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10-17-2008, 03:14 PM | #1 |
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We are Warriors of the Shire!?
An amusing comment is used by Pippin in the game BFME, "We are Warriors of the Shire!". In relation to the book, beyond the obvious Hobbits like Frodo and Co., who are these warriors? Hobbits are generally too timid and slow to be such warriors, yet the likes of Pippin ended up being worthy of being a Hobbit Prince in the eyes of the men of Gondor. Are there any others in the Shire that could step up to this mantle?
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10-17-2008, 06:47 PM | #2 |
Gruesome Spectre
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If I recall ROTK correctly, the reason the Gondorians referred to Pippin as "The Prince of the Halflings" was simply due to rumours that sprang up around him. Many of the inhabitants of Minas Tirith had likely never heard of Hobbits (or Halflings) before, and those that had knew them only as a childish myth or legend. With the apprehension prevalent in the city at that time, it was only natural for wishful thinking to elevate Pippin in their eyes to the status of a leader of a Halfling army that would stand with them against Mordor. It had nothing to do with any respect or fear of his combat prowess.
As for other Hobbits being warriors, that depends on what you mean by the word. If you are wondering if they would ever become warlike, or gain a love of battle for its own sake, I find that extremely unlikely, barring some drastic change in their way of life that required them to fight constantly for many years to stay alive. If you are asking which Hobbits would be capable of fighting at need, though they loathed having to do so, I would say nearly all of them. Hundreds fought to expel Saruman's Men from the Shire, then went back to their peaceful lives after the job was done.
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10-17-2008, 10:56 PM | #3 | |
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Ernil i Pheriannath (Prince of the Halflings): He was thought to be a person of high rank because he was in the company of Gandalf and because he used the familiar form of address at all times, as was customary in the Shire, even when speaking to Denethor, the Steward of Gondor. (RotK: "Minas Tirith," p. 41; Appendix F of LotR, p. 411) I believe that any hobbit in any fashion could be a "warrior" in different senses of the word. Frodo, the most merciful of the bunch, was a warrior in his own right. You do not have to be physically violent to be a warrior. But in the context that the BFME Pip used the term sounds like it meant as an actual warrior - in which Pippin was, having fought in many overwhelming battles. Merry and Sam were also. In fact, I would say all the hobbits that were involved with ousting Saruman from the Shire were all warriors. Hobbits didn't like war, and I don't think Pippin or any other hobbit would ever say that they did, or claim to be your typical "warrior", like Boromir, for example. The hobbits fought - they were warriors, and they could do it again - if provoked, although it is not their nature.
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10-18-2008, 08:31 AM | #4 | |||
Gruesome Spectre
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As to the rest of your post, I quite agree.
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10-18-2008, 09:23 AM | #5 | |||
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But more significant than this toughness is the nature of their society. While not classless, The Shire tends not to have highly specified, differentiated labour groups. It is still largely an agrarian form of social organization, even with its veneer of Edwardian customs (sans the fox hunts). And unlike the English Empire, The Shire is still settling its own uninhabited land and territories. Such an agrarian society could not financially support and maintain an armed elite trained and dedicated solely to warfare. In fact, it even lacks a formal governing organisation. Quote:
Not unlike, one might say, the farmers and sons of farmers who took up the call and led the fight at Vimy Ridge, and The Battle of Hill 70, and Ypres, who proved so much more staltwart than their pig-headed military commanders from long lines of military training.
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10-18-2008, 01:53 PM | #6 | ||
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Inziladun, although I haven't played it, "BFME" is like you guessed - Battle for Middle-earth...it's a PC game. I know it's largely concerned with armies and fighting, but I don't know what else it encompasses. Anybody care to enlighten us?
I was just pointing out that, because the men of Gondor thought little of hobbits (as they only knew them from, like you said, childish myths, etc.), Pippin's arrival was a shock, but we're told that it was mainly his company with Gandalf that laid claim to the name "Prince of the Halflings". I was agreeing that the Gondorian's didn't view Pip as a great warrior. If anything, they probably laughed at the thought of fighting hobbits. I was disagreeing with this statement: Quote:
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10-18-2008, 02:14 PM | #7 |
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I'd hate to turn this into another who'd beat who thread but Hobbits were not capable warriors, even at need. For this, they are simply too small and untrained. Sure they were tougher than they looked and managed to beat and chase away the Men of Saruman, but that was mainly thanks to Pippin and Merry's clever ambush, their superior numbers and, last but not least, their opponents' underestimation of them. A small number of well trained and armed men would've made mincemeat of the Hobbits (disregarding the option of guerilla warfare).
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10-18-2008, 04:09 PM | #8 |
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Peregrin Took, we seem to mostly agree here. Pippin's being called "Prince of the Halflings" likely was in large part due to his apparent friendship with Gandalf and his audience with Denethor. I was simply positing that the atmosphere of anxiety in Minas Tirith contributed to that initial perception of him as a leader of Halflings who would help Gondor with armed force. Had they not been on the brink of war, I wonder if they would have been so quick to make that assumption. As you say, by Pippin's physical appearance alone many would laugh or take Beregond's view. But in their desperate situation they would certainly have taken all the help they could get, and I doubt they would have laughed if they really had been offered five thousand swords, Halflings or not.
Mansun's original post seemed to suggest that it was Pippin's "warrior" status that was the reason for the title Pippin was initially given by some of the people. I was disagreeing with that premise and putting forth other explanations, as you did also.
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10-19-2008, 02:10 PM | #9 |
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There is no reason to suggest that, given Frodo and Co. were plucked from the quiet Shire, and gradually transformed into warriors on their fraught with danger quests, that other Hobbits from the Shire could not do likewise. Hobbits, if trained with the appropriate tools and experience, could have played a significant part in the war against Sauron if called upon by Gondor. They may be of no use against trolls and Nazgul, but they could have been employed as spies of the lands, as able archers, and as messengers.
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10-19-2008, 02:52 PM | #10 |
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On the most part yes, that is true. And nne are great warriors. I'm sure even Bandobras "Bullroarer" Took and his men couldn't kill a troll.
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