This tale grew in the telling, until it became a history
of the Great War of the Ring and included many glimpses of the yet more ancient
history that preceded it. It was begun soon after The Hobbit was written
and before its publication in 1937; but I did not go on with this sequel, for I
wished first to complete and set in order the mythology and legends of the Elder
Days, which had then been taking shape for some years. I desired to do this for
my own satisfaction, and I had little hope that other people would be interested
in this work, especially since it was primarily linguistic in inspiration and
was begun in order to provide the necessary background of 'history' for Elvish
tongues.
When those whose advice and opinion I sought
corrected little hope to no hope, I went back to the sequel,
encouraged by requests from readers for more information concerning hobbits and
their adventures. But the story was drawn irresistibly towards the older world,
and became an account, as it were, of its end and passing away before its
beginning and middle had been told. The process had begun in the writing of
The Hobbit, in which there were already some references to the older
matter: Elrond, Gondolin, the High-elves, and the orcs, as well as glimpses that
had arisen unbidden of things higher or deeper or darker than its surface:
Durin, Moria, Gandalf, the Necromancer, the Ring. The discovery of the
significance of these glimpses and of their relation to the ancient histories
revealed the Third Age and its culmination in the War of the
Ring.
Those who had asked for more information about
hobbits eventually got it, but they had to wait a long time; for the composition
of The Lord of the Rings went on at intervals during the years 1936 to
1949, a period in which I had many duties that I did not neglect, and many other
interests as a learner and teacher that often absorbed me. The delay was, of
course, also increased by the outbreak of war in 1939, by the end of which year
the tale had not yet reached the end of Book One. In spite of the darkness of
the next five years I found that the story could not now be wholly abandoned,
and I plodded on, mostly by night, till I stood by Balin's tomb in Moria. There
I halted for a long while. It was almost a year later when I went on and so came
to Lothlorien and the Great River late in 1941. In the next year I wrote the
first drafts of the matter that now stands as Book Three, and the beginnings of
chapters I and III of Book Five; and there as the beacons flared in Anorien and
Theoden came to Harrowdale I stopped. Foresight had failed and there was no time
for thought.
It was during 1944 that, leaving the loose
ends and perplexities of a war which it was my task to conduct, or at least to
report, I forced myself to tackle the journey of Frodo to Mordor. These
chapters, eventually to become Book Four, were written and sent out as a serial
to my son, Christopher, then in South Africa with the RAF. Nonetheless it took
another five years before the tale was brought to its present end; in that time
I changed my house, my chair, and my college, and the days though less dark were
no less laborious. Then when the 'end' had at last been reached the whole story
had to be revised, and indeed largely re-written backwards. And it had to be
typed, and re-typed: by me; the cost of professional typing by the ten-fingered
was beyond my means.
The Lord of the Rings has been
read by many people since it finally appeared in print; and I should like to say
something here with reference to the many opinions or guesses that I have
received or have read concerning the motives and meaning of the tale. The prime
motive was the desire of a tale-teller to try his hand at a really long story
that would hold the attention of readers, amuse them, delight them, and at times
maybe excite them or deeply move them. As a guide I had only my own feelings for
what is appealing or moving, and for many the guide was inevitably often at
fault. Some who have read the book, or at any rate have reviewed it, have found
it boring, absurd, or contemptible; and I have no cause to complain, since I
have similar opinions of their works, or of the kinds of writing that they
evidently prefer. But even from the points of view of many who have enjoyed my
story there is much that fails to please. It is perhaps not possible in a long
tale to please everybody at all points, nor to displease everybody at the same
points; for I find from the letters that I have received that the passages or
chapters that are to some a blemish are all by others specially approved. The
most critical reader of all, myself, now finds many defects, minor and major,
but being fortunately under no obligation either to review the book or to write
it again, he will pass over these in silence, except one that has been noted by
others: the book is too short.
As for any inner meaning or
'message', it has in the intention of the author none. It is neither allegorical
nor topical. As the story grew it put down roots (into the past) and threw out
unexpected branches: but its main theme was settled from the outset by the
inevitable choice of the Ring as the link between it and The Hobbit. The
crucial chapter, "The Shadow of the Past', is one of the oldest parts of the
tale. It was written long before the foreshadow of 1939 had yet become a threat
of inevitable disaster, and from that point the story would have developed along
essentially the same lines, if that disaster had been averted. Its sources are
things long before in mind, or in some cases already written, and little or
nothing in it was modified by the war that began in 1939 or its
sequels.
The real war does not resemble the legendary war
in its process or its conclusion. If it had inspired or directed the development
of the legend, then certainly the Ring would have been seized and used against
Sauron; he would not have been annihilated but enslaved, and Barad-dur would not
have been destroyed but occupied. Saruman, failing to get possession of the
Ring, would in the confusion and treacheries of the time have found in
Mordor the missing links in his own researches into Ring-lore, and before long
he would have made a Great Ring of his own with which to challenge the
self-styled Ruler of Middle-earth. In that conflict both sides would have held
hobbits in hatred and contempt: they would not long have survived even as
slaves.
Other arrangements could be devised according to
the tastes or views of those who like allegory or topical reference. But I
cordially dislike allegory in all its manifestations, and always have done so
since I grew old and wary enough to detect its presence. I much prefer history,
true or feigned, with its varied applicability to the thought and experience of
readers. I think that many confuse 'applicability' with 'allegory'; but the one
resides in the freedom of the reader, and the other in the purposed domination
of the author.
An author cannot of course remain wholly
unaffected by his experience, but the ways in which a story-germ uses the soil
of experience are extremely complex, and attempts to define the process are at
best guesses from evidence that is inadequate and ambiguous. It is also false,
though naturally attractive, when the lives of an author and critic have
overlapped, to suppose that the movements of thought or the events of times
common to both were necessarily the most powerful influences. One has indeed
personally to come under the shadow of war to feel fully its oppression; but as
the years go by it seems now often forgotten that to be caught in youth by 1914
was no less hideous an experience than to be involved in 1939 and the following
years. By 1918 all but one of my close friends were dead. Or to take a less
grievous matter: it has been supposed by some that 'The Scouring of the Shire'
reflects the situation in England at the time when I was finishing my tale. It
does not. It is an essential part of the plot, foreseen from the outset, though
in the event modified by the character of Saruman as developed in the story
without, need I say, any allegorical significance or contemporary political
reference whatsoever. It has indeed some basis in experience, though slender
(for the economic situation was entirely different), and much further back. The
country in which I lived in childhood was being shabbily destroyed before I was
ten, in days when motor-cars were rare objects (I had never seen one) and men
were still building suburban railways. Recently I saw in a paper a picture of
the last decrepitude of the once thriving corn-mill beside its pool that long
ago seemed to me so important. I never liked the looks of the Young miller, but
his father, the Old miller, had a black beard, and he was not named
Sandyman.
The Lord of the Rings is now issued in a
new edition, and the opportunity has been taken of revising it. A number of
errors and inconsistencies that still remained in the text have been corrected,
and an attempt has been made to provide information on a few points which
attentive readers have raised. I have considered all their comments and
enquiries, and if some seem to have been passed over that may be because I have
failed to keep my notes in order; but many enquiries could only be answered by
additional appendices, or indeed by the production of an accessory volume
containing much of the material that I did not include in the original edition,
in particular more detailed linguistic information. In the meantime this edition
offers this Foreword, an addition to the Prologue, some notes, and an index of
the names of persons and places. This index is in intention complete in items
but not in references, since for the present purpose it has been necessary to
reduce its bulk. A complete index, making full use of the material prepared for
me by Mrs. N. Smith, belongs rather to the accessory volume.
Chapter 1
A Long-expected
Party
When Mr. Bilbo Baggins of Bag End announced that he would
shortly be celebrating his eleventy-first birthday with a party of special
magnificence, there was much talk and excitement in Hobbiton.
Bilbo was very rich and very peculiar, and had
been the wonder of the Shire for sixty years, ever since his remarkable
disappearance and unexpected return. The riches he had brought back from his
travels had now become a local legend, and it was popularly believed, whatever
the old folk might say, that the Hill at Bag End was full of tunnels stuffed
with treasure. And if that was not enough for fame, there was also his prolonged
vigour to marvel at. Time wore on, but it seemed to have little effect on Mr.
Baggins. At ninety he was much the same as at fifty. At ninety-nine they began
to call him
well-preserved, but
unchanged would have been nearer
the mark. There were some that shook their heads and thought this was too much
of a good thing; it seemed unfair that anyone should possess (apparently)
perpetual youth as well as (reputedly) inexhaustible
wealth.
‘It will have to be paid for,’ they said. ‘It isn’t
natural, and trouble will come of it!’
But so far trouble
had not come; and as Mr. Baggins was generous with his money, most people were
willing to forgive him his oddities and his good fortune. He remained on
visiting terms with his relatives (except, of course, the Sackville-Bagginses),
and he had many devoted admirers among the hobbits of poor and unimportant
families. But he had no close friends, until some of his younger cousins began
to grow up.
The eldest of these, and Bilbo’s favourite, was
young Frodo Baggins. When Bilbo was ninety-nine, he adopted Frodo as his heir,
and brought him to live at Bag End; and the hopes of the Sackville-Bagginses
were finally dashed. Bilbo and Frodo happened to have the same birthday,
September 22nd. ‘You had better come and live here, Frodo my lad,’ said Bilbo
one day; ‘and then we can celebrate our birthday-parties comfortably together.’
