Rhetorical Situations: Aragon at the Black Gate

Sorry for the low quality of this video, it was the only one I could find that allowed embedding!  I decided to use Aragon’s speech from the Lord of the Rings (Return of the King) series.  The main protagonist, Frodo, is sent to Mordor to destroy an evil ring that would bring destruction to Middle Earth.  Prior to this speech, Aragon and his men had recently won a battle in Gondor.  Although victorious, they realize that they still have a long road ahead of them.  Aragon recognized that it was necessary to distract Sauron (antagonist); otherwise Frodo’s objective would be futile.  If they did not act now, winning the battle would be unavailing, as Sauron and his leagues of soldiers would obliterate them.  As a result, Aragon and his men travel to the Black Gate to challenge Sauron and buy Frodo time.

Aragon readily depicts exigency towards his audience in his speech.  Aragon’s main purpose in his speech is to request the help of his soldiers and wage war. If no one is willing to challenge Sauron and buy Frodo time, humanity itself will be lost.  The exigency described here makes it absolutely necessary for Aragon and his men to fight at Mordor.

In addition, the pathos strategy is used frequently throughout Aragon’s speech.  In the beginning of his speech he says, “I see in your eyes the same fear that would take the heart of me.  A day may come when the courage of men fails, when we forsake our friends and break all bonds of fellowship, but it is not this day.”  Aragon relates to his audience by sharing the same fears that he has, and he reassures them that if they can band together as brothers, then there is nothing to fear.  Finally, Aragon carries his words and tone out with valor and audacity.   These aspects were extremely pertinent into inspiring his men while using the pathos strategy.

Aragon displays the ethos factor as the speaker.  He is the heir of Isildur and is the rightful king of Gondor.  Throughout the books and the movies his character is depicted as just and kingly.  In addition, he was a leader in their last battle and was primarily responsible into leading his army to victory in Gondor.  Such authority makes him a strong ethos element.

Finally, I think the logos of this speech can be again attributed for the need of Aragon’s men to lead humanity to victory.  The logical situation would be to challenge Sauron and buy time for Frodo.   I honestly had a tough time to the logos appeal in this speech.  Does anyone see something I do not?

As explained, I believe that this speech portrays a rhetorical situational adequately.  Two of the three appeal schemes shine through and are used prominently.  Aragon uses these appeals to his advantage and he is able to convince his men into battle.  The battle buys just enough time for Frodo to destroy the ring and humanity is saved.

Published in: on January 28, 2010 at 3:46 am  Comments (3)  

The URI to TrackBack this entry is: https://blair01.wordpress.com/2010/01/28/rhetorical-situations-aragon-at-the-black-gate/trackback/

RSS feed for comments on this post.

3 CommentsLeave a comment

  1. I really do love this speech, the context is so epic. But no logos is rare to find in most battle speaches because a lot of the time their is a weak logical reason to go to battle, in most cases it is needed to live or protect something great. In this case Frodo and the ring to get to Mt. Doom in time. Nice choice!

  2. I found this video to be a very good choice of a rhetorical situation for all the reasons you have listed and as for logos I agree with your comment. If Aragon’s men do not fight then there will not be enough time for Frodo therefore humanity will end and the men will lose their lives for nothing.

  3. In response to your question, Aragorn’s refrain of “today is not that day” might be considered logos. Aragorn describes a dire hypothetical situation where the “courage of the men fails” and they abandon one and other, but then reminds his audience that that hasn’t happened yet. Aragorn’s argument can be summed up as “I know you’re scared, but you still have some courage left (you haven’t abandoned one another), so lets fight!” If the men follow Aragorn’s logic, they conclude that they must fight.

    This argument as an appeal to fear can also be classified under pathos, as you explained, and I agree with you that Aragorn uses that strategy more than anything else. The logos is more subtle.

    By the way, awesome choice of speech! I love Lord of the RIngs.


Leave a comment