Monday, August 31, 2020

The Tolkien Dictionary – Part 2

In this installment of the Tolkien Dictionary, I examine several words featured in book two of The Fellowship of the Ring.

I have already released the first part of the Tolkien Dictionary.  

I plan to release at least one more part of the Tolkien Dictionary that will define additional terms used in The Fellowship

 

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Wargs: Evil wolves that work for Sauron, the Dark Lord.

According to Tolkien Gateway, Tolkien derived the word from terms in Old English, Old High German, and Old Norse that refer to someone or something that strangles or chokes.  

During a conversation with Frodo, who is recovering from his injuries in Rivendell, Gandalf lists wargs among the servants of the Dark Lord.

“These horses are born to the service of the Dark Lord in Mordor. Not all his servants and chattels are wraiths! There are orcs and trolls, there are wargs and werewolves; and there have been and still are many Men, warriors and kings, that walk alive under the Sun, and yet are under his sway. And their  number is growing daily.” (Chapter 1) 

 

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Venerable: Accorded a great deal of respect, especially because of age, wisdom, or character

“The face of Elrond was ageless, neither old nor young, though in it was written the memory of many things both glad and sorrowful. His hair was dark as the shadows of twilight, and upon it was set a circlet of silver; his eyes were grey as a clear evening, and in them was a light like the light of stars.

“Venerable he seemed as a king crowned with many winters, and yet hale as a tried warrior in the fullness of his strength. He was the Lord of Rivendell and mighty among both Elves and Men.” (Chapter 1)

Elrond was a king who was well respected by Elves and Men. 

 

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Renowned: known by many people, famous

Gloin, one of the dwarves who journeyed with Bilbo in The Hobbit, was pleased to meet Frodo at Elrond’s house in Rivendell.

“I do not ask, for I have already been told that you are the kinsman and adopted heir of our friend Bilbo the renowned. Allow me to congratulate you on your recovery.” (Chapter 1)

Bilbo became famous for helping the Dwarves during their quest to recapture the Lonely Mountain and their former treasure. He earned the respect of his fellow adventurers, Gloin included.  

 

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Insolence: rude and disrespectful behavior  

Saruman sought to persuade Gandalf to help him find the Ruling Ring, which Saruman planned to wield himself.

“Until you reveal to me where the One may be found. I may find means to persuade you. Or until it is found in your despite, and the Ruler has time to turn to lighter matters: to devise, say, a fitting reward for the hindrance and insolence of Gandalf the Grey.” (Chapter 2)

Saruman told Gandalf that he would be punished for his rude and disrespectful behavior if he didn’t help Saruman find the Ruling Ring.  


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Tryst: a prearranged meeting

In its modern use, the term is commonly used to refer to a secret meeting between lovers.

Gandalf spoke at the Council of Elrond to share what he knew about the Ruling Ring and discuss his imprisonment by Saruman, who sought to use the ring to gain power.

 “And that, Frodo is the end of my account. May Elrond and the others forgive the length of it. But such a thing has not happened before, that Gandalf broke tryst and did not come when he promised. An account to the Ring-bearer of so strange an event was requires, I think.” (Chapter 2)

Gandalf explained why he didn’t join Frodo when Frodo departed from the shire on his quest, as Gandalf had promised. Gandalf planned to keep their meeting secret from the prying eyes of the servants of the Dark Lord. 


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Breeches: short trousers

Frodo accepted a sword and chain-mail armor as gifts from Bilbo, before Frodo departed from Rivendell to continue on his quest.

“‘Very well, I will take it,’ said Frodo. Bilbo put it on him, and fastened Sting upon the glittering belt; and then Frodo put over the top his old weather-stained breeches, tunic, and jacket.” (Chapter 3)

Frodo put on chain mail armor and fastened a sword on his belt, before putting on the rest of his clothes. 

 

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Doughty: brave and persistent

Boromir, Aragorn, and Legolas went down the mountain Caradhras to clear a path for the fellowship to retreat the way they had come.

“‘But happily your Caradhras has forgotten that you have Men with you,’ said Boromir, who came up at that moment. ‘And doughty Men too, if I may say it; though lesser men with spades might have served you better. Still, we have thrust a lane through the drift; and for that all here may be grateful who cannot run as light as Elves.’” (Chapter 3)  

The three adventurers were successful in creating a path for the others to follow. Boromir credited their success in part to himself and Aragorn, the brave and persistent men of the fellowship. 

 

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Cordial: a sweet liquor

Draught: a swig or serving of a liquid, especially a dose of medicine

Both of these words have many meanings, but Tolkien uses these definitions in The Fellowship.