At that time Frodo was still in his
tweens, as the hobbits called the
irresponsible twenties between childhood and coming of age at
thirty-three.
Twelve more years passed. Each year the
Bagginses had given very lively combined birthday-parties at Bag End; but now it
was understood that something quite exceptional was being planned for that
autumn. Bilbo was going to be
eleventy-one, 111, a rather curious number
and a very respectable age for a hobbit (the Old Took himself had only reached
130); and Frodo was going to be
thirty-three, 33) an important number:
the date of his ‘coming of age’.
Tongues began to wag in
Hobbiton and Bywater; and rumour of the coming event travelled all over the
Shire. The history and character of Mr. Bilbo Baggins became once again the
chief topic of conversation; and the older folk suddenly found their
reminiscences in welcome demand.
No one had a more
attentive audience than old Ham Gamgee, commonly known as the Gaffer. He held
forth at
The Ivy Bush, a small inn on the Bywater road; and he spoke with
some authority, for he had tended the garden at Bag End for forty years, and had
helped old Holman in the same job before that. Now that he was himself growing
old and stiff in the joints, the job was mainly carried on by his youngest son,
Sam Gamgee. Both father and son were on very friendly terms with Bilbo and
Frodo. They lived on the Hill itself, in Number 3 Bagshot Row just below Bag
End.
‘A very nice well-spoken gentlehobbit is Mr. Bilbo, as
I’ve always said,’ the Gaffer declared. With perfect truth: for Bilbo was very
polite to him, calling him ‘Master Hamfast’, and consulting him constantly upon
the growing of vegetables – in the matter of ‘roots’, especially potatoes, the
Gaffer was recognized as the leading authority by all in the neighbourhood
(including himself).
‘But what about this Frodo that lives
with him?’ asked Old Noakes of Bywater. ‘Baggins is his name, but he’s more than
half a Brandybuck, they say. It beats me why any Baggins of Hobbiton should go
looking for a wife away there in Buckland, where folks are so
queer.’
‘And no wonder they’re queer,’ put in Daddy Twofoot
(the Gaffer’s next-door neighbour), ‘if they live on the wrong side of the
Brandywine River, and right agin the Old Forest. That’s a dark bad place, if
half the tales be true.’
‘You’re right, Dad!’ said the
Gaffer. ‘Not that the Brandybucks of Buck-land live
in the Old Forest;
but they’re a queer breed, seemingly. They fool about with boats on that big
river – and that isn’t natural. Small wonder that trouble came of it, I say. But
be that as it may, Mr. Frodo is as nice a young hobbit as you could wish to
meet. Very much like Mr. Bilbo, and in more than looks. After all his father was
a Baggins. A decent respectable hobbit was Mr. Drogo Baggins; there was never
much to tell of him, till he was drownded.’
‘Drownded?’
said several voices. They had heard this and other darker rumours before, of
course; but hobbits have a passion for family history, and they were ready to
hear it again. ‘Well, so they say,’ said the Gaffer. ‘You see: Mr. Drogo, he
married poor Miss Primula Brandybuck. She was our Mr. Bilbo’s first cousin on
the mother’s side (her mother being the youngest of the Old Took’s daughters);
and Mr. Drogo was his second cousin. So Mr. Frodo is his first
and second
cousin, once removed either way, as the saying is, if you follow me. And Mr.
Drogo was staying at Brandy Hall with his father-in-law, old Master Gorbadoc, as
he often did after his marriage (him being partial to his vittles, and old
Gorbadoc keeping a mighty generous table); and he went out
boating on the
Brandywine River; and he and his wife were drownded, and poor Mr. Frodo only a
child and all. ‘
‘I’ve heard they went on the water after
dinner in the moonlight,’ said Old Noakes; ‘and it was Drogo’s weight as sunk
the boat.’
‘And
I heard she pushed him in, and he
pulled her in after him,’ said Sandyman, the Hobbiton
miller.
‘You shouldn’t listen to all you hear, Sandyman,’
said the Gaffer, who did not much like the miller. ‘There isn’t no call to go
talking of pushing and pulling. Boats are quite tricky enough for those that sit
still without looking further for the cause of trouble. Anyway: there was this
Mr. Frodo left an orphan and stranded, as you might say, among those queer
Bucklanders, being brought up anyhow in Brandy Hall. A regular warren, by all
accounts. Old Master Gorbadoc never had fewer than a couple of hundred relations
in the place. Mr. Bilbo never did a kinder deed than when he brought the lad
back to live among decent folk.
‘But I reckon it was a
nasty shock for those Sackville-Bagginses. They thought they were going to get
Bag End, that time when he went off and was thought to be dead. And then he
comes back and orders them off; and he goes on living and living, and never
looking a day older, bless him! And suddenly he produces an heir, and has all
the papers made out proper. The Sackville-Bagginses won’t never see the inside
of Bag End now, or it is to be hoped not.’
‘There’s a tidy
bit of money tucked away up there, I hear tell,’ said a stranger, a visitor on
business from Michel Delving in the Westfarthing. ‘All the top of your hill is
full of tunnels packed with chests of gold and silver,
and jools, by what
I’ve heard. ‘
‘Then you’ve heard more than I can speak to,’
answered the Gaffer. I know nothing about
jools. Mr. Bilbo is free with
his money, and there seems no lack of it; but I know of no tunnel-making. I saw
Mr. Bilbo when he came back, a matter of sixty years ago, when I was a lad. I’d
not long come prentice to old Holman (him being my dad’s cousin), but he had me
up at Bag End helping him to keep folks from trampling and trapessing all over
the garden while the sale was on. And in the middle of it all Mr. Bilbo comes up
the Hill with a pony and some mighty big bags and a couple of chests. I don’t
doubt they were mostly full of treasure he had picked up in foreign parts, where
there be mountains of gold, they say; but there wasn’t enough to fill tunnels.
But my lad Sam will know more about that. He’s in and out of Bag End. Crazy
about stories of the old days he is, and he listens to all Mr. Bilbo’s tales.
Mr. Bilbo has learned him his letters – meaning no harm, mark you, and I hope no
harm will come of it.
‘Elves and Dragons’ I says to
him. ‘
Cabbages and potatoes are better for me and you. Don’t go getting mixed
up in the business of your betters, or you’ll land in trouble too big for
you,’ I says to him. And I might say it to others,’ he added with a look at
the stranger and the miller.
But the Gaffer did not
convince his audience. The legend of Bilbo’s wealth was now too firmly fixed in
the minds of the younger generation of hobbits.
‘Ah, but he
has likely enough been adding to what he brought at first,’ argued the miller,
voicing common opinion. ‘He’s often away from home. And look at the outlandish
folk that visit him: dwarves coming at night, and that old wandering conjuror,
Gandalf, and all. You can say what you like, Gaffer, but Bag End’s a queer
place, and its folk are queerer.’
‘And you can say
what
you like, about what you know no more of than you do of boating, Mr.
Sandyman,’ retorted the Gaffer, disliking the miller even more than usual. If
that’s being queer, then we could do with a bit more queerness in these parts.
There’s some not far away that wouldn’t offer a pint of beer to a friend, if
they lived in a hole with golden walls. But they do things proper at Bag End.
Our Sam says that
everyone’s going to be invited to the party, and
there’s going to be presents, mark you, presents for all – this very month as
is.’
That very month was September, and as fine as you
could ask. A day or two later a rumour (probably started by the knowledgeable
Sam) was spread about that there were going to be fireworks – fireworks, what is
more, such as had not been seen in the Shire for nigh on a century, not indeed
since the Old Took died.
Days passed and The Day drew
nearer. An odd-looking waggon laden with odd-looking packages rolled into
Hobbiton one evening and toiled up the Hill to Bag End. The startled hobbits
peered out of lamplit doors to gape at it. It was driven by outlandish folk,
singing strange songs: dwarves with long beards and deep hoods. A few of them
remained at Bag End. At the end of the second week in September a cart came in
through Bywater from the direction of the Brandywine Bridge in broad daylight.
An old man was driving it all alone. He wore a tall pointed blue hat, a long
grey cloak, and a silver scarf. He had a long white beard and bushy eyebrows
that stuck out beyond the brim of his hat. Small hobbit-children ran after the
cart all through Hobbiton and right up the hill. It had a cargo of fireworks, as
they rightly guessed. At Bilbo’s front door the old man began to unload: there
were great bundles of fireworks of all sorts and shapes, each labelled with a
large red G
and the elf-rune,
That was Gandalf’s mark, of course,
and the old man was Gandalf the Wizard, whose fame in the Shire was due mainly
to his skill with fires, smokes, and lights. His real business was far more
difficult and dangerous, but the Shire-folk knew nothing about it. To them he
was just one of the ‘attractions’ at the Party. Hence the excitement of the
hobbit-children. ‘G for Grand!’ they shouted, and the old man smiled. They knew
him by sight, though he only appeared in Hobbiton occasionally and never stopped
long; but neither they nor any but the oldest of their elders had seen one of
his firework displays – they now belonged to the legendary
past.
When the old man, helped by Bilbo and some dwarves,
had finished unloading. Bilbo gave a few pennies away; but not a single squib or
cracker was forthcoming, to the disappointment of the
onlookers.
‘Run away now!’ said Gandalf. ‘You will get
plenty when the time comes.’ Then he disappeared inside with Bilbo, and the door
was shut. The young hobbits stared at the door in vain for a while, and then
made off, feeling that the day of the party would never
come.
