Ulmo was a Dunkleosteus)

Also acceptable, for larger and more action-oriented (look, Ulmo personally is the most unsettling Vala, so any stupid looking yet also vaguely unsettling prehistoric fish that randomly stayed around where you think it wouldn’t and surfaces from the depths of the ocean, as long as it isn’t full on nightmare fuel)

Uinen is a type of Cnidaria, yes? either a jellyfish or coral, depending on if she feels sedentary or not (Coral perhaps was her sulking and feeling vulnerable and hurt when Ossë left her for Melkor period?)

Who do you think that Gil-Salad’s father was?

Alas, I foolishly used ‘gil-galad’ as my tag for this character, thus using a dash and making said tag untraceable. Somewhere deep in my blog is my long response to the gil-galad parentage, but I’ll try my best to summarize the points, and basically it all comes down to Finduilas.

Gil-galad has two main contenders for parentage: Fingon and Orodreth. I’ll also entertain a dark horse candidate in claiming the throne via maternal line Lalwen, which does have some appeal in explaining the murkiness and silence on where Gil-galad came from. It also keeps the ‘sent from Hithlim down to Círdan’ journey and establishes a Lalwen and Círdan friendship (Lalwen as Fingolfin’s ambassador to Brithombar). I am especially warming up to this alternative because it adds a wonderful twist conclusion to Fingon ousting Lalwen from political power and influence after Fingolfin’s death in a combination of misogyny, pettiness, and desire to be independent (you will pry this headcanon from my dead fingers because it gives something actually interesting to bland beige wallpaper boy).

But Fingon was the version in the published Silm, and first, most widespread version wins. Plus it gives something for Fingon to do and means he marries a Sindarin lady -Meril of the original ruling family of Hithlum, distantly related via marriage to Thingol, and whose first cousin is the wife of Orodreth. I like the long-running rulers of Noldor-in-Exile to be Fingolfin’s line, and makes Gil-galad follow in the footsteps of his grandfather, complete with Pyrrhic death against a Dark Lord in a duel within his dark kingdom. Nice bookends. And Gil-galad’s sigil is a dark blue with silver stars, which is the colors for Fingolfin, not Finarfin or Finrod’s green.

Now Orodreth already has a canon wife and close allies with Thingol and a more logical and natural explanation for an alliance with Círdan, and the symbolism of the Kigns of the Noldor being both Arafinwë and his (great-)grandson on both sides of the sea are nice. But. Finduilas. I don’t like Finduilas staying while Gil-galad is sent for safety, that there would then be zero mention of him in Children of Húrin (which there is a parallel that should have been explored). And Gil-galad uses a spear as his signature weapon and the only other time a spear is mentioned instead of a sword, ax, or bow is the spear used to kill Finduilas. Making Finduilas and Gil-galad siblings thus unsettles me.

Now, I headcanon Finduilas and Gil-galad being second-cousins via their mothers because it gives an excellent reason in-universe for the conflicting stories and removes Orodreth’s wife/Finduilas’s mother from CoH without killing her off. When Gil-galad is sent to Círdan, he travels through Nargothrond first, and for the final leg of the journey is accompanied by his aunt. She -let’s call her Eregriel- stays with Gil-galad in Brithombar for a few years to get him settled/so he has family/her child is an adult or nearly so but his nephew is very young and thus needs her. But then events of the war happen, Ergriel is stuck unable to return home, then her home is destroyed, she stays in Gil-galad’s court, is treated and respected as if she was his birth mother, and the confusion in the historical records occur.

And not that it really matters. Biological headcanons be whatever. Gil-galad’s father is Círdan. He speaks Sindarin, his culture in more Falathrim than Noldor, and his history is the twilight days of the First Age Beleriand and the Second Age Middle-earth.

Have you done sigils of Glorfindel/Ecthelion antwhere ?

You’d think the Lords of Gondolin would have been easy for me to do, but I never got around to them before my old, old program stopped working. But there were plans for some of them (what does it say about me that Meleth the nursemaid does have a sigil?)

Huh, looking back through my blog, I don’t think I released the Glorfindel one in an official post. But here it is:

heckofabecca replied to your post:
LAST!

Imagery ������

It’s very much this exuding of triumph and pride and that the healing doesn’t erase the past trauma but here in Valinor it’s transformed into beauty once more. Once more she is Maktame of the beautiful arms (and the language shift to Mahtamë) and part of her beauty is that past. And that Ingwë worked to make this happen, so that she is now a dowager queen in lace enjoying herself on the athletic field -and that prosperity and healing and safety is now for all his people.

Tbh, I like Fingon & the Feanorians, but I am so, so, So Thankful for fans like you who give play to less widely-popular characters. Your takes on the Sindar, Teleri, and Vanyar are so thoughtful and well-written, and I love reading your stuff.

