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09-30-2002, 05:38 AM | #41 |
Pile O'Bones
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@Burrahobbit:
Sorry, but I just can't take your posts for serious anymore. I think you see this discussion as a joke and you are far from making qualified statements... "How many Nazgul were there? How many Nazgul attacked Minas Tirith?" What nonsense are those questions! There are eight, of course, and the Witch-King! If one of them was killed earlier, Tolkien would have said in the book. And what is the crap about extra- Nazgul?? Nonsense!
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09-30-2002, 07:01 AM | #42 | |
Maiden of Tears
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Quote:
Angmar_The_Horrible - Don't start criticising other people. At least make an intelligent point with it.
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09-30-2002, 09:28 AM | #43 |
Wight
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Patchogue NY
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Yes, it is true that Eowyn destroyed the Witch-King, and Legolas only shot down the creature that one of the Nazgul rode. If you read my post, you would see that I was talking more about their need to return to Mordor to be rehorsed, not that they were killed outright. As it is said in the books, you cannot kill something that is not alive and not dead. I pose the question to you again, how do you think they returned to Mordor? Why did it take them time to reinvest themselves in new steeds?
You will also rememeber that it took each Nazgul quite a long time to get back to their former jobs. It was because they were so close to the destruction of the One Ring that the others did not return again. I believe that even the Witch-King might have returned if the Ring had not been destroyed so soon after his "death". My argument is on the futility of "killing" something that will just come right back at you. would you waste precious time zapping the undead, instead of retreating from them? Or convincing them into not coming back, if you could? This is my statement: The Elves were wise to hold back. In doing so they saved lives that would have been spent in futility. [ September 30, 2002: Message edited by: Tirned Tinnu ]
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09-30-2002, 10:27 AM | #44 | |
Hidden Spirit
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Quote:
Secondly I'd like to remind you of Sauron. Huan fought Sauron and he died. Numenor fought Sauron and he eventually died. The last alliance fought Sauron and he died. Judging from that it looks like all of the wise people ever in the whole world would waste their time in the futility of killing something that would just come back.
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09-30-2002, 10:49 AM | #45 |
Maiden of Tears
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Elves could kill ringwraiths. The prophecy said that man would not kill the Witch-King, not could not. In any case, the Witch-King does not count for all nine ringwraiths.
As for how the Wraiths got back to Mordor, they probably DID walk. Think logically. How else would they? They were only unhorsed, they were still embodied, so their spirit would not just FLOAT back to Mordor. Not that that point bears ANY relation to the actual question.
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'It must often be so, Sam, when things are in danger: someone has to give them up, lose them, so that others may keep them' ~Frodo "Life is hard. After all, it kills you." - Katharine Hepburn |
09-30-2002, 10:58 AM | #46 |
Wight
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Few short questions:
1) On a similar tangent, how can you kill something that's already dead? 2) How do you define death in the case of a Nazgul? 3) Did Gandalf and Elrond 'kill' the Nazguls at Rivendell?
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09-30-2002, 11:18 AM | #47 |
Hidden Spirit
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1: They weren't dead for most of the story.
2: Death is when a fea leaves a hroa. Nazgul still have hroar, even if they are "thin and stretched." 3: No.
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09-30-2002, 12:51 PM | #48 |
Pile O'Bones
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Elves CANNOT kill Ringwraiths, it is said
nowhere in Tolkiens work. Or, if it is, show me a passage where it is CLEARLY said, not just passages where you can work out EVERY- THING. And for me, the words "will not be killed by a man" also included male elves, even male dwarves. I don't think it is limited to the race of men. And I still think that the elves are overrated.
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09-30-2002, 01:33 PM | #49 |
Maiden of Tears
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This thread is absolutely pointless.
The prophecy saying no man would kill the Witch-King only applies to the Witch-King. Not the other 8 Ringwraiths. And the prophecy said would not, not could not. And I don't know where all this crap about elven blades is coming from. Also, Angmar_The_Horrible, you said no elves could kill the Witch-King. So you get no female elves then?
