“VALAQUENTA”
A typescript by J.R.R.Tolkien, c. 1958, edited and published
by Christopher Tolkien in THE SILMARILLION, Houghton Mifflin, 1977.
Account of the Valar and Maiar according
to the lore of the Eldar
§1. In the
beginning Eru, the One, who in the Elvish tongue is named Ilúvatar, made the
Ainur of his thought; and they made a great Music before him. In this Music the
World was begun; for Ilúvatar made visible the song of the Ainur, and they
beheld it as a light in the darkness. And many among them became enamoured of
its beauty, and of its history which they saw beginning and unfolding as in a vision.
Therefore Ilúvatar gave to their vision Being, and set it amid the Void, and
the Secret Fire was sent to burn at the heart of the World; and it was called
Eä.
§2. Then
those of the Ainur who desired it arose and entered into the World at the
beginning of Time; and it was their task to achieve it, and by their labours to
fulfil the vision which they had seen. Long they laboured in the regions of Eä,
which are vast beyond the thought of Elves and Men, until in the time appointed
was made Arda, the Kingdom of Earth. Then they put on the raiment of Earth and
descended into it, and dwelt therein.
Of the Valar
§3. The
Great among these spirits the Elves name the Valar, the Powers of Arda, and Men
have often called them gods. The Lords of the Valar are seven; and the Valier,
the Queens of the Valar, are seven also. These were their names in the Elvish
tongue as it was spoken in Valinor, though they have other names in the speech
of the Elves in Middle-earth, and their names among Men are manifold. The names
of the Lords in due order are: Manwë, Ulmo, Aulë, Oromë, Mandos, Lórien, and
Tulkas; and the names of the Queens are: Varda, Yavanna, Nienna, Estë, Vairë,
Vána, and Nessa. Melkor is counted no longer among the Valar, and his name is
not spoken upon Earth.
§4. Manwë
and Melkor were brethren in the thought of Ilúvatar. The mightiest of those
Ainur who came into the World was in his beginning Melkor; but Manwë is dearest
to Ilúvatar and understands most clearly his purposes. He was appointed to be,
in the fullness of time, the first of all Kings: lord of the realm of Arda and
ruler of all that dwell therein. In Arda his delight is in the winds and the
clouds, and in all the regions of the air, from the heights to the depths, from
the utmost borders of the Veil of Arda to the breezes that blow in the grass.
Súlimo he is surnamed, Lord of the Breath of Arda. All swift birds, strong of
wing, he loves, and they come and go at his bidding.
§5. With
Manwë dwells Varda, Lady of the Stars, who knows all the regions of Eä. Too
great is her beauty to be declared in the words of Men or of Elves; for the
light of Ilúvatar lives still in her face. In light is her power and her joy.
Out of the deeps of Eä she came to the aid of Manwë; for Melkor she knew from
before the making of the Music and rejected him, and he hated her, and feared
her more than all others whom Eru made. Manwë and Varda are seldom parted, and
they remain in Valinor. Their halls are above the everlasting snow, upon Oiolossë,
the uttermost tower of Taniquetil, tallest of all the mountains upon Earth.
When Manwë there ascends his throne and looks forth, if Varda is beside him, he
sees further than all other eyes, through mist, and through darkness, and over
the leagues of the sea. And if Manwë is with her, Varda hears more clearly than
all other ears the sound of voices that cry from east to west, from the hills
and the valleys, and from the dark places that Melkor has made upon Earth. Of
all the Great Ones who dwell in this world the Elves hold Varda most in
reverence and love. Elbereth they name her, and they call upon her name out of
the shadows of Middle-earth, and uplift it in song at the rising of the stars.
§6. Ulmo is
the Lord of Waters. He is alone. He dwells nowhere long, but moves as he will
in all the deep waters about the Earth or under the Earth. He is next in might
to Manwë, and before Valinor was made he was closest to him in friendship; but
thereafter he went seldom to the councils of the Valar, unless great matters
were in debate. For he kept all Arda in thought, and he has no need of any
resting-place. Moreover he does not love to walk upon land, and will seldom
clothe himself in a body after the manner of his peers. If the Children of Eru
beheld him they were filled with a great dread; for the arising of the King of
the Sea was terrible, as a mounting wave that strides to the land, with dark
helm foam-crested and raiment of mail shimmering from silver down into shadows
of green. The trumpets of Manwë are loud, but Ulmo’s voice is deep as the deeps
of the ocean which he only has seen.
