Would you be interested in teaching me how to play the harp? I can pay you for the lessons too.
Ah, Lord of Lothlórien, esteemed tree-admirer and wearer of velvets so fine they make the stars feel underdressed—
Firstly, I am honoured by your request! To be asked to teach you, Celeborn of Doriath, of all elves, the harp—well. My knees went weak. My quill fell from my hand. I had to sit down and sip something calming.
Now. Would I teach you the harp?
Yes. Absolutely. Of course. But— And I must stress this—if and only if Lord Elrond allows me a single uninterrupted afternoon in which I am not: • Organising the archives, • Hunting down mysteriously vanished ink shipments, • Or attempting to decode the inventory list Erestor wrote entirely in Quenya cursive while sleep-deprived.
If I am granted this sacred window of time, I would delight in showing you the strings.
Imagine it: we sit in the sun-dappled courtyard, a pair of harps gleaming like captured moonlight. I demonstrate a soft trill, and you—after several noble attempts and one minor string-related disaster—replicate it with surprising grace. Birds begin to gather. Glorfindel drifts dramatically through the scene. A squirrel applauds.
It could be beautiful.
So. Yes. I am willing. Perhaps eager. Just please—have a word with Elrond. Or better yet, send Galadriel. If she asks for my schedule to be cleared, I suspect even Erestor would flee the room.














