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Putri Prihatiniさんのイラストまとめ


Author of Blog Tolkien Indonesia. Tolkien, folklore, books, movies. East Javanese. She/her. Header by Oniria, gifted by @TJQChristian.
putri2wotan.wordpress.com

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TrollGirl's watercolor painting cleverly frames the cats with Queen Berúthiel's hair. A dreamy depiction perfect for fairy tale books.

https://t.co/BzdpeaEZz2

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Steamey shows one detail of Berúthiel's depiction in Unfinished Tales: she decorated the courtyard with strange, disturbing sculptures, keeping the house mostly bare (modern architecture, right?). Full numbers of cats here: nine black and one white.
https://t.co/mpPZ0my3dU

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Next Berúthiel is by Peter Xavier Price. Dark purple seems like a popular color scheme for the queen, and I don't object! Love the background details with cats playing behind her.

https://t.co/rwTPhEc1Z0

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On 4 February 1937, The Oxford Magazine published Tolkien's poem titled "The Dragon's Visit". I love the hilarious opening of a dragon lazily sleeping under the cherry tree...in the garden of an old country Englishman named Mr. Higgins, in Tolkien's era.

🎨: J.R.R. Tolkien

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When the era of the Elves faded, so did elanor. After the death of Aragorn and Lothlórien was fading, Arwen laid herself upon the mound of Cerin Amroth, and there was her green grave, until the world was changed and elanor and niphredil bloomed no more there.

🎨:

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I'm sorry that it happened during your journey to recovery, but I'm happy that you keep going despite everything. Please know that your beautiful soul is loved, and we love you.

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For Tolkien, the seed of The Silmarillion was already growing in 1915. When he was still an undergraduate student in Oxford doing a final, he painted "The Shore of Faery", an abstract depiction of Kôr, the city of the Elves in the Blessed Land of Valinor.

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Jubokko is a yōkai tree that grows in battlefields or sites of massacres. It looks like ordinary tree except for subtle monstrous features from human blood it absorbs. It snatches unsuspecting humans and pierces them with sharp branches, sucking their blood.

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On 18 January 1934, The Oxford Magazine published Tolkien's poem titled "Looney". Tolkien later revised it with new title "The Sea-Bell (Frodos Dreme)", with a tone much darker and full of longing than the previous version.

🎨: Anna Kulisz

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