Thank you! Some of these were favorites from the first read, some I grew to love as I poked at them with the curiosity of ‘is this really an empty space? Wait, there’s awesome character potential here”.

Fingon it’s hilarious because I honestly forgot he was a character in the Silm at all, and anything interesting about him for me is not at all what’s popular about him. bland beige wallpaper boy is his tag for a reason.

I don’t love everyone, and I gloss over or ignore too many I feel guilty about, but I like to think with the wide range of characters and places I do write for there’s something for someone to enjoy. 

It makes me really sad that the fandom made you dislike Maedhros. If it’s okay, I’d like to bring up a couple non-Thingol aspects to his character: presumably seeing Morgoth in person, getting tortured, recovering from torture, having to deal with Feanor, dealing with his brothers, finding Finwe’s body, having to witness all the consequences of his actions play out, directly killing other elves, killing himself, giving up his crown. Those are some things that I think make his character Good.

And frankly, while dealing with Fëanor and his brothers would garner sympathy from me, the towering hypocrisy of Maedhros, that he does repeatedly murder civilian populations and unlike Thingol isn’t overwhelming motivated out of a desire to safeguard his people- which is one of the many reasons I love Thingol… One of my favorite characters in the Silm is Maeglin- who also has the captured by Morgoth and tortured (though only caused the destruction of one elven city), had a troubled home-life (and if Fëanor was written in fandom more emotionally abusive whom his sons were constantly fearing to lose their father’s affection and thus the Oath motivated in part out of that fear- I’d be more receptive). I’m not saying Maedhros isn’t interesting as a character- just that I’ve seen enough of it, it no longer appeals to me- what little did the first year or two in this fandom, now it’s been over ten years I’m sick of him.

But if Maedhros wasn’t rescued and instead spent the majority of the Silm hanging from that cliff? [shrug] I’d be fine with that.

oh no I’m sorry to hear you had the flu! (am I just behind, is tumblr not giving me posts in order again)

I hadn’t advertised it, and it was more ‘lingering effects’ and not energy, persistent sinus – but everyone around me was coming down with fevers and getting bad cases of it. So I’ve been curled up in blankets catching up on reading and games and trying to force myself to cook when I don’t have much of an appetite.

Tangentially – Garth Nix’s Frogkisser is a cute book, very young YA fantasy in the style of Wrede’s Talking With Dragons, Lloyd Alexander , Ella Enchanted, etc… where a big plot point is fantasy Magna Carta, and I’m not sure if it’s intentional but the main character reads are very much not-straight, which isn’t something I usually pick up on but I wonder if tumblr agrees with me.

elfmaiddryope:

squirrelwrangler:

@anghraine tagged me in the post-a-bit-of-something-you’re-working-on meme!

The arrow arced like a comet over the plains. Wind screamed in agony in its passage, shrill and short, and air rippled out like water from the impact. Earth liquefied under the arrowhead, and the impaled shadow-shape writhed like a spineless deep-sea creature brought to the surface before it dissolved into the ground. Faint wisps of steam rose from the crater around the embedded arrow. A tuft of matte-black fur lingered around the arrowhead before disappearing with a foul odor,

though no elf was close enough to behold this.

why is your prose so GOOD don’t tell me it was hard work I want to believe it involved some sort of unholy rituals 

*blush* 

Glad you like. It’s not quite purple prose, but it was a tad overindulgent on the descriptive metaphors. I was worried it was too much, but okay, it gets to stay.

Here’s the preceding line as a gift for the comment, btw:

The muscles of his back bunched and strained as he pulled back an arm, then let loose the arrow as that arm flung up with the graceful curve of a hunting cat’s tail.

aka heget watches korean historical dramas, can’t you tell? *tiger tail archer pose*


Of Ingwë Ingweron has really morphed into a weird bastard amalgamation of style and variations on my authorial voice and pov, because there’s that semi-detached quasi-scientific voice looking back- the lore-master voice- then the dialogue heavy full scenes where I sit with the characters and describe everything blow by blow like I normally do – Chapter Three is where that started and every chapter since has secretly been me as the lazy author wanting to find a point to winch back to the style of the first half of the first chapter- and then moments starting with the passage where I first described Oromë (end of Chapter Three) where I decided to go for broke on layering the metaphoric imagery and then because of the positive feedback for that paragraph I now had to commit. I don’t think the differences are as pronounced for a reader as it is for me writing it.

As for unholy rituals, well, I can admit that more often than not, snippets of Of Ingwë at least are written because I get stuck in a car/running errands/waiting at a park with someone who is a hardcore Pokemon Go player when I don’t play it, so I write lines to stave off the boredom.