“I Have Looked in The Stone of Orthanc, My Friends.” Why Does Aragorn Choose This Moment to Reveal Himself to Sauron.

The Return of the King by J.R.R Tolkien (Harper Collins 1991) pp. 761-765

in the last post on this blog we saw how Aragorn emerged from the disguise of Strider the Ranger that he has kept for many years to become Elessar the King. And when we heard him declare to Gimli, “You forget to whom you speak”, we felt the shock that his friends felt, friends who had become used to the disguise even though they knew deep in their hearts that he was more than the disguise. Perhaps it is worth reminding ourselves that when Pippin approached the throne room of Gondor with Gandalf in order to meet with Denethor that Pippin had to be warned not to speak about Aragorn to which Pippin replied, “What’s wrong with Strider?”. The disguise has been effective enough for Pippin to share in the surprise that Gimli and Legolas felt when Aragorn addressed them as the king.

But why has Aragorn chosen this moment to reveal himself to Sauron as king? Why has he done so even though Gandalf warned him not to be too hasty in using the Stone of Orthanc even though he is its rightful master?

I am going to offer my own understanding of this and would be delighted to read your thoughts about this in the comments section. I want to take you back a few pages from the passage that we are considering here because I think that in them we will find something that brings Aragorn out from his long crafted disguise. We read how the Dúnedain of the North overtook Théoden and his party as they rode from Isengard across Rohan to the fortress at Helm’s Deep, and how they brought messages from Rivendell to give to Aragorn, their captain. One message that we will think more about was from Elrond.

“The days now are short. If thou art in haste, remember the Paths of the Dead.”

And the other message, the message that I think brings Aragorn out from his disguise, comes from Arwen. It begins with a question that Aragorn asks of Halbarad.

“What is that you bear, kinsman?”

For Halbarad bears a “tall staff, as it were a standard, but it was close-furled in a black cloth bound about with many thongs.” And Halbarad answers his kinsman.

“It is a gift that I bring you from the Lady of Rivendell… She wrought it in secret, and long was the making. But she also sends word to you: The days now are short. Either our hope cometh, or all hopes end. Therefore I send thee what I have made for thee. Fare well, Elfstone.”

Note the way in which Arwen divides the word, farewell. Halbarad has done his duty as her messenger well in conveying her meaning exactly as she intended it. I cannot help but feel that she made it clear that he was to say, Fare Well. And think back to the moment in Lothlórien when Frodo heard Aragorn say to himself, Arwen, vanimelda, namarië.

Namarië. The word in the High-Elven tongue that means farewell. Here the word is not divided. Aragorn in Lothlórien has lost all hope after the fall of Gandalf in Moria. Here he is indeed bidding his beloved, his vanimelda, a last adieu “unless there be a light beyond the dark roads that we must still tread, you and I.” (The Fellowship of the Ring pp. 341-343)

But not so Arwen. In secret and alone she has woven a banner for the man that she has chosen against the wishes of the father that she loves. She knows the words of her father: “She shall not be the bride of any Man less than the King of both Gondor and Arnor” (The Return of the King p. 1036). And so she has made for Aragorn the standard of the King.

“Fare well, Elfstone.”

Arwen knew of the stone, the Elessar, that Galadriel kept secretly in Lothlórien and together with Galadriel she held the secret of her hope that she would be united with Aragorn. It was the stone that Idril of Gondolin gave to Eärendil before he made his great journey into the west on behalf of the beleaguered peoples of Middle-earth who had fallen under the yoke of Morgoth. Eärendil was Arwen’s grandfather, the father of Elrond her father, and Elros, the distant ancestor of Aragorn. Eärendil was the keeper of the stone of hope and in Lothlórien Galadriel gives the same stone to Aragorn with the words, “In this hour take the name that was foretold for you, Elessar, the Elfstone of the House of Elendil.” (Fellowship pp. 364-367).

Galadriel may have given the name to Aragorn in Lothlórien but now it is clear that she shared this secret together with Arwen, that together they have given the name that was once given to Eärendil by Idril of Gondolin. And in Arwen’s message to her Elfstone, her Elessar, come the words, fare well. Not a goodbye, an adieu, but a call to action, and an expression of her hope that in all that he does Aragorn will indeed fare well, go well, do well. And it is as the Elessar, the heir of Isildur, Elendil and Eärendil, that Aragorn receives her gift, her standard, and so declares himself to Sauron, wresting control of the Stone of Orthanc from his grasp.

10 thoughts on ““I Have Looked in The Stone of Orthanc, My Friends.” Why Does Aragorn Choose This Moment to Reveal Himself to Sauron.

  1. You know, that makes a lot of sense, I had never thought of it like that before. Maybe this is too obvious, but perhaps Aragorn revealed himself also to keep Sauron’s eye on him, dividing his attention, like when he led the last army to the Black Gate?

    • Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts. I am sure you are right in what you say. In fact, when Gimli says that this will cause Sauron to strike Aragorn replies that the blow that is struck too soon may go astray. But it felt to me that it was Arwen’s message that has the greatest impact on Aragorn, greater than Elrond’s. Perhaps it is a both/and rather than an either/or.

  2. I have read LotR many many times and have always loved the scene when Halbarad gives the standard and message to Aragon… even after 40+ years of thinking about every word, you give me new insights! Thank you!

  3. Good morning, Stephen, What an amazing essay into Aragorn’s history, ancestors, motivation, hesitations, and at last acceptance of his destiny enabling him to make this leap of faith. No more secrets, so to speak. Amidst all that, I never paid much attention to Elrond’s insistance that his daughter would be no-one’s bride but the King of Gondor’s. This is actually a familiar theme in so many chivalric epics and fairy tales: the poor/obscure knight can marry the princess only after slaying the dragon/acquiring a certain prize/stealing back a Silmaril.

    It looks like Arwen’s love tipped the balance: if Aragon wanted his dream of personal happiness with Arwen to come true, he first had to take back rule of the Orthanc stone, awaken his “Inner Elessar”, walk the Paths of the Dead, and become King (Arwen’s husband). Love conquers all?

    Of course, all of this ultimately would not have borne lasting fruit if Frodo, Sam, and Gollum hadn’t destroyed the Ring. Thanks for provoking thought and digging deep! Blessings, Kate

    • Kate, thank you so much for sharing these thoughts. This was a piece that meant a lot to me in writing it and I wanted to express ideas that had been growing over some time. I still remember my first meeting with my future father in law who gave me an intense interrogation. And now I have two daughters of my own and want the men who come into their lives to be worthy of them. Did Elrond think at first that he had set Aragorn an impossible task? Surely he would have had a memory of Thingol as you rightly alluded to in your thoughts. If he ever did think this then by the time of the Council that he gathered in Rivendell he knew that either Aragorn would succeed or all would fail.
      But I am convinced that it is the gift of the standard that rouses Aragorn’s “Inner Elessar” as you put it so well, at this crucial moment, and her reminder that the days are short.
      On your last thought the thing that strikes me is that each one of us is called to one field of action. If Frodo, Sam and Gollum had not taken the Ring to the Fire then the story of Aragorn and Arwen would have been vain. But if Aragorn (and Théoden too) had not arrived in time at the siege of Minas Tirith, and perhaps if Éowyn and Merry had not slain the Witch King, then there would have been nothing for Frodo and Sam to return to.
      Peace and all Good, Stephen

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