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#1 | |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Facing the world's troubles with Christ's hope!
Posts: 1,635
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![]() ![]() Just like the French in 1944 when the Allies were marching on Paris. The 2nd French Armoured Division volunteered to take the primary role in the liberation against Paris, Why? Because the De Gaul believed that the french should have a role in taking back their country; the same thing can be applied to the Hobbits. How could they, as a nation under the rule of King Aragorn, be seen as a respectable province if they were dependent on a wizard for everything? Must Gandalf be blamed for everything that went wrong in the war?
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I heard the bells on Christmas Day. Their old, familiar carols play. And wild and sweet the words repeatof peace on earth, good-will to men! ~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
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#2 |
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Curmudgeonly Wordwraith
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Ensconced in curmudgeonly pursuits
Posts: 2,515
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I always make sense, Groin. I believe in this instance you are merely having a lucid interlude.
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And your little sister's immaculate virginity wings away on the bony shoulders of a young horse named George who stole surreptitiously into her geography revision. |
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#3 |
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Guard of the Citadel
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Oxon
Posts: 2,205
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There you are wrong, since I would not be considering diplomacy with Sauron, but with those supporting him, the Men of Khand and Harad and further into the east.
I believe they could have been reasoned with and brought on the good side. Now you may argue that this was attempted and failed - with the Ithryn Luin setting off to the east and possibly having founded magic cults around themselves and with Gandalf having also went a bit further South (not that far) where he gained the name Incanus. But I do not believe that all was done that could have been done. Gondor's insecurity of how to handle the southern neighbours and their seeming unwilligness to initiate any true diplomatic talks is what brought the Easterlings and the Southrons closer to Sauron. First of all, we know they could be reasoned with, we see that after the war when peace is made with the people of the south and the east. But unfortunately, we hear of no such attempts by kings like Romendacil or Hyarmendacil, they just conquer, but don't seem to try and win over the population. I believe that had these people received better treatment, had Gondor invested more in helping these people they conquered, improving their lives for the better, then they would have been a lot more resistant to supporting Sauron. Now, I will give you this, by the time of the War of the Ring it was probably already too late, this I accept, however it would not have been too late before earlier. So much for the War of the Ring. You make a valid point that Sauron or Saruman lacked the conscience needed for such an action to work, I admit my lack of thinking deeper here, I did indeed miss that part. And lastly, the part about my signature. It gets a bit personal there, but I won't complain, so the idea behind it is I am proudly showing that date, but not necessarily for the reason you think of, so don't be so quick to jump to conclusions. 1815 was the year when the Urburschenschaft was founded in Jena, a student organization which unlike previous ones had also political goals. Indeed they did pretty much dispise the French for their part in the war and were no big fans of Napoleon, as they had fought against him in the war as volunteers (at least many of them). But the special thing about them was that they also fought against the state order at that time, the old rooted outdated conservative structures which wanted to suppress the intelligent people in the state and get everything under the control of the nobility again with Metternich as the one leading the whole process. So they founded their organization with the motto "Honour, Freedom, Fatherland", but they were very, very liberal for that time. They were patriotic, but in a good way, not the jingoistic kind of patriotism they unfortunately later developed after 1870. Now, the point is, it's a motto standing as a symbol for liberal ideology, for freedom. I see no contradiction between produly displaying it and in the same time looking for better (at least in my opinion) means to reach this freedom for all people. I see no problem in being proud of people that died to achieve something good in the past and trying to find new ways, again perhaps better ones to achieve something good in the present. After all, should we not learn from history? Yes, you make a good point with Chamberlain, I agree upon that, but again looking further back in history, had England taken a more German-friendly position in the 20s and had made more pressure for an ease on reparation payments and had supported Germany's economy more, the whole Hitler episode would never had happened. Actually, England did that partially, and it almost worked. It was mostly just the Wall Stree Crash that nailed it for the Nazis. With the economy a bit stronger it all may have well worked out in the end. So just saying "Oh, Neville was too nice and this caused all the war" is in my opinion wrong and way too one-sided. Looking back into history more in depth, one realises that had the British (and especially the French) been a bit nicer to Germany all could have probably been avoided. Ok, sorry for the big off-topic part but I felt it was necessary to set things straigh from my point of view. So, concluding with the Scouring of the Shire, I agree that you make a good, valid point there - Saruman had no conscience, but I doubt the ruffians had none. So it would have been very difficult indeed to manage anything without violence, but not impossible. Ruffians were not Orcs or trolls, they were men, bad men, but in the end still men and not some mental people. So the idea is that maybe one could have done things like Frodo did. If you look at the Battle of Bywater he seems to have had a position more like mine, whilst Sam would have been on your side. He refused to take part and to kill sentient beings for the common good and spent his time making sure no ruffian who gave up were killed by Hobbits. Moving further, did the Scouring make Hobbits better? And mark the question, it's not did it make it better for the Hobbits, but made them better. I believe not. It took away their inocence, best example is the killing of Wormtongue. The exhausted and tormented Wormtongue kills his evil master and gets three arrows in his body in return from Hobbit archers before Frodo could intervene and stop them from killing him. Great way to end a war. So yes, perhaps violence was the only way to make things better for the Hobbits, but it did exactly the opposite with their characters. Btw, sorry for respoding after so much time, I was afk this whole time and only got the chance to type all this now.
