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Sauron's Hroa and the Missing Finger
Hi all,
This is probably garbage but I was wondering. when Saurons physical body in it's final iteration is described, the general consensus is that it is basically the same as his penultimate body (the one he had when he faced Isildur) minus the finger Isildur cut off. My question is as follows, does anyone else think it is possible that the reason they looked the same is that they were the same. That is that when Isildur cut the ring for Sauron it drove the fea from his body ("killed him") but did not destroy said body, and the time it took for sauron to gain enough power to "grow a new one" was really the time it took for him to gain enough strenght to re-occupy the old one. Sauron had many loyal followers at the Battle with Isildur; in the confusion they could have borne his body away somewhere safe. And since we do not really know how "human" Saurons body was, It's a little hard to say how subject it would be to the ravages of decay in his fea's absence. My question would be sort of as follows, if Sauron did build himself a new body from scratch, why would he 1. make it just like the previos one (which had already proved to be defeatable) and 2. leave his hand damaged. if he could grow a new body he could presumably grown a new finger. The concept that he kept it missing as a reminder seems a bit tenuous (Sauron would need no reminder that he did not have the Ring) and it would seem that one would want all ones fingers for day to day activities. Besides if he ever did get back the ring, one would assume he would have liked somewhere to put it (with him wearing the nine mortal rings and the four dwarven rings, plus possibly the three eleven rings (if his post ring recovery plan involve taking them for his own as well after her conquered the elves.) one would think his nine remaining fingers would be running short of room. Unless we are to belive that, if he ever got his hands on the One ring again its first effect would be to cause his missing finger to re-sprout then. Also re-occupying a pre existing body would likey take less strength (which Sauron was running short of) than making a brand new one. at least that's my opinion. |
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The next we see of him is in Dol Guldur in his "Necromancer" guise. Quote:
"He took shape there again", I think, points to a new form. Quote:
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I do rather like this theory. Nice and quite Gothic, this cosmic corpse reanimation.
On the other hand, the logic of Tolkien magic often deals with permanent, irreversible diminution; on the evil side sometimes to do with a vague sense of punishment by, ish, Eru. Morgoth got left with a permanent limp by Fingolfin, Sauron could be Annatar, fair of face, no longer after Numenor was drowned, that sort of thing... |
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Sauron's power was diminished each time he was forced to rebody, so maybe he couldn't have it exactly the way he wanted, at least not without additional expenditure of his remaining power. Also, and this is only a theory, perhaps his remaining "maimed" in his physical appearance was somehow tied to his "maimed" (Ringless) spirit. After all, Sauron had lost his original Mair ability to appear in any guise he wanted. Quote:
Actually if he did make one from scratch there might be another reason to make it the same (if he only got one chance) If his consciousness returned before he re-incarnated and more importantly his ability to communicate he may have been able to find out what of his former trappings were left, and took a form that would allow him to re-use them without trouble. Even if his body had not survived things like his armor, his throne etc. might have been kept (or retrived) over the years. they would be small things, but weakend as he was, every little bit might have helped. But I'm basically freewheeling by now |
I say that cutting off the finger somehow maimed Sauron's fea as well. If he made a new body from scratch, what's a finger? If he was using his old body, how did he get it to Dol Guldur from Mordor where the Battle of the Last Alliance occured?
Well, possibly, in Dol Guldur he still didn't have his body yet; it was just his spirit that was "taking shape" in a metaphorical sense - not just a whisp of smoke floating around, but something with a definite goal/purpose/characteristics/etc. EDIT: or maybe he formed his new body in the image of his old body... he could not appear in any other appearace, as I recall. But that still doesn't explain the finger. |
If he had formed his new body in the same image as his old body, or even had his old body been salvaged from the battlefield, could the fact that the Ring being cut from *that particular* finger have contributed to his fingerless-ness? Seems like a theory you could speculate about, since the sudden absence of a greater part of his power that was in the Ring could have easily affected the re-incarnation of his newer form. But then again I'm just speculating.