Inside Bag End, Bilbo and Gandalf were sitting at the
open window of a small room looking out west on to the garden. The late
afternoon was bright and peaceful. The flowers glowed red and golden:
snap-dragons and sun-flowers, and nasturtiums trailing all over the turf walls
and peeping in at the round windows.
‘How bright your
garden looks!’ said Gandalf.
‘Yes,’ said Bilbo. I am very
fond indeed of it, and of all the dear old Shire; but I think I need a
holiday.’
‘You mean to go on with your plan
then?’
‘I do. I made up my mind months ago, and I haven’t
changed it.’
‘Very well. It is no good saying any more.
Stick to your plan – your whole plan, mind – and I hope it will turn out for the
best, for you, and for all of us.’
‘I hope so. Anyway I
mean to enjoy myself on Thursday, and have my little
joke.’
‘Who will laugh, I wonder?’ said Gandalf, shaking
his head.
‘We shall see,’ said
Bilbo.
The next day more carts rolled up the Hill, and
still more carts. There might have been some grumbling about ‘dealing locally’,
but that very week orders began to pour out of Bag End for every kind of
provision, commodity, or luxury that could be obtained in Hobbiton or Bywater or
anywhere in the neighbourhood. People became enthusiastic; and they began to
tick off the days on the calendar; and they watched eagerly for the postman,
hoping for invitations.
Before long the invitations began
pouring out, and the Hobbiton post-office was blocked, and the Bywater
post-office was snowed under, and voluntary assistant postmen were called for.
There was a constant stream of them going up the Hill, carrying hundreds of
polite variations on
Thank you, I shall certainly
come.
A notice appeared on the gate at Bag End: no
admittance except on party business. Even those who had, or pretended to have
Party Business were seldom allowed inside. Bilbo was busy: writing invitations,
ticking off answers, packing up presents, and making some private preparations
of his own. From the time of Gandalf’s arrival he remained hidden from
view.
One morning the hobbits woke to find the large field,
south of Bilbo’s front door, covered with ropes and poles for tents and
pavilions. A special entrance was cut into the bank leading to the road, and
wide steps and a large white gate were built there. The three hobbit-families of
Bagshot Row, adjoining the field, were intensely interested and generally
envied. Old Gaffer Gamgee stopped even pretending to work in his
garden.
The tents began to go up. There was a specially
large pavilion, so big that the tree that grew in the field was right inside it,
and stood proudly near one end, at the head of the chief table. Lanterns were
hung on all its branches. More promising still (to the hobbits’ mind): an
enormous open-air kitchen was erected in the north corner of the field. A
draught of cooks, from every inn and eating-house for miles around, arrived to
supplement the dwarves and other odd folk that were quartered at Bag End.
Excitement rose to its height.
Then the weather clouded
over. That was on Wednesday the eve of the Party. Anxiety was intense. Then
Thursday, September the 22nd, actually dawned. The sun got up, the clouds
vanished, flags were unfurled and the fun began.
Bilbo
Baggins called it a
party, but it was really a variety of entertainments
rolled into one. Practically everybody living near was invited. A very few were
overlooked by accident, but as they turned up all the same, that did not matter.
Many people from other parts of the Shire were also asked; and there were even a
few from outside the borders. Bilbo met the guests (and additions) at the new
white gate in person. He gave away presents to all and sundry – the latter were
those who went out again by a back way and came in again by the gate. Hobbits
give presents to other people on their own birthdays. Not very expensive ones,
as a rule, and not so lavishly as on this occasion; but it was not a bad system.
Actually in Hobbiton and Bywater every day in the year it was somebody’s
birthday, so that every hobbit in those parts had a fair chance of at least one
present at least once a week. But they never got tired of
them.
On this occasion the presents were unusually good.
The hobbit-children were so excited that for a while they almost forgot about
eating. There were toys the like of which they had never seen before, all
beautiful and some obviously magical. Many of them had indeed been ordered a
year before, and had come all the way from the Mountain and from Dale, and were
of real dwarf-make.
When every guest had been welcomed and
was finally inside the gate, there were songs, dances, music, games, and, of
course, food and drink. There were three official meals: lunch, tea, and dinner
(or supper). But lunch and tea were marked chiefly by the fact that at those
times all the guests were sitting down and eating together. At other times there
were merely lots of people eating and drinking – continuously from elevenses
until six-thirty, when the fireworks started.
The fireworks
were by Gandalf: they were not only brought by him, but designed and made by
him; and the special effects, set pieces, and flights of rockets were let off by
him. But there was also a generous distribution of squibs, crackers,
backarappers, sparklers, torches, dwarf-candles, elf-fountains, goblin-barkers
and thunder-claps. They were all superb. The art of Gandalf improved with
age.
There were rockets like a flight of scintillating
birds singing with sweet voices. There were green trees with trunks of dark
smoke: their leaves opened like a whole spring unfolding in a moment, and their
shining branches dropped glowing flowers down upon the astonished hobbits,
disappearing with a sweet scent just before they touched their upturned faces.
There were fountains of butterflies that flew glittering into the trees; there
were pillars of coloured fires that rose and turned into eagles, or sailing
ships, or a phalanx of flying swans; there was a red thunderstorm and a shower
of yellow rain; there was a forest of silver spears that sprang suddenly into
the air with a yell like an embattled army, and came down again into the Water
with a hiss like a hundred hot snakes. And there was also one last surprise, in
honour of Bilbo, and it startled the hobbits exceedingly, as Gandalf intended.
The lights went out. A great smoke went up. It shaped itself like a mountain
seen in the distance, and began to glow at the summit. It spouted green and
scarlet flames. Out flew a red-golden dragon – not life-size, but terribly
life-like: fire came from his jaws, his eyes glared down; there was a roar, and
he whizzed three times over the heads of the crowd. They all ducked, and many
fell flat on their faces. The dragon passed like an express train, turned a
somersault, and burst over Bywater with a deafening
explosion.
‘That is the signal for supper!’ said Bilbo. The
pain and alarm vanished at once, and the prostrate hobbits leaped to their feet.
There was a splendid supper for everyone; for everyone, that is, except those
invited to the special family dinner-party. This was held in the great pavilion
with the tree. The invitations were limited to twelve dozen (a number also
called by the hobbits one Gross, though the word was not considered proper to
use of people); and the guests were selected from all the families to which
Bilbo and Frodo were related, with the addition of a few special unrelated
friends (such as Gandalf). Many young hobbits were included, and present by
parental permission; for hobbits were easy-going with their children in the
matter of sitting up late, especially when there was a chance of getting them a
free meal. Bringing up young hobbits took a lot of
provender.
There were many Bagginses and Boffins, and also
many Tooks and Brandybucks; there were various Grubbs (relations of Bilbo
Baggins’ grandmother), and various Chubbs (connexions of his Took grandfather);
and a selection of Burrowses, Bolgers, Bracegirdles, Brockhouses, Goodbodies,
Hornblowers and Proudfoots. Some of these were only very distantly connected
with Bilbo, and some of them had hardly ever been in Hobbiton before, as they
lived in remote corners of the Shire. The Sackville-Bagginses were not
forgotten. Otho and his wife Lobelia were present. They disliked Bilbo and
detested Frodo, but so magnificent was the invitation card, written in golden
ink, that they had felt it was impossible to refuse. Besides, their cousin,
Bilbo, had been specializing in food for many years and his table had a high
reputation.
All the one hundred and forty-four guests
expected a pleasant feast; though they rather dreaded the after-dinner speech of
their host (an inevitable item). He was liable to drag in bits of what he called
poetry; and sometimes, after a glass or two, would allude to the absurd
adventures of his mysterious journey. The guests were not disappointed: they had
a
very pleasant feast, in fact an engrossing entertainment: rich,
abundant, varied, and prolonged. The purchase of provisions fell almost to
nothing throughout the district in the ensuing weeks; but as Bilbo’s catering
had depleted the stocks of most stores, cellars and warehouses for miles around,
that did not matter much.
After the feast (more or less)
came the Speech. Most of the company were, however, now in a tolerant mood, at
that delightful stage which they called ‘filling up the corners’. They were
sipping their favourite drinks, and nibbling at their favourite dainties, and
their fears were forgotten. They were prepared to listen to anything, and to
cheer at every full stop.
My dear People, began
Bilbo, rising in his place. ‘Hear! Hear! Hear!’ they shouted, and kept on
repeating it in chorus, seeming reluctant to follow their own advice. Bilbo left
his place and went and stood on a chair under the illuminated tree. The light of
the lanterns fell on his beaming face; the golden buttons shone on his
embroidered silk waistcoat. They could all see him standing, waving one hand in
the air, the other was in his trouser-pocket.
My dear
Bagginses and Boffins, he began again;
and my dear Tooks and Brandybucks,
and Grubbs, and Chubbs, and Burrowses, and Hornblowers, and Bolgers,
Bracegirdles, Goodbodies, Brockhouses and Proudfoots. ‘ProudFEET!’ shouted
an elderly hobbit from the back of the pavilion. His name, of course, was
Proudfoot, and well merited; his feet were large, exceptionally furry, and both
were on the table.
Proudfoots, repeated Bilbo.
Also my good Sackville-Bagginses that I welcome back at last to Bag End.
Today is my one hundred and eleventh birthday: I am eleventy-one today!
