the bad take's keep rollin on out smh https://twitter.com/notwokieleaks/status/989696977674915840 …
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weed helps seriously. reading the full Middle Earth cycle blazed was a delight
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that is the canonical procedure i suppose
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No one can be told why Tom Bombadil is in the book: you have to see it for yourself.
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But Father Christmas is in TLTWATW to show that our worlds share myths and hint hint, Aslan is Jesus. Sooooooometimes Clive was a little heavy-handed with the metaphors, shocking as that may be.
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well, i mean, Tom Bombadil is obviously Eru Ilúvatar, aka God nothing about the situation has yet revealed to me why God needs to show up though
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Wrong. I see this allegation a lot and it absolutely baffles me. Tolkien would have viewed God acting like Bombadil as sacrilegious.
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Bombadil does not *need* to be in the book for plot reasons. Merry could have gotten his barrow-sword some other way, or gotten some other magic sword. It’s a super cool story hook that he has a sword made by the Witch-King's mortal enemies, but whatever.
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Bombadil is in the book to show the Hobbits, and the reader by extension, two things. First, that power without responsibility for others is ultimately meaningless. The one person who can safely hold the Ring can’t be trusted with it because he is not responsible enough.
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Yes, it’s a Spider-Man gambit. But that’s the lesser of the two reasons. The other one is far more important.
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Frodo meets basically what is left of the Gods in Middle-Earth. Demi-Gods, at least. Gandalf the Maia. Galadriel the Light-Elf. Elrond, son of Eärendil the Blessed. Aragorn, heir of Númenor and descendent of Lúthien. They are all powerless before the evil of the One Ring.
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