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ugluk great
03-10-2001, 10:17 PM
A Elbereth Gilthoniel,
Silivren penna miriel
O menel aglar elenath!
Na-chaered palan-diriel
O galadhremmin ennorath,
Fanuilos, le linnathon
Nef aear, si nef aearon!

A strange thing seeing an orc singing an Elf song... maybe their blood awoke in me? Anyways, I'm so crazy about tolkien that I just wanted to post this cause 'it filled my heart with joy' talking in Tolkien way... :)
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Ugluk of the Uruk-Hai

Fat middle
03-10-2001, 10:26 PM
Welcome to Entmoot, ugluk great :)

i've moved this to Middle Earth, which is the apropiate forum for Tolkien related miscellaneous.

Spock1
03-11-2001, 01:26 AM
Tis a wonderful thing that an orc and a Vulcan/Hobbit can feel the same way.
I've the opening line lettered on my car in old English; that's how much I love it.
Here, here, for the orcs of taste.

ugluk great
03-11-2001, 06:16 PM
Hehe, sorry guys, I won't post a lot here, cause my most favorite message board is www.warcraft3.com and I will be a traitor if I move here, cause I have about 500 posts there, and post there every day...

Anyways, I'm writing my own book about what happened after LOTR and I'm planning Ugluk to become an Elf. I know u say he died. Well, I say he didn't! :)

easterlinge
03-15-2001, 09:24 AM
Welcome, whoeveryou are. Ummmm, how does one turn an Orc into an Elf? I know in Silmarillion that Morgoth twisted and altered captured Elves to make them, but I read somewhere that Tolkien changed his mind (my goodness he does that a lot doesn't he?). I've forgotten what the origins of Orcs are supposed to be.

Maybe Ugluk slips up and turns into a Hobbit....

Lief Erikson
03-30-2001, 04:45 AM
He didn't change his mind that I've heard of. He says they twisted and altered elves in his books, the Silmarillion and I think it says so in the LOTRs somewhere as well. Plus, it's in the encyclopedia. :)

Fuor
04-04-2001, 03:51 PM
Can anyone translate that verse for me because I reckon its great but I don't know what it means ?

ugluk great
04-05-2001, 03:33 PM
www.uib.no/People/hnohf/elbereth.htm (http://www.uib.no/People/hnohf/elbereth.htm)
It has the translation. The language is Sindarin.