Message from @Romanus Drevo
Discord ID: 542711708129427456
And is crafted, of course
I mean stuff like gunsmithing doesn't convey beauty
Nobody's stopping you from making engravings
lol
get me some Renaissance flair on my 12gauge
Shoot up schools like a sir
😍
If it doesn't convey beauty in some way I have no problems calling it non-art
It has merit, it has technique, but it is not art
but the words art or craft never meant anything about beauty 🤔
And as you tell us, there weren't even different words then, but there are now
So to get back to the original question, does fashwave have beauty?
because anglosaxon and latin weren't married yet
eh it can have a little bit
I would say so, in a certain way
Oh, the qualifications!
but it's nothing that will last as long as like the greek pagan statues
So a mark of beauty is longevity?
no
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but you can just tell if something is going to be long lived or not
You know, a lot of classical music was just written so that the composer would get a check at the end of the day. He wasn't necessarily trying to write music that would last forever, but he did know that the better music he wrote, the more likely it was he'd keep his job.
of course
What's sad is that books like Harry Potter will likely go down in history as "classics" along with true masterpieces like Middle-Earth, as if the two are comparable
Depends. I rather fancy that when the Great Catholic Monarch comes around, people will realize that Harry Potter just can't measure up to LOTR.
Tolkien set the bar for fantasy, and I have seen very, very few come anywhere near. Rowlings didn't even try.
I think Lewis' Space Trilogy is really good, though very different in nature
Funny story about that.
Tolkien and Lewis noticed that sci-fi and time travel stories were becoming more and more popular. So they did a little challenge between themselves: they'd draw straws, one would write sci-fi, and the other would write time travel. Lewis got sci-fi, and wrote the Space Trilogy. Tolkien got time travel, and wrote a little story about an English sailor who finds an island in the Atlantic where elves still live, and learns the history of the Ainur, the angels of Middle-Earth.
Is that work recounted in the "History of Middle Earth" collection?
I think it's the beginning of the first volume.
getting to the end of LoTR right now
I've read it... eight times? At least.
I don't understand half of the deep descriptions of geography
But other than that, sublime
Specially the dialog, which is noble and human, and not straight from some cringe worthy fanfic
Do you have a copy with a map?
Yes, but I follow a bigger online map. Rather than the ovverall geography (mountains or hills to this and that direction) I mean the more detailed descriptions of the landscapes, paths, etc
Oh, I see.
I can't give examples, since I'm reading it in spanish and I don't know the translation of the words