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Or, Tolkien thought the mention of the missing finger was a great bit of symbolism and merely wrote it in because it further emphasized Sauron's loss of the Ring. Sometimes the simplest explanations are the most reasonable. ;)
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Because when Sauron took back the Nine Rings he had the perfect amount of fingers for it.
:D |
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Morth, I think you hit the nail on the head. Applause! :D |
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1. To bury him, perhaps so his tomb could be a rallying point for further battles (granted this implies the existance in the ranks of men or orcs who hold a certain veneration for thier leader, above and beyond the fear 2. Given that we know that orcs (and possibly some of the other members of the forces) are cannibalistic, maybe they wanted to do an act of sympathetic cannibalism. It's not all that uncommon in our worlds history, your enemy was strong you eat him, his strength becomes yours. And if any knew Sauron enough to know he was more or less a god (or god like being) to a cannibalistic tribe that might have been a further inducement. |
On a (slightly) more serious note I'm with Morthoron on this as well.
If it needed to be explained internally then maybe (!) something like: the loss of the One somehow scarred the fea, so much so that the fea rebuilding its hroa could not overcome this 'spiritual scar' and thus Sauron was forced to reflect this in the body. Or something like that but better :D But again I think it was just too 'poetic' or 'right' (for JRRT) on an external level -- just like I think Tolkien knew that Sauron must take the Ring to Numenor (he couldn't leave it behind), and so Sauron's fea 'must' have somehow carried the physical One back to Middle-earth, his spirit being so tied to the One. Or something. |
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But Alfirin, do you have evidence for any of this? I mean, a footnote or a letter or anything? Because honestly, all I'm seeing here is a long, long chain of "and ifs".
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Finger bowls
I think it was prophetic based on a numerology scheme surrounding the nine major attributes of the Ring~
1. Sauron had nine fingers 2. Frodo had nine fingers 3. Bilbo gained 9 extra inches on his beltline 3. Gollum had nine teeth 4. Isildur had nine lives (but used them all by the time he crossed the Anduin) 5. Samwise Gamgee was elected to public office nine times 6. Tom Bombadil had nine sets of yellow boots 7. The Nazgul had nine ex-wives 8. Smeagol had nine personalities (two dominant so he gets a twice mention) 9. And last, Gimli, who touched it with his axe, had nine inch feet I'm just sayin |
10. For 9 or ninety-nine days we could think of all kinds of ridiculous 9-related things and still not finish. :p
PS: Gollum had an upsidedown 9 teeth. :D |
Well, I Never!
I... I... ::disconcerted smiley::
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Nine Nines for the Tolkien fans, on their forum black...
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Speaking of missing hroa, it's a good thing Sauron didn't keep the Ring elsewhere on his body. Otherwise, instead of nine, he would have none! :eek:
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Another option...
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It's not clear to me just how Gandalf resurrected, whether he got a new body or the old one was rebooted. However, afterwards he was back on top of the mountain. Ring and sword apparently survived the encounter. |
I Spy...
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As for Gandalf, there is much speculation, and alot to be read in other threads about this, but my leaning is to the argument that Eru Iluvatar sanctioned Gandalf's second incarnation and restored whatever the now White Wizard needed of his tool iventory. |
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Possily becuse Gandalf didn't need that clothing. ;) It wouldn't assist him in saving ME. And he wouldn't die without it either.
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A View from the Top?
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At least I still have my hat...
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Bravo, lol! |
Scary thought
Galadriel has seen Gandalf UNCLOAKED!!! :eek: :D
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Holy hot bizkits!
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To get back to the original thrust of this thread (and resurrect it), wasn't Sauron still disembodied at the time of the War of the Ring? I always thought that without the Ring, he didn't have enough power to remake a physical body.
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However, it took him a pretty long time to get his strength back, so that delay was probably due to his lacking physical possession of the One. |
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Some fairly recent discussion on that here: http://forum.barrowdowns.com/showthr...599#post655599 |
As for Sauron taking longer to rebuild his body in the Third Age...
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