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09-15-2004, 07:50 AM | #1 | |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 92
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The Fellowship's True Purpose?
The Fellowship was supposed to protect the Ringbearer Frodo from harm, while he pursues his Quest of destroying the One Ring...or so they say. But there seems to be either a big miscalculation on Gandalf's part, or the Fellowship had a darker purpose.
In The Shadow of the Past, Gandalf tells Frodo to try throwing the Ring into his fireplace. Frodo could not do so, and puts it in his pocket. Then Gandalf says: Quote:
But seriously, if that was not the Fellowship's purpose, why did Gandalf send Frodo on a Quest that was doomed to fail? He did not foresee Gollum's role. He merely says that he felt that Gollum would play a part "for good or for ill". Perhaps Gandalf truly was clueless. He knew Bilbo's Ring was one of the Twenty Rings of Power yet did nothing for 60 years, sent Frodo with 8 "defenders"(of which 3 did not know how to fight) to the very heart of Sauron's realm, and expected Frodo to destroy the Ring at the end, which he couldn't do even in the very beginning. Everything that happened was purely luck, if you think about it. The only logical explanations are that Gandalf was a dolt, or his Maia foresight told him that sending Frodo on this quest would turn out to be good. Gandalf is personally my favorite character, so I'll take choice #2, but he does seem to have some holes...Boromir did the logical thing in trying to take Frodo's Ring, IMO. It turned out to be evil, but he saw that the Quest was hopeless. Well, I sorta strayed from my original topic now. |
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09-15-2004, 08:29 AM | #2 |
Corpus Cacophonous
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: A green and pleasant land
Posts: 8,390
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Easy answer!
Gandalf trusted in providence ...
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09-15-2004, 01:05 PM | #3 | |
Laconic Loreman
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Don't know true purpose.
Right now, I don't know the "true purpose" of the fellowship, besides the fact to get the ring to Mount Doom, where it atleast has an oppurtunity of being destroyed. And of course the quest was supposed to fail, or well, was a "desperate task."
The one good thing I saw the Fellowship for however, is it created long lasting friendships. You have the Sam-Frodo friendship, Merry-Pippin, Aragorn-Legolas-Gimli, and then everybody, it all created a lasting friendship between the companions. For some added info on Boromir, I have read this interesting little discussion topic. But, Boromir took the ring, in thought that it wouldn't corrupt the righteous, it's not that he wanted it for himself (eventhough once he had it he would have taken it for himself). But his thought was it wouldn't be able to corrupt "the righteous" people. And here is a quote from The Council of Elrond. Quote:
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09-16-2004, 12:33 AM | #4 | ||||
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 92
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But I still think relying 100% on providence is wrong, when all the 'logical' explanations say that Frodo would fail. Quote:
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But, actually, Boromir did want it for himself, though he suggested Aragorn first (he believed himself to be one of those "strong Men"). Quote:
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09-16-2004, 12:58 AM | #5 | ||
Beloved Shadow
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However, the chances of successfully overthrowing Sauron using the Ring still would be higher than the chances of destroying the Ring, so I agree that Boromir's actions were understandable. I've been sitting here thinking for a while and I'm fairly certain that if I would've been in Boromir's position (I hate to say this) I probably would've tried to take the Ring like he did.
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09-16-2004, 05:06 AM | #6 | ||||
Illusionary Holbytla
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 7,547
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09-16-2004, 07:43 AM | #7 | ||||||
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 92
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Also, if there was a 99~100% chance of failing to defeating Sauron once and for all, wouldn't it be better to take the high chance of defeating Sauron for now? Quote:
Last edited by gorthaur_cruel; 09-16-2004 at 07:48 AM. |
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09-16-2004, 08:02 AM | #8 |
A Shade of Westernesse
Join Date: May 2004
Location: The last wave over Atalantë
Posts: 515
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The 'true purpose' of the Fellowship was to destroy the Ring. Gandalf knew that it was a hopeless task, but knew equally well that it was the best alternative - the others being to hide it somewhere and let it lie until it was found generations later and Sauron was able to regain it; to slip it on his finger and declare open war on Sauron; or to send it over the sea and hope against hope that it would be hidden there forever - or that the Valar would accept it. The only hope of the people of Middle-earth was in the destruction of the Ring - even if they had hidden it, Sauron would have been strong enough to defeat the Free Peoples of Middle-earth (they won the War of the Ring only because Sauron was destroyed), Likewise, the only hope in destroying the Ring was in taking it secretly to Mordor - an open assault on Sauron's realm with the purpose of winning a path to Mount Doom was pure folly. And, since it was already known to Gandalf that no one can destroy the Ring of his own free will, who better to take it than the one who bore it all the way from the Shire to Rivendell, and indeed for seventeen years before that? After the decision was made and the Fellowship was formed - a group of of keen thinkers, keen fighters and friends of the Ringbearer, representative of all the Free People - Gandalf had only, as The Saucepan Man said, to trust in providence.
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09-16-2004, 12:56 PM | #9 | |
Laconic Loreman
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Firefoot:
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09-16-2004, 02:12 PM | #10 | |||
Beloved Shadow
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It says what policy Elrond and Galadriel would attempt to follow but Tolkien obviously doubts their chances of success. Not to mention that destroying Sauron's armies and such still wouldn't destroy Sauron. You'd still have to destroy the Ring. The only way you would pursue the policy "use the Ring and destroy Sauron by military force" is if you believed that you would be able to remain uncorrupted and destroy the Ring when it was all over. This, I believe, is what Boromir wanted and what I probably would've tried. That way I would be trusting in my own ability to resist the Ring rather than trusting in a hobbit to do something that was logically impossible. Sure, it would've failed, but at the time it would've seemed like a better idea than what they actually did. Anyway, the stuff about confronting Sauron one on one is after the part that I posted above- Quote:
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09-16-2004, 11:21 PM | #11 | ||
Haunted Halfling
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Cheers! Lyta
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09-17-2004, 01:41 PM | #12 | |
A Shade of Westernesse
Join Date: May 2004
Location: The last wave over Atalantë
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09-17-2004, 04:36 PM | #13 | |
Laconic Loreman
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An explanation
Lyta
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