Title: The Loneliness of the Fishermouse (4/5): Coracle
Author:
clodia_metelliCharacters: Erestor, Galadriel, Celeborn, Glorfindel, Arwen; in previous chapters: Elrond, Lindir, Celebrían, OC.
Rating: PG-13 (off-screen character death, non-graphic violence and gore).
Book/Source: Silmarillion, LOTR Appendices.
Disclaimer: I am not J.R.R. Tolkien and I make no
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Comments 22
Just at that moment I think Arwen might need slapping. Erestor's grief is so less important, of course - he's only lost his wife of millennia after all.
But it is exactly right - she would focus only on her mother and feel that everyone else should too - the whole thing is masterfully written.
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But I may be overinterpreting. No one behaves very well at times like this.
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Of course, if her grandmother's greater level of foresight shows her that Arwen is going to be needed as a spur to drive on the King Returned she is going to have problems explaining why Arwen should not sail with her mother...
Celebrian and Arwen have relatives and family in the west - it would make a lot of sense for Arwen to go too, really. Except that Tolkien created her to specifically not sail!
Erestor can choose to sail now, of course, but he will know no-one, and he might have to wait a long time for Melinna to be returned from Mandos Halls. And, of course, he wouldn't be around to be mentioned in the LotR and we wouldn't know of his existence... :)
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I can't immediately think why any of them stayed. Elrond, Elladan and Elrohir, and Arwen all could have gone with Celebrian. In canon, what were their reasons? Elrond held Vilya, but the boys? This is where the thin spots in my understanding show up. For those born in Middle-Earth, perhaps, life in Middle-Earth was harder to surrender, and Valinor less real. Eru intended, apparently, for the elves to be born in Middle-Earth, not among the Valar.
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Also, you win on the tra-la-lallys. I've never seen such good sense made of that.
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And I love the way you put it, all these uncanny valley people: because yes, by now Erestor's circle of people or places or things he really cares about is very small and most of it was buried up by the waterfall.
I added a comment on your conversation with Wombat just above, btw. It was fascinating to read! Thank you for all your thoughts.
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- Erulisse (one L)
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Celebrian, who has been tortured by orcs, drags herself out of her sickroom to Erestor to deliver Melinna's last message and basically gets told she needn't have bothered and she wasn't really worth Melinna's efforts to help her anyway. (Yes, I know, he also says they were pointless and ineffective--but his tone clearly implies that he considers Celebrian unimportant.) And Arwen finally loses her temper with Erestor. So why shouldn't she?! So, okay, she didn't hear precisely what it was that Erestor said and only saw its effects...
Erestor's behaviour may be understandable, but the fact is that under the circumstances the others have been more patient with him than could necessarily be expected--he is by no means the only one who has suffered, after all. Their pain is not real to him, obviously, but that doesn't mean it's not there.
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I don't think 'my' Erestor would ever fade, not from grief. Self-preservation is too much of a habit with him. Maybe they would both have stayed in ME, if Melinna had survived, and eventually faded to mere voices on the breeze.
It's a bit of a relief to hear Arwen's words were understandable! It seemed to me that Erestor deserved at least that, at this point. And yes, I suppose that's a question for both of them; and Glorfindel, at least, can soothe himself with the harp. But at least Erestor is up and awake again. I'm glad you liked how he was roused - like the tapestry, I've been saving that up too...
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