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@thelyricalquill
Encouragment for writers that I know seems discouraging at first but I promise it’s motivational-
• Those emotional scenes you’ve planned will never be as good on page as they are in your head. To YOU. Your audience, however, is eating it up. Just because you can’t articulate the emotion of a scene to your satisfaction doesn’t mean it’s not impacting the reader.
• Sometimes a sentence, a paragraph, or even a whole scene will not be salvagable. Either it wasn’t necessary to the story to begin with, or you can put it to the side and re-write it later, but for now it’s gotta go. It doesn’t make you a bad writer to have to trim, it makes you a good writer to know to trim.
• There are several stories just like yours. And that’s okay, there’s no story in existence of completely original concepts. What makes your story “original” is that it’s yours. No one else can write your story the way you can.
• You have writing weaknesses. Everyone does. But don’t accept your writing weaknesses as unchanging facts about yourself. Don’t be content with being crap at description, dialogue, world building, etc. Writers that are comfortable being crap at things won’t improve, and that’s not you. It’s going to burn, but work that muscle. I promise you’ll like the outcome.
Words to describe facial expressions
Absent: preoccupied
Agonized: as if in pain or tormented
Alluring: attractive, in the sense of arousing desire
Appealing: attractive, in the sense of encouraging goodwill and/or interest
Beatific: blissful
Black: angry or sad, or hostile
Bleak: hopeless
Blinking: surprise, or lack of concern
Blithe: carefree, lighthearted, or heedlessly indifferent
Brooding: anxious and gloomy
Bug eyed: frightened or surprised
Chagrined: humiliated or disappointed
Cheeky: cocky, insolent
Cheerless: sad
Choleric: hot-tempered, irate
Darkly: with depressed or malevolent feelings
Deadpan: expressionless, to conceal emotion or heighten humor
Despondent: depressed or discouraged
Doleful: sad or afflicted
Dour: stern or obstinate
Dreamy: distracted by daydreaming or fantasizing
Ecstatic: delighted or entranced
Faint: cowardly, weak, or barely perceptible
Fixed: concentrated or immobile
Gazing: staring intently
Glancing: staring briefly as if curious but evasive
Glazed: expressionless due to fatigue or confusion
Grim: fatalistic or pessimistic
Grave: serious, expressing emotion due to loss or sadness
Haunted: frightened, worried, or guilty
Hopeless: depressed by a lack of encouragement or optimism
Hostile: aggressively angry, intimidating, or resistant
Hunted: tense as if worried about pursuit
Jeering: insulting or mocking
Languid: lazy or weak
Leering: sexually suggestive
Mild: easygoing
Mischievous: annoyingly or maliciously playful
Pained: affected with discomfort or pain
Peering: with curiosity or suspicion
Peeved: annoyed
Pleading: seeking apology or assistance
Quizzical: questioning or confused
Radiant: bright, happy
Sanguine: bloodthirsty, confident
Sardonic: mocking
Sour: unpleasant
Sullen: resentful
Vacant: blank or stupid looking
Wan: pale, sickly
Wary: cautious or cunning
Wide eyed: frightened or surprised
Withering: devastating
Wrathful: indignant or vengeful
Wry: twisted or crooked to express cleverness or a dark or ironic feeling
A lot of people tend to see Maglor as the quiet one. The gentle one. The sweet, kind musical one.
But you have to remember a few things:
He swore the Oath of Feanor, and participated in all three kinslayings. He chose to help burn the ships at Losgar. Only after the third kinslaying is he mentioned as having any remorse.
He owned and defended the large plain known as Maglor's Gap for centuries. He had absolutely zero cover from Morgoth's forces and the only thing that forced him out was the dragon Glaurung. This guy is a warrior, if not one of THE best warriors of the first age. He was a general during the Wars of Beleriand, including the war of wrath. He was also one of the only two, alongside Galadriel, of the 16 grandchildren of Finwe to survive the first age.
When the easterlings betrayed Caranthir, Maglor personally hunted Uldor down and killed him. You calling that gentle?
His name is Kanafinwe, which means "strong-voiced" or "commanding". Not just sweetly singing lullabies or mournful lamentations but also commanding armies. "Maglor who's voice is like the sea." Not just soft and gentle tides but also like a mounting wave. The sea that is both loved and feared.
People treat him like he's this sweet baby cinnamon roll who's just following orders but the thing is just because he felt bad for his crimes and cared for Elrond and Elros doesn't automatically make him this poor little sweetheart. He's a hardened, traumatized warrior who's a leader in his own right. He's a commander, a fighter, and a force to be reckoned with.
Never underestimate Maglor Feanorian.
By the time Elrond finally finds Maglor, he has lost his voice. He can no longer sing, and cannot speak above a whisper. But the echoes of his song can be heard amidst the crash of waves— and thus it continues evermore.
As his father before him, who infused his craft with a part of his own being, so too did Maglor— his voice was given to his song, and his song, after long ages, was given to the sea with the Silmaril he had cast away.
Some say now that his essë had become a mockery of him— that Kanafinwë the Strong-Voiced should barely be able to manage a whisper. But those who visit the southern shores of Middle-Earth, who hear the endless echoes of his lament, know otherwise.
Minas Morgul by Artem Demura
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