Auron is a troublemaker plus he is a terrible history teacher-That doesn't make him a leader.
Auron is a troublemaker plus he is a terrible history teacher-That doesn't make him a leader.
Actually, in the book, it was Aragorn who feared to go into Moria, not Gandalf. Gandalf had travelled through Moria from the other direction a few years earlier, and had hoped (along with Gimli), that the dwarves had held out and would be able to greet them. After Gandalf and the Balrog fall from the bridge of Khaza'dum, Aragorn mentions that he had warned Gandalf that he believed that travelling through Moria would lead Gandalf to his doom.Originally Posted by Tavrobel
Aragorn was always more the leader of the Fellowship than either Frodo or Gandalf anyway. Gandalf was an advisor, and Frodo was the Ringbearer, but Aragorn new the land far better and was usually the one who made the decisions on what road to take.
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