Gandalf shared swigs of a liquor from Rivendell, known as miruvor, with members of the fellowship. The liquor invigorated them and relieved their weariness.

“Frodo’s spirits had risen for a while after his escape, and after food and a draught of the cordial; but now a deep uneasiness, growing to dread, crept over him again.” (Chapter 4)

After Frodo escaped from the grasp of a lake monster, he ate and took a drink of miruvor. These things had made him feel better. But after a while, his fears returned once again. 


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Whiles: Sometimes                        

Frodo was aware that danger surrounded the adventurers as they journeyed through Moria.

“He was in any case the bearer of the Ring: it hung upon its chain against his breast, and at whiles it seemed a heavy weight. He felt the certainty of evil ahead and of evil following; but he said nothing. He gripped tighter on the hilt of his sword and went on doggedly.” (Chapter 4)   

At times, Frodo felt the Ruling Ring, which hung on a chain he wore around his neck, was a heavy load to bear. 

 

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Corslet: a piece of armor that covers much, but not all, of the upper body  

Gimli the dwarf sang about the wonders of Khazad-dûm under the leadership of King Durin. Khazad-dûm  had been a prosperous mining city, but it was eventually abandoned after the dwarves accidently awakened a monster known as a balrog.

 

"There hammer on the anvil smote,

There chisel clove, and graver wrote;

There forged was blade, and bound was hilt;

The delver mined, the mason built

There beryl, pearl, and opal pale,

And metal wrought on fishes’ mail,

Buckler and corslet, axe and sword,

And shining spears were laid in hoard.” (Chapter 4)


Khazad-dûm produced a variety of metal products, including armor.  


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Truncheon: a wooden shaft used as a weapon or as part of a weapon

The fellowship was attacked by orcs shortly after discovering Balin’s tomb in Khazad-dûm, which is also known as Moria.

An Orc Chieftain thrust a spear into Frodo’s side.  

“But even as the orc flung down the truncheon and swept out his scimitar, Anduril came down upon his helm. There was a flash like flame and the helm burst asunder. The orc fell with cloven head. His followers fled howling, as Boromir and Aragorn sprang at them.” (Chapter 5)

As the orc dropped his spear and picked up a sword, Aragorn used his own sword, Anduril, to decapitate the orc. 

 

Sunday, August 16, 2020

Hello from the Magic Tavern, Season 3

In Hello From the Magic Tavern, Arnie Niekamp, a man who fell through a magical portal into the fantasy world of Foon, records a podcast with a shapeshifter and a wizard.

Earlier this year, I shared my favorite early episodes from the podcast. Today, I’m going to share my favorite episodes from the current season of the podcast — Season 3.

During the first two seasons, Arnie, Chunt, and Usidore recorded their podcast inside the tavern The Vermillion Minotaur.

In the third season, they set out on the road, and met new characters on their journey to defeat the Dark Lord.

 

 

 

Season 3, Episode 32 —  Five Years

 Arnie, Chunt, and Usidore celebrated the five year anniversary of their podcast by sharing audio Arnie recorded when he first arrived in Foon. The audio was recorded before the first episode of Season 1.

Fans who are already familiar with Hello from the Magic Tavern will enjoy this additional backstory about how the podcast came to be.

 

Usidore: Chunt, do you realize what Arnie has found? The greatest form of entertainment in all of entertainment-dom…

Arnie: What is that?

Chunt: A clip show?

Usidore: A prequel. Everyone loves prequels!

 

Bonus: Earth Games — Scattergories

In honor of the five year anniversary, several bonus podcasts, which were originally only available to listeners who paid for access to Stitcher Premium, were released for everyone to listen to for free. 

 

 

In one of those episodes, the co-hosts, Arnie, Chunt, and Usidore, are joined by one of their frequent guests — Momo, a mouse with human strength. Momo is one of my favorite Magic Tavern characters.

The four friends play Scattergories, a game from earth where players have to come up with words for several categories that start with a specific letter.

 

Momo: Does this game have dice? Because Momo doesn’t want to throw them through the wall.

Chunt: Yeah, she is so strong.

Usidore: You know, the way humans always throw dice through the wall.

 

As they prepare to play the game, the characters discuss the rules, and Arnie attempts to ensure Chunt, who can transform into different species of animals by having sex with them, doesn’t have sex during the game.

 

Arnie: House rule, this isn’t for anyone in particular, can we all just agree during this game, no one is going to fuck an animal? Just during the game.

Chunt: That seems pointed.

