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Of Finrod and Men

Summary:

Here is a song called Of Finrod and Bëor, also called by some, Of Finrod and the Coming of Men, as was still sung in Rivendell in the Third Age of the world. It is but a fragment from the Lay of Felagund, which told the story of Finrod Felagund in full. It was first cast into Sindarin in Imladris by some of the High Elves who dwelt there for a time, and later into Westron.

I: Of Finrod tarrying in Ossiriand
II. Of Finrod spying Men in the woods
III: Of Finrod's song of Valinor
IV: Of the conversation of Finrod and Bëor
V: Of the disquiet of the Green-elves and the passing of Men into Beleriand
VI: Of the death of Finrod Felagund and the deeds of the House of Bëor
Coda

Notes:

This poem is long in the making. I am constantly writing and rewriting this piece, which was first set to words in late 2013. Likely a fifth Canto will be added which will deal with the coming of Men into Beleriand. -July 2021

Tentatively completed -March 2022

Revised March 2024

Chapter 1: Canto I

Chapter Text

Of Finrod tarrying in Ossiriand


In eastern land was once a wood
dense with elm and ashes grey
that under Ered Luin stood
and in its eaves did Finrod stray.
He walked by flowing rivers cold

and trod the valley’s secret ways
when spring was young upon the mould
in woodlands of the Elder Days.

From guard and friend he turned aside
wearying of the hunt, he rode
across the Gelion's waters wide
and took upon the Dwarven-road.
His quarry gone, his arrows spent,
softly rolled the forest stream
his feet along its waters went, 
and walked as in a waking dream;
unhorsed he wandered neath the trees
and silent passed by walls of stone,
while grasses bended in the breeze:
to Thargelion, he went alone.

For Finrod was an Elven lord,
a prince returned from Eldamar,
so bright his crown and keen his sword
in Nargothrond beneath the stars.
A thread of jewels like dews upon
a mantle dark wore Finrod king.
His belt was sewn with silver wan
and emeralds were in his ring
as serpents twain, that once was wrought
by Elven-smiths before the Dawn,
when crystal lamps lit forges hot
in the shinning halls of Tirion.

Unsounding soft did Finrod tread
in flowers and in shifting grass,
his singing voice had windless sped
headlong, as clear as chiming glass.
And free was Ossiriand that he
unbound by time had walked upon
like a dreamer deep in reverie
amazed and lost, until the dawn
and night alike had passed him by
and through the flower-meads he led
and still the dark and starry sky
wheeled above his golden head.
For long he walked in grasses strewn 
with thistle-blooms and warblers filled
and silent neath the penilune
Finrod by a clearing stilled.