Okay, I have read Lord of the Rings now and I have some questions

I seem to remember some speculation that the Entwives moved to the Shire (what was the name of the forest in the Shire where the trees moved?). I know that was my first thought when Treebeard was talking about losing them.

Bob

It’s deliberately left as a mystery, but IIRC Tolkien wrote in a letter that he thought they were all dead. They certainly aren’t in The Shire, although Treebeard remarks the entwives, being gardeners, would like that land. The entwives dwelt in The Brown Lands, which were destroyed during the War of the Last Alliance.

You would be in error.

The children of Elrond were allowed to choose to stay in mortal lands, and become mortal if they did. But their only opportunity for making that choice was when Elrond left for the West. Arwen, by not leaving with her father, decided to become mortal.

I have a vague memory that there’s a reference to Elladan and Elrohir in the appendices to the Lord of the Rings, so they stayed behind as well.

I’ve always understood Arwen choosing to die when she did as because, after Aragorn died, the lustre went out of Middle-Earth at last and, being unable to journey into the West, she went to Cerin Amroth and there died herself.

And I’m guessing they’d pick names like “Goldberry.”

Whatever Goldberry is, she isn’t an entwife. The potential for tasteless jokes shouldn’t be underestimated.

(Tom Bombadil - “Do yah like me when I’m huorn-y, baby.”)

Treebeard is pretty vague when describing entwives, bu he does say “their eyes were the eyes of our people”.

Tramps.

But not gypsys or thieves.

Who are the Maiar other than Gandalf? Was the Balrog a Maiar? What about the Nazgul?

Christopher Robin - off the top of my head I know that the other wizards were Maiar and I know that the Nazgul are men (kings in fact) who were corrupted by rings of power & who now have great power of intimidation and control but have become undead wraiths totally subject to Sauron, esp when he has the One Ring.

In the trilogy:
Gandalf and Saruman (and the rest of the Wizards)
The Balrog
Sauron

No one else in the Trilogy was a full-on Maia, IIRC (Tom Bombadil notwithstanding.) However, it is noted that many characters in the trilogy are descendants of Maia through a long-ago Maia-Elf marriage (and subsequent Elf-Human marriage). Even Aragorn is related to the Maia. How much this (and his elf-blood) factors into his power is unclear.

Right, I should have remembered that part from the movies, sorry.

Is there a reason given in the books as to why none of the dwarves become nazgul?

Also possibly Goldberry, though that’s not stated.

Not exactly. IIRC, Tolkien just said it was not in the nature of dwarves to be dominated. Their rings did not extend their lives either, but they weren’t completely unaffected, their greed for wealth and gold was increased.

“Gold, Gold, GOLD, GOLD, Gold, Gold, Gold, Gold, GOOOOOOLD.” *

  • Popular dwarvish song.

I had always thought that “servant of the secret fire” was a mention of Gandalf’s Ring, one of the Three. :confused:

Gandalf was basically saying he was a servant of Illuvator.

It’s the life-giving and reality-bestowing power, courtesy of Iluvatar. From here:

The trilogy doesn’t go into it, but the origins of the dwarves are covered elsewhere. They weren’t created the same way as the other races, and they’re a bit different. I’ve always assumed that kept them from being fully compatible with the rings. They’re running on an ethernet network and everyone else is on…

…a token ring.

The Dwarves that acquired the Seven rings probably hoarded them, rather than wearing them. It is stated somewhere that they are all believed to have been lost to dragons, who raided dwarf hoards for fun and profit. (See The Hobbit.)

Only wearing the ring and wielding its power leads to wraithhood.

I’ll let Wikipedia and One Wiki to Rule Them All do the heavy lifting here.

Long story short, Sauron tried to control the dwarves but they weren’t susceptible to the influence directly. Instead Sauron used them to amplify their inherent vices in lust for gold and treasure and pride. This was not much different from the Nine in that it amplified the men’s inherent need for power and long life. But men are more malleable and were able to be directly controlled.

Snort!:smiley:

From the LoTR wiki:

The rings of power did not have the effects that Sauron had intended, possibly because Aulë had made the dwarves especially to resist evil domination. The only apparent effect of the rings was that the Dwarves became more greedy, but they were not turned into wraiths like men.