Dawn Catanach - The Problem of Éowyn PDF
Dawn Catanach - The Problem of Éowyn PDF
Dawn Catanach - The Problem of Éowyn PDF
It is a fair criticism to point out the paucity–in numbers–of female characters in J.R.R. Tolkien's The
Lord of the Rings. In this case, however, what is lacking in quantity is made up for in quality. Where
earlier writers such as Malory may have put a sizable number of women in epic narratives such as
Le Morte Darthur, their women characters are quite flat; in many cases these women do not even
warrant a name while each knight, no matter how minor, is named. In contrast to such treatment,
Tolkien proves himself capable of writing female characters with much more depth and complexity.
Éowyn is an excellent example of this: not only is her role non-traditional, she is morally ambiguous.
Some call her a heroine while others consider her a deserter. But she is not unequivocally
deserving of either label. The truth of her character lies somewhere in between.
From a deontological point of view, Éowyn deserts. Simply put, she ran off to war instead of
staying behind to lead the people of Rohan in the absence of Théoden and Éomer. Clearly,
because she did not stay behind, she shirked her duties, thereby committing an ethical wrong.
However, this view ignores the mitigating circumstances in Éowyn's situation. Hers is not a
straightforward case of disobedience. Éowyn fulfills the letter of her duty, at least as far as the
reader knows what that duty is. Théoden's explicit instructions to her are to lead the people to
Dunharrow and to rule them in his absence. Aragorn finds her at Dunharrow, where he reminds
Éowyn (and the reader) that she is to remain there as ruler until Théoden's return, which occurs the
day after Aragorn leaves for the Paths of the Dead. Here is a chance for Éowyn to display a serious
disregard for duty. She asks Aragorn if she might join those going with him to the Paths of the
Dead. He does not allow it because of her charge, from which he neither can nor will release her.
So she indeed stays until Théoden arrives at Dunharrow. Her explicitly-stated charge is fulfilled, and
the reader does not find out if she is given another. When Théoden left Edoras for Helm's Deep,
his farewell to and appointment of Éowyn as his deputy was public, but he conducts his farewell
to Éowyn at Dunharrow in private–it is a scene that neither the reader nor those within the story
witness.
It may be objected that even if Éowyn was not specifically commanded to serve as ruler after
Théoden's departure for war in Gondor, she did her people a disservice by leaving them leaderless.
Yet, this speculation is not based on solid evidence from the text. Simply because Tolkien writes
no scene in which Éowyn hands her authority to someone else does not mean that she leaves
without making arrangements. Obviously her going to war was not a complete secret; she seemed
to have an understanding with Elfhelm, leader of her éored. It is hard to imagine such a leader
would be willing to look the other way if no arrangements had been made for Éowyn's absence.
Later on, there is no report of Rohan falling completely to pieces because no one was there to lead
them. In general, Middle-earth never lacks for someone to lead; when the lines of succession fail,
someone else is always appointed or willing to step in–the stewards in the kingdom of Gondor, and
Aragorn in the Fellowship. Furthermore, the Rohirrim are capable of choosing their own leaders–
Hama the Doorward originally suggests to Théoden that he appoint Éowyn to lead in his absence.
Catanach, “The Problem of Éowyn,” The Grey Book, volume 1 (2005), page 2
Nevertheless, these ambiguities concerning Éowyn's specific responsibilities and the state
of affairs in her absence cannot constitute a full defense of her actions. It is important to consider
her motivations as well. Most discussion of this subject centers on Éowyn's emotional state at the
time of her desertion. Textual evidence suggests that she acts on impulse and out of despair.
