Aragorn and spellcasting

billd91 said:
I think Aragorn has to be the one to heal the characters suffering from the Nazgul ailments because he is the one who actually knows how to treat them.
Given that Gandalf can freely come and go from the Houses of Healing and Aragorn cannot, and given that Gandalf knows more about the Nazgul than Aragorn does, how does your argument hold up in the actual situation in the book? Also, do you have any textual evidence that Aragorn does not have the power to heal as part of being the rightful king?
Notice also that athelas, AKA kingsfoil, is used to foil the ailments of the Nazgul, all previously kings of men.
Are you seriously telling me that athelas's properties are connected to healing the wounds inflicted by kings? That wounds inflicted by Anduril would therefore be best healed with athelas?
In this case, the hands of the king being the hands of a healer may also indicate a fundamental aspect of Aragorn's character that was part of the prophecy... he's particularly a man of compassion as well as war. You have yet to undermine that argument in any of your interpretations.
That's because I agree with it. Of course a fit king is a man who is just and compassionate.
Actually, I think we can say there's insufficient data to support your claim. We don't see ANYONE other than Aragorn doing any healing. We hear that Elrond heals Frodo, but we don't see how he does it. We don't have enough information to say that the healing power of athelas inires with Aragorn at all.
This is what I mean about the difference between reading history and reading literature. If LOTR were an historical document, your reasoning would be correct. But in literature, the absence of anyone else healing actually is evidence; Tolkien is choosing not to show anyone else healing.
But we don't really know if Gandalf or any of the others on-hand have any skill with healing. Gandalf knows a lot of stuff, but it's also clear from the books that he can't do everything under the sun.
Are you really saying there is ancient lore that Aragorn knows and Gandalf does not? You're resting an argument on Gandalf's ignorance?
I think your belief in the Professor's precision with symbology is a bit over-stated.
I really can't continue to argue with you if you're going to take this view. Arguing that Tolkien might have been unaware he was referencing the healing power of medieval kings with a prophecy that "the hands of a king are the hands of a healer" is just plain ridiculous. I have absolutely no time for an argument that rests either on Tolkien's ignorance of medieval history and literature or on Tolkien not being a good writer.
Steveroo said:
Thus, ALL Numenoreans had the blood of the Maiar flowing through their veins. They were Men, yes, and did not get to choose, but they still had the blood of Maiar and Elves flowing through their veins, to greater or lesser xtent.
Steveroo said:
Y'see, the Valar (Tolkien's top-level angels) ruled that there could be NO HALF-ELVES. They had to CHOOSE whether to suffer the fate of Men, or Elves. Elrond chose to be an Elf. His brother, Elros (Tar-Minyatur) chose to be a MAN, and became the FIRST KING OF NUMENOR!
Hence, your arguement that only the Maiar can cast spells actually supports the idea that Aragorn can.
All I've done here is reorder your statements. I hope that's sufficient to make my point. But just in case it isn't, what you're saying here is: by choosing to be men, they lost their elvish nature but by choosing to be men, they did not lose their angelic nature. You can't be serious.
Arwyn certainly did,
When did Arwen cast a spell?
and even Faramir
When did that happen?
Now like it or not, the Ranger is based on Aragorn, and like it or not, a case can most certainly be made for Aragorn casting spells
Because he had a D&D class based on him? By that reasoning, I guess Merlin must have been able to cast Fireball.
Squire James said:
"Magic" essentially means "stuff that guy over there does that I can't rationally explain". Some of the things Aragorn did were certainly "magical" from the point of view of the common Gondorian (and I imagine they'd understand more than most Men). To an Elf, what Aragorn did was probably as common as dirt, and they understood the world so well that the word "magic" itself was not used by them.
While I do not agree with this with respect to the athelas healing, I do agree with it as a general principle for looking at "magic" in Tolkien. You'll recall the scene in which Galadriel explains that these "magic" elven things are not magical at all -- they are just really well-made.
Certainly one could apply Muggle principles to Aragorn's actions and find them non-magical. Personally, I choose not to do that.
But nobody (except possibly Joshua) is arguing that Aragorn's magical healing is not magical; we are just arguing that it is not a spell.
Joshua Dyal said:
He's not a D&D class at all.
Joshua makes a very important point here. Why is everybody invested in believing that LOTR can be modeled using D&D. There are all kinds of worlds that cannot be modeled well using D&D rules; Middle Earth is just one of them.
Tewligan said:
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Robert Heinlein
This is a sci-fi definition of magic by somebody who never studied the history of magic. If you want to read all fantasy as sci-fi, more power to you I guess but I must admit you're cheating yourself out of a lot of fun.
 