‘Hurray! Hurray! Many Happy Returns!’ they shouted, and they hammered joyously
on the tables. Bilbo was doing splendidly. This was the sort of stuff they
liked: short and obvious.
I hope you are all
enjoying yourselves as much as I am. Deafening cheers. Cries of
Yes
(and
No). Noises of trumpets and horns, pipes and flutes, and other
musical instruments. There were, as has been said, many young hobbits present.
Hundreds of musical crackers had been pulled. Most of them bore the mark dale on
them; which did not convey much to most of the hobbits, but they all agreed they
were marvellous crackers. They contained instruments, small, but of perfect make
and enchanting tones. Indeed, in one corner some of the young Tooks and
Brandybucks, supposing Uncle Bilbo to have finished (since he had plainly said
all that was necessary), now got up an impromptu orchestra, and began a merry
dance-tune. Master Everard Took and Miss Melilot Brandybuck got on a table and
with bells in their hands began to dance the Springle-ring: a pretty dance, but
rather vigorous.
But Bilbo had not finished. Seizing a horn
from a youngster near by, he blew three loud hoots. The noise
subsided.
Ishall not keep you long, he cried. Cheers from all
the assembly.
Ihave called you all together for a Purpose.
Something in the way that he said this made an impression. There was almost
silence, and one or two of the Tooks pricked up their
ears.
Indeed, for Three Purposes! First of all, to tell
you that I am immensely fond of you all, and that eleventy-one years is too
short a time to live among such excellent and admirable hobbits. Tremendous
outburst of approval.
I don’t know half of
you half as well as I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well
as you deserve. This was unexpected and rather difficult. There was some
scattered clapping, but most of them were trying to work it out and see if it
came to a compliment.
Secondly, to celebrate my
birthday. Cheers again.
Ishould say: OUR birthday. For it is,
of course, also the birthday of my heir and nephew, Frodo. He comes of age and
into his inheritance today. Some perfunctory clapping by the elders; and
some loud shouts of ‘Frodo! Frodo! Jolly old Frodo,’ from the juniors. The
Sackville-Bagginses scowled, and wondered what was meant by ‘coming into his
inheritance’.
Together we score one hundred and forty-four. Your numbers were
chosen to fit this remarkable total: One Gross, if I may use the expression.
No cheers. This was ridiculous. Many of his guests, and especially the
Sackville-Bagginses, were insulted, feeling sure they had only been asked to
fill up the required number, like goods in a package. ‘One Gross, indeed! Vulgar
expression.’
It is also, if I may be allowed to refer to
ancient history, the anniversary of my arrival by barrel at Esgaroth on the Long
Lake; though the fact that it was my
birthday slipped my memory on that
occasion. I was only fifty-one then, and birthdays did not seem so important.
The banquet was very splendid, however, though I had a bad cold at the time, I
remember, and could only say ‘thag you very buch’. I now repeat it more
correctly: Thank you very much for coming to my little party. Obstinate
silence. They all feared that a song or some poetry was now imminent; and they
were getting bored. Why couldn’t he stop talking and let them drink his health?
But Bilbo did not sing or recite. He paused for a
moment.
Thirdly and finally, he said,
I wish to
make an ANNOUNCEMENT. He spoke this last word so loudly and suddenly that
everyone sat up who still could.
I regret to announce that – though, as I
said, eleventy-one years is far too short a time to spend among you – this is
the END. I am going. I am leaving NOW. GOOD-BYE! He
stepped down and vanished. There was a blinding flash of light, and the guests
all blinked. When they opened their eyes Bilbo was nowhere to be seen. One
hundred and forty-four flabbergasted hobbits sat back speechless. Old Odo
Proudfoot removed his feet from the table and stamped. Then there was a dead
silence, until suddenly, after several deep breaths, every Baggins, Boffin,
Took, Brandybuck, Grubb, Chubb, Burrows, Bolger, Bracegirdle, Brockhouse,
Goodbody, Hornblower, and Proudfoot began to talk at
once.
It was generally agreed that the joke was in very bad
taste, and more food and drink were needed to cure the guests of shock and
annoyance. ‘He’s mad. I always said so,’ was probably the most popular comment.
Even the Tooks (with a few exceptions) thought Bilbo’s behaviour was absurd. For
the moment most of them took it for granted that his disappearance was nothing
more than a ridiculous prank.
But old Rory Brandybuck was
not so sure. Neither age nor an enormous dinner had clouded his wits, and he
said to his daughter-in-law, Esmeralda: ‘There’s something fishy in this, my
dear! I believe that mad Baggins is off again. Silly old fool. But why worry? He
hasn’t taken the vittles with him.’ He called loudly to Frodo to send the wine
round again.
Frodo was the only one present who had said
nothing. For some time he had sat silent beside Bilbo’s empty chair, and ignored
all remarks and questions. He had enjoyed the joke, of course, even though he
had been in the know. He had difficulty in keeping from laughter at the
indignant surprise of the guests. But at the same time he felt deeply troubled:
he realized suddenly that he loved the old hobbit dearly. Most of the guests
went on eating and drinking and discussing Bilbo Baggins’ oddities, past and
present; but the Sackville-Bagginses had already departed in wrath. Frodo did
not want to have any more to do with the party. He gave orders for more wine to
be served; then he got up and drained his own glass silently to the health of
Bilbo, and slipped out of the pavilion.
As for Bilbo
Baggins, even while he was making his speech, he had been fingering the golden
ring in his pocket: his magic ring that he had kept secret for so many years. As
he stepped down he slipped it on his finger, and he was never seen by any hobbit
in Hobbiton again.
He walked briskly back to his hole, and
stood for a moment listening with a smile to the din in the pavilion and to the
sounds of merrymaking in other parts of the field. Then he went in. He took off
his party clothes, folded up and wrapped in tissue-paper his embroidered silk
waistcoat, and put it away. Then he put on quickly some old untidy garments, and
fastened round his waist a worn leather belt. On it he hung a short sword in a
battered black-leather scabbard. From a locked drawer, smelling of moth-balls,
he took out an old cloak and hood. They had been locked up as if they were very
precious, but they were so patched and weatherstained that their original colour
could hardly be guessed: it might have been dark green. They were rather too
large for him. He then went into his study, and from a large strong-box took out
a bundle wrapped in old cloths, and a leather-bound manuscript; and also a large
bulky envelope. The book and bundle he stuffed into the top of a heavy bag that
was standing there, already nearly full. Into the envelope he slipped his golden
ring, and its fine chain, and then sealed it, and addressed it to Frodo. At
first he put it on the mantelpiece, but suddenly he removed it and stuck it in
his pocket. At that moment the door opened and Gandalf came quickly
in.
‘Hullo!’ said Bilbo. 'I wondered if you would turn
up.’
'I am glad to find you visible,’ replied the wizard,
sitting down in a chair, 'I wanted to catch you and have a few final words. I
suppose you feel that everything has gone off splendidly and according to
plan?’
‘Yes, I do,’ said Bilbo. ‘Though that flash was
surprising: it quite startled me, let alone the others. A little addition of
your own, I suppose?’
‘It was. You have wisely kept that
ring secret all these years, and it seemed to me necessary to give your guests
something else that would seem to explain your sudden
vanishment.’
‘And would spoil my joke. You are an
interfering old busybody,’ laughed Bilbo, ‘but I expect you know best, as
usual.’
‘I do – when I know anything. But I don’t feel too
sure about this whole affair. It has now come to the final point. You have had
your joke, and alarmed or offended most of your relations, and given the whole
Shire something to talk about for nine days, or ninety-nine more likely. Are you
going any further?’
‘Yes, I am. I feel I need a holiday, a
very long holiday, as I have told you before. Probably a permanent holiday: I
don’t expect I shall return. In fact, I don’t mean to, and I have made all
arrangements.
'I am old, Gandalf. I don’t look it, but I am
beginning to feel it in my heart of hearts.
Well-preserved indeed!’ he
snorted. ‘Why, I feel all thin, sort of
stretched, if you know what I
mean: like butter that has been scraped over too much bread. That can’t be
right. I need a change, or something.’
Gandalf looked
curiously and closely at him. ‘No, it does not seem right,’ he said
thoughtfully. ‘No, after all I believe your plan is probably the
best.’
‘Well, I’ve made up my mind, anyway. I want to see
mountains again, Gandalf,
mountains, and then find somewhere where I can
rest. In peace and quiet, without a lot of relatives prying around, and a
string of confounded visitors hanging on the bell. I might find somewhere where
I can finish my book. I have thought of a nice ending for it:
and he lived
happily ever after to the end of his days. ‘ Gandalf
laughed. ‘I hope he will. But nobody will read the book, however it
ends.’
‘Oh, they may, in years to come. Frodo has read some
already, as far as it has gone. You’ll keep an eye on Frodo, won’t
you?’
‘Yes, I will – two eyes, as often as I can spare
them.’
‘He would come with me, of course, if I asked him.
In fact he offered to once, just before the party. But he does not really want
to, yet. I want to see the wild country again before I die, and the Mountains;
but he is still in love with the Shire, with woods and fields and little rivers.
He ought to be comfortable here. I am leaving everything to him, of course,
except a few oddments. I hope he will be happy, when he gets used to being on
his own. It’s time he was his own master
now.’
‘Everything?’ said Gandalf. ‘The ring as well? You
agreed to that, you remember.’
‘Well, er, yes, I suppose
so,’ stammered Bilbo.
‘Where is
it?’