§7.
Nonetheless Ulmo loves both Elves and Men, and never abandoned them, not even
when they lay under the wrath of the Valar. At times he win come unseen to the
shores of Middle-earth, or pass far inland up firths of the sea, and there make
music upon his great horns, the Ulumúri, that are wrought of white shell; and
those to whom that music comes hear it ever after in their hearts, and longing
for the sea never leaves them again. But mostly Ulmo speaks to those who dwell
in Middle-earth with voices that are heard only as the music of water. For all
seas, lakes, rivers, fountains and springs are in his government; so that the
Elves say that the spirit of Ulmo runs in all the veins of the world. Thus news
comes to Ulmo, even in the deeps, of all the needs and griefs of Arda, which
otherwise would be hidden from Manwë.
§8. Aulë
has might little less than Ulmo. His lordship is over all the substances of
which Arda is made. In the beginning he wrought much in fellowship with Manwë
and Ulmo; and the fashioning of all lands was his labour. He is a smith and a
master of all crafts, and he delights in works of skill, however small, as much
as in the mighty building of old. His are the gems that lie deep in the Earth
and the gold that is fair in the hand, no less than the walls of the mountains
and the basins of the sea. The Noldor learned most of him, and he was ever
their friend. Melkor was jealous of him, for Aulë was most like himself in thought
and in powers; and there was long strife between them, in which Melkor ever
marred or undid the works of Aulë, and Aulë grew weary in repairing the tumults
and disorders of Melkor. Both, also, desired to make things of their own that
should be new and unthought of by others, and delighted in the praise of their
skill. But Aulë remained faithful to Eru and submitted all that he did to his
will; and he did not envy the works of others, but sought and gave counsel.
Whereas Melkor spent his spirit in envy and hate, until at last he could make
nothing save in mockery of the thought of others, and all their works he
destroyed if he could.
§9. The
spouse of Aulë is Yavanna, the Giver of Fruits. She is the lover of all things
that grow in the earth, and all their countless forms she holds in her mind,
from the trees like towers in forests long ago to the moss upon stones or the
small and secret things in the mould. In reverence Yavanna is next to Varda
among the Queens of the Valar. In the form of a woman she is tall, and robed in
green; but at times she takes other shapes. Some there are who have seen her
standing like a tree under heaven, crowned with the Sun; and from all its
branches there spilled a golden dew upon the barren earth, and it grew green
with corn; but the roots of the tree were in the waters of Ulmo, and the winds
of Manwë spoke in its leaves. Kementári, Queen of the Earth, she is surnamed in
the Eldarin tongue.
§10. The
Fëanturi, masters of spirits, are brethren, and they are called most often Mandos
and Lórien. Yet these are rightly the names of the places of their dwelling,
and their true names are Námo and Irmo.
§11. Námo
the elder dwells in Mandos, which is westward in Valinor. He is the keeper of
the Houses of the Dead, and the summoner of the spirits of the slain. He
forgets nothing; and he knows all things that shall be, save only those that
lie still in the freedom of Ilúvatar. He is the Doomsman of the Valar; but he
pronounces his dooms and his Judgements only at the bidding of Manwë. Vairë the
Weaver is his spouse, who weaves all things that have ever been in Time into
her storied webs, and the halls of Mandos that ever widen as the ages pass are
clothed with them.
§12. Irmo
the younger is the master of visions and dreams. In Lórien are his gardens in
the land of the Valar, and they are the fairest of all places in the world,
filled with many spirits. Estë the gentle, healer of hurts and of weariness, is
his spouse. Grey is her raiment; and rest is her gift. She walks not by day,
but sleeps upon an island in the tree-shadowed lake of Lórellin. From the
fountains of Irmo and Estë all those who dwell in Valinor draw refreshment; and
often the Valar come themselves to Lórien and there find repose and easing of
the burden of Arda.
