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- Newsgroups: alt.fan.tolkien
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!usc!rpi!woodam
- From: woodam@aix.rpi.edu (Matthew G. Woodard)
- Subject: Boromir & Bombadil
- Message-ID: <qc41wwd@rpi.edu>
- Keywords: Silmarillion?
- Nntp-Posting-Host: aix.rpi.edu
- Organization: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY
- References: <1992Nov23.173823.25066@dragon.acadiau.ca> <1992Nov23.193858.18794@lgc.com>
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 23:56:15 GMT
- Lines: 33
-
- Alright, here's my position:
-
- Boromir is not evil, simply misguided. As a man of war, they only way he
- could truly see the ring was as a weapon one could use to kill one's ememy.
- After all, if he were in a fight without a sword, and his enemy dropped his
- weapon, wouldn't you expect Boromir to try and get to it before his enemy did,
- and if succesful use it against said enemy? Throughout the Fellowship's
- journey Boromir acted like a superstitious fool. He even went so far as
- to say that Lorien was an evil place! In all, I believe he was simply
- ignorant. The only way he could see destroying his enemies was through
- sheer strength, and the ring was, after all, one of the greatest sources of
- strength in Middle Earth.
- In the end, though, he should be forgiven. The ring has an effect on any
- who have even the slightest desire to wield it, no matter what their
- purpose. His actions were not entirely self-induced.
-
- Bombadil is another enigma. I am under the belief that he was placed in the
- books as an interesting diversion. I believe that one of the greatest things
- about Tolkien's work is that he doesn't try to explain the entire world in
- one novel. Many details are left to later works or the readers imagination,
- increasing the reader's ability to visualize and identify with the people he
- meets between the covers of the book. (A good example of this is the constant
- allusions to ancient M.E. history in songs, stories, etc.)
-
- If the people at I.C.E.(tm) (Iron Crown Enterprises) can be trusted when it
- comes to accurately describing the people of Middle Earth, Bombadil was a
- Maiar, just as was Gandalf, Radgast, Saruman, etc. This info is found in
- I.C.E.'s book: Lords of Middle-Earth Vol. I, The Immortals
- This book is a compendium to I.C.E.'s FRP game, M.E.R.P.
-
- Matt
- ( woodam@aix.rpi.edu )
-
-