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#1 |
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Sep 2023
Posts: 32
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Hi Rune Son of Bjarne
When I say “change size” - I mean something more radical than a loosening or tightening. Those minor fluctuations, of course, might be attributable to a biological factor and/or sudden local temperature variations which affect metals - and Gandalf doesn’t seem to have been overly concerned by them. Indeed, we must note it was Bilbo who suggested the chain and not the wizard. It appears to me that Gandalf never extrapolated the significance of the loosening/tightening phenomena. If Gandalf had truly suspected that the Ring could grow from aptly fitting the “long slender brown fingers” of a typical hobbit - to the girth of Sauron’s (seemingly of stature greater than even a 7 ft tall Isildur), then it’s probable that a third piece of evidence would have come into play. Namely - Bilbo’s ‘little’ ring was not only gold, and unadorned (i.e. without a gem), but size-wise it could fit Sauron’s hand. Upon such a realization, alarm bells ought to have sounded in Gandalf’s head. |
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#2 | |
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Odinic Wanderer
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Quote:
This is the essense of what is problematic with this part of the book. Gandalf seems very concerned, and yet he does nothing for ages. |
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#3 |
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Sep 2023
Posts: 32
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Hello Rune Son of Bjarne
Perhaps we ask too much of Gandalf. Despite being of a divine nature - he was not infallible. Tolkien related in a correspondence: “But in this ‘mythology’ all the ‘angelic’ powers concerned with this world were capable of many degrees of error …”. - Letter #156 When talking of wizards, and in particular Gandalf: “… he makes mistakes of judgement ….”. - Letter #156 One of these “mistakes” is misjudging the growth potential of the Ring. All we can conclude from the text is that he was aware of minor fluctuations in fit. We would be on dangerous ground extrapolating further. Consider the scenario of the Ring being of fixed size for the Dark Lord’s finger and not being endowed with the magical ability to substantially grow or shrink. Does anybody truly believe Gandalf would not have instantly recognized Bilbo’s ‘magic bangle’ for what it really was? So in my opinion, the text displays Gandalf hastily overlooking the Ring’s minor fit fluctuations without due consideration. But this was intentional on Tolkien’s part, and conveyed by the relatively quick dismissal of the looseness/tightness phenomena. The ‘chain’ solved the problem. And that was the only problem - in the wizard’s mind. It usually takes a minimum of three aligning matters before one can reasonably start thinking of dismissing coincidence and begin forming a tenable theory. The Ring was definitely ‘gold’ and ‘unadorned’. A correctly envisioned ‘size’ - would have formed the third physical characteristic leg to the triad. A connection Tolkien didn’t want Gandalf to make in The Shadow of the Past or in the interval prior to reading Isildur’s scroll. Otherwise the hole in the plot would have been too large for a credible story. |
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#4 |
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Loremaster of Annúminas
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 2,330
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The thing is, I don't believe that it says anywhere that autosizing is a property restricted to the One Ring, or even the Great Rings. For all we know, it may be a feature of any magic ring made by the Mirdain. Tolkien never bothers telling us.
So it may well be that all Gandalf has to go on is "magic ring"- which tells him nothing new. And keep in mind that magic rings are not Gandalf's field; that's Saruman's speciality.
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The entire plot of The Lord of the Rings could be said to turn on what Sauron didn’t know, and when he didn’t know it. |
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#5 |
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Newly Deceased
Join Date: Aug 2024
Posts: 7
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Doesn't Gandalf think all the rings are accounted for somehow? When Bilbo finds the ring, it shows that his information is wrong, but he cannot know for sure how. Maybe one of the 7 wasn't really destroyed. Maybe one of the nine was lost Maybe there were more magic rings than he knew of. At this point he still trusts Saruman, who seems very sure that the One is lost in the sea. In any case, there might not be any immediate danger, so he can take some time to figure it out. Sixty years isn't long from an immortal perspective.
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#6 |
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Spirit of Mist
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Tol Eressea
Posts: 3,397
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This has been the subject of debate, with some trying to reconcile what Gandalf says in Shadow of the Past in the manner you suggest, and others simply suggesting that this was an inconsistency in JRRT's story telling. You may want to look at this thread (and there are others):
http://forum.barrowdowns.com/showthread.php?t=19710 Feel free to continue the discussion and voice your views in either thread.
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Beleriand, Beleriand, the borders of the Elven-land. |
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