Quote:
Originally Posted by Andsigil
I see Boromir's joining as fate, just as Judas Iscariot was allowed to join the Apostles (not that I want to equate Boromir with Judas, mind you- it's just a salient example to me). Boromir's purpose was to set certain things in motion.
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I'm most prone to believe this, beyond all personal and strategic reasoning inside the fellowship and outside as well.
If Boromir had not been present, a domino effect would have occurred altering the fate of Middle Earth as we know it:
- The Fellowship would have eventually started to be tempted by the ring
- Frodo would not have encountered Gollum
- Fellowship would eventually fall apart
- The lust for the ring may drive Fellowship to kill Frodo
- Even if they don't, Frodo not meeting Gollum means that the ring would not be dropped into the Crack of Doom
Thus completely changing the story. Boromir's mere presence played a monumental part in this story. As Gandalf said when referring to Gollum that Gollum should not be killed because he may have some part to play yet, whether for good or evil, I believe the same happened with Boromir. I also believe there exists a distinct possibility that Elrond may have come to the same conclusion about Boromir that Gandalf had about Gollum.