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#1 |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: england
Posts: 64
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When isildur got the ring and him and elrond are standing in Mt. Doom why does Elrond not 'force' isildur to put the ring into the fire.
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#2 |
Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Nan Elmoth
Posts: 35
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Unless i'm terribly forgetting alot of things, this is just a scene made up in the movie. They never actually ventured into mt. doom. After Isildur cut the ring from Sauron's hand he just claimed it as his own.
Elrond and Cirdan who stood by him counselled him to cast it into the fires of orodruin, this way sauron would be destroyed, but Isildur refused and claimed the ring as a weregild for his father and brother. They COULD have forced him, but this would surely lead to total enstrangement between the races and after all they swore an Alliance
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#3 |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Minneapolis MN
Posts: 72
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Forcing him would have broken him. Though he only had it for a short amount of time, they were on the slopes of Mount Doom, where the Ring was at it's most powerful. It no doubt took an immediate hold of his mind. Tolkien said somewhere (I think in one of his letters--I don't have them, I read it here on the 'Downs) that no one in Middle Earth could voluntarily destroy the Ring. Forcing him to destroy it would have wounded his soul beyond healing, as it did Frodo. Taking it from him in order to destroy it would have done the same to him as it did to Gollum--driven him mad. And then you'd be back in the same boat. Neither Elrond nor Cirdan had the strength to cast it into the fire either. It could only be destroyed the way it was--by accident (with a little push from Iluvatar.)
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#4 |
Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Nan Elmoth
Posts: 35
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thanks for enlightening us ainur
But did Elrond knew this? I'm presuming here he did, but then why did he send out frodo with the ring(or atleast allow him), to eventually destroy it, if he knew this couldn't be done by his own achieving. Did he foresee , even vaguely, these actions?
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'...though we part here for ever, and I shall not look on your white walls again,from you and from me a new star shall arise' -Huor |
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#5 |
Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Buffalo
Posts: 38
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I'm not sure that the only way the ring could be destroyed was by accident There might have been some who had the power to destroy it. I don't believe Tolkien actually said that accidentaly was the only way to destroy it. It can be assumed that there would be very few and there might not be any in middle earth who had the strength but I dont know for sure that we can assume that no one had the strength.
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#6 |
A Northern Soul
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Valinor
Posts: 1,847
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Frodo's pain came from having the Ring so long. Isildur was different - being a man and a king, no less, he was more susceptible to the greed (as shown by the wraiths and Boromir). Hobbits showed resilience and displayed the obsession with the Ring only after extended exposure. Had Frodo been able to teleport to Mt. Doom from the Shire, I believe he probably would've had little problem with destroying it.
Backing up the first response here, yes - the Elrond/Isildur scene in the opening of the movie is made up. A council was held on what to do with the Ring, if memory serves correct. <font size=1 color=339966>[ 2:29 PM December 10, 2003: Message edited by: Legolas ]
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#7 | ||
Illusionary Holbytla
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 7,547
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But that was not the original question. I agree that Isildur could not have been "forced" into destroying the ring; it would break his mind. Isildur did not have the strength to cast the ring away, and though there were some who had that strength of mind, there were probably not very many. Just my opinion. |
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#8 | |
Corpus Cacophonous
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: A green and pleasant land
Posts: 8,390
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And if Frodo could not have done it, I do not believe that anyone in Middle-earth could have done. Even the most powerful, namely Gandalf and Galadriel, revealed their fear that they would succumb to the Ring were they to take it. The only conceivable exception is Tom Bombadil, but the reasons why he was not pressed into service were well-aired at the Council of Elrond. Gandalf knew, or at least suspected, that no one could destroy it willingly. His plan was to get it to Mount Doom and trust in Eru. And he was vindicated.
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#9 |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: At my house, on my computer (where else would I be?
Posts: 89
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If I were them, I WOULD force him, and if he did not, I would probably kill him [img]smilies/evil.gif[/img]. It would be better that him forced to destroy it or killed, then someone else destroy it, then, Sauron could not come back, because he would be dead. then again, then their will be no fellowship of the ring, the two towers, or the return of the king [img]smilies/rolleyes.gif[/img]
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