!new! | Silmaril
The Silmaril wants to be returned to the world’s roots. It will whisper to the bearer in moments of despair, tempting them to break it—not out of malice, but out of longing. Those who carry it too long find fate twisting against them: wars start over their head, lovers betray them, and the jealous dead rise to steal it.
They were made of a crystalline substance called silima and contained the unmarred light of the Two Trees of Valinor . silmaril
The Silmaril burns not with fire, but with the living light of the Two Trees—captured starlight made solid, yearning to be free. The Silmaril wants to be returned to the world’s roots
The (singular: Silmaril) are three mythical, unmarred jewels created by the Elf Fëanor in J.R.R. Tolkien’s legendarium, serving as the central plot device and namesake of his epic mythological work, The Silmarillion . Infused with the living, primordial light of the Two Trees of Valinor, these gems represent the absolute pinnacle of Elven craftsmanship and sub-creation. Rather than mere ornaments, the Silmarils function as the ultimate litmus test of morality in Middle-earth, driving the historical narrative of the First Age through themes of possessiveness, tragic oaths, and ultimate redemption. The Origin and Creation of the Jewels They were made of a crystalline substance called