Halifirien wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 8:59 pm
So your interpretation to that, scirocco, is that Gandalf made quite a mistake not searching through archives properly.
Well, an error of judgement, anyway. It's just the way he words it at the Council of Elrond.
The Council of Elrond wrote:`What those marks were he had not said. Who now would know? The maker. And Saruman? But great though his lore may be, it must have a source. What hand save Sauron's ever held this thing, ere it was lost? The hand of Isildur alone.
`With that thought, I forsook the chase, and passed swiftly to Gondor.
Once he had the brain-wave that a test might reveal the identity of the Ring, it doesn't seem to have been too difficult to find the Isildur-scroll. So it can't have been too deeply hidden. The criticism of Gandalf comes from the fact it never seems to have occurred to him previously to look in the one place in the last 3000 years where the paths of Men of Minas Tirith and the Ring had crossed, namely records related to Isildur at the battle. You would think that would be the first place he would look.
Perhaps I'm being too harsh. He did look for other stuff about Isildur. He may have just been unlucky in not hitting on the exact right place to look for the scroll. (or see Jude's suggestion).
Halifirien wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 8:59 pm I am very curious - what was he trying to find? He should have know everything about that battle by then, no? From Elrond, who was there. Why was he searching through archives to find something he already knew? Perhaps trying to find a clue how The One looks?
I agree, it's not obvious (surely Elrond had told him that Isildur had taken the Ring) but I think it's all part of a hunt for the bigger picture, right up to the time of Isildur's death. Elrond was only one participant at the battle; he can't have seen everything.
The Disaster of the Gladden Fields in Unfinished Tales gives the story as one complete sweep, but it was old history, and the facts probably came out gradually and piecemeal to the Denethor-era researchers 3000 years later. The main observers and survivors of Isildur's death were Dúnedain, not Elvish. If there had been a full investigation it would most likely have been by Isildur's kin and the detailed records would be held in Minas Tirith, not Rivendell. So it was quite reasonable for Gandalf to look there, as Faramir says he did.
Jude wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 9:22 pmAnd since Saruman had probably also discovered it, it's possible that (warning! wild speculation ahead!!!) he deliberately misfiled it somewhere where it was unlikely to be found.
I like it!