Dernhelm– Éowyn in disguise–wears an expression that Merry notices is "the face of one without
hope who goes in search of death" (Return 69). This hopelessness is the key to understanding
Éowyn's reasons for going to war. Many regard the source of Éowyn's hopelessness as her obvious
infatuation with Aragorn. Her desire to follow him on his journey comes out of love. With Aragorn
goes all hope; one of his many names, Estel, means "hope." Thus, when Aragorn leaves Éowyn
behind, hope leaves her too. It is the second time she has been left to face her greatest fear, which
is to “stay behind bars, until use and old age accept them, and all chance of doing great deeds is
gone beyond recall or desire” (Return 47). These incidents come after a string of events sufficient
to sap the joy out of anyone, namely the decline of her uncle, Théoden, and Gríma's treatment of
her. This picture of Éowyn is that of a woman already brought low who becomes desperate for a
way out of her situation when denied love. If at this point all hope is lost, Éowyn has nothing to lose
and everything to gain by leaving with the Grey Company. Her reason for doing so would match
their reason: love for Aragorn. Instead, she chooses to stay and wait for Théoden's arrival. It is only
after being left behind for a third time that she deserts Dunharrow.
Éowyn's reasons for disguising herself and running off to war involve people closer and more
familiar to her than a kingly man she just met. Her desperation truly becomes evident when the
members of her household leave her again, this time with the very real possibility that they will not
come back. This, not Aragorn's departure, is the breaking point. The Rohirrim, with help from the
Ents, have won victory over Isengard, and it is time to ride to the aid of Gondor, where no victory
is assured and is in fact quite unlikely. The threat of total annihilation in the West, magnified in the
coming of the Dawnless Day, is very real; little hope exists that either Théoden or Éomer will come
back to Rohan. All those present at the muster of Rohan think it more likely that it will be Sauron's
armies who come marching from the east in victory. Aragorn says as much when he tells Éowyn
"there will be need of valor without renown, for none shall remember the deeds that are done in the
last defense of your homes" (Return 47). Even as these words become more likely to prove true,
Éowyn's answer becomes more apt: she has "leave to be burned in the house, for the men will
need it no more" (Return 47). If the combined forces of Rohan and Gondor cannot stop Sauron's
army, the group left for the last defense has no better chance of succeeding where the much larger
force failed.
The hopelessness of the situation is not the main reason Éowyn deserts. After all, she did not
choose her moment to leave when Aragorn went on the Paths of the Dead–a situation just as
hopeless as that of the Rohirrim. When the Riders leave, those leading them are not simply men
Éowyn respects, but the members of her household, men she has known and loved all her life. One
of these is Théoden, her uncle who is a father to her in addition to his role as lord of Meduseld and
king of Rohan. Second to Théoden is Éomer, her brother and peer. This group of three, Éowyn,
Éomer, and Théoden, resembles a comitatus–a group of warriors bound together by loyalty.
The notion of comitatus is prominent in the Old English poem "The Battle of Maldon," a work
which Tolkien knew well. In this piece, the fighting force is an earl, Beorhtnoth, and his warriors, the
"sharers of the hearth" (line 204). These men fight to the last for their lord, even after his death:
"[T]hey desired all one of two things, / to leave life or else to avenge their dear lord" (lines 207-8).
Loyalty is the foremost value among the band of warriors. As one of them says:
Catanach, “The Problem of Éowyn,” The Grey Book, volume 1 (2005), page 3
nothing left for her; she either endures exile from her comitatus, or she goes with them to what
appears from the gloom of the Dawnless Day to be certain death.
Fortunately for everyone, Éowyn does not allow herself to be abandoned by her comitatus.
Instead, she takes decisive action to fulfill her appropriate duty as a member of that group, and in
the process achieves heroic deeds. From a teleological viewpoint, achievement of these deeds
warrants praise and honor. Regardless of the means it took to get her to the Fields of the Pelennor,
in the end she was meant to be there.
Éowyn's deed–the slaying of the Witch-king–is one that few others in or near Minas Tirith at
the time could have achieved. The Macbeth-like prophecy about the Witch-king proclaims that he
cannot be defeated by any living man.1 He is largely safe on the Pelennor Fields, since it is almost
exclusively men save Éowyn and Merry, also left behind by Théoden, his lord, who have ridden to
Gondor's aid. Gondor's own defensive forces include Gandalf and Pippin, who are also not men.
