The Ring caused more evil for poor, dear Frodo than I care to describe. In short, it was the cause of a stab he received in his shoulder from a Black Rider's poisoned knife (he will never be quite the same again), the reason he abandoned his friends, the Company, to go off alone on the rest of his journey, the reason the nine Nazgul forever chased and pursued him, terrifying him wherever he went, the reason he was forced to travel over rugged harsh terrain, with only Sam as his friend and companion, for days and months and weeks -- it gave him much pain, anxiety, fear, doubt, anger, and most of all, anguish. In fact, it could be reasoned that everything that Frodo had to face ever since he left the Shire with Merry, Pippin and Sam, was the fault of The Ring.
Actually the One Ring did take over Frodo in the end, attracting Sauron's attention resulting in him sending a Nazgul to take the One Ring from Frodo. But before the Nazgul could arrive Gollum bit off Frodo's ring finger and fell into the "Cracks of Doom", destroying the ring, Sauron, and the Nazgul.
The name of the blade that stabs Frodo is called a Morgul-blade
The Nazgul King stabs Frodo once in the shoulder. The tip of the morgul knife used snaps off inside Frodo. The tip is poisoned, but cannot kill, it is intended to cause fading: making Frodo permanently invisible (like the ring does) but also the slave of the Nazgul King.
The One Ring.
Frodo Baggins is one of the main characters in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. He is a Hobbit, a race of diminutive beings who are generally peaceful and prefer to remain isolated from the doings of the "Big People" in the rest of Middle Earth, where the books are set. Despite this, Frodo embarks on a quest to destroy the One Ring, a dangerous and evil artifact created three thousand years ago by the Dark Lord Sauron, who is beginning to rise again in his realm in Mordor. To destroy this ring, Frodo has to travel to Mount Doom, which is located in the heart of Mordor, and throw the ring into the depths of the mountain. This is made additionally difficult as the ring has a tendency to twist the thoughts of its bearers for its own - or possibly Sauron's - evil purposes.
Frodo carried the ring to Mordor.
He feared that his will was to weak and he would succumb to the temptations of the ring. extended answer: Gandalf was not only "good" but also a very powerful wizard. Because he is good, the "evil" ring had a very strong effect on him. If he were to be turned evil by the ring, he would be very destructive. Frodo was "neutral" so when he picked up the evil ring, it wasn't directly opposite to his core nature, like it was to Gandalf
Gollum takes the Ring from Frodo by biting off the finger bearing the Ring.
With the help of a courageous fellowship of friends and allies, Frodo embarks on a perilous mission to destroy the legendary One Ring. Hunting Frodo are servants of the Dark Lord, Sauron, the Ring's evil creator. If Sauron reclaims the Ring, Middle-earth is doomed.
Sam is a simple man with a simple life plans, and that's why he got scared when he heard the rings promises for a grand future. Then he realised that he was not capable to be the ring bearer and that he should give the ring to Frodo. Boromir was a warrior and a proud man, but he did not recognise how evil ring was, until the very end.
Actually the One Ring did take over Frodo in the end, attracting Sauron's attention resulting in him sending a Nazgul to take the One Ring from Frodo. But before the Nazgul could arrive Gollum bit off Frodo's ring finger and fell into the "Cracks of Doom", destroying the ring, Sauron, and the Nazgul.
no
The ring has a consciousness of its own. The ring knew that Frodo was going to take it to be destroyed, whereas the one ring abandoned Gollum as it knew that Gollum would never return it to Sauron. The ring used Bilbo as a carrier or a vector.
The One Ring changed hands several times: It was forged by Sauron Isildur cut the Ring from Sauron's hand. He was shot by orcs when the Ring slipped into the Anduin River Deagol took the Ring from the Anduin Smeagol, later Gollum strangled Deagol to get the Ring, and kept it for over 500 years The Ring was picked up by Bilbo Baggins in a dark cave At the urging of Gandalf, Bilbo passed the Ring to Frodo Baggins Sam took the Ring from Frodo when Frodo was stung by Shelob Sam freely returned the Ring to Frodo Gollum bit the Ring and the finger it was on off Frodo and fell into the fires of Mt. Doom with it. The One Ring was destroyed.
The name of the blade that stabs Frodo is called a Morgul-blade
Frodo is the ring bearer.
The Nazgul King stabs Frodo once in the shoulder. The tip of the morgul knife used snaps off inside Frodo. The tip is poisoned, but cannot kill, it is intended to cause fading: making Frodo permanently invisible (like the ring does) but also the slave of the Nazgul King.