Celebrim said:
Well, I'm glad I said something that you found worthy of responding to, but no.
Well, say something worth responding to more often, and I'll oblige.
....
Celebrim said:
They arrive at the last second in keeping with his underlying Christian/Catholic view of how the world should be ordered.
Right. I just can't possibly imagine a last-minute deus ex machina ending being written by an atheist, an agnostic or a pagan.
They arrive at the last second because arriving with an hour or two to spare just isn't as dramatic.
Celebrim said:
No. Tolkien gets wrongly accused of reaching for Deux ex Machina too often by people unfamiliar with what he was trying to say. By the nature of how the unexpected aid arrives, he's making statements about the nature of God as he percieves it.
Nobody cares WHY he did it, because ultimately a story stands on its own merits and not the blah-blah-blah explanations that authors like to fill our ears with. The latter are usually extremely brainy, usually written or constructed long afterward, and often wrong. The prefaces of Henry James's novels come to mind, or Thomas Merton's journals after his zeal cooled off and he chilled out.
Tolkien did reach for the god machine a little too often. But he was always learning, and his means of tying up stories in the trilogy and the hobbit, while quite similar, are certainly an improvement over some of the drivel you find in those mind-numbing tomes Tolkien's son churns out every few years.
Vocenoctum said:
It's acknowledged as Deus Ex Machina, but it's worked into the plot that such is logical. Thats sort of the point of the Eagles In Mordor thing, are the Eagles a plot hole, or does the fact that they didn't fly them there fit in with what was done.
Logical to you. Because, of course, it makes PERFECT sense that the eagles should not want to involve themselves into the affairs of men ... unless some scrawny dwarves and a hobbit need to be plucked out of trees, or an old man needs to be saved from a tower, or two smoldering hobbits need to be plucked from the side of a mountain, or some orcs need to be killed in a battle.
But other than that, they never really get involved, and keep to themselves.