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“The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike.”
Delos B. McKown |
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#4 | |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: The Deepest Forges of Ered Luin
Posts: 733
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Sauron is immortal. And bent on conquering Middle Earth. And evil (Let's keep it at that. I'm not into moral relativism and I'm utterly unconcerned with what things look like from the points of view of Sauron or the various orc races). You can't blockade or defend against him forever, otherwise he finds a way around you. Eventually you have to take the offensive against him.
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Even as fog continues to lie in the valleys, so does ancient sin cling to the low places, the depression in the world consciousness. |
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#5 | ||||||
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Curmudgeonly Wordwraith
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Ensconced in curmudgeonly pursuits
Posts: 2,515
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Chamberlain underestimated or ignored the evil intent of Hitler time and time again. Czechoslovakia had a superb army and a great munitions supplier, Skoda, and were more than capable of battling the Nazis, but Chamberlain handed the country to Hitler without a fight, which also left Poland exposed in the process. Chamberlain's method of appeasement is the worst possible example of diplomacy in the modern era. Quote:
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And your little sister's immaculate virginity wings away on the bony shoulders of a young horse named George who stole surreptitiously into her geography revision. |
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#6 | |
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Guard of the Citadel
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Oxon
Posts: 2,205
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@ several Downers
Andsigil,
Ok, now to the alliances in M-e. I very much disagree. Ever heard of the Ride of Eorl and the Oath of Eorl and Cirion? Any son of Cirion marrying a daughter of Eorl? I doubt it. This was the greatest alliance in western M-e in the Third Age, founded on friendship and support of the other in need and was always respected by both sides. Always. So why shoulöd we be so sure that an alliance with Khand and Harad would not have been just as powerful, even against the passing of the centuries and the threat of Sauron? Are you suggesting that the Men of the South and East were weaker or greedier or more evil only because of one example in the First Age of them betraying the Elves? Yes, some of them fought on to the last man in the Battle of the Morannon and some continued to remain hostile after Sauron's fall. Now, going very much off-topic, I recall several discusions on racism and Tolkien's feeling of a perhaps certain inferiority of these men, as a weaker or less nobler race. He himself came from South Africa, so he knew what racial discrimination was, and often we see that these dark skinned men are depicted as evil, but I doubt it was Tolkien's target to discriminate anyone and I doubt that believed them to be weaker. To compare this with recent events you probably heard of, some Haradrim were perhaps a bit Hamas-like, but this does not mean that long lasting peace with them was impossible. And same goes for Khand. I personally feel that by working together all the Men could defeat Sauron. And yes, as said in the previous long post I acknowledge that eventually violence would be necessary since neither Sauron nor his minions, Orcs and Trolls (althought debateble), had a true conscience. So it would have in the end came to a fight, but with the other Men on the side of good and avoiding a war to the extent of the War of the Ring. Morthoron, Firstly, look to the above example of Rohan and Gondor to see a very modern alliance. And it had precedents. And another thing - I have just found an example speaking against your idea of medieval alliances in Middle-earth. We have the year 1250 of the Third Age. Gondor is pretty strong, but so is the Kingdom of Rhovanion, the predecessors of the Eotheod. What would make sense? That a Gondorian prince marries a Rhovanion princess. And it happens, but not how you say. Valacar, son of Romendacil II is sent as an ambassador to Rhovanion were he falls in love with Vidugavia's daughter Vidumavi. Firstly, mark the word love, something you almost never found in medieval marriages, and when Tolkien says love he means it. Secondly, Romendacil II was at first against the marriage. By your logic he should have been really glad, but he was actually concerned with what effects the marriage may have, realising that many people of Gondor may not like her as of non-Numenorean descent. But as he did not want to offent the Northmen he agreed in the end. So as we see, in M-e exactly the opposite was true - marriages did happen between kingdoms, but because of love not because anyone wanted to strengthen relationships. If