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- From: mcconnel@mcs.kent.edu (Mike McConnell)
- Newsgroups: alt.fan.tolkien
- Subject: Re: Hobbits (was Re: Bombadil), and Maiar/N
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.210413.22689@mcs.kent.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 21:04:13 GMT
- References: <20JAN199321044565@juliet.caltech.edu> <1k3c3dINN6f1@galaxy.uci.agh.edu.pl>
- Sender: news@mcs.kent.edu
- Organization: Kent State University
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- In article <1k3c3dINN6f1@galaxy.uci.agh.edu.pl>, szymon@galaxy.uci.agh.edu.pl (Szymon Sokol) writes:
- |> Broughton, Wayne Jeremy (waynebro@juliet.caltech.edu) wrote:
- |> : Was it really known that a *Balrog* per se was Durin's Bane? I don't
- |> : know if Gimli actually "recognized" the Balrog as a Balrog; rather he
- |> : just realized that this terror in front of him was the embodiment of
- |> : the nightmarish descriptions he had heard of Durin's Bane. And Legolas
- |> : sure sounded kind of surprised at what he saw when he shouted "Ai-ee,
- |> : a Balrog!" or some such. Do you know of a textual reference that suggests
- |> : that Durin's Bane had been known to be a Balrog? Remember that a
- |> : reference written from the post-Third Age point of view might have included
- |> : the info that it was a Balrog in hindsight.
- |>
- |> Well, Durin was killed by a Balrog, as well as his son Nain the First (?),
- |> and the Dwarves left Moria a year later. It is written in the chronicles
- |> of the ME (one of the appendices to the LOTR). Therefore I suggested that
- |> Gimli's words "Durin's Bane!" meant that he recognized Balrog.
- |> Of course, it is not completely clear that it was known to the heroes of LOTR,
- |> but I have thought that if the dwarves spent one more year in Moria *after*
- |> Durin's death, they had to fight against orcs and they probably learned that
- |> there is someone more powerful than mere orcs. In addition: if Gimli did not
- |> know that Durin had been killed by the Balrog, why did he decided to call
- |> the Balrog "Durin's Bane" ? If he knew nothing about circumstances of Durin's
- |> death, he could attribute it to orcs as well, couldn't he?
- |> he
- |> --
- |> U U M M M M Szymon Sokol -- Network Manager
- |> U U MM MM MM MM University of Mining and Metallurgy, Computer Center
- |> U U M M M M M M M M ave. Mickiewicza 30, 30-059 Krakow, POLAND
- |> UUUUU M M M M M M TEL. +48 12 338100 EXT. 2885 FAX +48 12 338907
-
- Yes, the dwarves did know that there was something more powerful than orcs in
- Moria. Remember, after the great Dwarf-Goblin war, when Azog had been defeated
- at the gates of Moria, and Thrain was ready to enter, Dain (I think it was) re-
- minded him that Durin's Bane was still in Moria. The dwarves knew that something
- dark and powerful was in Moria, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they knew
- that that dark and powerful thing was a Balrog. After all, the Balrogs were not
- the only evil creatures shaped by Morgoth. So when Gimli cries "Durin's Bane",
- he is recognizing the creature as the same one that killed Durin, but that doesn't
- necessarily mean that he also knows that it is the type of creature classified as
- a Balrog. That's probably not the type of information that is carried down
- through the generations (and it was many generations since the first age) in
- dwarven lore. On the other hand, it is the type of information that is remembered
- by elves, so it is understandable that Legolas would recognize the creature as a
- Balrog--not because he knew previously that Durin's Bane was a Balrog, but because
- he knew a Balrog when he saw one.
-
- Mike McConnell
- Department of Mathmatics and Computer Science
- Kent State University
-