Aragorn 39;s Age In Fellowship Of The Ring

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Hermelindo Sauceda

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Jul 18, 2024, 3:39:20 AM7/18/24
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The company travels from Lorien to the falls of Rauros over 10 days. During that time Gollum creeps around, they are set upon by orcs and a dark enemy, and they enter the ancient realm of kings. Along the way Aragorn wrestles with indecision: which road must the company take, east to the mountain of fire or west, to the the white city?

Decisiveness is held up as an essential quality of leadership. But on re-reading I noticed that Aragorn has been wrestling with indecision through several chapters. The elves of Lothlrien, wise as they are, cannot, or perhaps will not. offer any certainty. Leadership of the company fell to him, adding to the doubt which has plagued him since before Rivendell.

aragorn 39;s age in fellowship of the ring


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So Aragorn delays until he can delay no longer. There we find the real lesson, which is sometimes we do not decide. Before the company can vote on a course of action, everything falls apart. In the next (and final) chapter, The Breaking of the Fellowship, the the power to choose rightly is taken away from Aragorn. The Ring, working in Boromir, puts pressure on the existing divisions in the fellowship. Boromir tries to take the Ring, Frodo flees, and orcs attack. Boromir is killed and Merry and Pippin are captured; the landscape of choice is transformed.

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Let's just do the whole fellowship, shall we? Also, keep in mind that the quest and the War of the Ring cover about a 6 month period. So, statistically speaking, half of the fellowship would have grown another year older during the actual events of the book. The ages listed below is how old everyone would have been in September 3018, when Frodo left Bag End.

Whether he's saying an emotional goodbye to his friends or leading an army into battle against seemingly insurmountable odds, Aragorn is often getting the best lines in any given scene. The very best Aragorn quotes are the ones that inspire fans of The Lord of the Rings in day to day life, even when the words are completely removed from their fantastical context and placed into the everyday world. It's why fans are still saying these lines out loud, decades after the release of the movies.

After the Uruk Hai reach the Fellowship at Amon Hen, Frodo decides he needs to take the ring to Mordor by himself. Seeing how the Ring impacts Boromir (Sean Bean) forces him to make this decision. Aragorn sees what Frodo intends to do, and he accepts his decision. However, before they part, there's this powerful Aragorn quote that demonstrates just how honorable and loyal Aragorn is. He really means this, and though Aragorn isn't there with Frodo in the fires of Mordor at the end of the journey, he's still there fighting for Frodo at the Black Gate.

After the events of Amon Hen, the Fellowship is torn apart. Frodo and Sam (Sean Astin) leave by themselves to Mordor. Boromir dies redeeming himself, and Merry (Dominic Monaghan) and Pippin (Billy Boyd) are taken captive. This leaves Aragorn, Legolas (Orlando Bloom), and Gimli (John Rhys-Davies) behind the others, with no real plan of action. When Gimli laments that the Fellowship has failed its mission, it prompts this inspiring Aragorn quote. It seems like all is lost in this moment but like a true leader, Aragorn turns the mood around with one epic speech.

Another extremely emotional moment from the films is when Boromir is dying at the end of The Fellowship of the Ring and Aragorn comforts him in his final moments. While these two have had their issues, stemming from Aragorn being the heir to the throne of Gondor, this moment shows that the two do ultimately see each other as brothers. Though Aragorn still clearly has his reservations about becoming a king, he makes this promise to Boromir, and it's clear that Aragorn is always a man of his word. It's a big step in the hero's development, as well as an unforgettable death scene.

When the rest of the Fellowship and the armies of Men arrive at the Black Gate to try and give Frodo and Sam a fighting chance in Mordor, Aragorn says this short but emotional line before leading the charge into battle. Even before Mordor and Sauron himself, Aragorn makes it clear that he's fighting not out of anger or hatred but rather for loyalty and fellowship, and this Aragorn quote is one of the most stirring and emotional of the Lord of the Rings trilogy.

