• @VubDapple
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    151 month ago

    My understanding is that Tolkien himself thought of Sam as especially heroic but I can’t think of where I would have learned that. He’s a ring bearer, and the ring wasn’t able to tempt him very well in that brief episode because he is just so humble and devoted. All he wanted was to be a gardener! Sam is a caregiver.

    • @TheGrandNagus
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      1 month ago

      Yup. Basically:

      Ring: I can make you into a great warrior. Like the old Elvish lords who commanded great armies!

      Sam: That’s absurd, I’m obviously not cut out for that lmao

      Ring: Uhhh…oh I got one. You see that mountain? You could turn all of that into a beautiful garden, and the land around can be beautiful meadows. You’d be the greatest gardener ever!

      Sam: I can’t manage a garden that large on my own, I’d need a whole army of gardeners doing the work for me. And if people are gardening for me, that’s no fun. Thank you kindly, Mr One Ring, Sir, but I don’t think I’ll be needing your services. My little garden is good enough for little old Sam.

      Ring: I can’t fucking deal with this guy, I give up.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Yeah yeah. Replace “the one Ring” with “a potayto” and see again how Sam is selfless and nice.

    • pachrist
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      41 month ago

      It’s one of the things I hated about the movies. Sam has a little Dutch angle moment, weighing whether to give back the ring with lots of facial expression acting.

      It’s been a while since I read the books, but I don’t recall him really thinking to much about it. He just gives it back to Frodo, and as a reader, you’re left wondering whether the ring just didn’t have enough time to grab hold, or maybe Sam is just truly pure of heart.

      Then you remember that Smeagol killed someone over the ring immediately. Sam is just that good of a guy. Better than Frodo, better than Bilbo, better than Galadriel, and even better than Gandalf.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      The way I interpreted Tolkien’s answer was more that Sam was the classical hero in the sense that once he returned home, he got a happy ending with Rose. Frodo on the other hand was irreversibly wounded and did not have a hero’s ending, having to leave to his beloved Shire to heal in Valinor.

      He did not claim that Sam’s story was more heroic in the sense most people would associate with the word.

      • @VubDapple
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        11 month ago

        All true, but I never thought of it that way. Sam avoided PTSD whereas Frodo was crushed by it.