alliances happened, then based on honour and truth, as with Rohan and Gondor. As for the Easterlings, I already stated my opinion of an alliance with them above. Furthermore, I am not sure if you do understand me. I am not saying I am not proud of the Hobbits ready to give their lives for this cause, of course their courage and bravery is something to be proud of, but not necessary worth emulating. Why not consider some better way of getting out of that sticky situation? Ok, now I really am getting started. German bellicosity starting WWI? You sound just like Clemenceau, so one-sided and without any deeper thinking. Now, I'll give you this - a lot of historians believed Germany to be the sole country with guilt for WWI, but things changed and most historians agree that it was a complex mixture of motives on ALL sides that led to the war starting so easily. Now, I first wanted to sum all my ideas on my own, but in my research I found that the Wikipedia articles already sums it up fairly well. I know it's lazy of me to just copy paste, but still I wish you a pleasant read. I have btw highlightened some of the parts I feel show clearly how much guilt other states had. Quote:
So don't be so hasty to say that it was clear that the French and the British had all the right to punish the Germans as they did. It's this kind of immoral and somewhat even evil and aggresive policies that make our world a worse place to live in for all of us. Instead of trying to support Germany, let's just punish them to the extent that they will starve and die and never again attack us. Or will maybe those conditions make them become even more extremist? (nobody thought about that question) On to Neville Chamberlain. I am well aware that his decision was wrongly made at that point in time, indeed had Great Britain acted when the Sudeten Crisis started they would have prevented Germany from taking over Czechoslovakia. Same goes for France when Germany militarized the Ruhr in 1936. Why did they not intervene? They approx. 100,000 Germany would have been hopelessly overrun by French and Hitler would have lost a lot of the power he had. Yes, good questions. And maybe violence would have been good there. But why not look deeper into history and consider other events where violence did nothing but to push the Germans closer to Hitler - say the French invasion of the Ruhr in 1923? And as said before, a peaceful, friendly approach would have surely prevented a Nazi take-over had it not been for the Wall Street Crash. The Young Plan and the Dawes Plan both helping Germany economically cope with reparations payments, the Locarno Treaty in 1925 and Germany's adderation to the League of Nations in 1926 all showed that working together was possible and desirable. But all these events were unfortunately only possible with the background of economic growth in the 1920s. With the Wall Street Crash everything changed, all states turned to isolationism instead of communication with other states, and it is here that I see the bigger mistake. Not Chamberlain's failure to deal with Hitler should be brought to all people's attention, the poor man is but a scapegoat. It is the failure of all the allied powers - France, Britain, USA - to continue to support weak Germany and to communicate with its leaders that was really the big mistake. Suddently all only cared about inner policy and dealing with rising economic problems, a big mistake if you ask me. Had the states continued to work together for their common good, then all would have been averted, the rise in Nazi popularity, Hitler's rise to power, WWII. To be so superficial and not take that into account, but just complain about Chamberlain not kicking Hitler's *** is easy, he's the one you have to blame. But let's be honest and admit that he was, like Germany at the start of WWI, not the only one making a mistake. So, as with the War of the Ring, same goes for WWII, perhaps violence was in order at that time, but looking back over the events prior to that we realise in both cases that treating your neighbours better and putting more effort into international relations is for the best. I personally feel that the Hobbits would have had a better chance of surviving in the Fourth Age by staying peaceful and keeping to their ways. Trying to emulate the behavior of men, such as Gondorians would only bring them destruction. They would too be subject to greed, power hungry leaders would arise from their ranks and maybe try to conquer Bree for example, leading to more Hobbit deaths. Instead, why not let them be as they always had been, separated from the rest of the world, as Aragorn btw intended as it was forbidded for outsiders to enter the Shire I believe, and let them keep their special position within M-e. And if something bad happened, if outsiders did threaten them once the House of Telcontar was done ruling? Well, then they had to simply disappear, move on, hide. Somehow, I do not feel that fighting back would have been a better option for them in that case. I rather see them surviving by fleeing than fighting in the Fourth Age. And another idea, as you will see below, I doubt Hobbits could be changed and made to grow up, it was