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Founded in 2005, the Silmarillion Writers' Guild exists for discussions of and creative fanworks based on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Silmarillion and related texts. We are a positive-focused and open-minded space that welcomes fans from all over the world and with all levels of experience with Tolkien's works. Whether you are picking up Tolkien's books for the first time or have been a fan for decades, we welcome you to join us!

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New Challenge: Epic 80s
This month's challenge features hundreds of fresh prompts from the bodacious decade of the 1980s.

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Comment data from the SWG underscores community as an essential component to a robust commenting culture.

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New & Updated Fanworks

[Writing] Kindling by Anérea

Aerin is miserable and bitter under the domination of Brodda and his people.
A horrible ficlet.

[Writing] Eä's Redemption by AaronAzrael

This is my new poetical attempt to add my own interpretation to Tolkien's Cosmology as to Eru's Creation and the Valar's minds and behind-the-scene providence reasons and mechanisms.. I often review Eä as part of our own world, just in another dimension, this is why I have always seriously…

[Writing] Nasyalossë by Lovimmy3365

Erestor lay up against a tree, brown washed to black in the wet of the snow. The black disc of the new moon sailed across the dark sky. Erestor wished it were gone. He had no need to look into dark eyes any longer.


He was dying.


(AKA Erestor unwittingly travels back in time to the…

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The Halls of Nienna are infinite, for so is grief. Within it lie the waters of the Ekkaia, the sea that surrounds the world, fed by Nienna's tears and the tears of her children. Finarfin is not like his brothers, not wise or brave or clever, but when he cried the Valar did not shut him out.

[Writing] I Sit and Think of Times There Were Before by Erdariel

In his old age, Isildur's former esquire Ruinamacil, known to later histories only as Ohtar, writes his own account of his escape from the ambush at Gladden Fields and journey to Imladris, and the history of his friend whom Isildur ordered to flee with him.

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When uneasy dreams bring him back into Beleriand, Daeron finds a pair of twins who have lost their home, and an enemy who has lost himself. The Shadow's reach is growing ever longer, and if they are to survive, they must do it together.

[Writing] From That Rubble by StarSpray

Fëanor shrugged, studying the contents of his wine glass. “Something must be done about that house. It will fall down eventually.”
“It does not follow that it must be you that tears it down single-handedly. Are you sure you do not want help?”
“It’s not as though I…

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Create a fanwork using on of our righteous prompts based on popular culture from the 1980s. Read more ...

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Expanding on my 2018 article "Why People Don't Comment," comment data from the SWG underscores community as an essential component to a robust commenting culture.

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By definition, fanworks fandom does not draw a lot of boundaries, but community archives and events have taken a strong stance against AI-generated fanworks due to ethical considerations and member input.

Grief, Grieving, and Permission to Mourn in the "Quenta Silmarillion" by Dawn Walls-Thumma

In a book as full of death as the Quenta Silmarillion, grief and mourning are surprisingly absent. The characters who receive grief and mourning—and those who don't—appear to do so due to narrative bias. Grief and mourning (or a lack of them) serve to draw attention toward and away from objectionable actions committed by characters.

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Out of the shadow, light is born anew.


A Chieftain is dead. And whilst the events surrounding his death are unclear, a son tries to come to terms with his loss.

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Alliterative Verse for Arda by Rhunedhel  

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Fanwork Notes

Rocking Chair Elrond by BloodwingBlackbird
Rocking Chair Elrond by BloodwingBlackbird (Tumblr | AO3)

Tolkien loved alliterative verse. He made Beowulf’s Midgeard his professional life’s work, and he wrote thousands of lines of alliterative poetry telling the tale of his own Middle-earth. In Midgeard, pride of place goes to his Lay of Sigurd and Gudrun and his Fall of Arthur. In Middle-earth, pride of place belongs to his alliterative Lay of The Children of Húrin and Lay of Leithian. Not surprisingly, many of his fans have been moved to write alliterative verse of their own.

I should know. I am one of them. I first read The Lord of the Rings in 1970, as an eleven-year-old. In the 1990s and early 2000s, I spent a large chunk of my life on Elendor MUSH, a Tolkien-themed text-based roleplaying game, where I played Rhunedhel, an Avarin bard who had fled the Uttermost East to seek refuge in Imladris. A bard needs songs, and naturally I wrote them, in my own version of alliterative poetry. They included The Song of Shadows, a tale of adventure in which a pair of Elven lovers work together to recover an heirloom from a mortal King—who may, in fact, be the Witch-king of Angmar. Rhunedhel’s masterwork was a long epic poem, The Redemption of Daeron, which tells the tale of Daeron, who loved Lúthien, and twice betrayed her. The poem reveals Daeron wandering grief-stricken in the Uttermost East, and tells the tale of how at long last he learned what really happened to Lúthien. That led in turn to me becoming the editor of Forgotten Ground Regained, the central store on the web for modern English alliterative verse.

In the process, I have collected quite a bit of Tolkien alliterative verse fan poetry. I am delighted to share some of my favorites with you. They are listed below, each with a brief description to give you a sense of their place in Tolkien’s Legendarium. Share your favorite alliterative poems in the comments!

Fanwork Information

Summary:

Part of our Themed Collection series for our newsletter, this collection features alliterative poems about Middle-earth.

Major Characters:

Major Relationships:

Genre: Fanwork Collection

Challenges:

Rating: General

Warnings:

This fanwork belongs to the series

Themed Collections
Posted on 27 September 2024 Updated on 30 September 2024

This fanwork is complete.

