Boooh once again I got very lazy with the last panels… But it’s finished. xD
The forging of the great ring, and Celebrimbor realizing Sauron’s deceit.
Schlagwort: sauron
So like, when Frodo was writing the Lord of the Rings, he interviewed Sauron’s ghost, right? He had to, to get some of that information. I’m sure that was enjoyable.
No, no. Galadriel spends half her time looking into Sauron’s mind. She gave Frodo a blow-by-blow account of the fall of Barad-dur as seen through the Eye.
I had not thought of this. But now that I have, I’m realizing that Galadriel and Sauron must have been watching each other constantly, trying to get into the other person’s mind w/o letting them into their mind.
Preferably to the tune of “Every Breath You Take” by the Police.
Please note that while that is happening, Galadriel is wearing and using one of Celebrimbor’s Three Rings. While Sauron, of course, is without his.
Insult to injury on every possible level!
Ofc Sauron doesn’t know (right?) that she has a ring, so Galadriel has the biggest shit-eating grin possible through all this.
I’ve always wondered about the hidden-ness of the Three. SURELY he must have worked it out? There are four Elf strongholds left: Lorien, Rivendell, Lindon and Thranduil’s realm in Mirkwood. Two of them, Lorien and Rivendell, are led by Noldor who are cousins of Celebrimbor.
Although we don’t get to see either Lindon or Mirkwood at the time of Lord of the Rings, the state of Mirkwood even 78 years earlier and the fact that book!Thranduil seems so resolutely Silvan and anti-Dwarf/Noldor in sentiment does rather suggest it’s not there.
You wonder where else Sauron thought they could be.
Suddenly thinking about Sauron
I think I realized why Sauron works as a villain, at least for me.
Sauron is often seen as the prototypical example of the Dark Lord, the excruciatingly boring stock villain of classic high fantasy. He’s the dark component of a reductive black-and-white morality. He sits in a tower and wants to conquer and/or destroy everything. His tools, his servants, his lands are all foul, ugly, barren and evil. No real motivation, no personality to speak of. (Especially in contrast to the secondary villains and anti-villains in LOTR, who all have their stories and all but overflow with personality.)
Real Tolkien buffs, the ones who are buffer than me, will tell you that Sauron has an incredibly complex backstory, mostly contained in the Silmarillion, with bits and pieces all over Tolkien’s writings. Sauron has led a long and complicated life, going by various names and identities, serving evils greater than himself, getting destroyed but surviving multiple times, doing evil, repenting, faking repentance, doing evil again, going native in various ancient civilizations then contributing to their destruction, etc. If you read all the supplementary material, piece it together and fill the gaps with your imagination, Sauron is a noble, interesting, complex villain.
Very little of that comes through in LOTR itself, but I think it doesn’t need to. I think Sauron functions as a fantastic villain in LOTR exactly because we know so very little about him. Sauron has no POV chapter, except for a few paragraphs, and no POV characters ever encounter Sauron in a direct and comprehensible way. He mostly acts through proxy, his captains make war for him, his proxies speak for him. The reader never feels that his characterization is insufficient, because he *has no characterization*, he’s too far away and too high up, unknowable. Mostly Sauron is spoken of in the abstract, as the ‘enemy’, as the cause of evil, not as a specific evil person to be defeated. After all, it’s pretty clear he cannot be defeated, not in person. And when someone has a real and somewhat more direct encounter with Sauron, either via a palantír or in a vision, Sauron is too powerful to register as an individual person: he is an eye, a flame, a force, a will, a seeking attention. He is too big and too close to see as a whole, he is in your head, intruding, terrible.
So the narrative places Sauron in a context where he is either a distant menace, or an immense, incomprehensible mindfuck. Although he feels emotions such as wrath or fear, and he makes cunning stratagems, he doesn’t read as a strong clever evil person, he mostly reads as a force, as sheer power that only seeks more power. And on the whole, I feel that he *is* just that: not a person, but a power-hunger itself. It is stated in text that he’s a diminished, weakened, wounded version of himself, that during his different attempts (and failures) to subjugate others, he kept losing parts of himself, first his ability to assume a pleasing form, then to embody himself at all. I get the implication that he used to be a complicated entire whole person, and his struggle for power slowly eroded him, sanding off quirks and traits and individuality, costing him his patience for beautiful craft and his interest in beautiful languages, until he could no longer even pretend to be a fellow-person and not a *power*. Until he became an creature made of, and by, his own power. He was a person but power ate him and now he’s gone: this is the threat and the lure of the ring, which Sauron made of, and for, himself. Interactions with the ring are the closest thing we come to genuine interactions with Sauron, or to insights into Sauron’s mind – and interactions with the ring are uniformly horrifying, except maybe the one time Sam is small enough and kind enough to laugh it off. And seeing that, it’s clear that the ring needs to be destroyed, and Sauron’s power needs to be destroyed, for Sauron’s sake too. Only when he’s cut off from his power can his lost houseless spirit find its way through, to redemption or even just to rest.
