The Shores of Faëry: Difference between revisions

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'''The Shores of Elfland''' was a poem written by [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] in 1915.
'''The Shores of Elfland''' is a poem written by [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] in [[8 July|8]]-[[9 July]], [[1915]]. It was first published in [[Humphrey Carpenter|Carpenter]]'s ''[[J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography|Biography]]'' in an unrevised version.<ref>[[Humphrey Carpenter]] ([[1977]]). ''[[J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography]]'', pp. 76-77</ref>


==The poem==
<poem style="font-style:italic; margin-left:20px;">East of the Moon, west of the Sun
there stands a lonely hill;
its feet are in the pale green sea,
its towers are white and still,
beyond Taniquetil
in Valinor.
Comes never there but one lone star
that fled before the moon;
and there the Two Trees naked are
that bore Night's silver bloom,
that bore the globéd fruit of Noon
in Valinor.
There are the shores of Faëry
with their moonlit pebbled strand
whose foam is silver music
on the opalescent floor
beyond the great sea-shadows
on the marches of the sand
that stretches on for ever
to the dragonheaded door,
the gateway of the Moon,
beyond Taniquetil
in Valinor.
West of the Sun, east of the Moon,
lies the haven of the star,
the white town of the Wanderer
and the rocks of Eglamar.
There Wingelot is harboured,
while Eärendel looks afar
o'er the darkness of the waters
between here and Eglamar -
out, out, beyond Taniquetil
in Valinor afar.</poem>
==See also==
*[[Tinfang Warble (poem)]]
*[[Index:Poems by J.R.R. Tolkien|Poems by J.R.R. Tolkien]]
{{references}}
[[Category:Poems by J.R.R. Tolkien|Shores of Elfland, The]]
[[Category:Poems by J.R.R. Tolkien|Shores of Elfland, The]]

Revision as of 18:39, 7 August 2019

"...there is much else that may be told." — Glóin
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The Shores of Elfland is a poem written by J.R.R. Tolkien in 8-9 July, 1915. It was first published in Carpenter's Biography in an unrevised version.[1]

The poem

East of the Moon, west of the Sun
there stands a lonely hill;
its feet are in the pale green sea,
its towers are white and still,
beyond Taniquetil
in Valinor.
Comes never there but one lone star
that fled before the moon;
and there the Two Trees naked are
that bore Night's silver bloom,
that bore the globéd fruit of Noon
in Valinor.
There are the shores of Faëry
with their moonlit pebbled strand
whose foam is silver music
on the opalescent floor
beyond the great sea-shadows
on the marches of the sand
that stretches on for ever
to the dragonheaded door,
the gateway of the Moon,
beyond Taniquetil
in Valinor.
West of the Sun, east of the Moon,
lies the haven of the star,
the white town of the Wanderer
and the rocks of Eglamar.
There Wingelot is harboured,
while Eärendel looks afar
o'er the darkness of the waters
between here and Eglamar -
out, out, beyond Taniquetil
in Valinor afar.

See also

References