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Morilinde
06-06-2002, 01:53 PM
I know that Ringwraiths were untouchable to mortal men unless they carried blades blessed with an Elven spell. But what about Elves? Where they able to fight The Nazgul?

Naurlothwen
06-06-2002, 04:22 PM
I REALLY wish that I could say. I probably have it somewhere in my brain.. sigh. smilies/rolleyes.gif

however the fact that mortal men could in fact kill Ringwraiths if they weilded swards blessed by the elves does give a clue that elves may be able to kill them. After all why would an man be able To kill a Ringwraith just because some Elf blessed it? It doesnt make sence unless elves in fact could kill them?"

But then again as its a spell...
I have a feeling that elves may be able to fill Ringwraiths

Keeper-of-Vilya
06-08-2002, 07:37 PM
I think elves could - the prophecy said no living man could hinder the lord of the ringwraiths, which is why Eowyn and Merry were able to kill him. Elves are not men so I think they could kill a ringwraith.

GreatWarg
06-08-2002, 08:24 PM
Good point Vilya.

the real findorfin
06-10-2002, 09:39 AM
The lord wraith was really cocky because of the prophecy, why didn't he think about elves or dwarves???

Daniel Telcontar
06-10-2002, 09:42 AM
Glorfindel does manage to scare the Ringwraiths so much, that they ride into the river and drowns. And the Witch-King flees when Glorfindel arrives at the Battle of Fornost. And both Ecthelion and Glorfindel (he is a cool guy, isn't he) has killed Balrogs, which are way cooler enemies than Ringwraiths. So I think that Elves could kill Wraiths, if they had blades made by elven smiths.

the real findorfin
06-10-2002, 02:27 PM
Can someone elaborate on the Battle of Fornost?

Naurlothwen, nice picture of arwen. Where did u get it from?

Daniel Telcontar
06-10-2002, 02:48 PM
I am not sure, but I think it is the battle where the Witch-King defeats Arnor and destroys it. An army from Falas, Gondor (led by Prince Earnur) and Rivendell (led by Glorfindel) then appears, and Earnur pursues the Witch-King, who tries to kill him. Glorfindel comes and the Witch-King flees because he do not dare attack him (Glorfindel is way cool).

burrahobbit
06-10-2002, 09:25 PM
Anything COULD kill a ring wraith, they just DIDN'T. Pfft, my puppy dog could have killed them all single-handedly if I had put explosives on him first.

obloquy
06-10-2002, 09:32 PM
I agree with Naurloaperhduhebrockfmgmn when she says: I have a feeling that elves may be able to fill Ringwraiths

I think it's very likely that Elves could fill the Ringwraiths. To the brim, I'd imagine.

Tarthang
06-11-2002, 12:59 AM
Obloquay I believe you mean fill it to the rim with Brimm.

Anyhow, only the Leader Of Ringwraith's was unkillable by men (literally). So any of the others were fair game to anyone with the means (i.e. having the willpower)to stand up to a Nazgul. I wouldn't discount that it would require a blade (or other such weapon) of Westernesse (Numorean) or Elvish make to actually harm one though.

Artilien
06-11-2002, 05:45 AM
I think elves could kill Ringwraiths. It would have no sence if men who got blades blessed by elven spell would be able to kill Ringwraiths and elves, who also have elvish blades (so blessed bye elves) wouldnt be able to kill them

burrahobbit
06-11-2002, 01:03 PM
Anyhow, only the Leader Of Ringwraith's was unkillable by men (literally).

There is a difference between can and will. A difference between being able to do something and actually doing it. Everything from my puppy dog to Eru above had the ability to kill the Witch-king, but only Eowyn actually did it.

Heen-1
06-11-2002, 01:10 PM
And both Ecthelion and Glorfindel (he is a cool guy, isn't he) has killed Balrogs, which are way cooler enemies than Ringwraiths.