Gandalf on his own is up to the task of battling the Witch-king, and he thinks it his fate to do so. But
it falls to Éowyn and Merry to defeat him, since Gandalf is called away to defuse Denethor's
situation. Loss is inherent in every possibility, but if Éowyn and Merry had not been at Pelennor to
stop the Witch-king, the losses could very well have been more grievous. With only Gandalf around,
either the Witch-king could have caused more havoc on the battlefield after attacking Théoden,
possibly scattering all the armies of the west, or Denethor would have proceeded with his plan to
put both himself and Faramir on a funeral pyre.
In addition to being a requirement of fate, Éowyn's presence on the Pelennor Fields enhances
the parallels within the narrative. The cancellation of the confrontation at the gate between Gandalf
and the Witch-king stands at the beginning of two sequences of events: Gandalf's rescue of Faramir
and the Witch-king's attack on the Riders of Rohan. The key figures in these events are Denethor
and Théoden, who each die within the same hour. If the confrontation at the gate had taken place,
Théoden would have been spared, to the loss of both Faramir and the parallels between Denethor
and Théoden. Tolkien sets up these two characters as foils for each other. Both are aging rulers
under threat from evil forces (Sauron and Saruman), both lose sons (Boromir and Théodred), and
both acquire a hobbit squire (Pippin and Merry). The difference between the two rulers shows in
the oaths they take from their new squires. Merry offers his service to Théoden out of love, as befits
a comitatus system. In contrast, Pippin offers service to Denethor out of a sense of duty. If love
plays any part in his decision, it is admiration for Boromir, not for Denethor–the lord to whom he
swears fealty. The parallels continue into the next generation with Éowyn and Faramir. They both
suffer from the Black Breath of the Nazgul after having gone through experiences that already
deprived them of hope, both are thought to be dead or as good as dead but are discovered to be
alive and are subsequently healed by Aragorn.
It is fitting, then, that in the end, Éowyn and Faramir are rewarded with a chance for happiness
together. In Middle-earth, the characters ultimately get their just deserts for their deeds.2 In the
1
The Witch-king is, however, in considerably more danger than Macbeth, as Middle-earth is full of beings who are
not living men, inluding Elves, Dwarves, Hobbits, Wizards, Ents, and the Army of the Dead, not to mention women.
Fortunately for him, few of them happen to be around during the Battle of the Pelennor Fields.
2
Evil characters in Tolkien’s texts come to a bad end: Gollum falls into the Cracks of Doom; Sauron is defeated,
presumably never to rise again; Saruman dies at the hands of his servant; Wormtongue falls outside of battle full of hobbit
arrows after getting kicked in the face. Those characters on the side of good get chances for happiness: Frodo seeks
healing in the Undying Lands; Sam becomes a gentlehobbit and starts a large family; Aragorn takes the throne and weds
Arwen; Beregond, kicked out of the Guard of the Citadel, gets a new assignment among Faramir's men, for whom he
sacrificed his place in the Guard; Gimli spends the rest of his life in Middle-earth in the Glittering Caves of Aglarond, then
removes with Legolas to the Undying Lands. Those few good characters who die before the end of the book–Boromir and
Théoden–at least get a glorious death in battle, a death a warrior can be proud of. Boromir's case is especially noteworthy
because he is not unequivocally good; he gives in to the temptation of the Ring, and had he been able to get it from Frodo,
(continued...)
Catanach, “The Problem of Éowyn,” The Grey Book, volume 1 (2005), page 5
larger context of Middle-earth, Éowyn is forgiven her transgression, that is, desertion, because of
her valiant role on the fields of the Pelennor Fields as shown by her reward of a happy life following
the War of the Ring. Even if she had fallen before the Witch-king, her death would have been a
valiant one. In whatever way that battle had ended, it was worthy of songs about the White Lady
of Rohan. Éowyn has been forgiven among her own people, for the Rohirrim remember events in
song. When all is said and done, Éowyn is both a heroine and a deserter. She had to desert Rohan
in order to achieve the heroic deeds fated for her. In doing so, she was motivated by the values of
Rohirric culture, namely courage, valor, and loyalty to one's lord. Therefore, she deserves and
receives forgiveness for her transgression.
Works Cited
2
(...continued)
who knows how far he would have gone before realizing his mistake. He gets a chance to repent and is rewarded with
a noble end.