Ethel Merman?
Where would all of Gandalf’s knowledge of Dragons consuming the Dwarven rings had come from? When he was talking to Frodo it seemed like he was the first person to have read Isiildur’s journals in 3000 years. And he kinda knew that Thrain had one of the the last extant rings yet didn’t know what happened to it.
Ancalagon The Black was kind of defeated by Earendil yet he had Manwe and a host of Eagles at his back. Morgoth and the dragons (excepting at least one and maybe a Balrog or two) hadn’t a chance in the world against this host by this point.
I’m being a little unfair between the Gandalf of The Hobbit (would have been nice to send some word ahead to Thranduil) and LotR yet really, in the latter (at least the appendix) we knew he and the Istari had been in Middle Earth for at least 2000 years. Gandalf had been to Minas Tirith enough (at least in Denethor’s time) to have a library card to their scrolls.
What useful things had any if the Istari (just going with the three known ones - the possibly evil blue wizards are interesting too) done?
I’ll just assume that everyone in Middle Earth had some idea - be it actual lore or fairy tale - about that bright morning/evening star/ship. Most wouldn’t have a clue about Earendil and that Cirdan built Vingilot. Bilbo hadn’t even finished writing about his own story when he meets Frodo in Rivendell.
So Gandalf huffs and puffs to The Shire to speak Frodo for a “check out what I just read” and a lot of name-dropping about dragons consuming Rings of Power. And advise him to clear out of Bag-end, move to another part of The Shire yet really, expediently head East to - well I’ll meet you in Bree. Nothing about Nazgul or Farmer Maggot (he & his dogs scare one away) or Tom Bombadil (who knows Maggot well).
What if was just ASSUMED dragons destroyed the Dwarven rings? When the 4th Age LOTR RPG was running I thought an interesting quest was to find a Dwarven ring. Not sure what powers, if any, it would have, but would still be of interest.
This is all in my head, and not supported by any official text.
Brian
Suaruman likely told him the fate of the various rings, since that was his specialty.
I don’t recall anything about Saruman trying to find The One Ring or read anything Isildur wrote about it. Isildur was ambushed near the Gladden Fields and that’s right about where it was found 2500 years later by the unfortunate Deagol.
Had it been washed downriver or into the Sea - well there are certainly ways to look for shiny gold rings in rivers. And of course it’s Gandalf who says something like “The Ring wanted to be found” by another keeper. Isildur apparently wasn’t corrupted enough (at least to join the Dark Side) so the Ring slipped offf and let him get shot by Orcs. The Ring certainly didn’t luck out for 2500 years or with Deagol or Smeagol.
If The Ring had any will or choice of its own, it again didn’t luck out with Bilbo or Frodo who were incorruptible. Beorn, Thranduil, perhaps Smaug if dragons know how to wield Rings of Power rather than smoke them and/or their bearers - they all would have been good candidates for the Ring to go to.
ETA: left out the Balrog and of course the obvious Aragorn. I really think you’d need a big standing army to take on Mordor and Sauron in any regard.
Boromir would have been a good choice but he’d have been killed before he could really use it. And Saruman sent out a truly pathetic party to find hobbits and bring them back to Orthanc. Faramir would have been an excellent candidate as at least Minas Tirith still had something of an army and a fighting chance against Mordor if Faramir ruled The Nine as well.
Saruman purchased Orthanc on the cheap as it had been abandoned for centuries and he knew it came with a Palantir. Yet if his pathetic little party brought The One back (despite many Orcs of Mordor and the Rohirrim) Sauron would have crushed MT, Rohan and Isengard inside a year and Saruman would have relinquished the One anyways.
I just assumed the Dwarves had kept track of who had the Rings and what happened to them. “Say, was Brumli Bushbeard in that party that went after the dragon?” “Yep, got et, and he had a Ring.”
Their virtue delayed it, but no one was incorruptible against the Ring’s power, correct?
Frodo failed at the last in Mount Doom.
That was Gandalf’s point: that the Ring was meant to be found by Bilbo, and that would not have been the Ring’s choice
“Rumor grew of a shadow in the East, whispers of a nameless fear, and the Ring of Power perceived its time had come. It abandoned Gollum, but then something happened that the Ring did not intend. It was picked up by the most unlikely creature imaginable: a hobbit, Bilbo Baggins, of the Shire.”
- Galadrial, opening of Fellowship of the RIngs,
Tom Bombadil?
This quote ignores the fact that Gollum was a hobbit, too.
And this- “There are many magic rings in this world, and none of them should be used lightly.”
There were & are true Artifacts, and they all have a heavy price.
Or do they? JRRT wasnt clear on this. Gollum said Sauron had rings on all nine fingers. And certainly once the Ringwraiths were made, that was it.
Yes. And Frodo saw a crown on the Ringwraiths head, but no rings.
He stated it implicitly.
Proto-hobbit.
Sauron: First rule in Evil Overlording: Why build one one when you can have two ones at twice the price? Only, this one can be kept secret.
I know it’s not canon, but in the computer game Shadow of War, one of the Nazgûl is revealed to be
Isildur. Kind of poetic. I can see Sauron being petty enough to do it.
Ooh! I forgot about him.
No, I don’t think it does. The point Gandalf’s making is not that it was somehow unprecedented for a hobbit to find a Great Ring; Gandalf knows Gollum’s ancestry and history perfectly well by this time, IIRC.
The point is that, given that Gollum had secreted this Great Ring in the depths of the Misty Mountains, the most unlikely creature to find it there (on the apparently unique occasion when Gollum had temporarily mislaid it) was this rustic home-loving little member of a distant rustic home-loving little race.
I can’t see Isildur agreeing to that, yeah he made a bonehead mistake under the influence of the Ring and the grief of losing his father, but nazgulhood? nah.
According to the game’s story, he was (mostly) dead when the ring was put on his finger, and it inevitably corrupted him. The idea of Aragorn fighting him, however unknowingly, is fun, given Aragorn’s own doubts about the strength of Man.
It works for the game no doubt, but it irks me because Isildur’s character has been denigrated since the movie came out, to the point that many see him as a bad guy when he was just flawed, far less flawed than Boromir for example.