not their nature to be like Men. Pitchwife, That is a great thought, I must admit. Hobbits had already fought off invaders and somehow the Scouring of the Shire may not have had that bad of an effect in the end after all as I think about it. Think about it, Hobbits fought of Orcs and fought against the forces of Angmar, but within a short time span they all but forgot about this and returned to their peaceful, natural way of life. So why should we not believe that the same happened after the Scouring of the Shire? Maybe in a few centuries of peaceful rule by the Telcontar they again returned to a peaceful way of life, forgetting the need to defend themselves against outsiders. This would in my opinion most surely happen. So, firstly, did the Scouring then even make sense? If the Hobbits would anyway perhaps return to a peaceful way of life did it make sense for Gandalf to first let them fight off the invaders? The deaths of the 19 Hobbits would then perhaps be worthless. The battle would be forgotten, same goes for the Roll with the names of all those who participated. So why let them fight the battle in the first place? A very intriguing question indeed, I look forward to replies to it. Bah, another huge post, but I'll sum it up like this - at least the part that is of interest to the topic at hand - Hobbits were just that way, innocent, natural, unspoiled. And neither Orcs nor forces of Angmar seem to have taken that away from them. So why would Saruman and ruffians manage it? Maybe they were meant to stay that way, meant to perhaps unfortunately disappear in the Fourth Age. So if this was the case, why the battle? 19 lives for nothing? I have to take a break now, my fingers hurt a bit already.
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“The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike.”
Delos B. McKown Last edited by The Might; 12-29-2008 at 12:48 PM. |
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#7 |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: The Deepest Forges of Ered Luin
Posts: 733
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TM,
As for Tolkien's depiction of the alliance between Rohan and Gondor lasting, they were like people in a way which the people of Khand and Harad were not like them. Besides, it was a plot device. As I said before, history is on my side in this. Even the countries of Europe can't go more than half a century without changing sides. On top of that, Sauron is immortal and has, literally, all the time on the (Middle) Earth to subvert allies.
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Even as fog continues to lie in the valleys, so does ancient sin cling to the low places, the depression in the world consciousness. |
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#8 | |
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Guard of the Citadel
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Oxon
Posts: 2,205
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EDIT: as I said, violence would be the last means eventually, I said that above. If Sauron's minions had no conscience and could not be reasoned with, which is debatable, nothing else could be done about it. And this I agree with, it was a point made by Morthoron I believe that only an enemy with conscience can be persuaded without fighting, a valid point which I accept. So Sauron would also in my opinion NOT have all the time in M-e.
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“The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike.”
Delos B. McKown Last edited by Legolas; 12-29-2008 at 01:05 PM. |
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A Voice That Gainsayeth
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: In that far land beyond the Sea
Posts: 7,431
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All right, I really like this thread and I pity that I don't have that much time to give to it, but for now I will add just a few rather sideway notes
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And perhaps the "old hobbits" would not have survived in the Fourth Age...
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"Should the story say 'he ate bread,' the dramatic producer can only show 'a piece of bread' according to his taste or fancy, but the hearer of the story will think of bread in general and picture it in some form of his own." -On Fairy-Stories |
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#10 |
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Wight of the Old Forest
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Unattended on the railway station, in the litter at the dancehall
Posts: 3,329
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Legate, I wonder whether you've read "Making History" by Stephen Fry. If not, you might enjoy it - it supports your argument about Castamir beautifully. It's about somebody going back in time to kill Hitler before he gained power (or even prevent him being born - I'm not sure about the details), but when he returns to the present he finds that one of Hitler's WWI buddies has taken the Fuehrer's place and made everything much worse - IIRC by actually winning WWII...