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I think you're getting farther and farther off base trying to deal with some of these arguments.

fusangite said:
Given that Gandalf can freely come and go from the Houses of Healing and Aragorn cannot, and given that Gandalf knows more about the Nazgul than Aragorn does, how does your argument hold up in the actual situation in the book? Also, do you have any textual evidence that Aragorn does not have the power to heal as part of being the rightful king?

Gandalf can freely come and go because he's neither incognito in a delicate political situation nor directly involved in patient care. That particular issue is entirely irrelevant. And just because Gandalf knows more about the Nazgul means that he has learned the skills of healing the Nazgul wounds.
Ultimately, I have no more evidence that Aragorn is a healer because of reasons other than being the king than you do that his healing is inherent in being the king. The prophecy is not conclusive because it doesn't need to be interpreted as indicating he can heal because he's the king. It could just be the marker that will enable others to identify him as the rightful king.

fusangite said:
Are you seriously telling me that athelas's properties are connected to healing the wounds inflicted by kings? That wounds inflicted by Anduril would therefore be best healed with athelas?

Smelling straw again. I said nor implied nothing of the sort. The common name for athelas is kingsfoil, right? What's the etymology of that word? We have no idea. I'm making the supposition that, being useful in the treatment of Nazgul wounds, it may have picked up its name as being a foil for the kings who fell to Sauron. Seems just as plausible as your assertion that it's only useable by kings, especially considering the reference in the thread above that suggests that it was widely known and used by the Numenorians once they came to Middle Earth.

fusangite said:
If LOTR were an historical document, your reasoning would be correct. But in literature, the absence of anyone else healing actually is evidence; Tolkien is choosing not to show anyone else healing.

That is completely bogus. Tolkien is also not choosing to show anyone going to the bathroom. Does that mean they don't do it? The absence of anyone else healing is no evidence at all.


fusangite said:
Are you really saying there is ancient lore that Aragorn knows and Gandalf does not? You're resting an argument on Gandalf's ignorance?

Lack of skill != ignorance or lack of general knowledge and lore. There certainly may be things Aragorn happens to be better at than Gandalf. Powerful as he is, it's unlikely that Gandalf can do everything/know everything better than everybody else. There's no evidence to suggest he can/does.

fusangite said:
I really can't continue to argue with you if you're going to take this view. Arguing that Tolkien might have been unaware he was referencing the healing power of medieval kings with a prophecy that "the hands of a king are the hands of a healer" is just plain ridiculous. I have absolutely no time for an argument that rests either on Tolkien's ignorance of medieval history and literature or on Tolkien not being a good writer.

I am making neither argument. But sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. Sometimes symbolism and metaphor mean things that are more mundane than some literary analysts want them to mean. Sometimes a turn of phrase or reference is a work of fiction was just a good and convenient way to get from point A to point B and not some deep symbol to be found by people spending too much time engaging in navel contemplation.
 

fusangite said:
This is what I mean about the difference between reading history and reading literature. If LOTR were an historical document, your reasoning would be correct. But in literature, the absence of anyone else healing actually is evidence; Tolkien is choosing not to show anyone else healing.
fusangite, I think we're coming to a point where we're reaching an impasse of sorts. Rather than restate or rephrase my arguments, I'll make a few more generic points.
  • Your insistence that Tolkien used Healing king symbology merely because he could and because it's medieval is absurd. You may well be right, and it's a valid interpretation (albeit one I disagree with) but I see no evidence that such a direct parallel must exist other than the fact that you like the symbology that would exist if it did. That's not really a very compelling argument.
  • Just because it's literature rather than historical, I do not accept that negative evidence is any more meaningful than it would be in any other field. Nobody else did any healing on screen because the plot did not call for it, not because Aragorn was some kind of magical or divine healer. As the point above, the fact that your "evidence" is no more than your subjective interpretation of absences in the books, makes it completely suspect if not absolutely disposible and discountable immediately.
  • As to your insistence that symbolism must have been inherent in the works because "Tolkien was a good writer," that's absolute baloney. Writers can be good in many ways, and using symbolism is not an absolute requirement of a good writer. And even if it was and Tolkien did use a fair bit of symbolism (which, to be sure, he did) there's nothing to support this particular bit of symbolism that you've extracted other than the fact that you particularly like it.
  • Along those same lines, you contrast reading literature and reading history, by essentially saying that literature must be read with an eye for symbols and parallels. To quote Tolkien on this very subject: "I much prefer history, true or feigned, with its varied applicability to the thought and experience of the readers." He's actually, if anything, supporting your ability to draw whatever parallels and symbolic interpretations you wish, but he is verifying none of them and guardedly telling us that to do so is contrary to his intention.
  • I also have a wariness of reading Tolkien as modern literary criticism would teach us to anyway. Throughout Tolkien's professional life, his own priorities in the English department at Exeter were almost constantly at odds with the literature "half" of the department. He very much disliked the way "literature" folks thought, and in some ways, consciously wrote the Lord of the Rings as a foil to their way of thinking, and expressed at various points in his life both unsurprise (and indeed satisfaction) that not only did literature folks "not get it" but that the works were quite successful in spite of their scorn of them, a scorn which he politely confirmed that he felt for their own tastes and prefered forms. So when you insist that I read Tolkien as "literature" and not "history" I believe you've quite missed the point, which Tolkien was at pains to make on more than one occasion; the Lord of the Rings is not literature in the sense that "literature people" thought of it, and it was indeed a mytho-historical work. So, if one of your key arguments is that I'm mistaken because I'm reading it as a history and not a work of symbol-ridden literature, that's another one that's fairly easily dismissed, since Tolkien himself wanted it read that way.
 

