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#11 | |||
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Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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Of Enslaved Wills and Limited Freedoms
Quote:
Tolkien said that the purpose of Fairy Story is escape, consolation, and recovery; namely to recover a clear view. Clear view of what? Reality. What he's saying (and I think you agree) is that Fairy Story (mythic story) reveals reality better than, and in a way that, mimetic fiction cannot. You need to understand that from my point of view there is no unnecessary stage, since Deeper sense of reality and Christian reality are one and the same. Quote:
The Losses of the Ring show some revealing variation. 1. Isildur cuts off Sauron's finger and the Ring falls to Isildur. 2. The Ring slides off Isildur's finger at the Gladden Fields, betraying him to the murdering arrows of the orcs. 3. Déagol is murdered by Sméagol for its possession. 4. The Ring slides off Gollum's finger uner the mountain. 5. The Ring drops from Bilbo's hands; Gandalf quickly picks it up before Bilbo can retrieve it. 6. Gandalf quickly places the Ring which he places on the hearth. 7. Sam removes the chain from around Frodo's neck, thinking him dead and the errand in need of completion. 8. Sam gives the Ring back to the demanding Frodo. 9. Gollum bites of Frodo's finger and regains the Ring. 10. The Ring and Gollum melt in the fires of Mount Doom. Gandalf, when explaining the Ring to Frodo in 'Shadows of the Past', says that Bilbo gave up the Ring voluntarily, but the narration in the previous chapter reveals a more complex situation. Bilbo 'accidentally' drops the Ring. Quote:
So is Gandalf lying to Frodo when he says that Bilbo gave up the Ring voluntarily? No. Bilbo's obvious relief at being rid of it, shows that he would have given it up, if he had been able. He wasn't able. His will had become enslaved to the Ring. There is only one voluntary relinquishment of the Ring, by Sam. Three times the Ring is violently removed fromt its holder. Three times the Ring falls from the hand of its holder. Two of these times, the Ring is certainly the will at work: leaving Isildur and leaving Gollum. What about when Bilbo drops it? The sense I have is that the Ring causes Bilbo's hand to jerk back; but does the Ring cause itself to be dropped from Bilbo's hand? Does it drop in hopes of being claimed by Gandalf? Perhaps. Was it just an accident? If so, it is an unusual exception to everything we know about the history of the Ring. Or was there another will at work? If so, what will could overpower the Ring's will to remain in the hands of Bilbo? What will could overpower the Ring's potential hold on Gandalf? It's obvious that Gandalf doesn't trust himself. He is exerting all his effort to separate the Ring from Bilbo while putting every effort of will that he can spare to resist the temptation of the Ring himself! It's not Gandalf's power that gets Bilbo to drop the Ring; Gandalf doesn't dare exert his will in that way, or he will himself succumb to the Ring's lure. So what will is this? What power? The Valar? If so, which of them has the power to overcome the will of the Ring, that even Gandalf and Galadriel fear? None of them. Is this dropping of the Ring just an accident? How many 'accidents' are there in LotR? More specifically, how many 'acidents' seem to tip the precarious scales of 'chance' toward the good of the free peoples, and away from Sauron's advantage ... if 'chance' we call it? What power is this? There is only one power, one answer that fits the narrative. Eru. |
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