I have no idea if this is AI or not.
I tried reading it, and was doubting every sentence.
Damn.
At this point I am not sure it matters.
Few years ago I would've read it with joy.
This article claims that Tom Bombadil is under-appreciated and then promptly gives no reasons to appreciate him more. We just get a brief description of who he is and what he does in Lord of the Rings.
I honestly don't remember much about the Harvard Lampoon's Bored of the Rings but I'm pretty sure Tom Bombadil has a van and you don't want to get in it.
we could go with Bombadill is an "awakened being", in the Buddhist sense. Which is supposedly better than a god. And it's hallmark power is self-control and resistance to temptation.
Bombadil represents the secret to resisting evil (vice, temptation to power, desire to dominate).
Why is Bombadil completely unaffected by the ring? Bombadil represents pure being - existence without the will to power. Note the biblical echo to the immortal godhead in Goldberry’s statement “He is” ("I am").
Bombadil doesn’t resist the ring because he’s stronger than it. He resists it because he delights in creation rather than possessing it. The ring can only corrupt what desires power. Bombadil desires nothing, so the ring has nothing to latch onto.
The key to overcoming evil in Tolkien's world isn’t military strength, strategy, nor political authority, but detachment
Really? Bill the Pony is higher in my ranking of heroes than Bombadil.
Bombadil is low low on the list along with other insufferable dicks who could have fixed the entire conflict in 5 seconds like Gandalf and the giant eagles.
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[ 5.5 ms ] story [ 54.8 ms ] threadI love Tom Bombadil, Tolkien's ghost.
I think there is no one who read LoTR and ignored Tom Bombadil. If anything, they give him too much importance.
>Barges into the narrative.
>Sings a song about how he's older than the world.
>Puts on and takes off the Ring with no effect.
>Refuses to elaborate.
>Leaves.
I enjoyed Tim Benzedrine, and Hashberry, from Bored of the Rings.
Basically Neo.
Why is Bombadil completely unaffected by the ring? Bombadil represents pure being - existence without the will to power. Note the biblical echo to the immortal godhead in Goldberry’s statement “He is” ("I am").
Bombadil doesn’t resist the ring because he’s stronger than it. He resists it because he delights in creation rather than possessing it. The ring can only corrupt what desires power. Bombadil desires nothing, so the ring has nothing to latch onto.
The key to overcoming evil in Tolkien's world isn’t military strength, strategy, nor political authority, but detachment
Bombadil is low low on the list along with other insufferable dicks who could have fixed the entire conflict in 5 seconds like Gandalf and the giant eagles.