"A Full Defense of Frodo"
I read this today on Facebook. I have always thought of Sam as the real hero of LOTR; but Nikkel's essay has given me a new appreciation for Frodo.
A Full Defense
of Frodo
Mary
Nikkel
I’ve threatened this digital essay for some time, and now I feel like my
timeline could use some nerdom, so the moment has come: it’s time for my full
defense of Frodo. 😉
I remember when I was younger, I struggled to accept and understand why a
lot of my peers found Frodo either forgettable or material for mocking. I
understand it a little better now: the movies DO often make him not
particularly likable or watchable. The book portrays him as someone who doesn’t
seem to be experiencing a reasonable range of human expression/emotion, which
admittedly can make him less compelling to read about. I understand that. But I
also think it’s integral to the point of the character.
Frodo and Sam are necessary for understanding each other. Sam was a
character cast from the mold that Tolkien learned on the frontlines of World
War I. Tolkien saw Sam as the everyday hero, the embodiment of the simple
good-hearted courage of the men he watched die in the trenches. Sam’s obstacles
are exterior to himself: the geography. The threat of enemy soldiers (orcs), of
Shelob, of his companion's physical and mental difficulties.
By contrast, Frodo’s obstacles are primarily internal. He endured a lot of
those same exterior challenges as Sam, but Sam did much to absorb their impact
(see the Cirith Ungol rescue). Frodo’s challenges are the slow, steady erosion
of a soul being asked to carry a tremendous internal darkness without being
consumed by it. Everything he was became laser-focused on that monolithic
spiritual and emotional task.
This is why, at the end, Frodo had to sacrifice far more than Sam. Because
Sam’s primary struggle was against external forces, once those external forces
were alleviated, he could go home, marry, have children, live as a functional
member of his community. For Frodo, the cessation of exterior pressure could do
nothing to mend the way his soul had been burning from the inside out.
This is a hard thing to portray in movie form (the greatest weakness of the
LotR movies is their inability to portray subtlety and spirituality, two traits
the narrative Tolkien crafted requires). We see Frodo’s neck chapping from the
actual physical weight of the Ring as a representation; well and good. But it’s
hard to truly convey the immense mental weight, the crucible of enduring
without utter collapse.
If Sam is a kind of patron saint for the good-hearted soldier, I would posit
that Frodo is the patron saint of the depressed, the suicidal, the addicted,
the ones living with trauma. We see it best maybe at Mount Doom, where Frodo’s
very self has been ground down to nearly nothing: “No taste of food, no feel of
water, no sound of wind, no memory of tree or grass or flower, no image of moon
or star are left to me. I am naked in the dark, Sam, and there is no veil
between me and the wheel of fire. I begin to see it even with my waking eyes,
and all else fades.”
If you’d ever been deeply depressed, ever lived chained in the prison of
PTSD, you will have experienced that exact same thing.
And of course that’s not always the most likable thing to read about or to
watch. Mental anguish has a way of stripping away so many of the human details
about you, even your personality itself.
"Frodo is a study of a hobbit broken by a burden of fear and horror—
broken down, and in the end made into something quite different,” J.R.R.
Tolkien himself wrote.
In another letter (#246, for the curious), Tolkien addressed the concern
that had been posed to him that Frodo was a weak and failed hero, that his
decision at Mount
Doom proved it. “I do not
think that Frodo's was a moral failure,” Tolkien clarified. “At the last moment
the pressure of the Ring would reach its maximum– impossible, I should have
said, for any one to resist, certainly after long possession, months of
increasing torment, and when starved and exhausted… I do not myself see that
the breaking of his mind and will under demonic pressure after torment was any
more a moral failure than the breaking of his body would have been– say, by
being strangled by Gollum, or crushed by a falling rock.”
Tolkien built into Frodo a validation of the internal struggle, marking it
not as weakness, but ultimately even as a special kind of strength. Through the
character of Frodo, Tolkien displayed that internal anguish, fear, and pain
were not moral failings. He might not have known it, but Tolkien was building
an incredibly beautiful fictitious case study on the impact of trauma on the
soul and the human ability to endure.
“Frodo undertook his quest out of love– to save the world he knew from
disaster at his own expense, if he could; and also in complete humility,
acknowledging that he was wholly inadequate to the task,” Tolkien summarized.
“His real contract was only to do what he could, to try to find a way, and to
go as far on the road as his strength of mind and body allowed. He did that.”
And for any of us carrying a weight of horror, trauma, grief, dread,
anxiety, depression, despair— maybe our hope is the same. To do what we can. To
know that, even when our minds give out under the tremendous weight, we are
still enough.
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