Quote:
Originally Posted by Inziladun
It obeys Bombadil because, at least in "the bounds that he has set" (to quote Gandalf), he is Master. I think he is allowed such power because he himself has set a limit on his influence. Tom wants to be left alone to pursue his own ends;[...]
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What ends are those though?
It seems to me that his agenda resolves mostly around having a swell day in the forest, dancing, singing and picking up some lilies for his beautiful wife on his way home, when it's time for supper. And this is a fine lifestyle, don't get me wrong, but given his immortal and powerful nature one might call him an underachiever, of sorts.
Joking aside, that's the thing that separates Tom Bombadil from
mythological beings, for example Ents or Wizards. And I like that theme because it subverts human expectations:
Usually those inherently powerful, immortal and supreme beings (especially in a mythological context, e.g. Homer's
Odyssey) of course have nothing better to do than meddling with the matters of the mortals, shaking up their lives in the process. To conceive that there could be a supremely powerful being that
doesn't want to expand it's authority and boss you around is, in a way, a narcissistic injury.