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Which I suppose in some ways is a rather appropriate title since I have not been posting much on LJ since Brythen died.   It is a big thing to adapt to, that. It needs some time.

But mostly the title is this thing I wrote.  It's easier to write fiction.

It is another Return to Aman post-LOTR thing.  I wrote it mostly because Return to Aman had 12 stories, and obviously it would be Very Wrong to finish a Tolkien series on the 13th story, so I decided to send Finrod on holiday with the hobbits.  I don't know where the other bits came from, the characters seem to be mostly making their own decisions by this time.  I feel faintly guilty that I wrote this as a series and it's ended up almost like chapters of one story. I didn't know it was going to do that!  Also people commented to say it was philosophical, which was not my intent and confirms my suspicion that the whole thing has got out of hand.

I Will Not Say the Day Is Done
In which Maglor stays up all night, has breakfast with Elrohir and tests the truth of the Doom of the Noldor, Elrohir gives his opinion of the Shibboleth of Fëanor, Finrod Felagund goes on a walking holiday with hobbits in Eldamar and discusses Moria and his dissatisfaction with the Valar, Sam sees Elf-magic, and Elrond visits Nerdanel to discuss Silmarils.

Date: 2017-09-07 03:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anna-wing.livejournal.com
Yes, all descended one way or another from "Primitive Quendian" (I've just been reading "The Lost Road", which contains the Etymologies, so it's quite fresh in my mind). But when the Noldor and Vanyar went off to Aman, their dialect, Quenya, became significantly different from the language of both the Teleri in Aman, since they lived a fair distance away, and from the Teleri who stayed in Beleriand and became the Sindar. THough of course the Teleri in Aman thought that what they were speaking was their own, separate language, and the Noldor and Vanyar thought the Teleri were just speaking a cute, regional dialect of Quenya...

I don't think even the exiled Noldor in Middle-earth spoke Quenya day to day, certainly not by the Third Age. My own version of Caranthir speaks it with his household in Thargelion, and has taught it to his Laiquendi allies, just to spite Thingol ("and if he wants to make a fuss about it, he can come and defend this border instead of us").

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