Brodha be Eeeevil?

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  • syvana1
    Rookie
    • Sep 2021
    • 1

    Brodha be Eeeevil?

    Had a bit of luck in that my Necromancer found a staff of dispel Evil at level 10 however when I went to use it on Brodda the easterling a nasty piece of work who picks on defenseless women and children, it turned out he was too pure of heart to be effected. I guess they had it coming. (Playing 4.2.1)
  • Ingwe Ingweron
    Veteran
    • Jan 2009
    • 2129

    #2
    Brodda may be a mean spirited bully in Bree, but he's pretty far down the totem pole as far as "evil" is concerned. There are many examples of this in Angband, Mim's children for example, may be misguided, but not "evil" like their dad.
    “We're more of the love, blood, and rhetoric school. Well, we can do you blood and love without the rhetoric, and we can do you blood and rhetoric without the love, and we can do you all three concurrent or consecutive. But we can't give you love and rhetoric without the blood. Blood is compulsory. They're all blood, you see.”
    ― Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead

    Comment

    • Sphara
      Knight
      • Oct 2016
      • 504

      #3
      Lots of really, really nasty enemies are not considered evil, as you get deeper in the dungeon.
      Necromancer needs an alternative ways to kill enemies. By the time you meet the early orc chiefs (Lagduf, Grishnakh, Golfimbul), your nether bolt is not going to do the job.

      Necromancer is a challenge class. Without a question, the hardest one to get it going (save great early luck).

      Comment

      • archolewa
        Swordsman
        • Feb 2019
        • 400

        #4
        Originally posted by Ingwe Ingweron
        There are many examples of this in Angband, Mim's children for example, may be misguided, but not "evil" like their dad.
        I always felt sorry for Mim and dont understand how anyone can consider him "evil." He and his sons are all alone, the last of his people (a people incidentally who were genocided by elves). He is out looking for food when he gets captured by bandits, his son is murdered and he is forced to shelter the murderers of his son. Sure he betrays Turin and his band to the orcs, but *they murdered his son and stole his home.* Also, its not clear that he betrayed Turin willingly.

        At worst the guy was angry and vengeful. He's certainly far less repugnant than Feanor.

        Now credit to Tolkien, neither the Silmarillion nor Children of Hurin really try to excuse Turins behavior during the whole sorry episode.

        Comment

        • Nick
          Vanilla maintainer
          • Apr 2007
          • 9637

          #5
          Originally posted by archolewa
          I always felt sorry for Mim and dont understand how anyone can consider him "evil." He and his sons are all alone, the last of his people (a people incidentally who were genocided by elves). He is out looking for food when he gets captured by bandits, his son is murdered and he is forced to shelter the murderers of his son. Sure he betrays Turin and his band to the orcs, but *they murdered his son and stole his home.* Also, its not clear that he betrayed Turin willingly.

          At worst the guy was angry and vengeful. He's certainly far less repugnant than Feanor.

          Now credit to Tolkien, neither the Silmarillion nor Children of Hurin really try to excuse Turins behavior during the whole sorry episode.
          Well put. I always have a really hard time trying to sympathise with Turin at all.
          One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
          In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

          Comment

          • Djabanete
            Knight
            • Apr 2007
            • 576

            #6
            Originally posted by Ingwe Ingweron
            Brodda may be a mean spirited bully in Bree
            It sounds like you are thinking about Bill Ferny from the Fellowship of the Ring, no?

            Comment

            • T-Mick
              Adept
              • Mar 2012
              • 120

              #7
              To help clarify the conversation: Brodda is an easterling who took over Hurin's land after the Battle of Unnumbered Tears. He's a petty dictator, murderer, slaver, and rapist. Hurin's son Turin kills him without much regret, and regretting killing people is Turin's specialty.

              Comment

              • Ingwe Ingweron
                Veteran
                • Jan 2009
                • 2129

                #8
                Originally posted by Djabanete
                It sounds like you are thinking about Bill Ferny from the Fellowship of the Ring, no?
                Ah, yes, you're right.
                “We're more of the love, blood, and rhetoric school. Well, we can do you blood and love without the rhetoric, and we can do you blood and rhetoric without the love, and we can do you all three concurrent or consecutive. But we can't give you love and rhetoric without the blood. Blood is compulsory. They're all blood, you see.”
                ― Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead

                Comment

                • archolewa
                  Swordsman
                  • Feb 2019
                  • 400

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Nick
                  Well put. I always have a really hard time trying to sympathise with Turin at all.
                  It's interesting. While Children of Hurin is my least favorite of the Great Tales (so, so sad that's the only one that has a complete "modern" rendition, I would give anything for a full novelization of Beren and Luthien) I do find Turin to be an interesting character. He feels very *human*, stumbling from problem to problem of his own making, with brief moments where he understands they're of his own making, but he just can't seem to tame his worst impulses. The best he can do is temporarily redirect them to more constructive ends.

