In http://forum.barrowdowns.com/showthread.php?t=2021 I posted {what seems to apply as well then as now} this:
Quote:
Well I, surprisingly got to the end of this thread w/ no one expressing what to me seemed the obvious. I thought for sure I would be pre-empted. but then again maybe I am just plain wrong!
my 2 cents;
Gildor searched his heart as to what he should do for Frodo and did it.
Just because you can help someone is it always right? Gildor clearly sensed something big was afoot and he hesitated to set anything in motion that was not meant to be.
Gildor knew that the Dunedain kept watch {aragorn was almost certainly one of those warned by Gildor's highly effective communications network.
All told we know it reached Aragorn, Bombadil and Rivendell, not bad for a slacking, racist wimp. 
No I think Gildor Inglorion was practicing what the taoists call Wu-Wei. Acting w/out self-interest. I believe although puzzled and alarmed by the situation he weighed his possible responses in his heart and saw that it was not his or his companies part to escort them further.
But let us look at what the brief meeting did accomplish.
*The ring saved from immediate peril.
*Hobbits greatly heartend and [ Frodo and Sam at least] greatly enlightened.
*Frodo was pronounced an 'Elf-Friend' before he even left the Shire [ I believe the Elf-Friend title also had a certain blessing that went w/ it. like Faramir's staff.
*He also asked that Elbereth's Stars shine upon his road [which they undoubtedly did].
*set them up w/ food better than anything we will probably ever eat - vegetarian too if I recall.
*gave Frodo counsel to take friends [ the counsel of which helped sway him when the conspiracy was unmasked].
*Implemented the emergency contact system along the old Arthedain/Cardolan border.
not bad in my book. Actually the Gildor and co. scene has always been along w/ lothlorien my favorite in the book. I always come away so inspired I can not imagine Gildor being anything other than perfectly in-tune.
So, again Gildor did exactly what he needed to do. Just like Elrond [ a more common lightening rod for the ' he/Rivendell did not help enough' question] did not go to Mordor himself. Gildor and Elrond where wise enough to be where they were most needed and mature enough to do their part and no more, no less.
btw 'house of Inglorion' almost certainly means not 'a son of' [ in which case he proably would have been King after Gil-Galad] but 'of the household of'.
And possibly a generation or 2 removed at that. Still as Finrod was one of the noblest [ The noblest in my book] of the Noldorin princes, even being his butler would have been a good job.
[ September 19, 2002: Message edited by: lindil ]
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The dwindling Men of the West would often sit up late into the night exchanging lore & wisdom such as they still possessed that they should not fall back into the mean estate of those who never knew or indeed rebelled against the Light.
Last edited by lindil; 12-09-2007 at 07:10 AM.
Reason: typos fixed 2007 - lots pf typos, and a link to the old thread
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