Subject: Olorin, Gwaihir, and Manwe.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-08-06 13:03:00 UTC
It's worth remembering that the Great Eagles are servants of Manwe the Windlord - and so is Gandalf. He studied with Nienna, and has a fire-affinity which marks him as kin to Aule or (gasp) Melkor - but in Unfinished Tales, it's made clear that Olorin is a Maia of Manwe.
So he probably knows the Eagles personally - Gwaihir and his brother Landroval were vassals of Thorondur way back in the First Age. Olorin could have - would have - been there when they flew to Taniquetil to visit or report, or receive direction. (There's a plot Nuzgul for you!)
But he would also have known their limitations - the ones apparently imposed by Manwe, Iluvatar's viceregent in Arda. Think about what the Eagles actually do: in pretty much every case, they are confined to a search-and-rescue role. They rescue Maedhros - Beren and Luthien - the body of Fingolfin - Thorin's company - Gandalf (repeatedly) - Frodo and Sam. The two battles they appear in both include Gandalf - and they are not the factor that turns the tide, in either case.
Gandalf was sent to Middle-earth to be 'the enemy of Sauron' - but not to oppose him in power. He says enough about how visible he is to suggest that he might not have gone to Mordor even had he lived, and he certainly makes no effort to catch Frodo and Sam up after he comes back. He also hides out when Bilbo and company are taking down Smaug, only coming back to fight relatively-inconsequential orcs. And when he does face one of Melkor's servants in battle - the Balrog - he pays for it with his life.
I think Gandalf, just like the Nazgul, was limited in his appointed role: comforter, counsellor, forger of alliances and sustainer of failing hopes. When he chose to push the boundaries of that task, he brought the very real risk of ruin on his head. In that sense, his imprisonment in Desolation of Smaug fits perfectly with the pattern.
And the Eagles? I think they, too, were restricted in what they were permitted to do. The One Ring was a problem for Middle-earth to deal with - and more, it was a problem for Men to face, as they took over dominion of the world. Aragorn's armies and Frodo's journey are both aspects of the ascension of mortals to the highest authority. In that quest, servants of the Uttermost West were, and should be, limited to supporting roles. If Manwe destroys the Ring, through his servants the Eagles - then why should the elves pass dominion to the Men who just stood by?
hS