Back to Middle-earth. I'm not so sure about the Hobbits always having been a peaceful people. Didn't they send archers to help King Arvedui against Angmar? Didn't Bandobras Took invent golf by beheading an Orc leader in battle? They had proven their ability to defend themselves fighting before the Scouring, although they were somewhat out of practice and needed some stirring to remember. If taking care of Saruman and his ruffians was anybody's responsibility apart from the Hobbits themselves, I'd say it was King Elessar's rather than Gandalf's - the Shire being a province of his Reunited Kingdom, etcetera. Isn't it a king's job to keep peace and order in his kingdom? Of course he couldn't be bothered at the time, being busy in Gondor, even if he'd known what was going on in the north, but I see Merry and Pippin sort of acting as his unappointed deputies in organizing the Hobbit resistance. ("You are speaking to a friend of the King" - either M or P to one of the ruffians; and Pip was wearing the livery of the Tower of the Guard, so it was probably him.) |
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#11 | |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Facing the world's troubles with Christ's hope!
Posts: 1,635
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The hobbits as a culture had reached the point of "perfection." They no longer possessed the ability to create new and better things, or to do the great things of their ancestors, the only thing that they could do was talk about the great things that their forefathers did and to mimic the deeds as best they could. This attitude needed to change eventually, and as almost always it does, it took drastic circumstances for them to wake up.
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I heard the bells on Christmas Day. Their old, familiar carols play. And wild and sweet the words repeatof peace on earth, good-will to men! ~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Last edited by Groin Redbeard; 12-29-2008 at 11:17 AM. |
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#12 |
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Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 6,003
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Popping in here with a few observations . . . . My take is that Tolkien was not writing an allegory of his century (see his comments in the Foreward to the Second Edition of LotR) so I fail to see how arguments about who started what war in that century have any bearing on LotR. Much of this thread sounds like an opportunity to argue about war in the Twentieth Century. The applicability to LotR is tenuous, which after all owes more to ancient battle epics and sagas than to Carl Von Clausewitz's On War. Lost in all of this (at least for this boring old Tolkien reader) is the question of whether it is appropriate to blame Gandalf for the events of the Scouring of the Shire.
![]() I would, however, like to make a humble comment on the use of the digital symbol @, to address the arguments of fellow Downers. My reservations about this might be due to English being my native language, and so perhaps any sensitivies about using @ to address posters would not belong to those who are not as familiar with English as I am. However, using @ to address a person reminds me very strongly of the English phrase, "have at" someone or something. In the Wiktionary (which admittedly is not the only dictionary), the archaic phrase is said to mean "to attack or engage in combat with." At dictionary.com, the definition is given as, "to go at vigorously; attack". While such an association might be well suited to the topic of warfare, I find it a tad harsh for our dour, staid, polite habits on the Downs. While it doesn't quite merit the description of a flame, it leans a bit too much towards internet attacks, particularly in a thread where feelings about responsibility for recent wars obviously touch personal nerves and where comments are verging on the personal. Could we please forgo using @ to address comments to particular posters and rely on that very handy device called "quote" which is readily available? ![]() Really, I think the question that Gandalf was responsible for the deaths of hobits is too close to post modern deconstructions of meanings to be, well, meaningful. LotR begins with a detailed and affectionate look at hobbit culture--which is not devoid of violence--remember the Bonfire Glade and the battle with the trees of the Old Forest--and ends with a depiction of the consequences of the War of the Ring on that culture. It's a full circle and to suggest that Gandalf could have avoided it is, I think, to miss both the narrative closure and the consequence of war, even distant war. It is, after all, as Tolkien said he wanted, a ripping good yarn, fantasy, and not history. Now, boys, I'll let you back to your war games.
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bêthberry; 12-29-2008 at 12:15 PM. Reason: added dictionary.com definition. If I get really enthused, I might come back with the OED's. ;) |
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#13 |
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Guard of the Citadel
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Oxon
Posts: 2,205
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Firstly, about the historical references, you will see above that I was not the one who started them, I merely pointed out several historical mistakes or false interpretations in my opinion. It thus came about in the discussion that historical references were used as comparisons for events in Arda.
Secondly, refering to the "@" symbol, I was under no circumstances aware of its aggressive connotation. I have seen it used and used it myself on another forum and none of use ever did it in an aggressive context, but only to save some time for typing so to speak. I usually avoid that here on the Downs, since we don't use short forms of words, etc., but it seems to have stuck. Now that I know that some may feel offended by its use I will refrain from using it here any longer. Thank you for your information in that respect, Bêthberry! I will edit my post above and remove the @s. That is an interesting take on the question of guilt, and seeing it that way the question does lose its importance. Then again, seen that way many of the questions raised by his work make little sense, since it would be necessary for the author to depict things in a certain way. And Andsigil, I will repeat that said above. I never said he would be "kept at bay for ever", I merely said that an alliance with the Easterlings and Southrons would have very much weakened Sauron and would have brought the free people of M-e in a much stronger position. And yes, culture was a barrier, indeed. There were many differences between them, but simply looking back at Elves and Men of the First Age there were a lot more differences, even different races. And that worked out... so why wouldn't this work out? And yes, you are correct about the debate part. Here in Germany most people do go for the accusation of being a Nazi when trying to end any debate, but that was not my intention.
