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  2. The Collected Poems of J.R.R. Tolkien - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Collected_Poems_of_J.R...

    Though J. R. R. Tolkien wrote poems starting from childhood, his poetry was less successful than the prose in his books The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (which both contained poems embedded in the text). The first poem in the collection is from 1910, addressed to Tolkien's future wife Edith Bratt. Christopher Tolkien shared drafts of poetry ...

  3. All that glitters is not gold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_that_glitters_is_not_gold

    All that glitters is not gold" is an aphorism stating that not everything that looks precious or true turns out to be so. While early expressions of the idea are known from at least the 12th–13th century, the current saying is derived from a 16th-century line by William Shakespeare , " All that glisters is not gold ".

  4. Tolkien's poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolkien's_poetry

    Tolkien's poetry is extremely varied, including both the poems and songs of Middle-earth, and other verses written throughout his life. J. R. R. Tolkien embedded over 60 poems in the text of The Lord of the Rings; there are others in The Hobbit and The Adventures of Tom Bombadil; and many more in his Middle-earth legendarium and other manuscripts which remained unpublished in his lifetime ...

  5. Poetry in The Lord of the Rings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry_in_The_Lord_of_the...

    The 2276 lines of the unfinished "Lay of the Children of Hurin" [T 7] present in Christopher Tolkien's words a "sustained embodiment of his abiding love of the resonance and richness of sound that might be achieved in the ancient English metre". The poem is in alliterative verse (unlike Tolkien's second version which is in rhyming couplets ...

  6. List of Tolkien's alliterative verse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tolkien's...

    King Sheave, a poem describing the arrival of Sheave , a postulated Germanic culture hero, in 154 lines. It was originally an incomplete portion of a longer projected poem written in the late 1930s, but was treated as a complete poem for its insertion into Tolkien's unfinished novel The Notion Club Papers , published in Sauron Defeated (1992 ...

  7. Death and immortality in Middle-earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_and_immortality_in...

    The Tolkien scholar Deidre A. Dawson writes that Elizabeth Whittingham's 2008 study The Evolution of Tolkien's Mythology reveals one especially strong pattern in the 12-volume The History of Middle-earth: Tolkien's "steady movement" from pagan archetypes towards a Bible-inspired mythology.

  8. Beowulf and Middle-earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beowulf_and_Middle-earth

    Beowulf is an epic poem in Old English, telling the story of its eponymous pagan hero.He becomes King of the Geats after ridding Heorot, the hall of the Danish king Hrothgar, of the monster Grendel, [a] who was ravaging the land; he dies saving his people from a dragon.

  9. Namárië - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namárië

    The poem names Valimar, the residence of the Valar and the Vanyar Elves; the Calacirya, the gap in the Pelori Mountains that lets the light of the Two Trees stream out across the sea to Middle-earth; and Oiolossë ("Ever-white") or Taniquetil, the holy mountain, [1] the tallest of the Pelori Mountains; the Valar Manwë and his spouse Varda, to whom the poem is addressed, lived on its summit.