What do you mean cooler?i think this would make an interesting thread....

obloquy
06-11-2002, 01:49 PM
I think burrahobbit's point, if he doesn't mind me spelling it out for everyone, is that the prophecy the Witch-King quotes to Eowyn doesn't mean he can't be killed by a man, just that he won't be killed by one. It was a prophecy spoken by Glorfindel, not some spell to protect the Witch-King from his foes. As burrahobbit says, his dog could've killed the Witch-King, given the right circumstances.

Glorfindel would have kicked his *** mad crazy-like. And I don't know what the King was thinking when he talked smack to Gandalf.

[ June 11, 2002: Message edited by: obloquy ]

burrahobbit
06-11-2002, 02:11 PM
Exactly. Glorfindel would have killed the Witch-king but good if he had chased him down instead of letting him run away, and Earnur might have also if not for his horse.

[ June 11, 2002: Message edited by: burrahobbit ]

Jessica Jade
06-11-2002, 09:37 PM
The wraiths' most deadly weapon is, undoubtedly, fear. And fear is very powerful. As it is said in F. Herbert's Dune, "Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little death that brings total obliteration." The Nazgūl were able to make people frightened beyond belief by calling out to eachother with their chilling, deadly voices. With a weapon, such as this, they did not need to fight with swords, cannons, etc, because when people are afraid they don't want to fight-- if their fear conquers them, then their ability to rationalize is eradicated, they want nothing but to cower down and hide, like they people of Minas Tirith did in The Battle of the Pelennor Fields.

Of course men or elves can kill the wraiths. Men were just too afraid. And elves...don't know if they ever had the chance. Besides Glorindel, that is...but then, at that time he wanted to lead Frodo&co away from the Wraiths and into Rivendell. It was too big a risk to kill the Wraiths and not the right time.

TarElendil
06-11-2002, 10:00 PM
the sword merry used to smite the witch king with wasnt Elvish. it was of Westernesse, From Numenor. As in from men. Elves could destroy the witch king in the same means merry and eowyn did. But in no way could they do it otherwise (save, ofcourse, destroying the one Ring)

TarElendil
06-11-2002, 10:04 PM
(replying to a comment earlier)
about the quote from glorfindel "not by the hand of man shall he fall" it was a prediction. not stating what could kill him and what couldnt. But what would. No elf could kill a nazgul with an ordinary weapon. Men had just the same chance of killing a Nazgul save that the Elves did not fear them nor any other ghosts of men.

Brinniel
06-12-2002, 01:53 AM
I've always found this a bit strange. Aren't the ringwraiths neither living nor dead? If so, how did Eowyn manage to kill the witch king? How is it possible for anyone to kill a ringwraith if they are not alive? smilies/confused.gif

burrahobbit
06-12-2002, 02:01 AM
Ringwraiths are totally alive, just red shifted into the lower end of the spectrum.

Brinniel
06-12-2002, 02:08 AM
Are they? Well, perhaps I read something wrong.

burrahobbit
06-12-2002, 02:57 AM
And of course by "totally alive" I mean "you're absolutely right." They sort of live in the dead things place and the living things place, moreso in the dead things place. I was thinking that I would be fancy like they were acually the same place but at different energy levels, but that isn't exactly right. They are more like places that overlap, like the pointy oval part of a venn diagram. I would still call them alive, though, as they never really died. Having said that, I think it would be a good ideaa to define death. In the context of Middle-earth I would say that a good definition for death would be when the spirit (fea) leaves the body (hroa) and goes off to do whatever it's going to do. The Rings of the Nazgul trapped the spirits Nazgul in the bodies of the Nazgul, preventing death by any means other than violence. Over time the rings and spirits of the Nazgul consumed the bodies of the Nazgul until there was nearly nothing left. Interestingly enough, the elves are faced with a similar problem. As the ages pass for them their spirits consume their bodies bit by bit, causing them to fade from the world. It casts an intersting light on the Nazgul to think of them this way (which I have never done before now).

