Courage does not just come to the human mind, humans have to develop it through aspects and actions throughout their life step by step. In Lord of The Rings: Two Towers by Peter Jackson courage is not easy to come by, but if fighting for the greater good of humanity and Middle Earth these acts of courage can come to one hero's mind and give him/her that courage. This can also show their loyalty to the greater good of Middle Earth. Samwise the mayor of the Shire and Frodo the primary protagonist are trying to get the ring to the Mountain of Fire. Two little hobbits traveling to unknown extremely dangerous lands for the greater good. Saruman lord of Isengard and Sauron lord of Mordor are starting a war against all good of Middle Earth, little does Sauron know Saruman will betray Sauron at any chance he gets to gain an advantage and rule all evil armies. Sauron likes to bring suffering upon people. He is also trying to conquer the world but slowly as enjoys the mess of war and suffering …show more content…
People on the bad side are untrustworthy, they cannot be loyal to each other. Of course Saruman is going to betray Sauron at the first opportunity he gets because Sauron would not hesitate to hurt Saruman if it could earn him some advantage. The problem with being evil: they can’t rely on any of their alliances. There are two different kinds of loyalty at work as Frodo and Sam try to cross into Mordor. First we have Sam’s devoted loyalty to Frodo, “I hate this place. It’s too quiet.” yet he still follows. Bizarre and compelled loyalty of Gollum the ring-bearer, is aimed at Frodo but really is about the ring. Sam does not trust Gollum but Frodo tells Gollum “There’s no promise you can make that I can trust.”, Gollum replies with “We swears to serve the master of the precious. We will swear on the precious.”, what Gollum is really loyal to is the precious. Frodo knows that the ring is treacherous and will hold Gollum to his