Joshua,

In your last post, you misrepresented a number of my arguments.

Your insistence that Tolkien used Healing king symbology merely because he could and because it's medieval is absurd.
I made no assertion that Tolkien did any such thing. I simply made the following points:
1. Tolkien extensively studied medieval literature in the process of obtaining his doctorate.
2. Tolkien therefore must have been aware that medieval ideas of kingship included a belief in healing through the laying on of hands.
3. Tolkien chose to make the revelation and reclamantion of Aragorn's true kingship a significant part of his LOTR narrative.
4. He wrote scenes about Aragorn healing through the laying on of hands, using a plant called kingsfoil, in full knowledge that healing through the laying on of hands was a proof of medieval kingship.
5. He created a Gondorian oral tradition that "the hands of a king are the hands of a healer."
6. Given that Tolkien was a careful and intentional writer, the most rational explanation for this behaviour was the intention to make this reference.

So what's your story? Tolkien depicts two healing scenes in the novel. Both involve the true king, healing someone using a plant called kingsfoil. He does so in full knowledge of the medieval tradition of true kings having the capacity to heal by the laying on of hands. What do you think was going through Tolkien's mind when he wrote these scenes and the prophecy fully cognizant of what they would evoke for any other scholar of the medieval period?

Clearly you cannot argue that Tolkien did not know what these passages would evoke for someone with similar education to his own. So, how do you think he wanted these people to regard what he had written?
Just because it's literature rather than historical, I do not accept that negative evidence is any more meaningful than it would be in any other field.
Well, here we are just at an impasse. I don't especially like your chracterization of this kind of thing as "negative evidence" either. Tolkien goes to the trouble of showing Aragorn healing, and only Aragorn healing twice.
Nobody else did any healing on screen because the plot did not call for it,
You talk about this as though Tolkien hadn't deliberately constructed a plot in which Aragorn gets to heal people.
As the point above, the fact that your "evidence" is no more than your subjective interpretation of absences in the books, makes it completely suspect if not absolutely disposible and discountable immediately.
So, let's suppose an author manages to write a book in which no women do anything significant. Can we conclude that this provides us with no evidence about the role of women in the world the author depicts? Surely even if you don't want to accept this point, you must concede that, at least in general, lacunae in books can give us significant information.
As to your insistence that symbolism must have been inherent in the works because "Tolkien was a good writer," that's absolute baloney.
That would be a good point if that is what I had asserted. But in fact, what I asserted was that Tolkien would have been aware of the symbolic meaning already inherent in the healing "prophecy" and laying on of hands. My argument is not that every good writer uses symbolism. My argument is that Tolkien would have known how scholars like himself would read what he had written.

Again, let's look at a different example. Let's suppose there is a scene in a novel in which a character is executed wearing a crown of thorns, or executed by crucifixion. Would you argue that a good writer should produce such a product without taking into account that his symbols would be seen as Christian?
Along those same lines, you contrast reading literature and reading history, by essentially saying that literature must be read with an eye for symbols and parallels. To quote Tolkien on this very subject: "I much prefer history, true or feigned, with its varied applicability to the thought and experience of the readers."
Have you read Roman Catholic historiographic theory? I would suggest that before you make too much of this, you should look at writers like de Lubac or Chenu or go to the original sources and look at people like Augustine or the Victorines. Premodern Roman Catholic theories of history allow history to proceed with free will be also recognize that tropes will reoccur in the history. Developed for Scriptural exegesis, idea of multiple signification and recurring patterns in history was first used by Saint Augustine on secular history. So I don't see any conflict here.

The advocates of this reading of history, in the past, made the same point Tolkien does in your above quotation -- that history could be read completely satisfactorily without this eye for symbols and parallels but that this did not discount other things that could be pulled from the text of unfolding events.