Momo: Why would Momo start today?

Usidore: Two of the four of us are animals, so it’s a little unfair. I don’t think sex was going to come up in the course of this game, unless there is another rule I don’t know about.

Arnie: Let’s not make it animal-related, no effing during the game.

 

I love how Momo responds to Arnie’s request by reflecting on her disappointment with her love life.

Arnie, a man from Earth, eventually realizes he won’t be able to tell whether the other players are giving real answers.

 

Arnie: I just realized, I’m not going to necessarily know if your answers are real or made up.

Usidore: They’re not.

Momo: We’ll tell you.

Usidore: Yes, of course, we’ll tell you if they are made up, but we wouldn’t do that, would we? No way.

 

I love the concept of actors improvising fictional characters playing Scattergories in a fantasy world, because any potential answer could be correct in the world they’re creating.

 

Season 3, Episode 34 — Mouse Knight

Arnie, Chunt, and Usidore caught up with Momo after she was knighted by Sir Trumble who she helped on a quest.

 

Momo: Being knighted sort of slowed down my career for a second, because I became a magnet for a little while. I got stuck to a refrigerator and was just a magnet.

 

I’m amused by the image of an adorable mouse in a suit of armor unable to move because her suit is magnetized and stuck to a refrigerator.

Momo also received some help from Usidore and Chunt as she explained her heroic journey alongside Sir Trumble.

  

Momo: I went over…you know that bridge that goes over fire?

Usidore and Chunt: Uh huh.

Arnie: What was that bridge called?

Momo: Um…

Usidore: Flame Lane.

Momo: (Laughs)

Arnie: Flame Lane?

Momo: We crossed that and then we crossed the mountain that’s made of ice, which is called…

Chunt: Oh, that’s the FroZone.

Momo: FroZone, (Laughs) And then, um, uh, we went, crossed that… and um… It sounds like Momo is making this up. I’m not.

Usidore: We know.

Chunt: We know.

 

I enjoyed listening to Momo tell her story during the improvised comedy podcast, especially because the other characters believed she wasn’t making it up on the spot.

 

Season 3, Episode 35 — Strong Guy Island

Arnie, Chunt, and Usidore traveled to Strong Guy Island to recruit warriors to assist them on their quest to defeat the Dark Lord.

Strong Guy Island is home to powerful warriors who each have a comic-book-like name that explains an important aspect about their character or abilities.

The three co-hosts adopted similar names as they prepared meet the warrior-residents of the island.

  

Usidore: I as Wizard Man must go and speak to Magic Man for a while. We have a Venn Diagram that overlaps, so it’s important that we know who is taking care of what at any given time.

Arnie: And I know BagdEric, it seems rude. But try to understand, he’s a Magic Man. 

Chunt: I’ll try. I can’t promise, but I’ll try.

  

Arnie snuck in a reference to the lyrics of Magic Man by Heart, a song that was released in 1975.

 

Season 3, Episode 38 — Distant

Our heroes were struck by a magical anomaly, known as the Shattering, that placed everyone in Foon in separate, confined areas they cannot easily leave.

This of course is their way to make jokes and provide commentary about the quarantine measures many people have taken to prevent the spread of coronavirus in the real world.

In the first episode about the Shattering, Arnie, Chunt, and Usidore discuss working from home.

  

Arnie: Just because we’re trapped doesn’t mean you can stop working, Usidore. You’re going to just have to work remotely.

Chunt: We should probably put Usidore on furlough or something.

Arnie: Can we mute each other? Is there a way? There’s all kinds of runes on this Jewel, and I don’t really know how they work.

Chunt: Go ahead and fiddle around with those Runes. Wait, we’re all using Rune right?

Arnie: What’s that?

Chunt: Rune was this technology that not everyone used. Now that the world is shattered, I feel like everyone is going to rely on Rune.

 

Chunt is using Rune as a clever stand-in for Zoom, a computer application many people use to communicate with each other during the pandemic.

 

Season 3, Episode 39 — Freshgrave Twins

Two young evil sorcerers checked in with the co-hosts during the Shattering.

Snaken and Schnenessa, the Freshgrave twins, who recently graduated from the wizarding school Jizzleknob, discussed what they have been up to during the Shattering.

  

Snaken: The first thing we did was we tried light magic, which was not really our thing.

Usidore: Ooh! How was it? How was it?

Snaken: It blows, Usidore.

Schnenessa: It’s like when you want to take a bath, but you only have a very small bath, but you’ve taken a bath in a big bath.

