"GL2" - читать интересную книгу автора (vol11) in; it seems to imply an extension of Dor-Lomen northwards.
(3) B 7 to C 7. The name beginning Fen is continued on Section 2, B 8 of Rivil, changed to of Serech (see p. 113, commentary on GA $44). An arrow, not inserted on the redrawing, points to three dots above the inflowing of Rivil as marking the Fen. (4) c 1. I can cast no light on the name Ened of the island in the ocean. (5) C 3. It seems probable that the name Falasquil referred to the small round bay, blacked in, on the southern shore of the great bay leading into the Firth of Drengist. On the remark- able reappearance of this ancient name see p. 344. (6) C 4. The clearly-marked gap in the stream flowing into the Firth of Drengist represents its passage underground; with the name Annon Gelyd cf. Annon-in-Gelydh (the Gate of the Noldor) in the later Tale of Tuor, Unfinished Tales p. 18. The ravine of Cirith Ninniach is described in the same work (ibid. p. 23). The upper course of the stream is very faintly pencilled and uncertain, but it seems clear that it rises in the Mountains of Mithrim (ibid. p. 20). (7) C 6. For the peak shaded in and marked Amon Darthir, with Morwen beside it, see Unfinished Tales, where it is told (p. 68) that the stream Nen Lalaith 'came down from a spring under the shadow of Amon Darthir', and (p; 58) that it 'came singing out of the hills past the walls of [Hurin's] house'. (8) C 6 to D 7. For the river Lithir see p. 261. C 8. (10) D 2-4. Both Nevrast and the Marshes of Nevrast were first written Nivrost (see p. 179, $100). On Lake Linaewen and the marshes see p. 192 and Unfinished Tales p. 25. (11) D 6. For the river Glithui see Unfinished Tales p. 38 and note 16, and p. 68. In the first of these passages (the later Tale of Tuor) the name is Glithui as on the map, but in the second (the Narn) it is equally clearly Gilthui. For Malduin see Unfinished Tales p. 38 and The Silmarillion p. 205. (12) D 7. The line of dots extending east from the Brithiach was struck out as shown; see Section 2, $38. For the ford of Brithiach see p. 228, $28. (13) D 7. Dim is the first part of the name Dimbard: see Section 2, D 8. (14) E 4 to F 4. anciently Eglador: Eglador was the original name of Doriath, 'land of the Elves' (see the Etymologies, V.356, stem ELED), and is so entered on the map (Section 2, F 9). For its later sense, 'land of the Eglain, the Forsaken People, the Sindar' see p. 189, $57; and here Eglador is used with a much wider reference: the western parts of Beleriand (see pp. 379-80). This is perhaps to be related to the statement in The Tale of Years (pp. 343-4), 'The foremost of the Eldar reach |
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