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“The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike.”
Delos B. McKown |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: The Deepest Forges of Ered Luin
Posts: 733
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Even as fog continues to lie in the valleys, so does ancient sin cling to the low places, the depression in the world consciousness. |
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Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Minas Morgul
Posts: 431
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About alliancs. Indeed the only lasting and successful alliance was that between the Gondorians and the Rohirrim. And Andsigil is right :it worked so well because the people in question were alike, were from the same Three Houses of the Edain. Strange no one has posted this quote yet, where Faramir speaks about the Men of Rohan:
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And even a marriage of Valacar to Vidumavi was frowned upon by the proud Gondorians as a misalliance with one of "lesser" blood. Eventually it led to Kin-strife. Tolkien was not racist himself, but I am afraid the Numenoreans, both in Gondor and Arnor, were. Why did the Hillmen of Rhudaur so universally turn against their Dunedain rulers and supported Angmar? Why did Dunlendings follow Saruman? I suspect Dunedain and Rohirrim racism was a huge factor. For a good alliance there should be mutual profit; mutual, not one-sided. The Men of the Eoteod needed land. Gondor gave them the land, because Gondor had land to spare. Their ancestors had grabbed a huge portion of the West of Middle Earth, but were too sophisticated to keep their own numbers growing. In return for the land grant, the Gondorians obtained all those lances and swords eager to come to their aid at the first call. And to be sure of the Eorling' loyalty Cirion made them swear a quite terrible oath, in the keeping of Eru and the Valar. That alliance was the smartest political decision the rulers of Gondor had ever made - and it worked. But could they do the same with say, Harad? The Haradrim were even more numerous then the Eotheod, reproducing fast, and always needed more land. Would Gondor grant them these lands in return for the alliance? And to Variags? And to Easterlings? There was not enough land in Gondor to satisfy everybody. And what was on the borders, the "wild" men managed to take without permission. Also would the "wild" men, who probably had never heard of the Valar, keep their Oath as faithfully as the Rohirrim did? And then there was Sauron, who was not that bad a ruler after all, if we look at things objectively. And he had already promised the lands of Gondor to the very same peoples - and sorry, was much more likely to grant them to his followers than the Gondorians themselves. Beat that… Last edited by Gordis; 12-29-2008 at 02:41 PM. |
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Wight of the Old Forest
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Unattended on the railway station, in the litter at the dancehall
Posts: 3,329
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Tolkien's own view is quite another matter. I don't get the feeling that he meant to paint Gondor as an ideal kingdom, nor that he wholeheartedly endorsed the way they dealt with the Southrons and Easterlings. The Dunedain were the good guys in so far as they were the only viable opposition to Sauron, but in every other respect they were as fallible as any other humans. Back to Gandalf and the Hobbits. TM, I agree that once the Northern Kingdom was firmly reestablished, there would be no more need for the Hobbits to exercise their capacity for self-defense, so yes, they'd probably revert to their peaceful way of life. So I see the Scouring more as an afterlude (if that word actually exists) to the War of the Rings than a prelude to the Hobbits taking an active role in the power politics of the Fourth Age. I'm sure Frodo would have agreed with you wishing for a solution that didn't cost 19 hobbit lives (not to mention the killed ruffians). Would he also have blamed Gandalf for not helping ? I don't think so. Gandalf's job, as I see it, was aiding mortal men (including hobbits) in their fight against the last incarnation of evil on a mythological scale. The Scouring, on the other hand, was just a fight against mere human evil (Saruman being reduced to little more than a mortal villain without his Maiarin powers), so Gandalf was forbidden to meddle by something like the Maiarin equivalent of the Federation Prime Directive .So, did the Scouring make the Hobbits better? Probably not. Was it deplorable, in so far as it cost lives? Sure. Was it necessary? I'm afraid it was. No clean solution to anything in this Age of Men... |
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