Fools in the Hot Zone: Saruman as Bold but Incompetent Firefighter
Posted by Adrian Simmons on Aug 10, 2011 in News | 11 commentsEvery year the Man sends me to Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response class. These HAZWOPER classes are almost always taught by firefighters because they routinely deal with emergency responses to hazardous materials.
Over the years I’ve noticed a trend in the way they teach the course–that most of the examples of what not to do when knee-deep in an emergency dealing with hazardous materials comes from the hard lessons of other firefighters. More specifically, they come from the gung-ho firefighters–the wanna-be heroes–who charge into a dangerous situation, make said situation worse, and force other firefighters to spend time and energy rescuing them instead of dealing with the main problem.
Because I’m a nerd, and I’ve taken this class a lot over the years and my mind wanders, I immediately saw a parallel to the wizards of JRR Tolkien’s Middle-earth.
Background? Surely:
So at the end of the Second Age Sauron has completely corrupted the men of Númenor, causing their destruction and his own. Because you can’t keep a good Miaiar down, and especially an extremely bad one like Sauron, he’ll be back. Which is why the Valar of the Utermost West decided to select three of their number to go to Middle-earth and “deal” with the problem of Sauron’s inevitable return.
From The Return of the King:
They came therefore in the shape of Men, though they were never young and aged only slowly, and they had many powers of mind and hand. The two highest of this order (of whom it is said there were five) were called by the Eldar (elves) Curunir ‘the Man of Skill’, and Mithrandir, ‘the Grey Pilgrim’, but by Men in the North Saruman and Gandalf.
Notice how the original number of three swelled to five? That’s what happens when divine beings make decisions by committee. However, the details of those proceedings are important–nay crucial–for the understanding of Saruman’s supreme arrogance and the depth of his magnificent solution to the Sauron problem.
From Unfinished Tales:
‘Who would go? For they must be mighty, peers of Sauron, but must forgo might, and clothe themselves in flesh so as to treat on equality and win the trust of Elves and Men. But this would imperil them, dimming their wisdom and knowledge, and confusing them with fears, cares, and weariness coming from the flesh.’ But two only came forward: Curumo (Saruman), who was chosen by Aulë, and Alatar, who was sent by Oromë.
It is important to note that when the word went out for volunteers, Saruman is listed first among the only two that answered. And how does Gandalf get into the mix?
Also from Unfinished Tales:
Then Manwë asked, ‘Where was Olórin (Gandalf)?’ and Olórin, who was clad in grey, and having just entered from a journey had seated himself at the edge of the council, asked what Manwë would have of him. Manwë replied that he wished Olórin to go as the third messenger to Middle-earth. But Olórin declared that he was too weak for such a task, and that he feared Sauron. Then Manwë said that was all the more reason why he should go, and that he commanded Olórin [to go as the third messenger]. But at that Varda looked up and said: ‘Not as the third” and Curumo remembered it.
So here you’ve got your three. Sarumon being “chosen,” Alatar being “sent,” and Gandalf having to be “ordered.”

Of course, agendas are crucial to conducting any staff meeting, and all agendas fall apart once the meeting starts.
From Unfinished Tales:
Curumo (Saruman) took Aiwendil (Radagast) because Yavanna begged him, and that Alatar took Pallando as a friend.
Here’s the history that is so interesting to me. Sarumon’s boss is Aulë–the god of rocks and metal, kind of a “forge” god. A god concerned with the making of things. And in the creation of the world, Saruman’s co-worker under Aulë was–Sauron.
It is interesting that after getting slapped down as “leader” of the group by Varda, Sarumon is still the one that Yavanna (the goddess of all “growing things”) goes to to ensure that a representative of her interests is among the wizards. She doesn’t bring this up at the council; she takes it to him personally. She’s also Aulë’s wife, so Sarumon’s first official call as a wizard is to do a favor for his boss’s wife. Just in case you think the gods are not as petty and repetitave as us poor mortals I have to point out that Yavanna’s pleading omits the fact she already has an entire race of her own agents in Middle-earth: the Ents.
And, of course, no task involving destroying an indestructible evil force would be complete without tying the hero’s hands behind his back:
From Unfinished Tales:
…whereas now their emissaries were forbidden to reveal themselves in forms of majesty, or to seek to rule the wills of Men or Elves by open display of power, but coming shapes weak and humble were bidden to advise and persuade Men and Elves to good, and to seek to unite in love and understanding all those whom Sauron, should he come again, would endeavor to dominate and corrupt.
The more you know about Sarumon, the more sympathetic to his situation you become. He is the first picked to go, and the first to arrive in Middle-earth. He journeys to the east with Aratar and Pollombo, and those two don’t return (not much is said about the blue wizards, but honestly I get the feeling they kind of flake out altogether–a very real danger with volunteers who get to bring their friends along).