§13.
Mightier than Estë is Nienna, sister of the Fëanturi; she dwells alone. She is
acquainted with grief, and mourns for every wound that Arda has suffered in the
marring of Melkor. So great was her sorrow, as the Music unfolded, that her
song turned to lamentation long before its end, and the sound of mourning was
woven into the themes of the World before it began. But she does not weep for
herself; and those who hearken to her learn pity, and endurance in hope. Her
halls are west of West, upon the borders of the world; and she comes seldom to
the city of Valimar where all is glad. She goes rather to the halls of Mandos,
which are near to her own; and all those who wait in Mandos cry to her, for she
brings strength to the spirit and turns sorrow to wisdom. The windows of her
house look outward from the walls of the world.
§14.
Greatest in strength and deeds of prowess is Tulkas, who is surnamed Astaldo,
the Valiant. He came last to Arda, to aid the Valar in the first battles with
Melkor. He delights in wrestling and in contests of strength; and he rides no
steed, for he can outrun all things that go on feet, and he is tireless. His
hair and beard are golden, and his flesh ruddy; his weapons are his hands. He
has little heed for either the past or the future, and is of no avail as a
counsellor, but is a hardy friend. His spouse is Nessa, the sister of Oromë,
and she also is lithe and fleetfooted. Deer she loves, and they follow her
train whenever she goes in the wild; but she can outrun them, swift as an arrow
with the wind in her hair. In dancing she delights, and she dances in Valimar
on lawns of never-fading green.
§15. Oromë
is a mighty lord. If he is less strong than Tulkas, he is more dreadful in
anger; whereas Tulkas laughs ever, in sport or in war, and even in the face of
Melkor he laughed in battles before the Elves were born. Oromë loved the lands
of Middle-earth, and he left them unwillingly and came last to Valinor; and
often of old he passed back east over the mountains and returned with his host
to the hills and the plains. He is a hunter of monsters and fell beasts, and he
delights in horses and in hounds; and all trees he loves, for which reason he
is called Aldaron, and by the Sindar Tauron, the Lord of Forests. Nahar is the
name of his horse, white in the sun, and shining silver at night. The Valaróma
is the name of his great horn, the sound of which is like the upgoing of the
Sun in scarlet, or the sheer lightning cleaving the clouds. Above all the horns
of his host it was heard in the woods that Yavanna brought forth in Valinor;
for there Oromë would train his folk and his beasts for the pursuit of the evil
creatures of. Melkor. The spouse of Oromë is Vána, the Ever-young; she is the
younger sister of Yavanna. All flowers spring as she passes and open if she glances
upon them; and all birds sing at her coming.
§16. These
are the names of the Valar and the Valier, and here is told in brief their
likenesses, such as the Eldar beheld them in Aman. But fair and noble as were
the forms in which they were manifest to the Children of Ilúvatar, they were
but a veil upon their beauty and their power. And if little is here said of all
that the Eldar once knew, that is as nothing compared with their true being,
which goes back into regions and ages far beyond our thought. Among them Nine
were of chief power and reverence; but one is removed from their number, and
Eight remain, the Aratar, the High Ones of Arda: Manwë and Varda, Ulmo, Yavanna
and Aulë, Mandos, Nienna, and Oromë. Though Manwë is their King and holds their
allegiance under Eru, in majesty they are peers, surpassing beyond compare all
others, whether of the Valar and the Maiar, or of any other order that Ilúvatar
has sent into Eä.
Of the Maiar
§17. With
the Valar came other spirits whose being also began before the World, of the
same order as the Valar but of less degree. These are the Maiar, the people of
the Valar, and their servants and helpers. Their number is not known to the
Elves, and few have names in any of the tongues of the Children of Ilúvatar;
for though it is otherwise in Aman, in Middle-earth the Maiar have seldom
appeared in form visible to Elves and Men.
§18. Chief
among the Maiar of Valinor whose names are remembered in the histories of the
Elder Days are Ilmarë, the handmaid of Varda, and Eönwë, the banner-bearer and
herald of Manwë, whose might in arms is surpassed by none in Arda. But of all
the Maiar Ossë and Uinen are best known to the Children of Ilúvatar.
