Subject: Urr.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-02-02 08:58:00 UTC
The fact that they were essays in ringcraft implies (duh) that they hadn't yet achieved the primary effect, or that they had an unwanted side-effect. I see two options:
1/ The longevity/sustaining effect (longevity in Men, environmental sustaining in Eldar and other immortals) wasn't yet in there. That means, depending on the time of making, they could have any combination of invisibility, wealth-generation, and sorcery.
2/ The sustaining was in there, but actually drained the user's life to do it. That would require adding a 'don't let the wearer's fea (soul) leave' function - which is fine for an elf, but causes rather awkward side-effects in mortals.
Actually, I rather like that second idea. The Rings cause invisibility - shifting the user entirely into the realm of spirits, not bodies. To a Valinorian Elda - and the leaders of Eregion were Noldor - they burn bright in both worlds, but you can imagine a shifting of viewpoint or power-focus. In the unseen realm, they would be able to view the 'spirit' of a location, and influence it accordingly.
For anyone who hadn't been to Valinor, they would find themselves shifted almost entirely to the unseen: invisibility. There they would be able to feel people's thoughts to some extent (since they would be actually looking at their souls), and would probably be able to work 'magic' of some kind - though what, exactly, I'm not sure.
The Rings apply their sustaining power to the body that wears it, in order to hold the fea in place - but the more a mortal uses a Ring, the more time their body spends in the unseen, and the less chance the Ring has to work on it. Thus the body fades away through lack of sustaining, while the fea is not yet free to leave, because the body never actually died.
(The Three, being made after Sauron left, would incorporate the latest innovation: they don't shift you into the unseen, but rather allow you to influence it while in the visible world. That explains how Elrond, Cirdan, and Gil-Galad can all use them without being invisible)
So there's a few options for what a lesser ring would do:
-Give you power, but drain your life while you use it, eventually leading to death.
-Give you wealth and magic, but drain everything around you.
-Give you power, but (if you weren't an Exile) make you invisible. - without the sustaining effect.
-... anything else, really. This is all theory. ;)
As to how corrupting they would be... while power corrupts, the main corrupting effect of the Rings (excluding the One) lies in their link to the One. The Master Ring - and its Master - rules over the others, and corrupts their users. It's not an intrinsic property of the rings.
hS