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'It must often be so, Sam, when things are in danger: someone has to give them up, lose them, so that others may keep them' ~Frodo "Life is hard. After all, it kills you." - Katharine Hepburn |
09-30-2002, 01:45 PM | #50 | |
Hidden Spirit
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Quote:
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09-30-2002, 01:59 PM | #51 |
Pile O'Bones
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@*Varda*:
I totally agree with you. This discussion IS pointless and will never come to any solution. As for the female elves: I was speaking of the elves in general. And I do think, that a female elve in place of Eowyn would have been able do kill the Witch-King. @burrahobbit: Neither do you. *yawn*
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09-30-2002, 02:02 PM | #52 |
Maiden of Tears
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@Angmar_The_Horrible
At least burrahobbit didn't contradict himself. You don't have a leg to stand on in this argument, there's not a single shred of evidence to back up your assumption. Burrahobbit and I win on logic alone. Oh, and it would be nice if people would actually READ the posts, instead of repeating the same mindless drivel about elven blades and women.
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'It must often be so, Sam, when things are in danger: someone has to give them up, lose them, so that others may keep them' ~Frodo "Life is hard. After all, it kills you." - Katharine Hepburn |
09-30-2002, 02:07 PM | #53 |
Princess of Skwerlz
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People, please keep this discussion on the subject matter, not on personal ones, or it will be a prime candidate for closure!
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09-30-2002, 03:13 PM | #54 |
Pile O'Bones
Join Date: Jul 2002
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@*Varda*:
I think I know at least as much about Tolkiens work as you do and do have a leg in this discussion. But anyway, I return to the discussions on my favourite forum - which just offered me moderator-status.
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09-30-2002, 03:22 PM | #55 | |
Hidden Spirit
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Quote:
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09-30-2002, 03:25 PM | #56 |
Hidden Spirit
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@Angmar:
Yay.
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09-30-2002, 03:53 PM | #57 |
Wight
Join Date: Aug 2002
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Hmm, Burrahobbit! You bring up an interesting question.
Yes, what about Luthien? What about the battles against Sauron and his fell spirits? After so many legendary battles in the name of the Sils could the Elves see themselves past it? Could it be that the Elves we get to know in the LOTR are not as driven as they? I think this is a good thread, that has worth. I see it as a way to get to know LOTRs Elves that much better! [ September 30, 2002: Message edited by: Tirned Tinnu ]
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09-30-2002, 05:22 PM | #58 | |||||
Spectre of Capitalism
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First of all, let me clarify what this post is. I had a long discussion of this thread with burrahobbit on the chat this afternoon. I really had not much interest in the question, but the debate was intriguing, and so I voiced an opinion, and burra and I spent a spirited hour discussing, and this post is the distillation of what I think based on that discussion.
The question, "Can an elf kill a Nazgul" is deceiving, becuase Nazgul exist, as burra has said, in two "planes" of existence. I think it is possible for an elf, or anyone else with sufficient strength, skill and bravery could "disembody" a Nazgul -- render the physical form so badly damaged that the wraith could no longer function in it. That is one kind of "death", and I say that this kind of death is the kind that *anyone* could deal out. In this sense, I agree with burra. This is the kind of thing that happened at the Fords: Quote:
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I'd also like to think that if the elves could take out the Nazgul anytime they wanted, as Burrahobbit asserts, they would have done so. Since these are fictitious characters anyway, to get all hot and bothered about what might or might not be possible in a world that existed truly only in the imagination of one man smacks of *someone* needing a life. But if you insist on trying to argue the point, at least do it from the texts he's written, and let's get on to more important questions -- like who would win the ultimate grudge match: Arwen versus Eowyn, mud-wrestling for the hand of Aragorn!
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09-30-2002, 07:14 PM | #59 |
Hidden Spirit
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An Elf that had been to Valinor, such as Glorfindel, exists on two planes just as the Nazgul. I think that he would hurt the nazgul on both planes if he hurt it at all. A regular elf like Legolas or any man would just be on one plane, and so would need a special weapon to to lasting damage. Merry stabbed the Witch-king with his barrow blade, which functioned as a sort of anti-morgul blade to bring WK out of the world of the unseen (as opposed to the morgul blade bringing you into the world of the unseen), which allowed Eowyn to kill him fully. Glorfindel wouldnt need WK to be pulled anywhere, they both exist in the same places already.
