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Originally posted by davidgrouchy
OMG
you don't know!?
Originally posted by MarrsAttax
I don't know if that can be right. Tom Bombadil calls the tree that attacked the Hobbits 'Old Man Willow'.
Originally posted by davidgrouchy
Originally posted by MarrsAttax
I don't know if that can be right. Tom Bombadil calls the tree that attacked the Hobbits 'Old Man Willow'.
The hobbits missunderstood what he said.
He called it "Old Man's widdow."
That's my story
and I'm sticking too it.
David Grouchy
Originally posted by FreeSpeaker
I like that one.
Originally posted by FreeSpeaker
On a side note, the forests of the south used to be contected to the forests in the north. Sauron destroyed the forest right in the middle and cut the south off from the north. Old Man Willow is a surviver of those times and is most black hearted over the whole thing and takes it out on any middle earthers, if Tom will let him.
Originally posted by davidgrouchy
The thing I like about the books is how it gives me pause to reflect and wonder.
Do I live in a forest cut off from the north, that used to be whole?
Being from Louisiana, it's entirely possible.
David grouchyedit on 7-8-2011 by davidgrouchy because: spelling
they are bearers of genetic knowledge knowable only though the blood
One of the primary comments on the survival of the Entwives is found in Letter 144 of The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien:
"I think that in fact the Entwives had disappeared for good, being destroyed with their gardens in the War of the Last Alliance (Second Age 3429 – 3441) when Sauron pursued a scorched earth policy and burned their land against the advance of the Allies down the Anduin..."
And later in Letter 338, answering the direct question: Did the Ents ever find the Entwives?
"As for the Entwives: I do not know. I have written nothing beyond the first few years of the Fourth Age. . . . But I think in Vol. II pp. 80-811 it is plain that there would be for Ents no re-union in 'history' — but Ents and their wives being rational creatures would find some 'earthly paradise' until the end of this world: beyond which the wisdom neither of Elves nor Ents could see. Though maybe they shared the hope of Aragorn that they were 'not bound for ever to the circles of the world and beyond them is more than memory.'...."
dave_welch
My guess is the Old Forest. Sam mentions at the start of The Fellowship of the Ring that his cousin Andy (I think) saw a walking tree as big as an Elm.