TLDR: I don’t usually dislike villains who seem to seek power for power’s sake, but Sauron feels like a fantastic deconstruction of that: after all, LOTR is mostly about the risk of individual people becoming corrupted by power and becoming the vehicle of mere power-seeking-power-for-power’s-sake, and Sauron is someone to whom that already happened.
YES its tru i tell wraiths to hug my soda bottles before i drink them….its energy efficient natural cooling….ok
sauron is using green energy now?
mordor is solar powered
Isn’t mordor covered in shadow? I would say it’s magma powered.
O shit u right. Geothermal.
I just took (and passed!) my exam to be credentialed in a set of green building standards today, and I can weigh in on this discussion! Natural refrigerants are best because artificial ones either are horrible for global warming (HFCs), are horrible for the ozone layer (CFCs, banned by the Montreal Protocol), or are a little bit harmful for both (HCFCs), so cooling via wraith hugging would be an excellent way to achieve the Refrigerant Management prerequisite and credit if Barad-dur were to apply for LEED certification! Unfortunately, geothermal isn’t an acceptable renewable energy system under LEED (although Ainurin magic could be; Sauron’s team could just submit an appeal when their renewable energy credit was denied).
Got any more questions about how Mordor can go green, @sauron-the-wraith-fucker? I’m an expert now! (This would have been a great way to study for my test, actually!)
(On a side note, I’m looking for a job doing this kind of work, so if anyone knows of any openings, hmu! Dartmouth College graduate with BA in Environmental Studies & extensive internship experience!)
Excellent….excellent….
You would make a fine servant!
This is iconic
Sauron and environmentalism…the crossover the world truly needed
If there are any of y’all out there trying to tell me, with a straight face, that Poor Baby Mairon Is An Innocent Cinnamon Bun And Never Did Anything Wrong, I’m fully willing to bring up certain of Tolkien’s writings and quote them to you verbatim.
Poor Baby Mairon is a horrible, sadistic cinnamon roll who always did everything wrong. I love him very much.

Sauron the Deceiver
I just read The Silmarillion (again) so I decided to draw Sauron pre-giant flaming eyeball. So here ya go
Rereading
“The Mariner’s Wife” – I vaguely remembered the letter Gil-Galad sends to
Tar-Meneldur asking for Numenorean aid, but I forgot how prescient it was about
the threat of Sauron’s growing influence.A new shadow arises in the East. It is no tyranny
of evil Men, as your son believes; but a servant of Morgoth is stirring, and
evil things wake again. Each year it gains in strength, for most Men are ripe
to its purpose. Not far off is the day, I judge, when it will become too great
for the Eldar unaided to withstand.This is the late ninth
century SA, more than three hundred years before Annatar first shows up in
Eregion, but here’s Gil-Galad already aware that the “shadow in the East” is
one of Morgoth’s former servants, and anticipating a potential invasion. It
kind of forces me to shift my whole understanding of the Second Age timeline. I
assumed Sauron had been subtly laying the foundations for his rule in the East –
whispering in the ears of local leaders, encouraging consolidation, leaving
behind a half-remembered personality cult wherever he went – the kind of
behind-the-scenes maneuvering that wouldn’t draw much attention. But here it
seems like he’d already become a full-blown tyrant by the second millennium of the
Second Age, and the Elves were aware of
it.Which has plenty of
implications, but I’m most confused (and amused) by the thought that Sauron was
forging rings with the Elves in Eregion and trying to rule a Dark Empire at the same
time. Like, what were the logistics of this? You can’t leave a bunch of mortals
alone for three hundred years and expect their descendants to still be loyal to
you when you get back. Even with highly competent, trusted lieutenants, he’d
still need to show his face every once in a while. But it couldn’t have helped Annatar’s
shady reputation with everyone except the Mírdain if he kept disappearing with
no good explanation for long stretches of time.(Galadriel: I’m glad to see
you’ve finally stopped associating with that sketchy Maia.Celebrimbor: Oh, no, he’s
coming back, he just went to survey some mithril deposits.Galadriel: For ten years?
Celebrimbor: He’s a really
thorough surveyor.)#then again given that arwen was off visiting galadriel for aragorn’s entire childhood #maybe ten year outings wouldn’t seem that weird to elves #‘I’m going out see you in a decade’ #‘okay pick up some more chisels while you’re gone’








