Who could use the Ring to successfully overthrow Sauron?

I thought the Ring always had a desire to find its way back to Sauron. Not overtly but things like slipping off Isildur’s finger at an inopportune moment. Unfortunately for the Ring Smeagol found it and sat on it in a cave for a long time.

Smeagol aside wouldn’t the Ring try to betray whoever has it to find its way back to Sauron?

Inferred from the way G talks about him the way you’d talk about an old friend.

As far as class consciousness goes, Faramir’s father and older brother were consumed by lust for the Ring and its power, which brought about the destruction of Boromir because his solitary pursuit of Frodo separated him from the rest of the Fellowship right when the Uruk-Hai attacked.

Faramir is rather in the vein of folktales where the youngest son succeeds in a challenge after the older sons have failed. Except in folktales they always come in threes.

The power of Maiar was large, but not strongly tied to the World. That is why many of them would clothe themselves in flesh, in order to more easily affect the world. But it created a vulnerability, since their bodies could then be wounded or destroyed. Sauron took it a step further by creating a worldly focus for his power. With all of his power embodied in the ring, he maximized his power (and multiplied it by subverting the other rings), with minimal risk. It was never going to leave his hand, and even if it did, it would make its way back to him. Nothing short of its original forge at his seat of power could destroy it, so it’s not like he was risking much, right?

Right - it’s not like anyone ever walks there.

One doesn’t.

I agree that it’s not clear they’ve ever met, much less “again”. But it seems improbable that they hadn’t met. Gandalf had been visiting the Shire since before Bilbo’s time, and been seen at intervals since, until he passed over the sea, a span of at least 130 years. Bombadil’s domain was on the border of the Shire and on the way to Bree.

They’ve met.

Get a copy of “Letters” and read all of letter 246 (already cited). It contains key information, not just on this immediate topic. Tolkien goes on to say that if Frodo had ultimately kept the Ring, the Nine would’ve flattered and deceived him until Sauron arrived.

Yeah. The whole point of the thread is to identify who would be one of the (as Tolkien said): “very few of equal stature could have hoped to withhold it from” (Sauron).

One person we haven’t discussed explicitly - Isildur. After the defeat of Sauron, could he have used the Ring to dominate Middle-Earth and become its new Dark Lord? He had natural authority as High King of Gondor and Arnor, had the Ring by right of conquest, and presumably had a lot of force of will and natural command ability. Had he not died at the Battle of Gladden Field, the history of Middle Earth might well have been very different.

Dean Winchester.

Dr. Cooper aside, I’m not quite sure how these critters would be able to make use of the ring:

Bazinga rieki - Wikipedia)
Euglossa bazinga - Wikipedia

Hmmm. Good point, and I agree. As a son of Elendil he was certainly a Man to be reckoned with. With Sauron rendered virtually impotent in the early years after his defeat, there’s a lot that Isildur, more aggressively using the Ring, could have done… but it would probably only have ended up with him being another Gollum, albeit with a glorious crown.

dp