
“Tolkien” ® is a registered trademark of The J. R. R. Tolkien Estate Limited. The Complete Tolkien Companion is not published with the approval of the Estate of the late J. R. R. Tolkien.
The Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, The Silmarillion, The Adventures of Tom Bombadil, and The Road Goes Ever On are published by HarperCollins Publishers under licence from The Trustees of the J. R. R. Tolkien 1967 Settlement and The J. R. R. Tolkien Copyright Trust.
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