Subject: I love numbered lists. ^_^
Author:
Posted on: 2016-01-12 13:21:00 UTC

They make rambling so much more structured.

1/ That is a fantastic image. Bow-wielding Bilbo is like a cuddly Rabbit of Caerbannog.

2/ There could be goblins - Sauron is on the rise, after all, and Morgoth's old haunts were in the North. It's hard to imagine a Smeagol-figure anywhere other than underground... the Ring could be passed down the family of a Beorn-analogue, perhaps, or the Company could pass through 'New Hollin' and find it buried. (I'll also note here that the Rohirrim - or rather, the Eotheod - are allies of Erebor, never moved south, and are only a little north of the Company's route. Butterflies, butterflies...)

3/ Well, the Witch-Queen of Numenor is dead(?) somewhere in Aman, but her three generals are still here (and probably venerating her as a deity, which must tick off Sauron no end). Given their millennia-old grudge against Erebor, they would absolutely try and interfere.

4/ This is the point where you get to play 'spot the cameo'. Is Galadriel with the company? Celeborn? Elrond and Celebrian (yeah, no Imladris, so she's still around.) What about Dain Ironfoot? Halbarad of Dale? He might be a bit young - but what about Denethor of Dale, distant cousin to Arathorn? (Imrahil of Dol Amroth doesn't exist, alas - his ancestry involves the elf-haven at Edhellond, which the Numenoreans took long ago.) Or you muck about with timelines and generations a little and stick Aragorn and Boromir in - and on the way over, they run into Theoden of the Eotheod and his family... but this is all getting a little too 'historical preservation' for me, I think. ^_^

5/ Er... 4b/ The Rings are a bit sketchy even in canon. The Sixteen (Seven + Nine) were identical, and could all make you immortal - look at the Nazgul. There were lesser rings with undefined effects.

I've assumed that Celebrimbor made around the same number of Rings, meaning there are 15-20 Rings of Power in existence, plus the (destroyed with Numenor? Stolen back by the Faithful?) Great Ring. Then there's a bunch of lesser rings.

The Rings of Power make you immortal (ie, a ringwraith) and enhance your innate powers, but the key thing to remember is that that was never the goal. The Great Ring - or, in canon, the Three - was the only one that did what it was meant to: preserve a land against decay. Nenya is the reason Lorien can still grow mellyrn, and that time is wonky there. Vilya is probably behind Rivendell's secrecy. Narya... well, Narya is on the hand of a demigod who's made it his purpose to preserve the entire world, who knows what it's doing? (There's a lovely story by Cirdan about what happened when the Ring of Fire was given to Gandalf: Mithlond's First Winter.)

Anyway: 'New Hollin' was around where Smeagol would later live, so stumbling across a Ring of Power isn't too farfetched. We know that Numenor had at least five, probably at least eight (three Witch-Kings, the Witch-Queen, her husband, and at least three generals in Numenor itself); we know that Durin's line (ie, Thorin) has one, as do (likely) Gil-Galad, Galadriel, Celeborn, and Elrond (though any who were taken to Numenor may have lost them there). Even assuming Gil-Galad and Galadriel had to source replacements, that still only comes to 15, so there's definitely scope for one to have gone missing in 'New Hollin'. So yes, he could have a bona fide Ring of Power.

hS

Reply Return to messages