‘In an envelope, if you must know,’ said Bilbo
impatiently. ‘There on the mantelpiece. Well, no! Here it is in my pocket!’ He
hesitated. ‘Isn’t that odd now?’ he said softly to himself. ‘Yet after all, why
not? Why shouldn’t it stay there?’
Gandalf looked again
very hard at Bilbo, and there was a gleam in his eyes. ‘I think, Bilbo,’ he said
quietly, ‘I should leave it behind. Don’t you want
to?’
‘Well yes – and no. Now it comes to it, I don’t like
parting with it at all, I may say. And I don’t really see why I should. Why do
you want me to?’ he asked, and a curious change came over his voice. It was
sharp with suspicion and annoyance. ‘You are always badgering me about my ring;
but you have never bothered me about the other things that I got on my
journey.’
‘No, but I had to badger you,’ said Gandalf. ‘I
wanted the truth. It was important. Magic rings are – well, magical; and they
are rare and curious. I was professionally interested in your ring, you may say;
and I still am. I should like to know where it is, if you go wandering again.
Also I think
you have had it quite long enough. You won’t need it any
more. Bilbo, unless I am quite mistaken.’
Bilbo flushed,
and there was an angry light in his eyes. His kindly face grew hard. ‘Why not?’
he cried. ‘And what business is it of yours, anyway, to know what I do with my
own things? It is my own. I found it. It came to me.’
‘Yes,
yes,’ said Gandalf. ‘But there is no need to get
angry.’
‘If I am it is your fault,’ said Bilbo. ‘It is
mine, I tell you. My own. My precious. Yes, my
precious.’
The wizard’s face remained grave and attentive,
and only a flicker in his deep eyes showed that he was startled and indeed
alarmed. ‘It has been called that before,’ he said, ‘but not by
you.’
‘But I say it now. And why not? Even if Gollum said
the same once. It’s not his now, but mine. And I shall keep it, I
say.’
Gandalf stood up. He spoke sternly. ‘You will be a
fool if you do. Bilbo,’ he said. ‘You make that clearer with every word you say.
It has got far too much hold on you. Let it go! And then you can go yourself,
and be free.’
‘I’ll do as I choose and go as I please,’
said Bilbo obstinately.
‘Now, now, my dear hobbit! ‘ said
Gandalf. ‘All your long life we have been friends, and you owe me something.
Come! Do as you promised: give it up! ‘
‘Well, if you want
my ring yourself, say so!’ cried Bilbo. ‘But you won’t get it. I won’t give my
precious away, I tell you.’ His hand strayed to the hilt of his small
sword.
Gandalf’s eyes flashed. ‘It will be my turn to get
angry soon,’ he said. If you say that again, I shall. Then you will see Gandalf
the Grey uncloaked.’ He took a step towards the hobbit, and he seemed to grow
tall and menacing; his shadow filled the little room.
Bilbo
backed away to the wall, breathing hard, his hand clutching at his pocket. They
stood for a while facing one another, and the air of the room tingled. Gandalf’s
eyes remained bent on the hobbit. Slowly his hands relaxed, and he began to
tremble.
‘I don’t know what has come over you, Gandalf,’ he
said. ‘You have never been like this before. What is it all about? It is mine
isn’t it? I found it, and Gollum would have killed me, if I hadn’t kept it. I’m
not a thief, whatever he said.’
‘I have never called you
one,’ Gandalf answered. ‘And I am not one either. I am not trying to rob you,
but to help you. I wish you would trust me, as you used.’ He turned away, and
the shadow passed. He seemed to dwindle again to an old grey man, bent and
troubled.
Bilbo drew his hand over his eyes. ‘I am sorry,’
he said. ‘But I felt so queer. And yet it would be a relief in a way not to be
bothered with it any more. It has been so growing on my mind lately. Sometimes I
have felt it was like an eye looking at me. And I am always wanting to put it on
and disappear, don’t you know; or wondering if it is safe, and pulling it out to
make sure. I tried locking it up, but I found I couldn’t rest without it in my
pocket. I don’t know why. And I don’t seem able to make up my
mind.’
‘Then trust mine,’ said Gandalf. ‘It is quite made
up. Go away and leave it behind. Stop possessing it. Give it to Frodo, and I
will look after him.’
Bilbo stood for a moment tense and
undecided. Presently he sighed. ‘All right,’ he said with an effort. I will.’
Then he shrugged his shoulders, and smiled rather ruefully. ‘After all that’s
what this party business was all about, really: to give away lots of birthday
presents, and somehow make it easier to give it away at the same time. It hasn’t
made it any easier in the end, but it would be a pity to waste all my
preparations. It would quite spoil the joke.’
‘Indeed it
would take away the only point I ever saw in the affair,’ said
Gandalf.
‘Very well,’ said Bilbo, ‘it goes to Frodo with
all the rest.’ He drew a deep breath. ‘And now I really must be starting, or
somebody else will catch me. I have said good-bye, and I couldn’t bear to do it
all over again.’ He picked up his bag and moved to the
door.
‘You have still got the ring in your pocket,’ said
the wizard. ‘Well, so I have!’ cried Bilbo. ‘And my will and all the other
documents too. You had better take it and deliver it for me. That will be
safest.’
‘No, don’t give the ring to me,’ said Gandalf.
‘Put it on the mantelpiece. It will be safe enough there, till Frodo comes. I
shall wait for him.’
Bilbo took out the envelope, but just
as he was about to set it by the clock, his hand jerked back, and the packet
fell on the floor. Before he could pick it up, the wizard stooped and seized it
and set it in its place. A spasm of anger passed swiftly over the hobbit’s face
again. Suddenly it gave way to a look of relief and a laugh. ‘Well, that’s
that,’ he said. ‘Now I’m off!’
They went out into the hall.
Bilbo chose his favourite stick from the stand; then he whistled. Three dwarves
came out of different rooms where they had been busy.
‘Is
everything ready?’ asked Bilbo. ‘Everything packed and
labelled?’
‘Everything,’ they
answered.
‘Well, let’s start then!’ He stepped out of the
front-door.
It was a fine night, and the black sky was
dotted with stars. He looked up, sniffing the air. ‘What fun! What fun to be off
again, off on the Road with dwarves! This is what I have really been longing
for, for years! Good-bye! ‘ he said, looking at his old home and bowing to the
door. ‘Good-bye, Gandalf!’
‘Good-bye, for the present,
Bilbo. Take care of yourself! You are old enough, and perhaps wise
enough.’
‘Take care! I don’t care. Don’t you worry about
me! I am as happy now as I have ever been, and that is saying a great deal. But
the time has come. I am being swept off my feet at last,’ he added, and then in
a low voice, as if to himself, he sang softly in the dark:
The Road goes ever on and on
Down from the door where it
began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
And I must follow, if I
can,
Pursuing it with eager feet,
Until it joins some larger
way
Where many paths and errands meet.
And whither then? I cannot
say.
He paused, silent for a moment.
Then without another word he turned away from the lights and voices in the
fields and tents, and followed by his three companions went round into his
garden, and trotted down the long sloping path. He jumped over a low place in
the hedge at the bottom, and took to the meadows, passing into the night like a
rustle of wind in the grass.
Gandalf remained for a while
staring after him into the darkness. ‘Goodbye, my dear Bilbo – until our next
meeting!’ he said softly and went back indoors.
Frodo came
in soon afterwards, and found him sitting in the dark, deep in thought. ‘Has he
gone?’ he asked.
‘Yes,’ answered Gandalf, ‘he has gone at
last.’
‘I wish – I mean, I hoped until this evening that it
was only a joke,’ said Frodo. ‘But I knew in my heart that he really meant to
go. He always used to joke about serious things. I wish I had come back sooner,
just to see him off.’
‘I think really he preferred slipping
off quietly in the end,’ said Gandalf. ‘Don’t be too troubled. He’ll be all
right – now. He left a packet for you. There it is!’
Frodo
took the envelope from the mantelpiece, and glanced at it, but did not open
it.
‘You’ll find his will and all the other documents in
there, I think,’ said the wizard. ‘You are the master of Bag End now. And also,
I fancy, you’ll find a golden ring.’
‘The ring!’ exclaimed
Frodo. ‘Has he left me that? I wonder why. Still, it may be
useful.’
‘It may, and it may not,’ said Gandalf. ‘I should
not make use of it, if I were you. But keep it secret, and keep it safe! Now I
am going to bed.’
As master of Bag End Frodo felt it his
painful duty to say good-bye to the guests. Rumours of strange events had by now
spread all over the field, but Frodo would only say
no doubt everything will
be cleared up in the morning. About midnight carriages came for the
important folk. One by one they rolled away, filled with full but very
unsatisfied hobbits. Gardeners came by arrangement, and removed in wheel-barrows
those that had inadvertently remained behind.
Night slowly
passed. The sun rose. The hobbits rose rather later. Morning went on. People
came and began (by orders) to clear away the pavilions and the tables and the
chairs, and the spoons and knives and bottles and plates, and the lanterns, and
the flowering shrubs in boxes, and the crumbs and cracker-paper, the forgotten
bags and gloves and handkerchiefs, and the uneaten food (a very small item).
Then a number of other people came (without orders): Bagginses, and Boffins, and
Bolgers, and Tooks, and other guests that lived or were staying near. By
mid-day, when even the best-fed were out and about again, there was a large
crowd at Bag End, uninvited but not unexpected.