Published Poems

"Hymn to Earendil" by Patricia Masson

Patricia Masson was an early Tolkien fan and a particularly skilled and accomplished poet. She died young, in the early 1990s, or we would likely have seen much more work from her. While they aren’t Arda-based, her other poems, such as A Lay of St. Boniface and The Last Valkyrie are also well worth reading.

Summary: This is an alliterative hymn to that most beloved star. It targets the foundation stone of Tolkien’s legendarium.

"Slaying the Dragon" by Susan Edwards

Susan Edwards (Tuilinde) began publishing Tolkien fan poetry in the 1980s. Her work sets a standard for poetry that is vigorous in its alliterative form but also true in spirit to Tolkien’s work. Like Patricia Masson, her work was first published in Mallorn.

Summary: This poem tells of the burning of Laketown, from Bard’s point of view

"The Paths of the Dead" by Susan Edwards

Summary: This poem tells the tale of how Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli dared the dark together.

"Lament for Baldor the Brave" by Gill Page

In the early days of Tolkien fandom, Gill Page was leader of the Morgul-hai smial of the Tolkien Society in Maidstone, Kent, England. The PDF snapshot of his poem in an early mimeograph of Mallorn is adorned with period fan art that perfectly captures the spirit of the Morgul-hai, who would show up at Tolkien Society activities cosplaying as Orcs.

Summary: This tale describes what really happened to Brego’s son when he dared the dark mountain.

"Dear Tolkien Society" by Lancelot Schaubert

Lancelot Schaubert is part of a new generation of poets who, inspired by Tolkien’s example, have chosen to write primarily in alliterative verse. You can find more of his poems at his author page on Forgotten Ground Regained, or in his published poetry collections.

Summary: Only a poet and a Tolkien fan would dare to ask the Tolkien Estate for a chance to finish Tolkien’s Fall of Arthur.

"Tree and Leaf" by Malcolm Guite

Malcolm Guite is an English poet, singer-songwriter, scholar, and Anglican priest and was for many years chaplain of Girton College, Cambridge. This is the least fanfic poem in my selection, but Guite is a figure Tolkien fans should be aware of. He has written a great deal of interesting work, and is currently writing his own epic version of the Arthurian mythos.

Summary: This poem is a meditation on Tolkien, who is perhaps meditating on “Leaf by Niggle”.

From Fanfic Archives

The remaining poems on my last can be found on major fanfic archives – specifically, An Archive of Our Own (AO3). You can find these and many other fan poetry authors indexed on my SF author and fan page on Forgotten Ground Regained.

"Earendil the Seafarer" by Himring

Tolkien was inspired by the Norse sagas, which preserve a rich array of Old Norse alliterative poems embedded inside prose narratives. Himring does the same kind of thing quite skillfully, as she imagines Elwing and Earendil addressing one another in solemn, spectacular alliterative verse, just before Earendil risks everything and sails Vingilot to Valinor. This poem describes a conversation between Elwing and Earendil, before Earendil set sail to petition the Valar to rescue Middle-earth from Morgoth.

Summary: Spring arrives at the Havens of Sirion.
Elwing can see that Earendil is about to go seafaring again.

"Narn Hathaldir ah Aerlin" by Aris Katsaris

One of the joys of fanfiction is its ability to take a minor character from Tolkien’s works and craft a story that gives them some of the glory that Tolkien reserved for his major characters. Another joy is the creation of OCs (original characters) and fleshing them out within the world that Tolkien wrought. This fanfic author gives us that in spades.

Summary: The tale of a boy and a girl. The untold story of Hathaldir the Young, one of the twelve last companions of Barahir ...

"Wruxled in White" by Lindariel

One of Tolkien’s knacks was his ability to combine high, fateful myth with the mortal, the ordinary, and the comic. This poem achieves a similar kaleidoscopic effect in its description of Gandalf. This work is presented as a fragment from a poem about the Istari, featuring one Gandalf Greyhame.

Summary: This recently discovered poem fragment in the Anglo-Saxon alliterative style may have formed part of a longer work, now lost, about the Istari at the end of the Third Age.

"The Choices of Lady Éowyn" by Zdenka

The poem describes that moment famous from book and film: Who knows what she thought, alone in the watches of the night? Zdenka is one of the most prolific fanfic authors of alliterative verse. This poem is one of her strongest.

Summary: Éowyn decides to join the Ride of the Rohirrim to Minas Tirith. A poem in alliterative verse.


Rhunedhel

1 year 8 months ago

Permalink

Rhunedhel's compositions

If you want to check out my fan poetry, it's all currently over on A03. I'm Rhunedhel there too:

https://archiveofourown.org/users/Rhunedhel/pseuds/Rhunedhel

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Rhunedhel

1 year 8 months ago

Permalink

In reply to Rhunedhel's compositions by Rhunedhel

The alliterative poems

You can find all my alliterative Tolkien poetry under Tales of the Avari (https://archiveofourown.org/series/3853291)

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Anérea (Laiquendi snuggled in a tree)

Anérea

1 year 8 months ago

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Thanks for sharing these…

Thanks for sharing these with us!

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Himring

1 year 8 months ago

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Thank you very much for…

Thank you very much for including my Earendil piece in your collection!

And thank you for compiling the collection and sharing it and also the link to your own poems. (It may take me a while to catch up, but I won't forget.)

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Rhunedhel

1 year 8 months ago

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In reply to Thank you very much for… by Himring

:)

Thank you too! Hope you enjoy them.

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Himring

1 year 8 months ago

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As the link to Earendil the…

As the link to Earendil the Seafarer in the collection goes to AO3, I hope it is okay to provide a link to the piece on SWG in a comment.

It can be found here.

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