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Frodo Baggins

The Lord of the Rings

in Literature

Frodo Baggins ~ Sakinorva Databank

Frodo Baggins


The Lord of the Rings

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INFP 6
9w1 6
4w3 1
so/sx 3
EII 2
LEFV 1
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Stephen Hearts

ENFJ

2w1

2018/05/04 (Fri) 06:24:07

#106

"How do you pick up the threads of an old life? How do you go on, when in your heart you begin to understand... there is no going back? There are some things that time cannot mend. Some hurts that go too deep, that have taken hold."

The Lord of the Rings is really about the stark truth that you can never quite go home after The Journey; that arc of separation, completion and return. There are scars that simply won't heal. Wounds that will never close, memories that will follow you until you die. And all you can do, in the end, is get on the boat with Gandalf the White and leave everything you knew and loved behind. Because the world you once called home cannot accommodate you anymore. It cannot accommodate the weight of your sins, the things that you've seen and the sadness that they bring with them.

Frodo ends his arc not resembling the prototypical Hero character -- like Aragorn -- but rather, the tragic bard or poet. He is wounded existentially and eternally, metaphorically and physically. He chooses to write the words of his adventure, as his uncle once did, in the hopes that he will find some solace in it. But like time, his words cannot heal him. The wounds are too deep, too baked into the DNA of who he is and who he is not. All the Fellowship Hobbits go through this to some degree, but each assimilate back into the world. Sam fashions a new home from the remnants of the old one through his desire to build a family. But Frodo can't. Why is that?

The truth of the matter is, the ring was not destroyed because Frodo was of sound and calm enough mind to cast it into the flames - he wasn't. The ring was destroyed because Bilbo was kind and humble enough to give it over in the first place.

And this contributes to the tragedy of Frodo's character. He is different from the other Hobbits from the get-go. Frodo has a deeply romanticized view of what it means to be a Hero. He has internalized it and wants to walk the path so badly that he goes there and back again. And it is precisely because of this that he fails. His desire to be the ""Hero"" is the very roadblock that prevents him from becoming one.

All of this to say, there's something very Type 4 about where Frodo ends up. Frodo takes some degree of pride in being different from the other Hobbits. He is in love with this image of Heroism that existed in his Uncles stories. But he fails to live up to this, and he is eventually wounded beyond all repair because of it.

Editing post #106 by Stephen Hearts

Replying to post #106 by Stephen Hearts

dateusernamevote
20/05/26 16:05Vendrah INFP
20/05/09 05:41kashifirfanbhatti INFP
19/04/15 15:13tman INFP
19/02/25 22:01tch INFP
18/05/04 11:08Maul INFP
18/05/04 05:42Stephen Hearts INFP
dateusernamevote
20/05/26 22:03Tman INFP
20/05/26 16:05Vendrah INFP
20/05/09 05:41kashifirfanbhatti INFP
19/02/25 22:00tch INFP
18/05/13 05:40fg INFP
dateusernamevote
20/05/26 16:05Vendrah 9w1
20/05/09 05:41kashifirfanbhatti 9w1
19/04/15 15:13tman 9w1
18/05/13 05:41fg 9w1
18/05/04 11:08Maul 9w1
18/05/04 05:42Stephen Hearts 4w3
dateusernamevote
20/01/24 14:39Tman so/sx
18/05/13 05:41fg so/sx
18/05/04 11:08Maul so/sx
dateusernamevote
20/05/09 05:41kashifirfanbhatti 947
19/07/08 17:25tman 964
19/02/02 16:20Zethmal 962
dateusernamevote
20/05/09 05:41kashifirfanbhatti EII
19/04/15 15:13tman EII
dateusernamevote
20/08/12 16:11Tman LEFV