We can't deny it: as disgusting as Gollum is, there is some clear overlap between him and Bilbo. It's there that Bilbo meets Gollum and finds the Ring, and the rest is history. Gollum's family drives him out of their community, and he goes to live by himself in the dark under the Misty Mountains. But he also gives the Ring an automatic hold on his mind. With this murder, Gollum takes possession of the Ring, sure. Déagol brings the Ring up out of the water and Gollum murders him for it. So Déagol falls into the water and spots something golden on the river floor. The Ring had been sitting in this marsh ever since Isildur's death. What these Hobbit-ish guys did not know is that they were fishing at the site where Isildur (remember, Elendil's son and the man who took the Ring from Sauron in the first age?) died. How does Gollum get the Ring? Many years before The Hobbit (like, hundreds of years), Gollum (called Sméagol then) went fishing with a good buddy of his, Déagol, in the Gladden Fields. Is this what awaits Frodo at the end of his quest? Certainly, Peter Jackson plays up the possibility in his film – we can't help but notice that Gollum is the only other character in that movie with eyes as giant and blue as Frodo's own. So Gollum is a very, very scary example of what can happen to a Hobbit when the Ring gets too much of a hold on his mind. This also makes Gollum is the original Hobbit (or at least, Hobbit- ish) Ringbearer.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |