Dunheved wrote:Looking at Balrogs in the detailed version of the Fall of Gondolin (Book of Lost Tales 2), Tolkien was offering the deaths/destruction of multiple Balrogs at that event. Even accepting that these spirits were destroyed by exceptional (High) Elven characters wielding powerful weapons, Balrogs need to be able to be taken down.
You have to be careful with using this stuff (and not for licensing reasons). The LT represent to oldest and most raw ideas of Tolkien as far as Middle-earth is concerned. If you look at the developmental process, you can see how Balrogs developed from frightening, but manageable (for great heroes) creatures to monsters that were almost unbeatable. In the same instant, their numbers decreased: In the LT, there are hordes of them and they are slain by the Elves (and Tuor - a man!) in the dozen. Later on, Tolkien reduced their numbers ever more, until he came up with the idea that probably no more than seven ever existed. In the same instant, their individual power was greatly increased.
Thus, it is difficult and gives a skewed image to directly compare the LT Balrogs with the LotR Balrog, even if they bear the same name.
Cheers
Tolwen