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Sauron Wins!:D
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Sauron is my vote from the list.
But, my real guess is Melkor. He made Sauron what he was. I have always equated Melkor as the Devil and Sauron as his head demon. Sauron after all was only fulfilling Melkor's wish. |
The best liar is definitly Sauron,and here is why:
1.He managed to trick the elves into creating the Rings Of Power. 2.He convinced Ar-Pharazon to attack the Undying Lands of Aman. 3.He turned most of the Numenoreans into Morgoth-worshippers. 4.He tricked Gorlim into reavelling the hideout of Barahir and his outlaws. 5.He made Eonwe beleive he is good again,at the end of the First Age. ...If someone here from this list is the ultimate Prince Of Lies its definitly gonna be Sauron...:cool: |
I would have said Sauron, but since the question was specifically about LOTR, I voted Wormtongue. Sauron's lying ended in the 2nd age; from the beginning of the 3rd, everyone knew he was downright evil. He was a mighty big liar in the 1st and 2nd ages, though, but not in LOTR.
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Even Sauron's closest servants are deceived ... listen to the Mouth of Sauron's gloating in the book - he thinks that he will rule over the West from Isengard, but we know he will be nothing but a puppet of Sauron. Add to that the deceit of the Elves regarding the Rings, the corruption of the Numenoreans, the corruption of the Nine, and indeed the corruption of Isildur and others via the One Ring (Sauron's mightiest creation) and it's not too hard to vote for him. I don't think I need to add any of his treachery in The Silmarillion. Not only did Sauron corrupt many of the Numenoreans in Numenor itself, but also many of those back in Middle Earth, which lead to the Black Numenoreans (cause of so much trouble to Gondor in the Third Age). He also managed to end the line of Kings in Gondor by deceiving Earnur, the last King. In other words, he lied to him. As for Saruman, once his treachery was exposed his effectiveness as a liar was severely diminished. What did he accomplish after that time? 1. Escape from Isengard, mostly because Treebeard felt sorry for him. 2. Spoiling the Shire. Not exactly one of the great military triumphs of the Age - and utterly unworthy of a Maiar. In the end he was defeated by a small group of brave hobbits and then humbled by the mercy of Frodo. He was a fairly petty liar by that point, more in Ted Sandyman's league than Sauron's. Sauron's deceits spanned thousand of years, and brought down civilisations. Saruman managed about 160 years. No contest, in my view. |
Fascinating thread and surprised that I didn't see it back in the day. :)
Specifically to answer Prince of the Halfling's fine post: Sauron could easily have swayed the Eastern and Southern men to fight for him without lying. Military glory, security from Mordor, crusade against the Western and Northern men; lies were not necessary. Likewise the Mouth. Why assume that Sauron lied? Mouth could easily foresee that Sauron would need to delegate some fun jobs! I have to agree that Sauron did all his best lying further back in the story, and that's why I'd choose someone else. |
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Although I have to join the chorus of those saying that the moments when Sauron's "art" of lie really seems like an "art" are mostly the First/Second Era ones. The episode with Gorlim is definitely the top for me. Sauron (and even more the "proto-Sauron", like his earlier "versions" in the Lay of Leithian) seems to me to be the liar, although of course taking nothing from Morgoth, of whom he was technically a mere servant, so "cosmologically" it is pretty certain that Morgoth was "the" liar; but sort of from the literary perspective, it seems to me that with Sauron, it is somehow more emphasised (and also if the question is only about LotR, then Morgoth is anyway out of question). |
If we'd consider the 1st age as well, I'd agree with you on Morgoth. He created lie in the first place. He decieved men, elves, and even the Valar.
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That's why I think these particular 'lies' were not so effective, because the end-result was the same with or without them: those armies were marching for Sauron regardless. |
Saruman. Definitely Saruman.
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Wormtongue. Not everyone can hoodwink a Head of State ;)
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Can anyone tell me why are Boromir and Denethor on this pole???
I dont seem to recall either one of them telling a single lie during the book... ...or am I wrong?:smokin: |
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Boromir is a very poor liar.
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I voted Wormtongue because his "advice" did corrupt King Theoden. Like in the movies Wormtongue says that Saruman has been Rohan's friend and ally, which we all know isn't true, but to Theoden its the truth, because his mind has been poisened by Wormtongue's evil whisperings.
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I'm going to throw a spanner in the works and suggest that none of them were effective liars. To my mind, an effective liar would have gotten away with it, and come away largely scot-free at the end of the tale. But as we know, all of them met a grisly death! And I think there's a lesson in that.
However, since lmp did not allow "none of the above" as an option, I humbly suggest that Gollum was the most effective, but not in the way he intended. He deceived Frodo into taking the Pass of Cirith Ungol, making out that it was relatively safe, with ill intent. Had Frodo not taken this way, he would never have been able to make it to Mount Doom. Gollum's deception in leading Frodo and Sam that way, and his treachery in reclaiming the Ring in the Sammath Naur led to the destruction of the Ring and the fall of Sauron. Effective! |
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