[en] The Prancing Pony > The Lord of the Rings
favourite Fellowship Members
Walküre:
Simply said: Gandalf :)
I've always been fascinated by the fact that his pivotal and fundamental presence deeply (and naturally) influences the Fellowship being him physically present among its Members or not.
hoho96:
I'm for Sam! His goodness and optimism are just so amazing. Even in the middle of mordor where hope seemed to be a distant thought!
CragLord:
--- Zitat von: Adamin am 27. Okt 2015, 00:25 ---My favourite Character always was Boromir.
The strong son of lesser men, that only wanted to save his people from destruction. He falls for the feigned promises of power from the One Ring, yet redeems himself by giving his life away to protect two little Halflings.
A tragic, relatable Character. ^^
--- Ende Zitat ---
I always thought and felt same. :)
(Like you read my mind, literally! ^^)
+1 for Boromir
Gandalf The Gray:
That was Beautiful
Adamin:
--- Zitat von: CragLord am 5. Nov 2015, 23:00 ---
--- Ende Zitat ---
--- Zitat von: Gandalf The Gray am 5. Nov 2015, 23:47 ---That was Beautiful
--- Ende Zitat ---
Indeed, a very good summary though I'd like to add something imho important to the end. ^^
--- Zitat ---[Boromir:]"Farewell, Aragorn! Go to Minas Tirith and save my people! I have failed."
"No!" said Aragorn, taking his hand and kissing his brow. "You have conquered. Few have gained such a victory. Be at peace! Minas Tirith shall not fall!"
Boromir smiled.
--- Ende Zitat ---
- The Two Towers, Book Three, Chapter One: The Departure of Boromir -
It is not just a simple promise from Aragorn, not just soothing words for the dying Boromir. It is the testimony of Boromirs Salvation.
You have conquered. Aragorn is not talking about the fight, the twenty dead orcs lying around. Boromir has conquered his lust for the Ring, broke free of its influence. He was about to take the Ring from Frodo, possibly killing him in the process, whom Boromir has sworn to protect. But at the brink of it he turned away.
Few have gained such a victory. Isildur himself was not able to do the same, turning away from the Ring, and he was counseled by Elrond and Cirdan. But Boromir did. And in his turning away he achieved redemption, victory, by doing the ultimate good action: Sacrificing himself to protect his friends.
Boromir dies smiling, not only because of the promise that Minas Tirith shall not fall, but also because of the assurance that his sins are atoned for.
Navigation
[0] Themen-Index
[#] Nächste Seite
[*] Vorherige Sete
Zur normalen Ansicht wechseln