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09-30-2002, 08:57 PM | #60 |
Wight
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Its the whole thing where Frodo sees the Nazgul differently with the ring on. in the second plane, where they are tall and powerful kings of old, their "true selves" they can be destroyed i believe, like burra said.
and if Angmar comes back i hope he is a bit less heavy handed |
09-30-2002, 10:24 PM | #61 |
Wight
Join Date: Mar 2002
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Hey, Burrahobbit. Where in Tolkien's works does it state that an elf who has been Mandos'ed lives in two planes? I'm not contradicting you, just wondering.
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10-01-2002, 02:03 PM | #62 | |
Hidden Spirit
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Quote:
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10-01-2002, 02:34 PM | #63 |
Spectre of Capitalism
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Repeating the same quote over and over does not bolster your case, Burra.
As I said, could Glorfindel drive off a Nazgul? Yes. Could he "hurt" one? Certainly. Could he do what Merry and Eowyn did with their respective weapons? There is no evidence to support that. The fact that he has "great power" over both the seen and the unseen does not mean "absolute power", and does not negate Gandalf's statement that the ringwraiths stand or fall with their master. The knives of Westernesse are probably the only exception mentioned in all JRRT's works. If I picked a fistfight with Burra, his youth and strength would be pitted against my "perceived" age and skill. Each would have "great power" over the other in some ways, and yet the outcome still be in doubt. The ringwraith obviously has great power in "both planes" as well -- it is not a foregone conclusion that an elf will always defeat a nazgul one-on-one. Another point. Burra makes great hay of both the elves and the Nazgul existing on "two planes" at once. But if elves go to Mandos' halls at death, and what happens to men after death is unspoken in JRRT's magnum opus, then how can one have any certainty that the "unseen plane" of the elves is the same as the "unseen plane" of men? Tolkien never said what happened to men in the afterlife, at least not in the major books (I will admit to a vast yawning ignorance of the HoME tomes...) . It matters little to me one way or another. *My* real point in wasting all this bandwidth is to demonstrate (1) that no one except the man himself knows the score on this one, and (2) that where the text is ambiguous, or at least open to multiple interpretations, we should be charitable to those who hold differing opinions. Way too much effort is being expended on this question, which is, as I noted with different verbiage in my last post, a futile exercise, a moot point, a non-issue, not worth getting worked up about. Geez. [ October 01, 2002: Message edited by: Thenamir ]
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10-01-2002, 02:53 PM | #64 |
Hidden Spirit
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I know, Thenamir, I was replying to Dior.
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10-03-2002, 09:02 PM | #65 |
Wight
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Thanks Burrahobbit.
I hadn't noticed that, though I do hold the view that it would be impossible for someone such as Glorfindel to truly kill a Ringwraith just because of the good, two-planed aura his spirit gave off, since there would be no other way without a sword of significant anti-wraithing power in his control, as has been proved previously.
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10-03-2002, 09:09 PM | #66 |
Wight
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This topic does bring up the question though, that if elves were able to kill Balrogs, than what is it that would prevent them from killing Wraiths, other than the power of the ring, which didn't prevent Merry/Eowyn from killing one. Seeing as the Balrogs were maiar, and couldn't be killed without their opposition dying, does bring the differences in perspective though. Eh, well I guess you can scrap this post than, unless someone else has something profound to say of this.
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10-04-2002, 01:38 PM | #67 | ||
Wight
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It's an interesting point, Dior.
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[ October 04, 2002: Message edited by: Nar ] |
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10-05-2002, 05:16 PM | #68 |
Wight
Join Date: Mar 2002
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Yes, my point was not that everyone who could fight and kill a Balrog would they themselves die, I was just showing that there must've been some large catastrophic happening every time a Balrog was killed, and how that differed from the event in which the Witch King was killed.
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