[ June 12, 2002: Message edited by: burrahobbit ]

Susan Delgado
06-12-2002, 03:22 AM
So basically what you're saying is, this is what happens when men become immortal. When men become immortal, they fade the same way the elves' do, but much faster because their bodies were not designed to last very long, so they aren't as strong. This would happen even independent of any magic rings they happen to pick up. Interesting

obloquy
06-12-2002, 09:12 AM
boy am i glad to see we've acquired a new know-it-all. welcome to the damn downs tarelendil, i'm bitter.

TarElendil
06-12-2002, 10:41 AM
why thank you.
smilies/wink.gif

TarElendil
06-12-2002, 10:47 AM
the Nine Kings were consumed by the power of the Nine Rings. The rings were under the command of the One. The evil will of sauron was in all those rings, thus entering the minds of all the men and turning them to mere shadows of what they once were.

burrahobbit
06-12-2002, 04:10 PM
Yes, Susan, it looks like that is what I was saying. The rings would have sped up the fading process, what with being evil and all.

Ar-Luman
09-26-2002, 06:48 PM
When Glorfindel (reincarnate) met the fellowship on the road to Rivendell he mentions that even he a elf prince could not withstand the nine when they are together. That leads me to belive that he is able to withstand one maybe more and in turn kill them if the oppurtunity presented itself.

Orome
09-26-2002, 08:23 PM
the passage goes something like this: even Glorfindel and Aragorn, on foot, could not withstand the Nine horsed

one of implacations of this that people are continually arguing about is that if the Nine were on foot, Glorfindel and Aragorn could withstand them. and I beleive that all of the above posters that Fear is the Nine's greatist weapons and in great likelyhood the one that kept them, at least one, from being killed earlier. in Osgiliath prehaps boromir could have killed one. who knows?

Ar-Luman
09-26-2002, 08:35 PM
thanks for the correction

Angmar_the_Horrible
09-29-2002, 08:42 AM
@TarElendil:

I totally agree with you - the Ringwraith
CANNOT be killed by men, hobbits or ELVES
using ordinary weapons. The sword that killed
the Witch-King was from Westernesse, made in
the wars against Angmar - and the magic on
it was not elvish but it was specially against the Witch-King of Angmar. That was
thr reason why it was able to break the spell and made it possible for Eowyn to kill
him. It was made long ago for this occasion,
that has nothing to do with Elvish magic.

The Elves are able to injure and weaken the
Nazgul, but not to kill them. That would be
too easy, and they were not that dangerous if
every Elf who is brave enough can kill them.

And the Elves are overrated a lot, specially
in the Third Age. They lost a lot of their
power and they are leaving Middle Earth!

If it would have been necessary, the Witch-
King would have even entered Lothlorien
searching for the Ring - and I don't think
that Galadriel would have prevent that. But
that is another topic...

burrahobbit
09-29-2002, 10:38 AM
Let me quote a bit of Tolkien at you.

GLORFINDEL: "Hi, I'm Glorfindel."
WITCH-KING: "Oh no! *runs*

There you have it, straight from the fingers of the author.*


*"But Glorfindel rode up then on his white horse, and [...] the Witch-king turned to flight and passed into the shadows."

Read the whole thing before you post anymore.

[ September 29, 2002: Message edited by: burrahobbit ]

Angmar_the_Horrible
09-29-2002, 03:38 PM
I know that part of Tolkien, don't worry.
But he doesn't explain WHY the Witch-King
flees. He fears the magic and he knows that
a elven-warrior IS a serious enemy that can
weaken him - but not kill him!

If Elves can kill Ringwraiths - why do they
not take their bow and arrow and actually
DO it?? For them there is no need to get
near a Nazgul for killing him, and they don't
do - because they can't!