§19. Ossë
is a vassal of Ulmo, and he is master of the seas that wash the shores of Middle-earth.
He does not go in the deeps, but loves the coasts and the isles, and rejoices
in the winds of Manwë; for in storm he delights, and laughs amid the roaring of
the waves. His spouse is Uinen, the Lady of the Seas, whose hair lies spread
through all waters under sky. All creatures she loves that live in the salt
streams, and all weeds that grow there; to her mariners cry, for she can lay
calm upon the waves, restraining the wildness of Ossë. The Númenóreans lived
long in her protection, and held her in reverence equal to the Valar.
§20. Melkor
hated the Sea, for he could not subdue it. It is said that in the making of
Arda he endeavoured to draw Ossë to his allegiance, promising to him all the
realm and power of Ulmo, if he would serve him. So it was that long ago there
arose great tumults in the sea that wrought ruin to the lands. But Uinen, at
the prayer of Aulë, restrained Ossë and brought him before Ulmo; and he was
pardoned and returned to his allegiance, to which he has remained faithful. For
the most part; for the delight in violence has never wholly departed from him,
and at times he will rage in his wilfulness without any command from Ulmo his
lord. Therefore those who dwell by the sea or go up in ships may love him, but
they do not trust him.
§21. Melian
was the name of a Maia who served both Vána and Estë; she dwelt long in Lórien,
tending the trees that flower in the gardens of Irmo, ere she came to
Middle-earth. Nightingales sang about her wherever she went.
§22. Wisest
of the Maiar was Olórin. He too dwelt in Lórien, but his ways took him often to
the house of Nienna, and of her he learned pity and patience.
§23. Of
Melian much is told in the Quenta Silmarillion. But of Olórin that tale does
not speak; for though he loved the Elves, he walked among them unseen, or in
form as one of them, and they did not know whence came the fair visions or the
promptings of wisdom that he put into their hearts. In later days he was the
friend of all the Children of Ilúvatar, and took pity on their sorrows; and
those who listened to him awoke from despair and put away the imaginations of
darkness.
Of the Enemies
§24. Last
of all is set the name of Melkor, He who arises in Might. But that name he has
forfeited; and the Noldor, who among the Elves suffered most from his malice,
will not utter it, and they name him Morgoth, the Dark Enemy of the World.
Great might was given to him by Ilúvatar, and he was coeval with Manwë. In the
powers and knowledge of all the other Valar he had part, but he turned them to
evil purposes, and squandered his strength in violence and tyranny. For he
coveted Arda and all that was in it, desiring the kingship of Manwë and
dominion over the realms of his peers.
§25. From
splendour he fell through arrogance to contempt for all things save himself, a
spirit wasteful and pitiless. Understanding he turned to subtlety in perverting
to his own will all that he would use, until he became a liar without shame. He
began with the desire of Light, but when he could not possess it for himself alone,
he descended through fire and wrath into a great burning, down into Darkness.
And darkness he used most in his evil works upon Arda, and filled it with fear
for all living things.
§26. Yet so
great was the power of his uprising that in ages forgotten he contended with
Manwë and all the Valar, and through long years in Arda held dominion over most
of the lands of the Earth. But he was not alone. For of the Maiar many were
drawn to his splendour in the days of his greatness, and remained in that
allegiance down into his darkness; and others he corrupted afterwards to his
service with lies and treacherous gifts. Dreadful among these spirits were the
Valaraukar, the scourges of fire that in Middle-earth were called the Balrogs,
demons of terror.
§27. Among
those of his servants that have names the greatest was that spirit whom the
Eldar called Sauron, or Gorthaur the Cruel. In his beginning he was of the
Maiar of Aulë, and he remained mighty in the lore of that people. In all the
deeds of Melkor the Morgoth upon Arda, in his vast works and in the deceits of
his cunning, Sauron had a part, and was only less evil than his master in that
for long he served another and not himself. But in after years he rose like a
shadow of Morgoth and a ghost of his malice, and walked behind him on the same
ruinous path down into the Void.
HERE ENDS THE VALAQUENTA
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