He said "Lasto beth nîn, tolo dan nan galad" - which means "hear my word, come back to the light"
lotr fonts - which ones? like, the LoTR title font or rather "elvish" writings?
there are both at www.dafont.com
HEY EXA HEY EXA I READ THE SILMARILLION....
sorry guys had to use caps i wont again :-( lol
yeah but anyway i read the silmarillion and damn it is so good and also the story at the start umm the valaquenta i think about the making of earth and the ainur man that is cool... btw naughty melkor and... feanor is sort of pretty evil for an elf
Originally posted by cheney
HEY EXA HEY EXA I READ THE SILMARILLION....sorry guys had to use caps i wont again :-( lol
yeah but anyway i read the silmarillion and damn it is so good and also the story at the start umm the valaquenta i think about the making of earth and the ainur man that is cool... btw naughty melkor and... feanor is sort of pretty evil for an elf
You read the Sil? Cool 🙂 🙂 ✅ Melkor is the best 😄 and, yey, Feanor is a great character because he's just not the typical boring good elf... he's cool, he's different, and he causes loads of problems 😄
I think it's part of the fascination of LoTR that there is no main character - it's a story about friendship and all of the characters are involved in this story. The central character was in the beginnging probably Frodo - and, though he's not always really present, Sauron. Later Aragorn practically got the same importance and gandalf as the "head" of the fellowship, too... but no real "main" character.
Originally posted by shadowy_blue
Exa! Here, here!!! Question! ...LOL..😄 😉Whatever happened to Cuivienen? Is it still part of Middle-earth during the Third Age, or did I miss something and it was destroyed?
Thankies!! 😄
LOL 😄 ... Cuiviénen was later known as Mordor 😛
It's indeed fascinating that the places where life first came from - Cuiviénen for elves and Hildórien for men - later became the home of the "evil" side, Mordor exactly covers a big part of the shapes of earlier Lake (or rather Sea) of Helcar on the shores of which Cuiviénen lay while the region near Hildórien must be where most of the Haradrim and maybe also the origins of the peoples of Rhûn come from.
When Thû the wizard (later Sauron) settled here in the southeast of the inhabited world, he must have spread his "evilness" over the country so that all the waters of Helcar dried - except for the (very salty) part that was later known as the Sea of Núrn, the only rests of the Tower of Helcar which Melkor built of ice in the beginning of light.
So Cuiviénen as it was before, a dark, silent place surrounded by huge forests, somewhere in the east one of the four first mountain-landscapes of the world (the Orocarni) and a peaceful lake / sea directly at hand, was surely destroyed by Sauron's might, the region was I think later a desert.
Originally posted by shadowy_blue
Oh my Gee, I never knew that!! 😄 Thanks Exa!! 😄 Cuivienen...Mordor..hmm..yummy!!! 😄 I've been wondering for a long time what happened to Cuivienen, LOL..I didn't know it became Mordor..LOL..Thanks again!! 😄
... well, at least part of eastern Mordor 😛 Il draw a map to find out where exactly it is... unfortunately not yet found any maps that really show that.
@Feanor thx, cool map... 🙂
if you look at Mordor, it exactly covers the western half of earlier Helcar, but I just noticed that I got a little confused with the proportions as Helcar reached northward until the later Sea of Rhûn, so Cuiviénen actually doesnt belong to Mordor anymore, yet the landscape there seems to be similar the the "Wild Wood" has surely disappeared.
Originally posted by cheney
lol naughty evil exa melkor is not cool lol. hes a naughty naughty ainur. lol but anyway ummm i agree with feanor though its interesting how an elf can be portrayed that way
he IS cool 😄