This chapter is too rich and too eventful to cover in one post, so I will confine myself to Fëanor’s death.
Ath wrote:
And looking out from the slopes of Ered Wethrin with his last sight he beheld far off the peaks of Thangorodrim, mightiest of the towers of Middle-earth, and knew with the foreknowledge of death that no power of the Noldor would ever overthrow them; but he cursed the name of Morgoth thrice, and laid it upon his sons to hold to their oath, and to avenge their father.
What a sad and terrible end: to willingly spend the blood not only of your sons, but of your entire people, on an utterly hopeless cause. I may be fascinated by this character, and appreciate his pivotal role in the great tale of Arda Marred, but I don’t like him at all, and find some kind of strange comfort in the thought of the innumerable ages he will spend “houseless” and alone in the Halls of Mandos
I don’t know if I would choose to apply either
like or
dislike to Fëanor. He had a part to play in the drama… and play it he did.
I find his ‘punishment’, for punishment is surely is, most unfair.
The more I think about him, the more one-dimensional his character becomes. Of how he was driven to create the Silmarils by the doom laid upon him in the music, and further driven by his temperament into lust for the jewels. Speaking of temperament … neither of his parents appear to exhibit similar traits … unless Míriel’s stubbornness counts … and is not a child’s temperament mostly inherited? (That lust was also experienced by Morgoth and perhaps others … was it something intrinsic in the capturing of the light itself? Was the whole conceit of trapping something (light) spiritual innately flawed?) How, it seems to me, he had virtually no choice in his behavior. Tolkien sets it thus: His birth causes Míriel’s despair and subsequent suicide > he is driven (by lust?) to capture the light of the Trees in the jewels > they exact a fierce (and unnatural?) possessiveness in his heart so much so that he refuses (or cannot) relinquish them even to save Valinor from darkness > which leads to rebellion and the swearing of the great oath,
"They swore an oath which none shall break, and none should take, by the name even of Ilúvatar, calling the Everlasting Dark upon them if they kept it not..."
In which the very words themselves contain binding properties so that all who swear are under compulsion to fulfill its terms or die in the attempt.
Because I do not believe that Fëanor EVER really had free will, the freedom to choose his path, ( I don’t care what Tolkien says in Letters … the fact remains that Fëanor is doomed from the beginning) so I cannot fault him for keeping his destiny.
Ack!

I’ve been so out of the loop I’ve only just read the latest posts.
Well … no surprise here,

if you read mine you’ll know I unequivocally agree with Imp and disagree with you, Ath.
I just can't agree with this, Impy . Although Sassy might. I think Fëanor was indeed intended to achieve greatness beyond imagining, which in Tolkien's world is always a very dangerous thing, but I don't think he was intended to slaughter his own kinsmen. If I thought that were so, I don't think I could hold the Sil so dear. I just could not be touched so deeply by a work with such a cold and manipulative heart at its centre.
I must add that believing Fëanor (and the Eldar in general) to have been created bereft of true freedom of will does not impact the Sil in the negative way it would for you (and others perhaps). Instead it becomes even more poignant as it takes on the trappings of a great and tragic epic saga. Simply because the tale of a central protagonist is already woven neither mitigates its power or its impact.
But perhaps this is because I see the Sil as a heroic myth, and not as a lens through which to view ‘the great and mysterious scope of the human condition’ as Ath describes; instead, for me, it is only remotely connected to the human condition … my perception is that I am privilaged to witness a play of the gods upon a field of which I can only dream. Fëanor’s tragedy holds no life lesson for me, for it is too extreme in all aspects.
If everything that occurs in the Sil is intended to occur in just one way and no other, it becomes a mere puppet play to my thinking. If every note of the Music must be played a certain way, what is the whole point of creating sub-creators whose purpose is to interpret the "theme propounded" to them, so that they may add their own individual variations or seek out others so that they may weave together new harmonies?
Not every note, Ath.

Just the notes pertaining to Melkor and Fëanor. And the Quendi, to a lesser extent. Oh, and maybe Orcs ....
But if what you're saying is that he is singled out by Eru to specifically commit the deeds that he does by walking a set path with no chance to exercise his own gift of free will, then that is quite an alien (and unpleasant) thought to me.
But that is
exactly what I am saying, have said, and will continue to say. As I tried to explain above, I do not find this an abhorrent thought ... in fact, I think it mirrors much of real life ... although not to the extreme set out in the Silmarillion.
Besides, who else besides me (and Impy) is going to disagree with you?
Where would the fun be if I didn't?