Fact is, Tolkien doesn't say something like
that in his work, quoting the scene from the
battle of Fornost is nonsense and no prove
at all!

burrahobbit
09-29-2002, 04:05 PM
Because that wouldn't be fun to read.

jane
09-29-2002, 04:08 PM
I'm not entirely convinced that elves can actually kill the nazgul. I think they fear the elves because they see them in their true form, like pure light and that is likely to drive them wild wth fright like someone that ha s a genuine phobia against, say, heights. This would explain why at the ford they dashed into the water at the sight of Glorfindel.

burrahobbit
09-29-2002, 05:38 PM
Or maybe it's because Glorfindel is a total badass. He killed a balrog by himself. Have you ever done that? I bet not, because it's really hard. Way harder than killing a nazgul, at least.

[ September 29, 2002: Message edited by: burrahobbit ]

Tirned Tinnu
09-29-2002, 10:29 PM
Oye, do we forget easily! I was mystified until I read this entire thread, and remembered what the RingWraiths were all about!
It would not matter if an Elf slashed them down a thousand times, so long as the One Ring existed. If they were unhorsed, or dis-embodied, their spirits would just find their way back to Mordor, to reincorporate themselves into a new host. Disgusting, yes?
Think of the one that Legolas shot down! If that creature was in any way alive, it certainly was not going to live through a fall from the sky. How did it come back to assail the fields of Pelinnor? It had to float back to Mordor, and there take another body and another creature to ride.
(Thus also brings to mind the Riders unhorsed at the Ford. They'd be washed to the Sea, and what then, would they walk all the way to Mordor?! Of course not.)

So, you see, the Elves saw the futility of trying to kill what is unkillable, until the One Ring be destroyed.

[ September 30, 2002: Message edited by: Tirned Tinnu ]

burrahobbit
09-29-2002, 11:17 PM
If they were unhorsed, or dis-embodied, their spirits would just find their way back to Mordor, to reincorporate themselves into a new host.

Where does Tolkien say that? I don't remember it.

Thus also brings to mind the Riders unhorsed at the Ford. They'd be washed to the Sea, and what then, would they walk all the way to Mordor?! Of course not.

I know! Nobody would ever walk to Mordor! That's just dumb!

burrahobbit
09-29-2002, 11:43 PM
If they were unhorsed, or dis-embodied, their spirits would just find their way back to Mordor

"Unhorsed" is not a poetic way of saying that somebody has been killed, it means that they don't have a horse anymore. "Dismounted" means the exact same thing as "unhorsed". When you say "Jimmy was dismounted," you don't mean "Jimmy died a horrible death." You mean "Jimmy was forced off of his horse and now he has to walk if he wants to get anywhere. It's really too bad that he can't see very well and the only place he can get a new horse is so far away, that is going to be a very long walk."

Think of the one that Legolas shot down! If that creature was in any way alive, it certainly was not going to live through a fall from the sky. How did it come back to assail the fields of Pelinnor?

Who says it did? How many Nazgul did Legolas shoot down? How many Nazgul are there? How many Nazgul attacked Minas Tirith? How many extra Nazgul does that make?

(Hint: six or seven extras.)

So, you see, the Elves saw the futility of trying to kill what is unkillable, until the One Ring be destroyed.

Eowyn never killed anything in her whole life honest I swear!

I was mystified until I read this entire thread, and remembered what the RingWraiths were all about!

You forgot again, though.

Angmar_the_Horrible
09-30-2002, 05:38 AM
@Burrahobbit:

Sorry, but I just can't take your posts for
serious anymore. I think you see this
discussion as a joke and you are far from
making qualified statements...

"How many Nazgul were there? How many Nazgul
attacked Minas Tirith?"

What nonsense are those questions! There are
eight, of course, and the Witch-King! If one
of them was killed earlier, Tolkien would
have said in the book.

And what is the crap about extra- Nazgul??
Nonsense!

*Varda*
09-30-2002, 07:01 AM
Think of the one that Legolas shot down! If that creature was in any way alive, it certainly was not going to live through a fall from the sky. How did it come back to assail the fields of Pelinnor? It had to float back to Mordor, and there take another body and another creature to ride.


