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The Return of the King
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The Return of the King

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Summary
In the Houses of Healing, Faramir courts the Lady Éowyn. The shield maiden of Rohan states that she does not desire healing, but rather to ride once more into battle. Faramir, however, tells her that he would "lose so soon" what he has found, and professes his love to her. His profession of love sparks a change within Éowyn, who declares, "I will be a healer, and love all things that grow and are not barren."

Later, Faramir, as the last Steward of Gondor, does what the situation demands and offers to surrender his role to Aragorn, the rightful king who has at last begun to rule. Aragorn, however, does not release Faramir from service, but instead appoints Faramir and his descendants as his perpetual Stewards. As an officer of the king, then, Faramir announces Aragorn's ascension to power and crowns him king. At the end of the chapter, Aragorn weds Arwen, the daughter of Elrond. Frodo reflects, "Now not day only shall be beloved, but night too shall be beautiful and blessed and all its fear pass away!"

Analysis
Tolkien continues to develop his theme of endings and passings even as he relates the kindling of the romance between Faramir and Éowyn. Faramir, for instance, states that his reason tells him "we stand at the end of days," but his heart, in the presence of Éowyn, convinces him that no "darkness will endure." Some readers have found the passage regarding their courtship unconvincing and abrupt, and while such criticisms contain some legitimacy, readers may do better to consider the love relationship between these two characters as another example of eucatastrophe: a sudden turn toward good out of sorrow, even if it is fleeting and transitory. The eucatastrophic hymn (which, as Tom Shippey points out, resembles the language of the psalms) sung by the eagle in the midst of the passage would seem to support this view of Faramir and Éowyn's relationship.

The lines of poetry which Aragorn speaks upon his coronation are, in fact, a strong echo of the two lines of Anglo-Saxon poetry which struck Tolkien so forcibly when he was a student. They are the lines that inspired Tolkien to create his vast and rich private mythology. The original lines read, in translation: "Hail Earendel, brightest of angels / above the middle-earth sent unto men" (as quoted in Humphrey Carpenter, J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography, 1977: New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2000; page 72). As adapted to be spoken by Aragorn, they reinforce his messianic status and underscore the ways in which Tolkien's work can be viewed as a parable (not an allegory) of his own understanding of the Christian salvation myth. Aragorn, like Christ in Christian belief, has come into this world-"Middle-earth"-to rule forever: "In this place will I abide, and my heirs, unto the ending of the world." Furthermore, outside of a specifically Christian context, the lines emphasize the apocalyptic nature of Tolkien's story-for, in fact, the world of his characters is ending. Aragorn's accession to the throne represents the end of the Third Age of the world and the beginning of the Fourth-the Age of Men in which, ironically from our vantage point, the Men of old such as Aragorn will be long-forgotten. This simultaneous attention to both eternity and temporality is one of the features that has made Tolkien's vision of the world so compelling to so many.

Frodo's reflections at the wedding of Aragorn and Arwen recall the New Testament's description of the new heaven and the new earth, where there is no night. Tolkien's Christian background informs this eucatastrophic, apocalyptic image.

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