High Lord Tolkien wrote:I disagree.
TC, in the very quote you supplied was specifically talking about serving Revelstone as a place for the people of the Land.
Well, it's Xar, actually, but I forgive you
High Lord Tolkien wrote:But you missed a VERY important (imo) part of the quote you supplied.
"So the future will have a place to centre. A place where people can come to learn about the past - and see what the Land means - and make plans."
They didn't do that.
The Haruchai killed all learning, all history.
I didn't miss that part. But on the other hand, you must consider that 3.500 years passed between the Second and Last Chronicles. Plenty of time for the original idea to be twisted - especially if, as someone suggested, Foul planted a suggestion or two along the way. Remember the Clave? It, too, originated from Mhoram's far purer desire to seek peaceful Lore, and eventually de-evolved into an elaborate ruse. I agree that in that case, a Raver was directing the Clave's actions all along; but I might also point out the fact that Foul isn't so stupid as to believe that to use that tactic with the Haruchai would have worked the same way. In their own way, the Haruchai are prisoners of their own accomplishments; as we have been shown time and again, they are so sure about themselves that sometimes they blind themselves to all other considerations - and throughout the Chronicles, this has proven to be a terrible shortcoming of theirs. I don't find it so difficult that Foul just planted some carefully arranged suggestions (or subtly manipulated a few key events in the Land) in order to twist Covenant's original purpose into the sort of rule the Masters placed upon the Land.
After all, we do not yet know for sure whose ears Foul whispered suggestions to... And let us remember that Foul has all the time he wishes for, in order to do this.
Sure, you might point out to the Haruchai's racial memories as a way for them not to fall into Foul's trap; but once again, their memories are just that - memories. How to interpret them is something which, humanly speaking, depends upon the situation, your own mindset, and so on. I don't find it too difficult to believe that if the Haruchai were slowly "persuaded" that the true spirit of Covenant's request was that they rule over the Land the way they eventually decided to do, then they would later interpret the memories of Covenant's request that way (something along the lines of "he implied we should take care of all the Land in the best possible way we can devise", or so on). And - the Haruchai have shown, especially in the First Chronicles, that they are quite ready to make others' decisions on their behalf.
High Lord Tolkien wrote:And why would they serve just Revelstone so utterly like that anyway?
What's their motivation?
The Bloodguard took the Vow because they were blown away by the beauty of the Land, Ranyhyn, Giants and whatever "gifts" Kevin gave them.
They came back to the Land during the Sunbane because they were curious. Then more came in force because they were pissed off.
They did what TC asked out of respect for the UrLord.
He told then to keep it as a place for the people of the Land to learn and remember.
He didn't say "bring back the Lords" which the Haruchai might be able to do. Remember they heard/remembered all the words and spells andway of life from both the Old and New Lords. But of course they didn't aprove of it.
See above. At least in my mind, Revelstone stands beside Andelain as one of the two most important places in all the Land. While Andelain represents the untarnished beauty of the Land, Revelstone represents the people of the Land and their dedication. To protect Revelstone could also mean to protect the people of the Land, in a metaphorical way.
But apart from metaphors; yes, Covenant asked the Haruchai to protect Revelstone so it would be a place of remembrance and knowledge. Still, if the Haruchai changed over the years until they believed that all Earthpower lore should be hidden from the people of the Land, then Covenant's request could have been conveniently ignored.
And I would like to point out that the point you make should apply to Runes as well: if the Haruchai haven't lost their racial memories (and they haven't, as Stave shows), and if therefore they still remember Covenant's request, and they are complying with it, then why are they making sure no one reaches Revelstone or studies there?
High Lord Tolkien wrote:Why would they stay after the Earthpower was healed anyway?
Or rather, why would they stay for as long as they did?
I thought they had such a passion for their wives and homes.
That passion didn't prevent them from taking the Vow thousands of years before. I also wondered about that point: but since in Runes we have no evidence that Haruchai women are in Revelstone or in the Land (I'm starting to wonder if the Haruchai DO indeed have women among them!

), and since this time there is no supernatural Vow binding them to service, it is possible and quite probable that their sense of duty is far stronger and quite capable of keeping under check their yearning. If the Haruchai believe that they are still doing what Covenant asked of them - or if they believe that they're protecting the Land, or fighting Corruption, anyway - I don't think they'd just pack and leave. And they have reason to believe they're still fighting Corruption, or at least protecting the Land: Kevin's Dirt, the existence of Anele and caesures, all of these things could be threats to the Land that the Haruchai could feel bound to defeat, or at least to contain, safeguarding the Land.
High Lord Tolkien wrote:Sunder and Hollian were in Alendilan (spelling?) with their child.
I get the feeling *they* worked with the survivors more than the Haruchai.
And for the Haruchai to do so *little* for thousands of years?
For....nothing?
Somethings out of whack.
Sunder and Hollian did work with the survivors than the Haruchai - until they died. Then it should have been up to Anele to do so (and, coincidentally, also keeping alive the legends, stories, and lore of the Land), but as we know, he became Unfettered and left his charge in order to study the Earthpower and the Staff of Law. And any chance he could have returned vanished when he was swallowed up by the caesure and brought to a time where Haruchai rule was far too strong - and Anele's mind too broken - to do anything about it. Humankind's memory is notoriously short (remember that, in the SC, no human remembered the stories about Covenant, or the past existence of Lords old and new, or Earthpower), especially if it is "aided" by those who would wish for those memories to be erased. Just like the Clave eventually changed what little history of the Land was known to its people, so that eventually they believed in a-Jeroth, Berek Halfhand the betrayer, and so on, the Haruchai simply waited, refusing to share their knowledge, and with the additional advantage that they lived among the people they wished to influence, therefore being able to influence their thought as well, to some extent.
The general feeling I have when I read the passages in Mithil Stonedown is a sort of apathy. People go about their business, naively ignorant of the true nature of their world, of their past, and so on, and cultural development, innovations, discoveries, everything has been stifled by the Haruchai's presence. In a way, you could almost say that their immutability has "infected" the human culture we have seen in Mithil Stonedown, so that the common people also find themselves unable to even conceive the notion of making progresses.
As for the "nothing" the Haruchai would receive in return - well, if they believe they're obeying Covenant's request, knowledge of it is all they require, is it not? What the Haruchai desire the most as a people is pure service; if they believe they are doing just that, what more would they ask for?