Legolas never shot a Nazgul. I'm pretty sure it was only the creature he rode. Anyway, Eowyn killed the WitchKing when the One Ring was still around.

Angmar_The_Horrible - Don't start criticising other people. At least make an intelligent point with it.

Tirned Tinnu
09-30-2002, 09:28 AM
Yes, it is true that Eowyn destroyed the Witch-King, and Legolas only shot down the creature that one of the Nazgul rode. If you read my post, you would see that I was talking more about their need to return to Mordor to be rehorsed, not that they were killed outright. As it is said in the books, you cannot kill something that is not alive and not dead. I pose the question to you again, how do you think they returned to Mordor? Why did it take them time to reinvest themselves in new steeds?
You will also rememeber that it took each Nazgul quite a long time to get back to their former jobs.

It was because they were so close to the destruction of the One Ring that the others did not return again. I believe that even the Witch-King might have returned if the Ring had not been destroyed so soon after his "death".

My argument is on the futility of "killing" something that will just come right back at you. would you waste precious time zapping the undead, instead of retreating from them?
Or convincing them into not coming back, if you could? This is my statement: The Elves were wise to hold back. In doing so they saved lives that would have been spent in futility.

[ September 30, 2002: Message edited by: Tirned Tinnu ]

burrahobbit
09-30-2002, 10:27 AM
My argument is on the futility of "killing" something that will just come right back at you. would you waste precious time zapping the undead, instead of retreating from them?
Or convincing them into not coming back, if you could? This is my statement: The Elves were wise to hold back. In doing so they saved lives that would have been spent in futility.

Firstly I'd like te repeat my earlier question, where did Tolkien say that?

Secondly I'd like to remind you of Sauron. Huan fought Sauron and he died. Numenor fought Sauron and he eventually died. The last alliance fought Sauron and he died. Judging from that it looks like all of the wise people ever in the whole world would waste their time in the futility of killing something that would just come back.

*Varda*
09-30-2002, 10:49 AM
Elves could kill ringwraiths. The prophecy said that man would not kill the Witch-King, not could not. In any case, the Witch-King does not count for all nine ringwraiths.

As for how the Wraiths got back to Mordor, they probably DID walk. Think logically. How else would they? They were only unhorsed, they were still embodied, so their spirit would not just FLOAT back to Mordor.

Not that that point bears ANY relation to the actual question.

Ransom
09-30-2002, 10:58 AM
Few short questions:

1) On a similar tangent, how can you kill something that's already dead?

2) How do you define death in the case of a Nazgul?

3) Did Gandalf and Elrond 'kill' the Nazguls at Rivendell?

burrahobbit
09-30-2002, 11:18 AM
1: They weren't dead for most of the story.

2: Death is when a fea leaves a hroa. Nazgul still have hroar, even if they are "thin and stretched."

3: No.

Angmar_the_Horrible
09-30-2002, 12:51 PM
Elves CANNOT kill Ringwraiths, it is said
nowhere in Tolkiens work. Or, if it is, show
me a passage where it is CLEARLY said, not
just passages where you can work out EVERY-
THING.

And for me, the words "will not be killed by
a man" also included male elves, even male
dwarves. I don't think it is limited to the
race of men.

And I still think that the elves are overrated.

*Varda*
09-30-2002, 01:33 PM
This thread is absolutely pointless.

The prophecy saying no man would kill the Witch-King only applies to the Witch-King. Not the other 8 Ringwraiths. And the prophecy said would not, not could not.

And I don't know where all this crap about elven blades is coming from.

Also, Angmar_The_Horrible, you said no elves could kill the Witch-King. So you get no female elves then?

burrahobbit
09-30-2002, 01:45 PM
Elves CANNOT kill Ringwraiths, it is said nowhere in Tolkiens work.

