Even without knowing the backstories the feeling of diminishing toward the mundane is a prevalent theme. I think it is captured especially well in the scene where Frodo, Sam, and Faramir watch the moon setting over Gondor. It's been such a long time since I read it but I remember that capturing the sense of lost grandeur perfectly.
J.R.R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings
12/12/2011 04:25:26 AM
- 1657 Views
Thank you for reposting these.
12/12/2011 04:36:06 PM
- 943 Views
Interestingly enough
13/12/2011 12:10:08 AM
- 790 Views
Re: Interestingly enough
13/12/2011 12:42:10 PM
- 770 Views
I think
13/12/2011 01:21:41 PM
- 836 Views
Probably, yes, but still no excuse for allowing the worldbuilding to overpower the story being told.
13/12/2011 04:00:23 PM
- 775 Views
We'll have to disagree.
14/12/2011 12:46:23 AM
- 792 Views
Agreed
23/12/2011 05:27:02 AM
- 783 Views
Re-reads after a long period of time can lead to surprising results
13/12/2011 01:02:23 AM
- 893 Views
The speech patterns were intentional, but not meant to be "archaic".
14/12/2011 04:02:55 AM
- 849 Views
Oh, I know that
14/12/2011 08:25:53 AM
- 841 Views
I love the dialogue in LOTR. a more modern voice would be terrible *NM*
15/12/2011 06:09:18 PM
- 375 Views