“Wall the Heart” – One of my favorite scenes:

Grief, Thingol reminds himself, grief has removed our armor, will make us feel and think things we shall regret.
One of Thingol’s councilors enters, Daeron at his heels. Both have grave faces. “There was another attack, in the corridors of the palace set aside for the various refugees. One of the elves from Mithrim turned and started killing the injured Laegrim that were sleeping there. Luckily one of the healers heard the noise and was able to stop the man. He won’t explain why he did it before he died, only whispered the name of the Belegruth before he died. The people are badly frightened.” Long pause. “Among the dead were injured children, and some of their surviving lords.” A longer pause. “I have spoken to some of the Laegrim; they no longer trust the safety of Menegroth. Many are planning to return to Ossiriand.”
“How many died?” the king asks and wonders why he thought his weariness would subside when he reach the walls of his home. His people no longer trust him to provide safety. As Daeron reads out the list of the dead, Thingol doesn’t hear the names. Ithilbor is the only one that stick in his mind, one of the Wise among the Laegrim, whose loss will be keenly felt. All Elu hears is his own thoughts. My people of whom chose me as their king, even after I had been lost to them, left them alone to face dangers without the guidance I promised them, who still chose me when I returned, and I have failed them. I have failed. I could not save Denethor. I could not save his family. I cannot even save his people. I have failed as king. I owe their trust in me to never fail again.
“What of this man – did he come with the last group of refugees under Eredhon? Was there a connection, could he have been working under his lord’s orders?” Is there any answer to this more concrete than just a shadow of the Dark One’s malice that Melian sees hanging over the world? Elu cannot swing a sword at the impressions of shadows.
“No,” Daeron says, his tablet of reports in front of him like a shield. “The man was from a different group of Northern refugees, from the group fleeing from the plains north of Dorthonion. They never spoke to each other during their time here.”
The news brings the opposite of comfort.
“Can we tell friend from foe?” Thingol demands, “know for sure who has gone over to the side of the enemy?” He stares directly at Melian, looks into the light of her eyes that usually burn as bright as the memory of the Two Trees.
“I thought I could,” the Maia answers in a soft voice, looking at her fingers that twist among themselves like so many serpents each trying to escape one another. “I thought Eredhon was truthful in that he had managed to evade Bauglir’s hand, that he would bring no harm to anyone.”
“And Linkwînen and others paid for our mistake.”
“You are too harsh, my husband,” Melain says, but he brushes it off.
“No. I was not harsh enough. I was naive, and thought no enemies could come to us in our home. That rats could not sneak behind our doors. I have been too trusting; I ignored the warning of my own kin,” and here he nods towards Eöl, who looks up startled from his own dark corner, private personal nightmares gnawing at the young sword-smith’s mind. “I thought all our enemies would come in foul shapes, would look like wolves and orcs. I thought that an elf could not hurt another elf. And now my kin and my people have died for that folly.”

Fledge

markasite:

Fandom: The Silmarillion
Pairing: Thingol/Melian, but Thingol is truly just a stage dressing here
Rating: Gen
CW: birdmonster!Melian is best Melian. 

The explanation of my headcanons behind this drawing accidentally a prose. The art piece was for @legendariumladiesapril, prompt: Beginnings, and also accidentally ‘Fanon’ and ‘Abstracts’. I am in fact that slow 😀


Her husband’s people insisted on referring to it as her true form, but it wasn’t. She didn’t – she wasn’t like Tulkas or Oromë or the matter-shaping maiar of Aulë, to need a body to realise her part in the song of Ëa. She was- was the quality of sound that made it music rather than noise, harmony rather than discord. Her nature held no inherent physicality, but she would, in the springtime of the world, wear a shape to better hear the nightingales sing.

It was not her true form, the shape her husband had first found her in, but it was her most comfortable body, if she chose one, the assemblage of the world around her naked spirit that was easiest to put on. Elu had loved her in it at once. 

His people were afraid of it.

Keep reading

bichiiart:

She spoke no word; but being filled with love Elwë came to her and took her hand, and straightway a spell was laid on him, so that they stood thus while long years were measured by the wheeling stars above them; and the trees of Nan Elmoth grew tall and dark before they spoke any word.” 

@verymaedhros

Silmarillion stuff

There u go friend. sorry is so late I came home later than I thought yesterday. Luckily, tomorrow I am staying home all day so, I can make more stuff.

Thingol/Melian fluff: “The Smell of Raindrops and Lightning”

squirrelwrangler:

Eh, written quickly in one sitting, still pretty rough. Went through and tried to replace as much of the root-Quenya words with Sindarian. Thingol and Melian mush. They’re an OTP. And look, no mention of Lúthien or Menegroth (too early).

Elu stretched out on the damp soil, his back resting on the folded gray cloak he had been wearing earlier, looking up at the trees. Melian, his wife, rested on the ground next to him, her shining eyes closed as she hummed a counterpoint to the rain. A storm was passing through the pine woods, and they had found shelter under the largest tree with the densest branches, waiting for the rain to end. Most had fallen, and now there was only in comparison a few drops to shake the pine needles and shimmer to the ground, making a soft yet constant melody. When the storm would finally end, the birds would return and burst into song, but for now the only voices were of Elu Thingol and Melian.

There was a profound sense of peacefulness, Thingol thought, to listen to the voices of the rain, unbothered by anyone else but his wife.

Keep reading

bichiiart:

She spoke no word; but being filled with love Elwë came to her and took her hand, and straightway a spell was laid on him, so that they stood thus while long years were measured by the wheeling stars above them; and the trees of Nan Elmoth grew tall and dark before they spoke any word.” 

@verymaedhros

Silmarillion stuff

There u go friend. sorry is so late I came home later than I thought yesterday. Luckily, tomorrow I am staying home all day so, I can make more stuff.

bichiiart:

She spoke no word; but being filled with love Elwë came to her and took her hand, and straightway a spell was laid on him, so that they stood thus while long years were measured by the wheeling stars above them; and the trees of Nan Elmoth grew tall and dark before they spoke any word.” 

@verymaedhros

Silmarillion stuff

There u go friend. sorry is so late I came home later than I thought yesterday. Luckily, tomorrow I am staying home all day so, I can make more stuff.