But Sarumon’s always second fiddle. Right from the start Varda makes it clear that he’s not in charge, and later when the White Council is formed, Galadriel doesn’t want him in control of that August body either. And he learns that that weenie Gandalf (who comes to Middle-earth one hundred years later) gets one of the three rings of power the day he freaking lands. Ugh! The humiliation! You’d retreat to the fastness of your ancient tower, too.
Sarumon’s activities are not well defined, but there are hints that he tangles with ring wraiths, and he is in the thick of it when the White Council goes to Dol Gulgdur to deal with the Necromancer. After Dol Guldur he withdraws a bit, but even then he is still working on the Sauron problem, and his solution is as awful as it is cunning. You have to keep in mind, he’s come to Middle-earth as a volunteer hero, he fights the good fight (for over a thousand years), stress causes his hair to turn from black to white, he gets the keys to Orthanc, and he discovers the pilantir. After Dol Guldur is where the Big Plan starts.
And here is the tragedy of it all, as Sauron and Sarumon were co-workers back in the day, they have a remarkably similar ‘corporate culture’, and a pretty similar worldview–and this is why the wise don’t really want Sarumon in charge–because his answer to Sauron will be to become Sauron, Ring or no.
Sauron, of course, knows all this, and that’s why it is so easy for him, via the pilantir, to pluck at Sarumon’s pride and ensure that, like the gung-ho fireman, he overestimates his own abilities and underestimates the situation, and his teammates have to burn valuable time and resources bailing him out.
And since Sarumon can’t force Men or Elves to fight his Big War, he comes up with the idea of the half-orcs/Urik-hai. The injunction by the gods? Doesn’t say shit about orcs, does it? Hell no it doesn’t! So, really, it was only a matter of time before Saruman realized that he could raise an army of his own orcs to take on Sauron’s. Give him another hundred years and he won’t need the damn Men or the Elves. It really has a whole Stalin vs. Hitler vibe, doesn’t it?
And I want to point out that the only orcs who get anywhere close to success in this entire trilogy are Sarumon’s orcs. Love the Uruk-uai or hate ‘em, it goes down exactly like Uglúk said it would. In fact, had Uglúk not been saddled with the goblins of Moria and up to his watery eyes in spies from Mordor, I daresay Sarumon of Many Colors would have totally shaken the pillars of heaven.
But what’s odd is that Sarumon double-hedges his bets, even once he begins constructing his army, he’s obeying the letter but not the spirit of the law; he doesn’t use any of his mojo on Theoden…maybe he taught Grima a little mojo and let him do it, but well, he doesn’t even make Grima do anything.
And, if you read the Two Towers, Sarumon does not even order his Uruk Hai to do anything (in the various movies Sarumon is shown ordering them out, but in the book this is never shown). And it is a good thing, too, because had those orcs had even the slightest bit of decent leadership, they wouldn’t have rushed up to the walls of Helms deep with no plan (other than to mill around getting killed). Like DEVO, I must repeat: Sarumon doesn’t even really bend the will of the Uruk-hai to his own.
I realize that there may be some readers who think me a fool to state that Sarumon was not in charge, but I think the evidence speaks for itself. And, during the storming of Minas Tirith, Tolkien mentions on multiple occasions that “no brigand or orc-chieftan was in charge” but that the chief of the Nazgúl was. And I think it also hints strongly that the Uruk-hai were left on their own (along with their far-from-competent human allies).
The injunction does not mention Hobbits, and that too, is key, perhaps the key, to the end of the trilogy. Sarumon didn’t have time to build a big enough army of half-orcs to stand against Sauron, so Plan A is shot all to hell, and he didn’t get his hands on the Ring, so there goes Plan B, and thanks to the remarkable willpower of those scruffy Hobbits, he can’t take refuge under Sauron’s massive cloak (where I feel confident that Sarumon would have convinced himself that he’d affect long-term change from within the organization). His pride–something that is a key part of his very being–is stung, so what does he do? Well, he goes and screws with the Hobbits because he can. Because there is no one else for him to take revenge on. In a creepy way he still won’t turn a hand against Men or Elves, and the Ents have already handed him his ass (and, well, Radagast might be a harder opponent than Sarumon’s tough talk implies).
I have no idea what Sarumon is thinking in taking over the Shire; yes he is spiteful, he is vengeful minded, but again he has totally not turned completely from his path. He doesn’t, as far as I know, do anything to the Hobbits himself, even to Frodo. So what the heck is he doing in the Shire? What is his long-term plan? Plan D, I think, is that the new age is just starting, and that if you give him another century (and what is a century to Sarumon?), he will build a great thing, a great kingdom, the Elves and the Men will have to deal with Sarumon, one way or another.
Back to the firefighter analogy: just as the incompetent firefighter gets himself into trouble and diverts energy and materials away from the fire itself, so does Sarumon. In his misguided attempts to heroically solve the problem, he ends up making things worse. Not only does Rohan have to expend a lot of men and energy dealing with that, but so does Gandalf. Gandalf stands up for Sarumon, and that is puzzling to many people, and it smacks of an old-boy network, but Gandalf knows that Sarumon has done his job, and done it well, for thousands of years, and even after getting totally juked by Sauron (which is what Sauron does), was in a strange way doing it even with the search for the Ring and the Uruk-hai.
