Subject: This is interesting
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Posted on: 2014-08-05 18:12:00 UTC

It fits a lot with the politics in the rest of the story - there's definitely strong political issues in the relations between Gondor and Rohan, not to mention Saruman attempting to grab his own piece of the pie by manuvering the White Council and turning his neighbors against each other. And it fits, thematically, with the way that both Orthanc and Minas Tirith were weakened from the inside long before anyone had a clue what exactly was going on.

To my mind, it also reinforces the whole theme of all the different peoples of Arda coming together and trusting each other in the end, instead of succumbing to old rivalries. (The primary example of that being, of course, the Council of Elrond, and appointing representatives of Men and Elves and Dwarves to go with Frodo on the quest.) It's a bit of a reversal of their old methods of breaking apart kingdoms.

I can't help but think, though, that the Nazgul's methods in the Shire show a lack of preparation. They just go up in their suspicious black garb asking suspicious questions of the locals - I suppose they thought it would be an easy mission, but still, that is not smooth investigative procedure at all. But it makes some sense - they're ex-rulers, not field agents, incognito was not their style while alive.

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