When the Fellowship of the Ring is first formed, Aragorn is one of the first to offer his support and help to Frodo by offering his skills and life. This starts a chain reaction of each member of the Fellowship stepping forward to pledge themselves to the cause of making sure that Frodo reaches Mordor to destroy the One Ring. It's one of the greatest moments of the entire trilogy, and it's all started by the great Aragorn quote.

In The Return of the King when Aragorn decides to take the Paths of the Dead, they come to a very spooky entrance with an ominous warning carved into it, which Legolas reads aloud. Even Gimli is terrified of the situation but Aragorn, determined to find the Army of the Dead and convince them to fulfill their oath to fight for Gondor. He says this line with a look of hardened resolve on his face and marches straight into the pitch black darkness of the entrance, making it one of the coolest Aragorn quotes and moments from the whole trilogy.

After Aragorn is crowned as king in Minas Tirith, the crowd bows to him as he goes through it. Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin also beginning to bow to him, but Aragorn makes sure that the crowd honors the Hobbits as they honor him as he understands that they have done just as much as he has. He instead bows to them and gets everyone else in the crowd to follow suit. It's the final Aragorn quote of the trilogy, and even during his own crowning ceremony, he makes it about his companions and not himself, showing his true greatness as a leader.

The battle itself is one of the most epic on the Lord of the Rings trilogy and that's in part because of how Aragorn steps up from being the skilled Ranger that he'd proven himself as already and became a military leader who could wage war fearlessly. When he convinces Haleth that there's hope, he shows this strength is founded on his love for the Free Peoples of Middle-earth, and it's an infinitely repeatable Aragorn quote.

Howard Shore (b. 1946) is a Canadian-born composer who has scored more than 80 films. He most-known for his scores to the Lord of the Rings trilogy as well as the Hobbit trilogy, the former for which he received 3 Academy Awards. Shore's approach to leitmotivic scoring in the Lord of th Rings is truly a work of meticulous planning, creating a large network of different themes for characters and places, all connected musically at the smallest level. By connecting these different themes together, Shore creates a thematic network of interrelated themes, that all still retain their own unique identity. Though these techniques are present in some of John Williams' works, Shores' music is of special interest, because every single important musical theme may be traced back to the main theme! In this way, Shore is able to tell the entire story of the protagonists's fellowship through his compositional techniques!

The Lord of the Rings, as written by J.R.R. Tolkien in 1954-55, takes place in a high-fantasy setting. In its fictional history, we learn that eons ago, a dark sorcerer named Sauron along with some Elves had forged 19 "rings of power" to be dispersed among the different races of Middle Earth: 3 were given to Elves, 7 were given to Dwarves, and 9 were given to Humans. Sauron then created his own "One Ring" in the fires of Mount Doom to control all of the others, and those who wore them. The Lord of the Rings tells the story of Elves, Dwarves, Humans, and Hobbits forming a Fellowship to destroy the One Ring. Shore's music not only enhances the unfolding drama, but also foreshadows dramatic events through his network of related musical themes!

As one would expect, Howard Shore provides the main characters their own musical themes, and provides two recurring main themes. The first main theme accompanies the opening title of the first movie Fellowship of the Ring with a theme called "The One Ring." Watch the opening cinematic from the first film The Fellowship of the Rings, which describes the story's fictional history. The ominous music you hear in the background at the beginning is a variant of the movie's first main theme, which musicologist Doug Adams refers to the opening statement as "One Ring to the Rule them All" (see below).

After watching the opening cinematic, listen to the opening few seconds of the theme without any narration. This ominous melody ("One Ring to the Rule them All") involves a very short two-measure melody that consists of a falling and ascending melodic gesture, both labeled x and y (see the example below). Later in the film, we hear another ominous piece of music called "Seduction of the Ring," which sounds when protagonists hold the Ring of Power, which slowly corrupts even the most well-intentioned being. This theme (seen below) consists of a rising and falling gesture labeled y: this gesture grows out of the same gesture that was heard in the opening title track "One Ring to Rule Them All."

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