So you are admitting that you have no support for your argument? I think i can live with that.

Angmar_the_Horrible
09-30-2002, 01:59 PM
@*Varda*:

I totally agree with you. This discussion
IS pointless and will never come to any
solution.
As for the female elves: I was speaking of
the elves in general. And I do think, that a
female elve in place of Eowyn would have been
able do kill the Witch-King.

@burrahobbit: Neither do you. *yawn*

*Varda*
09-30-2002, 02:02 PM
@Angmar_The_Horrible

At least burrahobbit didn't contradict himself. You don't have a leg to stand on in this argument, there's not a single shred of evidence to back up your assumption.

Burrahobbit and I win on logic alone.

Oh, and it would be nice if people would actually READ the posts, instead of repeating the same mindless drivel about elven blades and women.

Estelyn Telcontar
09-30-2002, 02:07 PM
People, please keep this discussion on the subject matter, not on personal ones, or it will be a prime candidate for closure!

Angmar_the_Horrible
09-30-2002, 03:13 PM
@*Varda*:

I think I know at least as much about
Tolkiens work as you do and do have a leg
in this discussion.
But anyway, I return to the discussions on
my favourite forum - which just offered me
moderator-status.

burrahobbit
09-30-2002, 03:22 PM
"And here in Rivendell there live still some of his chief foes: the Elven-wise, lords of the Eldar from beyond the furthest seas. They do not
fear the Ringwraiths, for those who have dwelt in the Blessed Realm live at once in both worlds, and against both the Seen and the Unseen they have great
power.'" -- Book II, chapter 1

Oh no, Angmar_the_Horrible, I've got no support at all! You're so right, how do I even manage to get up in the morning!

burrahobbit
09-30-2002, 03:25 PM
@Angmar:

Yay.

Tirned Tinnu
09-30-2002, 03:53 PM
Hmm, Burrahobbit! You bring up an interesting question.
Yes, what about Luthien? What about the battles against Sauron and his fell spirits? After so many legendary battles in the name of the Sils could the Elves see themselves past it?
Could it be that the Elves we get to know in the LOTR are not as driven as they? I think this is a good thread, that has worth. I see it as a way to get to know LOTRs Elves that much better!

[ September 30, 2002: Message edited by: Tirned Tinnu ]

Thenamir
09-30-2002, 05:22 PM
First of all, let me clarify what this post is. I had a long discussion of this thread with burrahobbit on the chat this afternoon. I really had not much interest in the question, but the debate was intriguing, and so I voiced an opinion, and burra and I spent a spirited hour discussing, and this post is the distillation of what I think based on that discussion.

The question, "Can an elf kill a Nazgul" is deceiving, becuase Nazgul exist, as burra has said, in two "planes" of existence.

I think it is possible for an elf, or anyone else with sufficient strength, skill and bravery could "disembody" a Nazgul -- render the physical form so badly damaged that the wraith could no longer function in it. That is one kind of "death", and I say that this kind of death is the kind that *anyone* could deal out. In this sense, I agree with burra. This is the kind of thing that happened at the Fords:

"the waves took the form of great white horses with shining white riders; and there were many rolling and grinding boulders"

This killed the horses outright, and rendered the Nazgul body-less, but not unable to re-body and return. That would seem to indicate that you cannot destroy a Ringwraith until and unless you sever the connection between it and its master. Their bodies could no longer sustain their spirits, being held and enslaved by Sauron by his power.

"'Eight out of the Nine are accounted for at least,' said Gandalf. 'It is rash to be too sure, yet I think that we may hope now that the Ringwraiths were scattered, and have been obliged to return as best they could to their Master in Mordor, empty and shapeless."

On the other hand, when *I* think of "killing" a Nazgul, I have in mind a more permanent arrangement, like what happened to the Witch-King after Merry and Eowyn came after him:
"a cry went up into the shuddering air, and faded to a shrill wailing, passing with the wind, a voice bodiless and thin that died, and was swallowed up, and was never heard again in that age of this world."

