In message <
news:sImdnRO4H5FLlBvS...@insightbb.com>
"Chris Hoelscher" <
chrisho...@insightbb.com> spoke these staves:
>
> another ponderable (i am probably missing something obvious)
>
> Why did Sauron send the (8) ringwraiths to Mount Doom as opposed
> to he going himself?
He was bound to his body (i.e. he was not able to discard the body on
his own), and he had no means of transport that would have allowed
him to reach the mountain as quickly as the Ringwraiths (even though
the distance from the Black Gate to the mountain was considerably
longer than the distance from the Black Tower).
I believe that Tolkien wrote somewhere (I can't remember just where)
that the Ainur, when not clad in a body, could move instantaneously
(or just about instantaneously) between any two points in Arda, but
when they wore a body, they were subjected to the same limiations and
the Incarnates. At the same time, he writes, in Ņsanwe-kenta, about
the effect on the Ainur of becoming bound to their body, and clearly
states that Sauron did become bound to his body, so that he was
unable to discard, or leave, the body without the body being actually
physically killed by some external force.
Thus Sauron would have had to walk or run the whole way from Barad-
dūr to Orodruin at a pace not much greater than a man's (there is
very little difference in pace between a person who's 4'6" and one
who is 7', and Sauron would have been not much greater than this
('The form that he took was that of a man of more than human stature,
but not gigantic.' /Letters/ no. 246). And of course there was also
the matter of getting down the stairs -- Sauron was sitting somewhere
near the top of Barad-dūr, which was 'ginormous'.
Therefore, when Frodo claimed the Master Ring for his own, Sauron
commanded the Nazgūl to fly there while he concentrated his full
attention on the Sammath Naur. Sauron appears to have had a greater
control of the Ringwraiths, and they didn't need his constant
attention to perform (as evidently did some of his other slaves), and
so they could be trusted to carry out his intention (and to stay
loyal) as detailed in letter no. 246 (see
<
http://preview.tinyurl.com/6jfhgba>).
If not for Gollum's intervention, I believe that Sauron would have
stayed in Barad-dūr until the situation in the Sammath Naur was
stable -- i.e. until there was no longer any threat to the Ring
itself and the Nazgūl had the situation under control. Then he would
have gone there, and arriving he would have destroyed Frodo,
retrieving the Master Ring.
> in the past - his "spirit" fled - after losing his finger (and the
> ring) - form what i remember - his spirit fled to the east -
The exact circumstances of this events are not known, but it would
seem -- to me, at least -- that the cutting of the Ring (& finger)
from Sauron's hand was the 'final straw' that killed the body:
Elendil and Gil-galad had already, as we learn, 'cast down' Sauron
before Isildur cut the Ring from his hand, and I think it is likely
that the Ring was, at that point, the only thing keeping his spirit
in the body, so that removing the Ring effectively killed the body,
ousting the spirit.
> even after the sinking of the HMS Numenor, he managed to flee back
> to MIddle Earth (yes - he did have the ring)
And again the body was killed due to external force: he did not
voluntarily discard the body.
--
Troels Forchhammer
Valid e-mail is <troelsfo(a)
gmail.com>
Please put [AFT], [RABT] or 'Tolkien' in subject.
Scientific reasoning works only with measurements: only
when we have a number and a unit. Thus, topics for which
we have no measurements, scientific investigation is not
useful. No math, no science. When we do have
measurements, scientific reasoning cannot be ignored.
- Dr Nancy's Sweetie on usenet
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