There are always people in the barrage scolding Frodo for being useless. His line is indeed not very good-looking, and it is not as exciting as Aragorn's line. Countless entanglements, cowardice, bewitched, retreat, in the end the injury is not healed, the evil in my heart may still remain, and go away.
Frodo is kind, so he is not deceived. Kindness is also easy to be soft-hearted. Being brave doesn't mean you won't regret and back down after making a choice.
After all, the choice is an instant, and he has to sacrifice his life to undertake it. Don't hesitate, don't be weak. Can't be sad, can't give up. That's too "superhuman". He is not.
He saw everyone arguing and stood up to take it all. In fact, he is the weakest of the crowd.
Everyone was protecting him, putting the burden on him, he had to decide, he had to move forward. One of the companions is eyeing the Lord of the Rings, and the evil eyes of the evil beasts and half-orcs are all targeting him. He has no force value and can only rely on others to protect himself. Gandalf died for the road (not actually), powerless, remorseful, grief-stricken.
Epics are made up of extraordinary people, brave and ordinary people, and many, many ordinary people.
As Sam told Frodo in the second part.
"I can't do it." (Frodo)
"I know. It's not fair. We shouldn't have come, but we came. It's like the wonderful stories we've heard, celebrating great deeds, full of darkness and danger. Sometimes you don't want to know the end, because how There may be a happy ending? How can the world go back to how it was before so many terrible things happened? But in the end the terrible shadows will disappear, and even the darkness will disappear, and a new day will come, and the sun will shine brighter . This is the kind of coming-of-age story you'll never forget, even if you're too young to understand why.
But I think I get it, I get it now. The protagonists of these stories have many opportunities to give up halfway, but they don't, they decide to go ahead. Because they hold a belief. "(Sam)
"What beliefs do we hold?"
"There must be kindness in this world worth fighting to the end."
——He had many chances to give up halfway and still go on.
PS
Even Frodo could not conquer desire. Humanity still can't stand the long-term bewitching?
I find it interesting that desire made Frodo's journey almost fail, but desire led Gollum to bring about the demise of the Lord of the Rings.
PPS
The flow of time is different for this group of people, and they may be separated from each other outside the film. Time is really a weapon.
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