                  He feels like he's cut from the same cloth as Boromir, and Boromir is one of my favorite characters in LOTR.

                  Comment

                  • Nick
                    Vanilla maintainer
                    • Apr 2007
                    • 9637

                    #10
                    Originally posted by archolewa
                    It's interesting. While Children of Hurin is my least favorite of the Great Tales (so, so sad that's the only one that has a complete "modern" rendition, I would give anything for a full novelization of Beren and Luthien)
                    The one I really mourn is the Fall of Gondolin. Rubbing salt in the wound, there is a beginning of a full rewrite of it in "Unfinished Tales", which is possibly my favourite piece of Tolkien's writing.
                    One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
                    In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

                    Comment

                    • archolewa
                      Swordsman
                      • Feb 2019
                      • 400

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Nick
                      The one I really mourn is the Fall of Gondolin. Rubbing salt in the wound, there is a beginning of a full rewrite of it in "Unfinished Tales", which is possibly my favourite piece of Tolkien's writing.
                      Yeah, I read both the paetial rewrite and the original version in the "Fall of Gondolin" book. Man, the old version may not quite line up with current canon, but it is *epic*.

                      Personally, though I have to go with the original version of Beren and Luthien for my favorite piece of writing. Theres a but when Luthien is first setting out to save Beren where she cries in terror, before pressing on. That really hammered home for me just how terrifying "Melko" was for the elves, and just how much she relied on her mother's girdle before then.

                      Comment

                      • AnonymousHero
                        Veteran
                        • Jun 2007
                        • 1393

                        #12
                        Would it be controversial to suggest that Tolkien might have had a very opposite-of-nuanced idea of evil? I don't think it's too much of stretch that his experiences during The War and religiosity may have affected the writing. I'm no literary critic or anything, but the themes in the books seem very Original Sin-esque and all that.

                        EDIT: Think of any random orc. Could that orc redeem himself through being a good person? Were they only capable of evil and therefore irredeemable? How could an orc in a society of orcs (who can only do evil) even function?

                        Dgmw, it works for a story, but it is very simplistic.
                        Last edited by AnonymousHero; September 19, 2021, 00:05.

                        Comment

                        • Nick
                          Vanilla maintainer
                          • Apr 2007
                          • 9637

                          #13
                          Originally posted by AnonymousHero
                          Would it be controversial to suggest that Tolkien might have had a very opposite-of-nuanced idea of evil? I don't think it's too much of stretch that his experiences and religiosity may have affected the writing. I'm no literary critic or anything, but the themes in the books seem very Original Sin-esque and all that.
                          He was a devout Catholic, and had a very strong belief in the concept of the Fall, and this definitely affected everything to do with his writing. So Morgoth is a pretty good equivalent to Lucifer. His ideas of evil when applied to humans in his works are pretty conventional for his background - everyone is capable of both evil and good, and so on. Boromir, for example, is tempted to do evil acts for what seem like good reasons to him, but then repents and is redeemed.

                          Originally posted by AnonymousHero
                          EDIT: Think of any random orc. Could that orc redeem himself through being a good person?
                          This is where it gets tricky. Morgoth and Sauron are mostly regarded as an embodiment of evil (although both of them behave well at different times, and there is some hint that they had a chance of genuine repentance). Orcs were created by Morgoth (more or less - this was another thorny issue for Tolkien that he never really resolved), and so shared some of that embodied-evilness, which would imply the answer to your question is no. The description of the battle aftermath at the gate of Mordor after the ring was destroyed indicates the difference between how the humans behaved and how orcs and trolls did. But despite all that, you do get occasional flashes of "humanity" even from the orcs - in the conversation Sam overhears between Shagrat and Gorbag, for example.

                          My feeling is that Tolkien believed with his head that absolute evil exists, and translated that into his work, but faced with (real or written) sentient beings his feeling of faith in God and humanity softened the edges a bit.
                          Last edited by Nick; September 19, 2021, 01:54. Reason: Spelling
                          One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
                          In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

                          Comment

                          • Pete Mack
                            Prophet
                            • Apr 2007
                            • 6883

                            #14
                            It is standard Catholic 'lore' that demons and fallen angels cannot be saved; only humans. (Why fallen angels, with no true free will, were created in the first place is left as a mystery.)
                            So yes, orcs are probably just beyond redemption.

                            Comment

                            • T-Mick
                              Adept
                              • Mar 2012
                              • 120

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Pete Mack
                              IWhy fallen angels, with no true free will, were created in the first place is left as a mystery.)
                              The idea is that angels, not existing in time, and being created with full knowledge of everything they need to know, instantly made the decision to either fall or not fall using their free will, and since they have and had full knowledge of the consequences of their actions in their entirety from the instant of their simultaneous creation and fall, they will never change their minds.

                              Comment

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