Frodo was
waiting on the step, smiling, but looking rather tired and worried. He welcomed
all the callers, but he had not much more to say than before. His reply to all
inquiries was simply this: ‘Mr. Bilbo Baggins has gone away; as far as I know,
for good.’ Some of the visitors he invited to come inside, as Bilbo had left
‘messages’ for them.
Inside in the hall there was piled a
large assortment of packages and parcels and small articles of furniture. On
every item there was a label tied. There were several labels of this
sort:
For ADELARD TOOK, for his VERY OWN, from
Bilbo, on an umbrella. Adelard had carried off many unlabelled
ones.
For DORA BAGGINS in memory of a LONG
correspondence, with love from Bilbo, on a large waste-paper basket. Dora
was Drogo’s sister and the eldest surviving female relative of Bilbo and Frodo;
she was ninety-nine, and had written reams of good advice for more than half a
century.
For MILO BURROWS, hoping it will be useful,
from B.B., on a gold pen and ink-bottle. Milo never answered
letters.
For ANGELICA’S use, from Uncle Bilbo, on a
round convex mirror. She was a young Baggins, and too obviously considered her
face shapely.
For the collection of HUGO BRACEGIRDLE,
from a contributor, on an (empty) book-case. Hugo was a great borrower of
books, and worse than usual at returning them.
For
LOBELIA SACKVILLE-BAGGINS, as a PRESENT, on a case of silver spoons. Bilbo
believed that she had acquired a good many of his spoons, while he was away on
his former journey. Lobelia knew that quite well. When she arrived later in the
day, she took the point at once, but she also took the
spoons.
This is only a small selection of the assembled
presents. Bilbo’s residence had got rather cluttered up with things in the
course of his long life. It was a tendency of hobbit-holes to get cluttered up:
for which the custom of giving so many birthday-presents was largely
responsible. Not, of course, that the birthday-presents were always
new,
there were one or two old
mathoms of forgotten uses that had circulated
all around the district; but Bilbo had usually given new presents, and kept
those that he received. The old hole was now being cleared a
little.
Every one of the various parting gifts had labels,
written out personally by Bilbo, and several had some point, or some joke. But,
of course, most of the things were given where they would be wanted and welcome.
The poorer hobbits, and especially those of Bagshot Row, did very well. Old
Gaffer Gamgee got two sacks of potatoes, a new spade, a woollen waistcoat, and a
bottle of ointment for creaking joints. Old Rory Brandybuck, in return for much
hospitality, got a dozen bottles of Old Winyards: a strong red wine from the
Southfarthing, and now quite mature, as it had been laid down by Bilbo’s father.
Rory quite forgave Bilbo, and voted him a capital fellow after the first
bottle.
There was plenty of everything left for Frodo. And,
of course, all the chief treasures, as well as the books, pictures, and more
than enough furniture, were left in his possession. There was, however, no sign
nor mention of money or jewellery: not a penny-piece or a glass bead was given
away.
Frodo had a very trying time that afternoon. A false
rumour that the whole household was being distributed free spread like wildfire;
and before long the place was packed with people who had no business there, but
could not be kept out. Labels got torn off and mixed, and quarrels broke out.
Some people tried to do swaps and deals in the hall; and others tried to make
off with minor items not addressed to them, or with anything that seemed
unwanted or unwatched. The road to the gate was blocked with barrows and
handcarts.
In the middle of the commotion the
Sackville-Bagginses arrived. Frodo had retired for a while and left his friend
Merry Brandybuck to keep an eye on things. When Otho loudly demanded to see
Frodo, Merry bowed politely.
‘He is indisposed,’ he said.
‘He is resting.’
‘Hiding, you mean,’ said Lobelia. ‘Anyway
we want to see him and we mean to see him. Just go and tell him
so!’
Merry left them a long while in the hall, and they had
time to discover their parting gift of spoons. It did not improve their tempers.
Eventually they were shown into the study. Frodo was sitting at a table with a
lot of papers in front of him. He looked indisposed – to see Sackville-Bagginses
at any rate; and he stood up, fidgeting with something in his pocket. But he
spoke quite politely.
The Sackville-Bagginses were rather
offensive. They began by offering him bad bargain-prices (as between friends)
for various valuable and unlabelled things. When Frodo replied that only the
things specially directed by Bilbo were being given away, they said the whole
affair was very fishy.
‘Only one thing is clear to me,’
said Otho, ‘and that is that you are doing exceedingly well out of it. I insist
on seeing the will.’
Otho would have been Bilbo’s heir, but
for the adoption of Frodo. He read the will carefully and snorted. It was,
unfortunately, very clear and correct (according to the legal customs of
hobbits, which demand among other things seven signatures of witnesses in red
ink).
‘Foiled again!’ he said to his wife. ‘And after
waiting
sixty years. Spoons? Fiddlesticks!’ He snapped his fingers under
Frodo’s nose and slumped off. But Lobelia was not so easily got rid of. A little
later Frodo came out of the study to see how things were going on and found her
still about the place, investigating nooks and corners and tapping the floors.
He escorted her firmly off the premises, after he had relieved her of several
small (but rather valuable) articles that had somehow fallen inside her
umbrella. Her face looked as if she was in the throes of thinking out a really
crushing parting remark; but all she found to say, turning round on the step,
was:
‘You’ll live to regret it, young fellow! Why didn’t
you go too? You don’t belong here; you’re no Baggins – you – you’re a
Brandybuck!’
‘Did you hear that, Merry? That was an insult,
if you like,’ said Frodo as he shut the door on her.
‘It
was a compliment,’ said Merry Brandybuck, ‘and so, of course, not
true.’
Then they went round the hole, and evicted three
young hobbits (two Boffins and a Bolger) who were knocking holes in the walls of
one of the cellars. Frodo also had a tussle with young Sancho Proudfoot (old Odo
Proudfoot’s grandson), who had begun an excavation in the larger pantry, where
he thought there was an echo. The legend of Bilbo’s gold excited both curiosity
and hope; for legendary gold (mysteriously obtained, if not positively
ill-gotten), is, as every one knows, any one’s for the finding – unless the
search is interrupted.
When he had overcome Sancho and
pushed him out, Frodo collapsed on a chair in the hall. It’s time to close the
shop, Merry,’ he said. ‘Lock the door, and don’t open it to anyone today, not
even if they bring a battering ram.’ Then he went to revive himself with a
belated cup of tea.
He had hardly sat down, when there came
a soft knock at the front-door. ‘Lobelia again most likely,’ he thought. ‘She
must have thought of something really nasty, and have come back again to say it.
It can wait.’
He went on with his tea. The knock was
repeated, much louder, but he took no notice. Suddenly the wizard’s head
appeared at the window.
‘If you don’t let me in, Frodo, I
shall blow your door right down your hole and out through the hill,’ he
said.
‘My dear Gandalf! Half a minute!’ cried Frodo,
running out of the room to the door. ‘Come in! Come in! I thought it was
Lobelia.’
‘Then I forgive you. But I saw her some time ago,
driving a pony-trap towards Bywater with a face that would have curdled new
milk.’
‘She had already nearly curdled me. Honestly, I
nearly tried on Bilbo’s ring. I longed to
disappear.’
‘Don’t do that!’ said Gandalf, sitting down.
‘Do be careful of that ring, Frodo! In fact, it is partly about that that I have
come to say a last word.’
‘Well, what about
it?’
‘What do you know already?’
‘Only
what Bilbo told me. I have heard his story: how he found it, and how he used it:
on his journey, I mean.’
‘Which story, I wonder,’ said
Gandalf.
‘Oh, not what he told the dwarves and put in his
book,’ said Frodo. ‘He told me the true story soon after I came to live here. He
said you had pestered him till he told you, so I had better know too. "No
secrets between us, Frodo," he said; "but they are not to go any further. It’s
mine anyway."‘
‘That’s interesting,’ said Gandalf. ‘Well,
what did you think of it all?’
‘If you mean, inventing all
that about a "present", well, I thought the true story much more likely, and I
couldn’t see the point of altering it at all. It was very unlike Bilbo to do so,
anyway; and I thought it rather odd.’
‘So did I. But odd
things may happen to people that have such treasures – if they use them. Let it
be a warning to you to be very careful with it. It may have other powers than
just making you vanish when you wish to.’
‘I don’t
understand,’ said Frodo.
‘Neither do I,’ answered the
wizard. ‘I have merely begun to wonder about the ring, especially since last
night. No need to worry. But if you take my advice you will use it very seldom,
or not at all. At least I beg you not to use it in any way that will cause talk
or rouse suspicion. I say again: keep it safe, and keep it
secret!’
‘You are very mysterious! What are you afraid
of?’
‘I am not certain, so I will say no more. I may be
able to tell you something when I come back. I am going off at once: so this is
good-bye for the present.’ He got up.
‘At once!’ cried
Frodo. ‘Why, I thought you were staying on for at least a week. I was looking
forward to your help.’
‘I did mean to – but I have had to
change my mind. I may be away for a good while; but I’ll come and see you again,
as soon as I can. Expect me when you see me! I shall slip in quietly. I shan’t
often be visiting the Shire openly again. I find that I have become rather
unpopular. They say I am a nuisance and a disturber of the peace. Some people
are actually accusing me of spiriting Bilbo away, or worse. If you want to know,
there is supposed to be a plot between you and me to get hold of his
wealth.’
