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Critical Essays

The Temptation of the Ring

For less mighty characters, the temptation of the Ring becomes, if anything, more powerful. Although a strong and proud man, Boromir acknowledges his country's weakness at the Council of Elrond: "though I do not ask for aid, we need it." That knowledge of weakness opens him to the Ring's influence, the desire to wield it growing stronger the more he thinks of Minas Tirith's danger. At last he succumbs, "his fair and pleasant face . . . hideously changed" by madness when he attacks Frodo. Sam does take the Ring for the right reason, to keep it out of orc hands at Cirith Ungol, but again his own weakness tempts him to keep and wield the Ring — even to challenge the Dark Lord. "Wild fantasies arose in his mind; and he saw Samwise the Strong, Hero of the Age, striding with a flaming sword across the land . . . at his command the vale of Gorgoroth became a garden of flowers and trees and brought forth fruit." What saves Sam from the temptation that overpowered Boromir is his lack of worldliness and ambition. Where Boromir wants to defend his city and rule it, Sam desires only "the one small garden of a free gardener . . . not a garden swollen to a realm."

The final and greatest temptation in the novel is that of Frodo at the Cracks of Doom. From the first revelation of the fiery letters in his home at Bag End, Frodo has known that he cannot and must not wield the Ring. Twice he tries to give it away, first to Gandalf and again to Galadriel. Always he has known that it must be destroyed. Its evil will warp and corrupt everyone it contacts, as it warped and corrupted Frodo's perception of Bilbo and Sam and as it warped and corrupted Boromir. When the time finally comes, however, Frodo is also the weakest and most vulnerable he has ever been. He has been beaten and starved. He has left behind weapons and armor that he does not have the strength to bear, abandoning all his defenses. He can hardly crawl the last miles until Sam must finally carry him up the slope of the mountain. And it is there, in his weakness, that the Ring takes him: "I do not choose now to do what I came to do." Even knowing that his decision will cause the suffering of untold numbers of people, including his own companions, Frodo cannot resist the temptation to take the Ring as his own.

Put in the context of the other temptation scenes, Frodo's failure at the Cracks of Doom reveals that the danger of the Ring is not limited to its use. Wielding power — especially the immense power of the Ring — can corrupt even the most wise and well-intentioned. The more subtle danger of the Ring, however, is its ability to prey on the desires of those who are powerless. Even more than its use, the eagerness to acquire power can destroy.


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