Melian [ˈmeli.an] the Maia is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium. She appears in The Silmarillion, the epic poem The Lay of Leithian and the novel The Children of Húrin.
A visual description of Melian is given in the Lay of Leithian:
and dark and long her tresses lay,
beneath her silver girdle seat
She is a Maia of the race of the Ainur, akin to Yavanna. Before the First Age, in the Years of the Trees, she left the gardens of Lórien and went to Middle-earth, and there she fell in love with the Elven-king Elu Thingol, King Greymantle, and with him ruled the kingdom of Doriath. She had a child with Thingol, a daughter named Lúthien, said to be the fairest and most beautiful of all the Children of Ilúvatar. Melian's line of descent is the half-elven and Kings of Númenor.
Her name Melian means Beloved in Tolkien's invented language of Sindarin. In Quenya, another of Tolkien's languages, it translates to "Melyanna", either "Dear Gift" or "Gift of Love" (Q. melya, "dear, lovely" < Q. mel-, "love"; Q. anna, "gift").
Melian is a character of the fantasy book The Silmarillion by J. R. R. Tolkien.
Melian may also refer to:
Didn’t you know my life would fall?
Oh no, now you’ve really gone and done it
Was I waiting here too long?
Oh no, even the floor got cold.
And I want to call home to see if you’re not alone
And I want to call home to see if you’re not alone
Not alone, not alone
Your eyes are watching while I turn to stone
And the city trembles, the clouds unfold
And still somehow you grab a hold of me,
Spin me around a few times and let go of me
Did you forget to be true to me?
Oh no, now I can see
Your eyes are watching while I turn to stone
And the city trembles, the clouds unfold
And I want to call home to see if you’re not alone
And I need to call home to see if you’re not alone