‘Some people!’ exclaimed Frodo. ‘You mean Otho and
Lobelia. How abominable! I would give them Bag End and everything else, if I
could get Bilbo back and go off tramping in the country with him. I love the
Shire. But I begin to wish, somehow, that I had gone too. I wonder if I shall
ever see him again.’
‘So do I,’ said Gandalf. ‘And I wonder
many other things. Good-bye now! Take care of yourself! Look out for me,
especially at unlikely times! Good-bye!’
Frodo saw him to
the door. He gave a final wave of his hand, and walked off at a surprising pace;
but Frodo thought the old wizard looked unusually bent, almost as if he was
carrying a great weight. The evening was closing in, and his cloaked figure
quickly vanished into the twilight. Frodo did not see him again for a long
time.
Chapter 2
The Shadow of the
Past
The talk did not die down in nine or even ninety-nine
days. The second disappearance of Mr. Bilbo Baggins was discussed in Hobbiton,
and indeed all over the Shire, for a year and a day, and was remembered much
longer than that. It became a fireside-story for young hobbits; and eventually
Mad Baggins, who used to vanish with a bang and a flash and reappear with bags
of jewels and gold, became a favourite character of legend and lived on long
after all the true events were forgotten.
But in the
meantime, the general opinion in the neighbourhood was that Bilbo, who had
always been rather cracked, had at last gone quite mad, and had run off into the
Blue. There he had undoubtedly fallen into a pool or a river and come to a
tragic, but hardly an untimely, end. The blame was mostly laid on
Gandalf.
‘If only that dratted wizard will leave young
Frodo alone, perhaps he’ll settle down and grow some hobbit-sense,’ they said.
And to all appearance the wizard did leave Frodo alone, and he did settle down,
but the growth of hobbit-sense was not very noticeable. Indeed, he at once began
to carry on Bilbo’s reputation for oddity. He refused to go into mourning; and
the next year he gave a party in honour of Bilbo’s hundred-and-twelfth birthday,
which he called Hundred-weight Feast. But that was short of the mark, for twenty
guests were invited and there were several meals at which it snowed food and
rained drink, as hobbits say.
Some people were rather
shocked; but Frodo kept up the custom of giving Bilbo’s Birthday Party year
after year until they got used to it. He said that he did not think Bilbo was
dead. When they asked: ‘Where is he then?’ he shrugged his
shoulders.
He lived alone, as Bilbo had done; but he had a
good many friends, especially among the younger hobbits (mostly descendants of
the Old Took) who had as children been fond of Bilbo and often in and out of Bag
End. Folco Boffin and Fredegar Bolger were two of these; but his closest friends
were Peregrin Took (usually called Pippin), and Merry Brandybuck (his real name
was Meriadoc, but that was seldom remembered). Frodo went tramping all over the
Shire with them; but more often he wandered by himself, and to the amazement of
sensible folk he was sometimes seen far from home walking in the hills and woods
under the starlight. Merry and Pippin suspected that he visited the Elves at
times, as Bilbo had done.
As time went on, people began to
notice that Frodo also showed signs of good ‘preservation’: outwardly he
retained the appearance of a robust and energetic hobbit just out of his tweens.
‘Some folk have all the luck,’ they said; but it was not until Frodo approached
the usually more sober age of fifty that they began to think it
queer.
Frodo himself, after the first shock, found that
being his own master and
the Mr. Baggins of Bag End was rather pleasant.
For some years he was quite happy and did not worry much about the future. But
half unknown to himself the regret that he had not gone with Bilbo was steadily
growing. He found himself wondering at times, especially in the autumn, about
the wild lands, and strange visions of mountains that he had never seen came
into his dreams. He began to say to himself: ‘Perhaps I shall cross the River
myself one day.’ To which the other half of his mind always replied: ‘Not
yet.’
So it went on, until his forties were running out,
and his fiftieth birthday was drawing near: fifty was a number that he felt was
somehow significant (or ominous); it was at any rate at that age that adventure
had suddenly befallen Bilbo. Frodo began to feel restless, and the old paths
seemed too well-trodden. He looked at maps, and wondered what lay beyond their
edges: maps made in the Shire showed mostly white spaces beyond its borders. He
took to wandering further afield and more often by himself; and Merry and his
other friends watched him anxiously. Often he was seen walking and talking with
the strange wayfarers that began at this time to appear in the
Shire.
There were rumours of strange things happening in
the world outside; and as Gandalf had not at that time appeared or sent any
message for several years, Frodo gathered all the news he could. Elves, who
seldom walked in the Shire, could now be seen passing westward through the woods
in the evening, passing and not returning; but they were leaving Middle-earth
and were no longer concerned with its troubles. There were, however, dwarves on
the road in unusual numbers. The ancient East-West Road ran through the Shire to
its end at the Grey Havens, and dwarves had always used it on their way to their
mines in the Blue Mountains. They were the hobbits’ chief source of news from
distant parts – if they wanted any: as a rule dwarves said little and hobbits
asked no more. But now Frodo often met strange dwarves of far countries, seeking
refuge in the West. They were troubled, and some spoke in whispers of the Enemy
and of the Land of Mordor.
That name the hobbits only knew
in legends of the dark past, like a shadow in the background of their memories;
but it was ominous and disquieting. It seemed that the evil power in Mirkwood
had been driven out by the White Council only to reappear in greater strength in
the old strongholds of Mordor. The Dark Tower had been rebuilt, it was said.
From there the power was spreading far and wide, and away far east and south
there were wars and growing fear. Orcs were multiplying again in the mountains.
Trolls were abroad, no longer dull-witted, but cunning and armed with dreadful
weapons. And there were murmured hints of creatures more terrible than all
these, but they had no name.
Little of all this, of course,
reached the ears of ordinary hobbits. But even the deafest and most stay-at-home
began to hear queer tales; and those whose business took them to the borders saw
strange things. The conversation in
The Green Dragon at Bywater, one
evening in the spring of Frodo’s fiftieth year, showed that even in the
comfortable heart of the Shire rumours had been heard, though most hobbits still
laughed at them.
Sam Gamgee was sitting in one corner near
the fire, and opposite him was Ted Sandyman, the miller’s son; and there were
various other rustic hobbits listening to their
talk.
‘Queer things you do hear these days, to be sure,’
said Sam.
‘Ah,’ said Ted, ‘you do, if you listen. But I can
hear fireside-tales and children’s stories at home, if I want
to.’
‘No doubt you can,’ retorted Sam, ‘and I daresay
there’s more truth in some of them than you reckon. Who invented the stories
anyway? Take dragons now.’
‘No thank ’ee,’ said Ted, ‘I
won’t. I heard tell of them when I was a youngster, but there’s no call to
believe in them now. There’s only one Dragon in Bywater, and that’s Green,’ he
said, getting a general laugh.
‘All right,’ said Sam,
laughing with the rest. ‘But what about these Tree-men, these giants, as you
might call them? They do say that one bigger than a tree was seen up away beyond
the North Moors not long back.’
‘Who’s
they
?’
‘My cousin Hal for one. He works for Mr. Boffin at
Overhill and goes up to the Northfarthing for the hunting. He
saw
one.’
‘Says he did, perhaps. Your Hal’s always saying he’s
seen things; and maybe he sees things that ain’t
there.’
‘But this one was as big as an elm tree, and
walking – walking seven yards to a stride, if it was an
inch.’
‘Then I bet it wasn’t an inch. What he saw
was an elm tree, as like as not.’
‘But this one was
walking, I tell you; and there ain’t no elm tree on the North
Moors.’
‘Then Hal can’t have seen one,’ said Ted. There was
some laughing and clapping: the audience seemed to think that Ted had scored a
point.
‘All the same,’ said Sam, ‘you can’t deny that
others besides our Halfast have seen queer folk crossing the Shire – crossing
it, mind you: there are more that are turned back at the borders. The Bounders
have never been so busy before.
‘And I’ve heard tell that
Elves are moving west. They do say they are going to the harbours, out away
beyond the White Towers.’ Sam waved his arm vaguely: neither he nor any of them
knew how far it was to the Sea, past the old towers beyond the western borders
of the Shire. But it was an old tradition that away over there stood the Grey
Havens, from which at times elven-ships set sail, never to
return.
‘They are sailing, sailing, sailing over the Sea,
they are going into the West and leaving us,’ said Sam, half chanting the words,
shaking his head sadly and solemnly. But Ted
laughed.
‘Well, that isn’t anything new, if you believe the
old tales. And I don’t see what it matters to me or you. Let them sail! But I
warrant you haven’t seen them doing it; nor any one else in the
Shire.’
‘Well I don’t know,’ said Sam thoughtfully. He
believed he had once seen an Elf in the woods, and still hoped to see more one
day. Of all the legends that he had heard in his early years such fragments of
tales and half-remembered stories about the Elves as the hobbits knew, had
always moved him most deeply. ‘There are some, even in these parts, as know the
Fair Folk and get news of them,’ he said. ‘There’s Mr. Baggins now, that I work
for. He told me that they were sailing and he knows a bit about Elves. And old
Mr. Bilbo knew more: many’s the talk I had with him when I was a little
lad.’
‘Oh, they’re both cracked,’ said Ted. ‘Leastways old
Bilbo was cracked, and Frodo’s cracking. If that’s where you get your news from,
you’ll never want for moonshine. Well, friends, I’m off home. Your good health!’
He drained his mug and went out noisily.