Gandalf’s answer to the Sarumon problem? In a delicious way, in a very Sarumon-like way, he declares that isn’t his f-ing problem is it? That’s not what he’s been sent to Middle-earth (twice!) to deal with. In the end everyone, Gandalf, Hobbits, Grima, and even our failed hero Sarumon, are all given something most of those inept gung-ho firefighters never got–free reign over their own fates.


I’m with Gandalf. I’m only going if I get orders!
Need a edit pass, sorry to nitpick. Saruman, not Sarumon – confusing Sauron? You’ve got a 50/50 split on the spelling of the name, here.
Clearly I was using the Northern spelling and the Southern spelling, much like JRRT himself, why call someone one name when you can just as easily use two!
Brilliant, Adrian! Saruman was the White. Gandalf was the Grey. I always understood that Saruman was the more powerful, and that Gandalf a reluctant hero. But it’s all sort of pre-destination: the Powers Above knew what Saruman would do, that he wanted the Ring for himself. They knew Gandalf would not fall into that trap, was even afraid of the Ring. Gandalf’s reluctance, his fears, served him well. After his death and resurrection, he became the White, and more powerful than Saruman. He passed the test. Saruman failed. I never hated Saruman as a character, a villain, and you argue so well for him and his motives. I always felt a little sorry for Saruman. But it’s Sam Gamgee who’s the real hero. Frodo failed. It was Sam who won the day. Now, Harry Potter destroyed and threw away the Elder Wand (though I bet Rowling won’t be able to resist having that wand found and restored — like the Ring was found by Smeagol) — whereas Frodo could not destroy the Ring.
If I may be able to toot my own horn for a moment. An article I wrote about my picaresque novel, MAD SHADOWS: THE WEIRD TALES OF DORGO THE DOWSER, has been posted on Black Gate Magazine’s website. The article is titled: “Dorgo the Dowser and Me.” You can read it at http://www.blackgate.com
Thank you!
I’m not sure if the lords of the uttermost west knew how Saruman would turn out, but I think they knew the potential was there (because of the shared history between Saruman and Suaron). But they NEEDED him, they needed someone to go. And, back to the firefighter analogy here, they need someone who is willing to run into that burning building.
As for Mr. Gamgee, he has a certain course wisdom that really saves the day. I’m really surprised that the movies didn’t show Sam’s own weird power fantasies when he puts on the ring. He realizes he can’t handle it and he gets rid of it while he can.
It’s too late for Frodo by the time he gets to the mountain. It’s very telling that (in the movies at least, I’m not sure about the book off the top of my head) on the way back when Bilbo askes him if he still has it, his answer isn’t that he threw it away, or destroyed it, it was that he lost it. I think, like Golum and Bilbo, and Sauron even, Frodo will always want it back.
Now that you mention it, the movies didn’t deal with Sam and the Ring. I think they gave the Frodo/Sam dialog about what happened to the Ring to Bilbo and frodo at the climax of the film. The Lord should have been plural — because Sauron, Gollum, Bilbo, and Frodo all own the Ring long enough to become possessed by it, to become part of it. Gandalf was wise as well as afraid to touch the One Ring, as was Elrond, Faramir, and Aragorn. I think your firefighter analogy is quite appropriate: Saruman was the hero who rushed in, but he was flawed and had his own agenda. Gandalf was the reluctant hero, who tread warily but had the moral strength to deny the Ring. Many scenes show his fear, his uncertainty, yet still he forges ahead. His strength and his courage grew after his resurrection. The film does a good job of showing the change in him when he went from Grey to White. I love the scene in Fangorn Forest where Aragorn, Gimli, and Legolas are faced with “Saruman” — and then the images morphs into Gandalf. To me, that’s the transference of power, of title, from Saruman to Gandalf. Not by accident are Saruman and Sauron’s name so similar. I would love to see Jackson do the First War of the Ring. The Silmarillion was fine as a “history or Bible,” But I really had wanted another trilogy dealing with Morgoth and Sauron.
I have heard that part of the Hobbit movie will be Gandalf and the White Council going to deal with the necromancer. Which could be pretty cool.
Thanks!
A terrific, thought-provoking essay Adrian. I’ve re-written the climatic film scene where Saruman captures Gandalf in my head many times, coming at it from a similar angle — what if there was some crazy logic to Saruman’s orc-centered strategy? What if he was crazy like a fox under all that appeasement stuff, trying to win the ring to beat Sauron?
But it was never above the level of daydreaming, and your approach is far more interesting (and well researched). Well done!
Anything that refers to Lord of the Rings in a clever way is already a win for me, but this is really excellent. In particular, I like the citing from non-LOTR sources. Kudos!