16.12.2019, 17:22
Je n'ai que UT sous la main, mais on trouve en note du chapitre "Cirion and Eorl", note 28 :
Citation :Eorl's horse. In Appendix A (II) to The Lord of the Rings it is told that Eorl's father Léod, who was a tamer of wild horses, was thrown by Felaróf when he dared to mount him, and so he met his death. Afterwards Eorl demanded of the horse that he surrender his freedom till his life's end in wergild for his father; and Felaróf submitted, though he would allow no man but Eorl to mount him. He understood all that men said, and was as long-lived as they, as were his descendants, and mearas, "who would bear no one but the King of the Mark or his sons, until the time of Shadowfax." Felaróf is a word of the Anglo-Saxon poetic vocabulary, though not in fact recorded in the extant poetry; "very valiant, very strong."
"L'urgent est fait, l'impossible est en cours, pour les miracles prévoir un délai."