Snaken: You’re like, ‘In theory I understand what should be nice about this, but this just isn’t doing it for me. This bath is much smaller, and I know what a big bath is.

Usidore: But imagine squeezing yourself down into the tiniest bath, so you can enjoy every single droplet of it.

Schnenessa: If I had never been in a big bath, then maybe a little bath would be like, ‘Oh, this is nice.’ But once you’ve done very cool dark magic and put wheels on a first year, you can’t be in a small light bath.

Usidore: Excess! Excess is evil!

Snaken: When your magic is black, you never go back.

 

The episodes features some amusing moments that highlighted the generational differences between Usidore the wizard and the young sorcerers.

 

Usidore: I’m just saying, I was brought into this world to be a champion for the forces of good by a confluence of fire and rain and birds and squirrels and frogs. And all they did is bring me forth, fully-formed, into this world as a magical wizard and handed me one million gold pieces to make my way on my own.

Arnie: A million gold pieces?

Snaken: Here’s the thing, Usidore. I feel like you are not listening to yourself.

Usidore: Huh? What do you mean?

Snaken: You’re starting with an incredible head start that I feel like you take for granted.

Chunt: Hold on, hold on. You’re saying a wizard who arrives born, a full adult with powers, and a million gold and no debt, somehow has a leg up?

Usidore: I made myself.

Schnenessa: You didn’t make yourself, you were called together. You were formed.

 

This is of course a reference to Donald Trump’s statement that his father gave him, “a small loan of a million dollars.”

Snaken and Schnenessa also discussed how they feel so much older than the students who were taking their first year of courses at Jizzlenob. This led the cohosts to reflect on their own ages.

 

Arnie: You can’t feel sad about getting older, that’s honestly the worst thing a young person can do. You can do any kind of annoying things; you can do annoying spells. But old people hate it when young people feel old, because that means we are really old.

Snaken: I don’t know what to tell you Arnie. We’re not as young as we used to be. The first years, when we were leaving, they felt like tiny, tiny babies.

Schnenessa: Teeny, tiny babies. I was confused how they could even walk, they looked so tiny to me. To think we were there, years ago.

Snaken: They spend so much of their time, not casting magic, but watching other people cast magic. That’s their sort of entertainment. They have the ability to do the magic, but they don’t do the magic. They kill a horse or do whatever it takes to watch.

Usidore: Pop-and-lock.

Snaken: Pop-and-lock, to watch other people do magic.

  

I loved this reference to criticisms of teenagers and young adults who watch people play video games online. A lot of older people are perplexed by this form of entertainment, which Snaken was able to highlight through allegory.

 

Season 3, Episode 46  — Jazzhands

Arnie, Chunt, and Usidore met Spirulina Jazzhands, a singer-songwriter who feels her songs are too boring and mundane. The episode features a number of improvised songs.

The cavalier way the episode deals with death is a bit off-putting.

An incoming tide poses a potential life-and-death threat to Chunt, who is part sandcastle during the episode. The way Chunt’s possible impending death is handled is a bit cringe-worthy.

Spirulina also casually mentions she was suicidal during a moment that, to my sensibilities, wrongly made light of suicide.

But the episode more than makes up for these moments by being genuinely funny and featuring clever and amusing improvised songs.

Spirulina learns more about herself during the course of the episode, including that some of her life experiences that she finds mundane are actually interesting and extraordinary.

  

Spirulina: Who hasn’t slept with a centaur, and then the centaur’s mistress comes down and smites her with a lion ring? If you don’t know what a lion ring is, it’s basically what it sounds like. It’s a lion that you wear as a ring. 

This is a very, very gigantic mistress we’re talking about. And the lion ring leaps out at you and somehow you get away. And then you’re backing up and you try to grab a spear to shove in the heart of the lion. And the lion actually dies because you succeed at it, because it was just luck.

Listen, I grabbed a spear and I tripped. It was so embarrassing. Who wants to tell that story?

  

Hello from the Magic Tavern has had many quality episodes throughout its current season. Here are how my favorite episodes in ranked order.

 

1. Freshgrave Twins

2. Earth Games — Scattergories

3. Mouse Knight

4. Strong Guy Island

5. Distant

6. Jazzhands

7. Five Years

 

The following people play key roles in these Magic Tavern episodes.

 

Arnie Niekamp plays a fictional version of himself

Chunt — Adal Rifai

Usidore — Matt Young

Momo—Erin Keif

Snaken—Zach Reino

Schnenessa—Jess McKenna

Spirulina — Nicole Parker

Otok Barleyfoot—Nick Baer

Blemish—Martin Wilson