Paul Chung: LOTR

Lord of the Rings is one my favorite novels ever written. It is J. R. Tolkiens works that I have an immense fondness for. There are many allegorical connotations that derive from biblical accounts. The story of Christ for one as the "returning king" represented by Aarogron son of Arathorn. The one that would become king. It is truly an inspiring novel that speaks to the heart. My heart was moved by the strong friendships that journeys in life takes upon people (particularly Samwise and Frodo). The elemental plots that made the story even greater involved the characterizations of antagonist characters such as Gollum. Gollum was quintessential in the LOTR universe, for without him, the world would have plunged into darkness. The beauty in this ideology is that we need antagonist characters because they develop our own characters. They force us to grow when we do not want to. Often times opposition is what forces one to grow because it becomes the realization of the necessity to evolve. That is the beauty of human character because growth is inevitable, all one has to do is to choose to want to. That is the beauty of choice. Even in LOTR has a choice to do good or evil. That given choice derives people's destinies.

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