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Lembas: Part of a Balanced, Evil-free Diet
As the casual LOTR reader knows, lembas was the waybread given by Galadriel to the Fellowship. Tolkien said it was not a "food concentrate", and that "no analysis in any laboratory would discover chemical properties of lembas that made it superior to other cakes of wheat-meal" (Letters # 210).
Nevertheless, it was invaluable to Frodo and Sam. Quote:
When Frodo and Sam were joined by Gollum, they offered him lembas. Gollum tried a bite, but spit it out. Frodo's reaction was this: Quote:
Being a Ring-bearer talking to a former Ring-bearer, I think Frodo might have had some sort of insight there. If Gollum had been able to choke down some lembas, what would the effect have been? |
Intriguing question!
Gollum hates all things good. Elvish things are "very good", if you forgive the phrasing. He hates them even more than the Sun. He couldnt stand the rope and spat out the lembas.
I think that the bread, having some elven "magic" in it (as is made obvious by the amount of energy it gives to the eater), would help Smeagol get rid of the Gollum side. But if it was forced into his mouth and rammed into his throat, all it would do is build up his hatered for all. He had to take it himeslf, and he wasn't ready for that yet, as Frodo points out. I think we can safely say that it's a ringbearer-to-ringbearer connection with Gollum, since Frodo has it all the time, and Sam can only find a corner for it only after he wore the Ring. (I'm not sure if we can incluse Bilbo in this, but he certainly fits the criteria). Maybe the lembas was like the last "real" piece of all things that he remmbered from before he entered the "monochromatic" Mordor. He told Sam waaaay later that he could not remember what grass and strawberries were like. I have the feeling that he remembered before because somehow lembas kept the memmory going. It's like it has all the "good" concentrated in it. It stretched that mental support as as much as it could. I think Frodo would have "forgotten" much sooner if he ate omething else all the time. So lembas would help Gollum. The Smeagol woke up in him when Frodo awakened memmories of the distant past in him. Maybe lembas could do more, if only Gollum accepted it. But that is a really shaky theory. I want to find out what the rest of you think. |
Allergy
I would also note that when Gollum was tied with elven rope, he was in real pain, a pain not caused by an excessively tight knot. I am not sure he has a 'hatred' for things elven or good, or that it is only a 'hatred'. It might also be a magical allergy. Gollum might react poorly to the boats the Fellowship was given, the Phial of Galadriel, or any other product of elven craft where the maker has put something extra in the making.
I could only attribute it to corruption caused by the Ring. While perhaps it might have been possible to recover from such an effect after having borne the Ring so long, I would be dubious. |
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And I think that his personality and the influence of the Ring are very intertwined. His personality was affected as part of the "lasting influence". Quote:
But, really, I think you're right here for the most part. The only counter-thing I can think of is the Nazgul. A lot of men seemed to be absolutely helpless when they came. But on the other hand, they collectively found the strength to stand and fight. In that same battle, we are told that orcs fled from Aragorn because of Anduril and just who he was. They could not find the strength. This probably comes from the fact that the "goodies" have all at stake - they fight not only for their lives, but for their land, their kin, their nation, country, revenge, you name it. They have motivation beyond saving their own skins. The "baddies" largely care about themselves only. An exception could be the Dunlendings that were misled into believing that they should fight for revenge. Gollum's goodie side of him was able to find the strength of mind and will to stand the Sun when it was needed, to walk into Lorien (al all!), and to overcome those "hate"s that he was aware of. He could not overcome his "alergy" to the Elven rope and lembas because he was not read for such a great callenge yet. He did not have sufficient motivation and understanding. |
I hesitate to bring this up because I don't want to trigger one of those arguments but I am going to mention the pachyderm I at least can see lurking in the corner trying despite its bulk to keep a low profile.
Yes it is the C word..... Catholicism. Not a direct correlation obviously but it seems to me that there is something sacramental about the lembas. It is the vehicle spiritual as well as physical benefits - a kind of grace. The mass is more central to Catholic observance than say the Anglicanism into which Tolkien was born, I need to check references and try to be more coherenct when I have slept but I think this is a factor. |
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Lembas was intended as a food product, primarily. There was no ritual for its use, and no restriction of that use, beyond the fact that its making was a secret of the Elves, and they did not ordinarily give it to those of other races. The Eucharist is highly ritualized in Catholicism, and to a lesser extent in Protestant denominations. The bread and wine is not consumed for any nutritional value, but "in remembrance" of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. It is a symbolic act, and those uninstructed in the ritual, and ignorant of the meaning behind it, derive nothing from eating and drinking the same things as the celebrants of the Mass. Lembas, though, required no such instruction. The Fellowship, with the exception of Legolas (and maybe Aragorn), knew nothing about its origin or making. Yet, they still derived full benefit from it. In fact, Frodo and Sam lived on it alone after their escape from the Tower of Cirith Ungol. It nourished the body, as well as the soul. |
It's interesting that Tolkien acknowledges but does not explicitly confirm one critic's equation of Lembas with the viaticum.
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Frodo's insight does not have to be conferred by the Ring. Of the hobbits he is the eldest, best educated and most thoughtful, so it would be natural that he would come to an understanding of Sméagol's plight with or without the influence he could feel from the Ring. I'm not suggesting for a moment that there wasn't a particular affinity between the two that stemmed from their bearing of the Ring, but it's not necessary for an understanding of his comments under discussion. |
There's a very brief but interesting text concerning lembas - called, appropriately enough, 'Of Lembas' - in HoMe XII (it's the second of two parts in the short 'Dangweth Pengolodh').
Here it is said that lembas was not invented by the Elves, but was given to them by the Valar at the beginning of their Great Journey from Middle-Earth to Aman. It was made 'of a kind of corn which Yavanna brought forth in the fields of Aman'. This corn was later grown by the Elves in Middle-earth, but its origin in the 'Blessed Realm' would seem to at least partially explain its peculiar power. And perhaps most intriguingly, it is said here that if mortals were to eat too much of the bread they would become weary of their mortality and long for the fields of Aman. For this reason, the Valar commanded that the Elves not share it with Men except at great need. |
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Notably, I think, the Fellowship is not given any sort of restriction on the use of the lembas. As a matter of fact, eating more is depicted as beneficial, or at least not harmful, in LOTR. Referencing the initial passage I noted in the initial post in this thread, it was said that: Quote:
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