Also I don't buy that this was some deep use of symbolism here. This was just a direct reference. But if you didn't have the reference, you could just read what the text itself said: "the hands of a king are the hands of a healer."
I also have a wariness of reading Tolkien as modern literary criticism would teach us to anyway. Throughout Tolkien's professional life, his own priorities in the English department at Exeter were almost constantly at odds with the literature "half" of the department. He very much disliked the way "literature" folks thought, and in some ways, consciously wrote the Lord of the Rings as a foil to their way of thinking, and expressed at various points in his life both unsurprise (and indeed satisfaction) that not only did literature folks "not get it" but that the works were quite successful in spite of their scorn of them, a scorn which he politely confirmed that he felt for their own tastes and prefered forms.
The tools I am using are not the tools of modern literary criticism. There are no hidden symbols or complex parallels here -- just a direct reference to a thing in the past that, in case the readers don't get, he spells out the meaning of in the text anyway.

Also, to suggest that finding non-literal meaning in texts or references in texts is somehow automatically grouped with the modern literary critics with whom Tolkien had differences is a great insult to the traditions of reading and writing that came before the modern period. I don't think Tolkien intended to paint Hugh Saint Victor and Saint Augustine with the brush with which he painted his colleagues.
it was indeed a mytho-historical work.
So are you seriously now going to take the position (a) that intentionally-written myth histories are not literature or (b) that myth does not include symbolism?
billd91 said:
Tolkien is also not choosing to show anyone going to the bathroom. Does that mean they don't do it?
Let's actually use a comparable example. What you're looking for in the text is an instance of only one character being able to do something. So, is the fact that only Gandalf does fire magic significant? Yes. Is the fact that Eowyn is the only woman who goes to war significant? Yes.
Sometimes symbolism and metaphor mean things that are more mundane than some literary analysts want them to mean. Sometimes a turn of phrase or reference is a work of fiction was just a good and convenient way to get from point A to point B and not some deep symbol to be found by people spending too much time engaging in navel contemplation.
Ok. (a) There is no metaphor here. (b) There is no deep hidden meaning here. (c) The text also directly states the information Tolkien references. So there is no big complex literary navel gazing going on. Why did I even bring this up? Because I was providing additional evidence in support of my 100% literal direct reading of the text.
 

billd91 said:
No, but Aragorn's applications of athelas can credibly be seen as the use of healing spells from a game-mechanic interpretation standpoint.
If this were true, Sam Gamgee (who learned the secret of kingsfoil from Strider) became a spellcaster. There is absolutely no indication that others can't use kingsfoil if they know how ... in fact, Tolkien goes out of his way to point out in several places that people have forgotten how to use kingsfoil for healing.

Note that in Fellowship, Strider says that kingsfoil is unlikely to have much power over Frodo's wound; not "I'm not likely to be able to do much," but rather "this plant's not likely to be able to do much, despite its largely forgotten herbal properties."

No, Strider did extraordinary things, but in D&D terms that's exactly what they were: Extraordinary.
 
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fusangite said:
Let's actually use a comparable example. What you're looking for in the text is an instance of only one character being able to do something. So, is the fact that only Gandalf does fire magic significant? Yes. Is the fact that Eowyn is the only woman who goes to war significant? Yes.

But we know also that Elrond is a powerful healer even if he does his work off-screen. That makes Aragorn's singular ability not so singular even if Gandalf is the only wizard using fire magic and Eowyn is the only woman going to war. Gimli seems to be the only one wielding an axe, but we don't expect he's the only one that can. At which point are you picking and choosing what singular events have the right kind of significance because you just happen to like them that way versus what the Professor meant?
So why should we assume that Aragorn is the only one able to use athelas to heal people when, truthfully, we don't know that much about it? And if he is the only one, what's the point on getting on the physician's case about it when the people at the house of healing couldn't use it anyway?
I just don't see it.
 

billd91,

I suppose misrepresentation is the last refuge in an argument but, if you go back, you can see that I never stated that Aragorn was the only person in the world capable of healing people. So proving that he was not doesn't do any damage to my above arguments. What I said was that what an author shows and does not show is information. If you and Joshua want to insist that these decisions by an author cannot be used as data in textual analysis, there's nothing much more I can do here.
 


Joshua Dyal said:
I do so insist, at least that such decisions cannot bear the burden you've decided to put on them.
By using the term "burden" here, you imply that my main textual evidence is this. As you can see from throughout our argument back and forth, my main evidence remains a literal reading of the text. All this other stuff is just backup. What I have not seen is textual evidence that when Tolkien says, "the hands of the king are the hands of a healer" that we should not take him at his word and read the text literally.
 

fusangite said:
1. Tolkien extensively studied medieval literature in the process of obtaining his doctorate.

Um...

I don't have my Tolkien Biography immediately to hand, but I'm pretty certain that's incorrect if by "mediaeval" you mean the troubadour tradition of Arthurian romances, Song of Roland etc.

Those would have been French in origin, and Tolkien hated anything French.

His field was earlier - Anglo-Saxon predominantly plus iof course his philological passion which led him to Finnish and Welsh myths (Kalavela and Mabinogion, frex) amongst others.
 

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