raisindot said:
It was quite clear that this was the same queen. Could there possibly be two elf queens whose husband-kings left them?
I would be more surprised if there had ever been an elf relationship that lasted without a breakup. They live for hundreds if not thousands of years and are also easily bored.
raisindot said:
As for the different 'appearances' of the elves, remember that they look the way people want them to look. In L&L, their appearance as beautiful, stylish creatures was shaped by what the Lancre townfolk imagined them to look like, aided by collective memery (misspelling intentional). In WFM, their appearance is based solely on Tiffany's dreams and nightmares.
I don't recall that being mentioned in the story. Tiffany wasn't described as having any nightmares, certainly not with the kind of imagery in the elf-queen's world.
raisindot said:
She's too young to necessarily think of them in terms of beauty (although the Queen's beauty is probably the one thing that doesn't change among all people who meet her, partly because in most mythologies queens are almost always beautiful),
But remember, Tiffany is the girl who asked "Where's the evidence." She is the last person to automatically assume someone claiming royalty would necessarily be beautiful. Also, Tiffany has no experience of style; she was embarrassed about the china figurine but had no more fashionable image to replace it with. If the Queen's appearance had to be based on Tiffany's subconscious, socially-imprinted ideas, she'd have looked like the china figurine.
raisindot said:
and instead sees them as nightmare creatures--hounds, headless horsemen, 'bee-women' and whatnot. Indeed, Tiffany may actually be the first person who ever saw what the Queen really looked like (even Granny may not have achieved this).
The Feegles and Roland seem to have seen them the same way Tiffany did.
I'll grant you the landscape, that did seem to be forming itself according to expectations, but Tiffany wasn't demanding that it be snowy - that was forced by the Queen. The other denizens and former denizens complained about it.
Magrat saw the queen that she fought in Lords and Ladies as insectoid, but she was thinking of the battle in terms of bee queens, and that may have affected her perception. On the other hand, Granny Weatherwax used the shape that human minds put onto the elves to weaken them, to change them into fluffy little Victorian fairies. Maybe a strong enough human mind can actually reshape the elves, not just make them appear one way or another. If so, then Magrat's thinking of the elf queen as a thin little insectile being would have changed the humanoid form into the insectile form, and similarly, Tiffany's looking at an elf queen as a small animal would have forced that form to appear.
Granny was spoiling for a fight, so maybe she had trouble overcoming her own need for a worthy opponent.