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Difference between revisions of "Tinfang Warble"

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(Created page with "Also known as Tinfang Gelion, this is originally some sort of fairy bird (a leprawn), first appearing in two early poems (1914) of J.R.R. Tolkien: "Tinfang Warble," written 19...")
 
 
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[[Category:Fictional bards, minstrels, and troubadours]]
 
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Latest revision as of 11:18, 14 January 2019

Also known as Tinfang Gelion, this is originally some sort of fairy bird (a leprawn), first appearing in two early poems (1914) of J.R.R. Tolkien: "Tinfang Warble," written 1914, and published in a rewritten form circa 1927; and "Over Old Hills and Far Away," written 1915. Both were collected into The Book of Lost Tales Part One (1983).

In a later work, the "Lay of Leithian," Tinfang is a half-fey, half-elf, credited as being one of the finest Elven minstrels to have lived, on par with Maglor and Daeron.

Tinfang Gelion who still the moon

enchants on summer nights of June

and kindles the pale firstling star;

and he who harps upon the far

forgotten beaches and dark shores

where western foam for ever roars,

Maglor whose voice is like the sea;

and Dairon, mightiest of the three.

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