To accomplish this, you apparantly need special weaponry:
"So passed the sword of the Barrow-downs, work of Westernesse. But glad would he have been to know its fate who wrought it slowly long ago in the North-kingdom when the Dśnedain were young, and chief among their foes was the dread realm of Angmar and its sorcerer king. No other blade, not though mightier hands had wielded it, would have dealt that foe a wound so bitter, cleaving the undead flesh, breaking the spell that knit his unseen sinews to his will."

The key words here being "no other blade", that is one specially made and imbued with the particular power for this one purpose. You can grind the body of a Wraith to powder, but as long as the power of Sauron and the Ring endured, the spirits of the kings of men could always be called back to Mordor, and be given new bodies.

"`I thought they were all destroyed in the flood,' said Merry.
'You cannot destroy Ringwraiths like that,' said Gandalf. `The power of their master is in them, and they stand or fall by him."

I'd like to think that is a pretty strong case. Could Glorfindel have disembodied a Nazgul? I think the answer to that is "certainly" -- if that was on pay-per-view, I'd be on the phone to Tom "Bookmaker" Bombadil with 50 gold coins on Glorfindel. But power was not in Glorfindel to defeat Sauron himself, or to destroy the ring outright, therefore he could not sever the connection between the wraiths and their master.

I'd also like to think that if the elves could take out the Nazgul anytime they wanted, as Burrahobbit asserts, they would have done so. Since these are fictitious characters anyway, to get all hot and bothered about what might or might not be possible in a world that existed truly only in the imagination of one man smacks of *someone* needing a life. But if you insist on trying to argue the point, at least do it from the texts he's written, and let's get on to more important questions -- like who would win the ultimate grudge match: Arwen versus Eowyn, mud-wrestling for the hand of Aragorn!

burrahobbit
09-30-2002, 07:14 PM
An Elf that had been to Valinor, such as Glorfindel, exists on two planes just as the Nazgul. I think that he would hurt the nazgul on both planes if he hurt it at all. A regular elf like Legolas or any man would just be on one plane, and so would need a special weapon to to lasting damage. Merry stabbed the Witch-king with his barrow blade, which functioned as a sort of anti-morgul blade to bring WK out of the world of the unseen (as opposed to the morgul blade bringing you into the world of the unseen), which allowed Eowyn to kill him fully. Glorfindel wouldnt need WK to be pulled anywhere, they both exist in the same places already.

Orome
09-30-2002, 08:57 PM
Its the whole thing where Frodo sees the Nazgul differently with the ring on. in the second plane, where they are tall and powerful kings of old, their "true selves" they can be destroyed i believe, like burra said.

and if Angmar comes back i hope he is a bit less heavy handed

Dior
09-30-2002, 10:24 PM
Hey, Burrahobbit. Where in Tolkien's works does it state that an elf who has been Mandos'ed lives in two planes? I'm not contradicting you, just wondering.

burrahobbit
10-01-2002, 02:03 PM
"And here in Rivendell there live still some of his chief foes: the Elven-wise, lords of the Eldar from beyond the furthest seas. They do not
fear the Ringwraiths, for those who have dwelt in the Blessed Realm live at once in both worlds, and against both the Seen and the Unseen they have great
power.'" -- Book II, chapter 1

Thenamir
10-01-2002, 02:34 PM
Repeating the same quote over and over does not bolster your case, Burra.

As I said, could Glorfindel drive off a Nazgul? Yes. Could he "hurt" one? Certainly. Could he do what Merry and Eowyn did with their respective weapons? There is no evidence to support that.

The fact that he has "great power" over both the seen and the unseen does not mean "absolute power", and does not negate Gandalf's statement that the ringwraiths stand or fall with their master. The knives of Westernesse are probably the only exception mentioned in all JRRT's works. If I picked a fistfight with Burra, his youth and strength would be pitted against my "perceived" age and skill. Each would have "great power" over the other in some ways, and yet the outcome still be in doubt. The ringwraith obviously has great power in "both planes" as well -- it is not a foregone conclusion that an elf will always defeat a nazgul one-on-one.

