Quote:
Originally Posted by Alfirin
The last quote in and of itself is odd, since the Nazgul don't keep their rings; it is made clear elsewhere that they have turned them back over to Sauron and he is wearing them (unless you interpret the sentence in the sense of "the nine rings keep the Nazgul enslaved/alive (which is true, but not exactly pertinent to the matters being discussed when Gandalf makes the statement.) Though it is possible Gandalf doesn't know this fact at the time and or never knew it. (It's not like he has intimate knowledge of the day to day minutae of Nazguldom, or has had much, if any opportunity to study them up close. The one time we know he went face to face with them, he was presumably too busy keeping alive to notice if they actually had rings on their fingers.)
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Yes, that apparent contradiction has indeed been noted before. I favor your second scenario, in which Gandalf simply didn't know for certain where the Nine were then bestowed. After all, how could
anyone know for sure, outside the Mordor higher-ups who might see the Nazgûl on a regular basis?
For that matter, would the rings be
visible if the Nazgûl wore them? Like their clothing that "gave shape to their nothingness"?