Storm Raven
First Post
Flexor the Mighty! said:My difference from some may be that I don't see Isildur as a good guy, after he grabbed the ring he became a tool of evil, of the evil ring. There is no means to justify.
But you still use ends to justify the means. Murder remains murder. How you come to claim the Ring (or deal with the current owner of the Ring) determines how quickly it gains power over you.
Evil is on the verge of destruction, at least Sauron's evil, but this wonderful prince decideds, "hell I sure love this ring of pure evil, I'll keep it and obsess over it...", well in my book he became the enemy at that moment. His lawful right to own the ring is overruled by the lawful right of the world to protect itself from the evil he is enabling.
That's not the way the law of the cultures Tolkien was dealing with worked. The right of Kings was strong. The rights of weregeld were so powerful that nature respected them (there are instances where a powerful individual claims weregeld over a natural thing that killed their kin and the beast or feature acquiesces to their claim). Isildur is a king, chosen by the hand of God. His rights predominate. God chose him to make decisions, and through his decisions, God's will is expressed.
P.S. If an Orc was standing there with the ring in the same situation would Elrond have let him walk out with it? After all if he tried to push the Orc in he would have been corrupted right?
It depends. Trying to force the issue with the bnearer of the Ruling Ring corrupts your soul. If an orc held the Ruling Ring at that moment, and Elrond tried to kill him and take it (whether to destroy it or not) he would have been consumed by its power. Trying to take it would have likely destroyed Elrond. Do you think he would have tried under those circumstances?
That's what makes the Ring so dangerous. Trying to claim it no matter the reason, whether to keep it, use it for good, or destroy it, will destroy the individual claiming it. That's why Frodo's possession of the Ring, coming in the fomr of a voluntary inheiritance, makes him uniquely suited to carry it and avoid being corrupted by it too quickly.