Another point. Burra makes great hay of both the elves and the Nazgul existing on "two planes" at once. But if elves go to Mandos' halls at death, and what happens to men after death is unspoken in JRRT's magnum opus, then how can one have any certainty that the "unseen plane" of the elves is the same as the "unseen plane" of men? Tolkien never said what happened to men in the afterlife, at least not in the major books (I will admit to a vast yawning ignorance of the HoME tomes...) .

It matters little to me one way or another. *My* real point in wasting all this bandwidth is to demonstrate (1) that no one except the man himself knows the score on this one, and (2) that where the text is ambiguous, or at least open to multiple interpretations, we should be charitable to those who hold differing opinions.

Way too much effort is being expended on this question, which is, as I noted with different verbiage in my last post, a futile exercise, a moot point, a non-issue, not worth getting worked up about.

Geez.

[ October 01, 2002: Message edited by: Thenamir ]

burrahobbit
10-01-2002, 02:53 PM
I know, Thenamir, I was replying to Dior.

Dior
10-03-2002, 09:02 PM
Thanks Burrahobbit.

I hadn't noticed that, though I do hold the view that it would be impossible for someone such as Glorfindel to truly kill a Ringwraith just because of the good, two-planed aura his spirit gave off, since there would be no other way without a sword of significant anti-wraithing power in his control, as has been proved previously.

Dior
10-03-2002, 09:09 PM
This topic does bring up the question though, that if elves were able to kill Balrogs, than what is it that would prevent them from killing Wraiths, other than the power of the ring, which didn't prevent Merry/Eowyn from killing one. Seeing as the Balrogs were maiar, and couldn't be killed without their opposition dying, does bring the differences in perspective though. Eh, well I guess you can scrap this post than, unless someone else has something profound to say of this.

Nar
10-04-2002, 01:38 PM
It's an interesting point, Dior. if elves were able to kill Balrogs, than what is it that would prevent them from killing Wraiths It seems to me that if the RIGHT elf (not just any elf-- a Glorfindel-Echthelion kind of elf) could kill a Balrog even at the cost of his own life, then the right elf could kill a Nazgul. One difference would be how much fading had gone on with the elf in question. Glorfindel would be a good candidate, as he has an excellent resume and obvious courage, had been spiffed up and possibly recharged in Valinor (re: fading) and is blessed with one of the author's favorite names. There's difference in degree of power (Nazgul vs. Balrog, etc.), then there's differences in the nature of the enemy, which have been ably explained on this thread already (presence on the other side and so forth). Seeing as the Balrogs were maiar, and couldn't be killed without their opposition dying, I'm not sure if you meant that as a sort of rule or not-- I don't think that's a rule (perhaps you don't either). If we were talking about a RPG or a computer game, the author can be supposed to be working from nice clean rules we're expected to figure out: then, the fact that no character kills a Balrog without losing his own life WOULD suggest a rule about Balrogs vs. other. Since we're talking about a story, 'real world, fictional time' (not an exact quote, but it's more or less from JRRT), 3 cases, or even 30, don't suggest a rule but a likelihood. If I only know of three cases where the giant rhinobeast of Bohemia was killed, and all three hunters (or killers, depending on your perspective) died themselves, I would not conclude that it wasn't possible to kill one and survive. On the other hand, if I went out hunting them, I would definitely want Glorfindel along.

[ October 04, 2002: Message edited by: Nar ]

Dior
10-05-2002, 05:16 PM
Yes, my point was not that everyone who could fight and kill a Balrog would they themselves die, I was just showing that there must've been some large catastrophic happening every time a Balrog was killed, and how that differed from the event in which the Witch King was killed.