This raises the interesting possibility that by the mid-60s Tolkien had evolved a rather subtle view... that the Breaking of the World really *did* happen, but Men are too blind/pragmatic/unimaginative/out-of-touch with the Valar to conceive of such a cataclysmic Divine intervention- so they refused to believe it. In other words, Arda globed from the beginning is an incorrect Mannish myth, concocted because Men keep falling back on, well, scientific method rather than faith and revelation.
This confuses me
By the mid 1960s wasn't Tolkien moving toward explaining such notable notions as the Sun and Moon hailing from the Trees, and an originally flat earth made round, as largely due to Mannish influence?
I believe this can be traced. The first hint appears in (probably) the early '60s, with the statement in "The Line of Elros" that Elendil wrote the "Downfall of Númenor, which was preserved in Gondor.". This is of great interest because, as I observed back then, the Akallabêth is explicitly a fusion of the "Elvish" Fall of Númenor and the "Mannish" Downfall of Anadune- it represents in fact the Mannish legend corrected in light of 'true' Elvish lore learned by the Dúnedain.
Where is the
Akallabêth noted as a corrected version? especially with reference to a correction concerning the original shape of the world (Elves informing Men that it was originally flat). In
DA the Elves teach that the world was originally round, but some Men found this a hard saying.
Yes the
Akallabêth was a fusion of texts, as CJRT nicely shows, and he states:
'It seems to me likely that by 'Elvish tradition' he meant The Fall of Númenor, and since 'Mixed Dunedanic tradition' presumably means a mixture of Elvish and Númenórean tradition, he was in this surely referring to the Akallabêth, in which both The Fall of Númenor and The Drowning of Anadune were used (see pp. 376, 395-6).' (Sauron Defeated)
Christopher Tolkien is here referring to a note (guessed to be) written
'some time in the 1960s' and
'on the envelope that contains the texts of the Drowning of Anadune.'
Contains very old version (in Adunaic) which is good -- in so far as it is just as much different (in inclusion and omission and emphasis) as would be probable in the supposed case:
(a) Mannish Tradition
(b) Elvish tradition
(c) Mixed Dunedanic tradition
JRRT
It appears this envelope contained
DA, and (IMO) at some later point Tolkien noted that this (now) even 'very old version' DA is good, because it is different enough from other supposed traditions...
... but does he mean the Elvish tradition as in the specific version referred to as
The Fall of Númenor III (FN III), a text thought to be written at a:
'relatively early stage in the writing of The Lord of the Rings'? (this version contains the flying ships of the Numenoreans incidentally). The envelope does not appear to contain this, in any event, and the note simply says 'Elvish tradition'.
In other words, could this mean simply
an Elvish tradition
that could be devised, possibly out of the 'old'
FN III? following his commentary on the note, CJRT explains that in
DA the confusions and obscurities of the Mannish tradition were deepened in relation to the preliminary sketches; but what are the confusions?
I really mean to ask: does the confusion in DA include
what the Elves taught concerning the shape of the world? For myself, I wonder how it could easily be confused that
the Elves (Nimri) taught that the world was as an apple and so on (section 23
DA II, retained in subsequent versions of DA) -- or in short, that the world was round; and the King of Númenor thus considers that, if so, by going east, one:
'shall come up at last behind the West, and yet break no ban?' (section 27
DA II again)
I suggest that DA could correctly represent what the Elves told Men, and (
DA final form):
'For in the youth of the world it was a hard saying to men that the earth was not plain as it seemed to be, and few even of the Faithful of Anadune had believed in their hearts this teaching;...'
Perhaps the 'Elvish tradition' awaited to be written, intended to fall in line with the Elvish teaching as represented in DA. It still could have been
The Fall of Númenor (although again, Tolkien himself does not refer to this text specifically in his note), but a revised version. Although the tale as it stood was still flat world, even
FN III is less explicit as to the shape of the world than earlier versions -- where it had been unequivocally expressed that the gods:
'bent back the edges of the Middle-earth, and they made it into a globe'
Or have I made a crucial or simple error here? Let me know, as I feel that I might have. One can still disagree in any case, obviously; and any opinions or comments are welcome.