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Thread: Undying lands...or not?

  1. #1
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    Undying lands...or not?

    Upon re-reading Aldarion and Erendis I stumbled upon this interesting bit:

    To Erendis they gave a pair of birds, grey, with golden beaks and feet. They sang sweetly one to another with many cadences never repeated through a long thrill of song; but if one were separated from the other, at once they flew together, and they would not sing apart.
    'How shall I keep them?' said Erendis.
    'Let them fly and be free,' answered the Eldar. 'For we have spoken to them and named you; and they will stay wherever you dwell. They mate for their life, and that is long. Maybe there will be many such birds to sing in the gardens of your children.'
    The Eldar of Tol Eressëa gave these two birds as a gift for her marriage with Aldarion. It is visible from this passage that the birds live long, yet are mortal. Aren't the Undying lands supposed to be free of stain, decay and....death? Do creatures and plants die there, just like they do in Middle Earth (the only difference being that they live longer)? There have been a few cases of "natural" death in Aman of course (Miriel; Frodo, Bilbo, Sam...supposedly), but these are rather exceptions to the rule.
    Do you see that piece of land over there? That used to be a lake. And then this one November, all these ducks come by, and they landed in that lake, and then the temperature dropped so fast the whole lake just froze. Then the ducks took off and took the whole lake with them. Now that lake's somewhere over in Georgia.

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    Maybe Tol Eressea was considered a special part of the Undying Lands, permitting a kind of decay. As I have understood, what made the lands Undying was the dwelling of the Ainue on them. But on Tol Eressea I don't think that they marched often, thus these lands wee not completely free of death.
    Of course I may be wrong and this passage might have slipped Tolkien's attention.
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    Well, Tol Eressëa IS called "the easternmost of the Undying lands" I just cannot remember where this is said (someone please remind me!). Mortals were not allowed to set foot on it (notably the Numenoreans), so I don't see any difference from Aman. After the drowning of Numenor, the Undying Lands were removed from the circles of the world. And this naturally includes Eressëa.
    Do you see that piece of land over there? That used to be a lake. And then this one November, all these ducks come by, and they landed in that lake, and then the temperature dropped so fast the whole lake just froze. Then the ducks took off and took the whole lake with them. Now that lake's somewhere over in Georgia.

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    Lightbulb ooo! My specialist subject!

    well.... as i live in the halls of mandos, which are located in the undying lands, i should know this one......

    the undying lands were once part of arda alongside middle earth, so therefore it was possible to die there (like miriel). BUT when numenor was drownded and the world became round, then Aman (the undying lands) became set out of reach of non elvish boats, so it became, if u like, a 2nd heaven: even mortals that are granted leave to go their by manwe & co. become immortal. Because its a timeless place, you never really get bored.

    So legolas and gimlet and bilbo frodo and sam r all there. Unfortunately the straight road is shut now, so no one can access it.

    Im in the halls of mandos because i am hashberry, muddy-puddle daughter, maiar spirit and part elven, so wen i threw myself into the abyss of the "unknown zone", i went there instead. Its not that fun tho, u dont get 2 visit the alive elves, & theres neva ne1 new.
    peece, Hash xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx





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    hashberry-gimlet? You've been reading too much Bored of the Ring. Say hi to Tim, by the way. And try not to get high. There are clinics for your's and Tim's problem you know.

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    in eply to the undying lands (feb)

    as i said, i'm dead. Tim spent too much time in "Amsterdam of Hobbiton" to bother about me. He doesn't care, the portayal in bored of the rings was all wrong; and as for the problem , I sorted that out years ago.

    Bored of the rings is cool, but Gimlet's only called that by me cos it's better then "Giblet"
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    Well I haven't read that tale but I think "They mate for their life, and that is long.'' could be said about the elves as well.

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    So "Undying Lands" really means "the land where life is long" then...
    Do you see that piece of land over there? That used to be a lake. And then this one November, all these ducks come by, and they landed in that lake, and then the temperature dropped so fast the whole lake just froze. Then the ducks took off and took the whole lake with them. Now that lake's somewhere over in Georgia.

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    I normally assumed that the term 'Undying' was coigned from the immortality of the Valar who dwelt there.. It is said in the Silmarillion that the holiness of the land was because of the inhabitants.. Did this mean the Elves or the gods? Or both?
    beyond cherry brumes, is the bell at Asakusa or Ueno that booms?

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    Re: ooo! My specialist subject!

    Originally posted by hashberry
    even mortals that are granted leave to go their by manwe & co. become immortal.
    Mortals did not become immortal just because they came to Aman, only Iluvatar had the power to cange the fates of the Children.

    Letters #154
    But in the story it is supposed that there may be certain rare exceptions or accommodations (legitimately supposed? there always seem to be exceptions); and so certain 'mortals', who played some great part in Elvish affairs' may pass with the Elves to Elvenhome. Thus Frodo (by the express gift of Arwen) and Bilbo, and eventually Sam (as adumbrated by Frodo); and a a unique exception Gimli the Dwarf, as friend of Legolas and 'servant' of Galadriel.
    I have said nothing about it in this book, but the mythical idea underlying is that for mortals, since their 'kind' cannot be changed for ever, this is strictly only a temporary reward: a healing and redress of suffering. They cannot abide for ever, and though they cannot return to mortal earth, they can and will 'die'- of free will, and leave the world.
    Hail Earendel brightest of angels,
    over middle-earth sent unto men
    Crist by Cynewulf (lines 104-5)

  11. #11
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    Because its a timeless place, you never really get bored.
    Nope. It still shared the same characteristics as the rest of Arda, including time. The difference being that one Valian Year was equivalent to just over 9 years of the sun.

    For Aman was within Arda and therfore within the time of Arda...Therefore Arda and all things in it must age....
    Myths Transformed; HoME 10

    On the actual question, M.T has some answers:

    But since Aman was made for the Valar...all those creatures that were thither transplanted or were trained or were bred or brought into being for the purpouse of inhabiation in Aman were given a speed of growth such that one year of their kinds on earth should in Aman be in one year
    We can see that Tolkien was hinting at the longeveal life of animals/plants in Aman. So, if we take the 1 Valian Year is equivalent to 9 Y.O.S, then 'life' in Aman would be nine times longer then that of M-E. This was done so they could fit in with the 'slow' growth of Aman, and also for the Elves:

    For the Eldar this was a source of joy. For in Aman the world appeared as it does to Men on Earth, but without the shadow of death soon to come. Whereas on Earth to them all things in comparison to themselves are fleeting....while flowers and birds would be born and die in loar and loar under the wheeling Sun.
    So there was death in Aman, but it only aplied to animals/flower with no fea. As Finrod himself tells
    Andreth, though their passing was mourned it wasn't a tragedy on the level of the death of a incarnate.
    Curiosity is insubordination in its purest form-Vladimir Nabokov

    Do not read as children do to enjoy themselves, or, as the ambitious do to educate themselves. No, read to live. -Gustave Flaubert

    We are not provided with wisdom, we must discover it for ourselves, after a journey through the wilderness which no one else can take for us, an effort which no one can spare us.-Marcel Proust

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