There is an answer, then; for I am not of Etheirys, nor have I ever heard of it. [There is a grimness in his tone. Much here he does not understand, but that very lack of understanding solidifies the truth of his situation, and it is one he mislikes.]
[There, too, is that curious phrasing. The capital of our star. He looks at Hythlodaeus with renewed fascination, and a kind of wonder: there are tales of those who move among the stars, but they are not Men, nor even Elves, and they are beyond the ken of mortals. It seems unlikely that he speaks now with a Vala - more likely that his new acquaintance speaks in poetry, or is making some allusion Faramir does not understand - but the thought is there, nonetheless.]
Am I correct to think, then, that Gondor or Ennor would be likewise unknown to you?
no subject
[There, too, is that curious phrasing. The capital of our star. He looks at Hythlodaeus with renewed fascination, and a kind of wonder: there are tales of those who move among the stars, but they are not Men, nor even Elves, and they are beyond the ken of mortals. It seems unlikely that he speaks now with a Vala - more likely that his new acquaintance speaks in poetry, or is making some allusion Faramir does not understand - but the thought is there, nonetheless.]
Am I correct to think, then, that Gondor or Ennor would be likewise unknown to you?