Sam sat silent and
said no more. He had a good deal to think about. For one thing, there was a lot
to do up in the Bag End garden, and he would have a busy day tomorrow, if the
weather cleared. The grass was growing fast. But Sam had more on his mind than
gardening. After a while he sighed, and got up and went
out.
It was early April and the sky was now clearing after
heavy rain. The sun was down, and a cool pale evening was quietly fading into
night. He walked home under the early stars through Hobbiton and up the Hill,
whistling softly and thoughtfully.
It was just at this time
that Gandalf reappeared after his long absence. For three years after the Party
he had been away. Then he paid Frodo a brief visit, and after taking a good look
at him he went off again. During the next year or two he had turned up fairly
often, coming unexpectedly after dusk, and going off without warning before
sunrise. He would not discuss his own business and journeys, and seemed chiefly
interested in small news about Frodo’s health and
doings.
Then suddenly his visits had ceased. It was over
nine years since Frodo had seen or heard of him, and he had begun to think that
the wizard would never return and had given up all interest in hobbits. But that
evening, as Sam was walking home and twilight was fading, there came the once
familiar tap on the study window.
Frodo welcomed his old
friend with surprise and great delight. They looked hard at one
another.
‘Ah well eh?’ said Gandalf. ‘You look the same as
ever, Frodo!’
‘So do you,’ Frodo replied; but secretly he
thought that Gandalf looked older and more careworn. He pressed him for news of
himself and of the wide world, and soon they were deep in talk, and they stayed
up far into the night.
Next morning after a late breakfast,
the wizard was sitting with Frodo by the open window of the study. A bright fire
was on the hearth, but the sun was warm, and the wind was in the South.
Everything looked fresh, and the new green of Spring was shimmering in the
fields and on the tips of the trees’ fingers.
Gandalf was
thinking of a spring, nearly eighty years before, when Bilbo had run out of Bag
End without a handkerchief. His hair was perhaps whiter than it had been then,
and his beard and eyebrows were perhaps longer, and his face more lined with
care and wisdom; but his eyes were as bright as ever, and he smoked and blew
smoke-rings with the same vigour and delight.
He was smoking now in silence, for Frodo was
sitting still, deep in thought. Even in the light of morning he felt the dark
shadow of the tidings that Gandalf had brought. At last he broke the
silence.
‘Last night you began to tell me strange things
about my ring, Gandalf,’ he said. ‘And then you stopped, because you said that
such matters were best left until daylight. Don’t you think you had better
finish now? You say the ring is dangerous, far more dangerous than I guess. In
what way?’
‘In many ways,’ answered the wizard. It is far
more powerful than I ever dared to think at first, so powerful that in the end
it would utterly overcome anyone of mortal race who possessed it. It would
possess him.
‘In Eregion long ago many Elven-rings were
made, magic rings as you call them, and they were, of course, of various kinds:
some more potent and some less. The lesser rings were only essays in the craft
before it was full-grown, and to the Elven-smiths they were but trifles – yet
still to my mind dangerous for mortals. But the Great Rings, the Rings of Power,
they were perilous.
‘A mortal, Frodo, who keeps one of the
Great Rings, does not die, but he does not grow or obtain more life, he merely
continues, until at last every minute is a weariness. And if he often uses the
Ring to make himself invisible, he
fades: he becomes in the end invisible
permanently, and walks in the twilight under the eye of the dark power that
rules the Rings. Yes, sooner or later – later, if he is strong or well-meaning
to begin with, but neither strength nor good purpose will last – sooner or later
the dark power will devour him.’
‘How terrifying!’ said
Frodo. There was another long silence. The sound of Sam Gamgee cutting the lawn
came in from the garden.
‘How long have you known this?’
asked Frodo at length. ‘And how much did Bilbo
know?’
‘Bilbo knew no more than he told you, I am sure,’
said Gandalf. ‘He would certainly never have passed on to you anything that he
thought would be a danger, even though I promised to look after you. He thought
the ring was very beautiful, and very useful at need; and if anything was wrong
or queer, it was himself. He said that it was “growing on his mind”, and he was
always worrying about it; but he did not suspect that the ring itself was to
blame. Though he had found out that the thing needed looking after; it did not
seem always of the same size or weight; it shrank or expanded in an odd way, and
might suddenly slip off a finger where it had been
tight.’
‘Yes, he warned me of that in his last letter,’
said Frodo, ‘so I have always kept it on its chain.’
‘Very
wise,’ said Gandalf. ‘But as for his long life, Bilbo never connected it with
the ring at all. He took all the credit for that to himself, and he was very
proud of it. Though he was getting restless and uneasy.
Thin and
stretched he said. A sign that the ring was getting
control.’
‘How long have you known all this?’ asked Frodo
again.
‘Known?’ said Gandalf. ‘I have known much that only
the Wise know, Frodo. But if you mean “known about
this ring”, well, I
still do not
know, one might say. There is a last test to make. But I no
longer doubt my guess.
‘When did I first begin to guess?’
he mused, searching back in memory. ‘Let me see – it was in the year that the
White Council drove the dark power from Mirkwood, just before the Battle of Five
Armies, that Bilbo found his ring. A shadow fell on my heart then, though I did
not know yet what I feared. I wondered often how Gollum came by a Great Ring, as
plainly it was – that at least was clear from the first. Then I heard Bilbo’s
strange story of how he had “won” it, and I could not believe it. When I at last
got the truth out of him, I saw at once that he had been trying to put his claim
to the ring beyond doubt. Much like Gollum with his “birthday present”. The lies
were too much alike for my comfort. Clearly the ring had an unwholesome power
that set to work on its keeper at once. That was the first real warning I had
that all was not well. I told Bilbo often that such rings were better left
unused; but he resented it, and soon got angry. There was little else that I
could do. I could not take it from him without doing greater harm; and I had no
right to do so anyway. I could only watch and wait. I might perhaps have
consulted Saruman the White, but something always held me
back.’
‘Who is he?’ asked Frodo. I have never heard of him
before.’
‘Maybe not,’ answered Gandalf. ‘Hobbits are, or
were, no concern of his. Yet he is great among the Wise. He is the chief of my
order and the head of the Council. His knowledge is deep, but his pride has
grown with it, and he takes ill any meddling. The lore of the Elven-rings, great
and small, is his province. He has long studied it, seeking the lost secrets of
their making; but when the Rings were debated in the Council, all that he would
reveal to us of his ring-lore told against my fears. So my doubt slept – but
uneasily. Still I watched and I waited.
‘And all seemed
well with Bilbo. And the years passed. Yes, they passed, and they seemed not to
touch him. He showed no signs of age. The shadow fell on me again. But I said to
myself: “After all he comes of a long-lived family on his mother’s side. There
is time yet. Wait!”
‘And I waited. Until that night when he
left this house. He said and did things then that filled me with a fear that no
words of Saruman could allay. I knew at last that something dark and deadly was
at work. And I have spent most of the years since then in finding out the truth
of it.’
‘There wasn’t any permanent harm done, was there?’
asked Frodo anxiously. ‘He would get all right in time, wouldn’t he? Be able to
rest in peace, I mean?’
‘He felt better at once,’ said
Gandalf. ‘But there is only one Power in this world that knows all about the
Rings and their effects; and as far as I know there is no Power in the world
that knows all about hobbits. Among the Wise I am the only one that goes in for
hobbit-lore: an obscure branch of knowledge, but full of surprises. Soft as
butter they can be, and yet sometimes as tough as old tree-roots. I think it
likely that some would resist the Rings far longer than most of the Wise would
believe. I don’t think you need worry about Bilbo.
‘Of
course, he possessed the ring for many years, and used it, so it might take a
long while for the influence to wear off – before it was safe for him to see it
again, for instance. Otherwise, he might live on for years, quite happily: just
stop as he was when he parted with it. For he gave it up in the end of his own
accord: an important point. No, I was not troubled about dear Bilbo any more,
once he had let the thing go. It is for
you that I feel
responsible.
‘Ever since Bilbo left I have been deeply
concerned about you, and about all these charming, absurd, helpless hobbits. It
would be a grievous blow to the world, if the Dark Power overcame the Shire; if
all your kind, jolly, stupid Bolgers, Hornblowers, Boffins, Bracegirdles, and
the rest, not to mention the ridiculous Bagginses, became
enslaved.’
Frodo shuddered. ‘But why should we be?’ he
asked. ‘And why should he want such slaves?’
‘To tell you
the truth,’ replied Gandalf, ‘I believe that hitherto –
hitherto, mark
you – he has entirely overlooked the existence of hobbits. You should be
thankful. But your safety has passed. He does not need you – he has many more
useful servants – but he won’t forget you again. And hobbits as miserable slaves
would please him far more than hobbits happy and free. There is such a thing as
malice and revenge.’
‘Revenge?’ said Frodo. ‘Revenge for
what? I still don’t understand what all this has to do with Bilbo and myself,
and our ring.’
‘It has everything to do with it,’ said
Gandalf. ‘You do not know the real peril yet; but you shall. I was not sure of
it myself when I was last here; but the time has come to speak. Give me the ring
for a moment.’
Frodo took it from his breeches-pocket,
where it was clasped to a chain that hung from his belt. He unfastened it and
handed it slowly to the wizard. It felt suddenly very heavy, as if either it or
Frodo himself was in some way reluctant for Gandalf to touch
it.
Gandalf held it up. It looked to be made of pure and
solid gold. ‘Can you see any markings on it?’ he
asked.
‘No,’ said Frodo. ‘There are none. It is quite
plain, and it never shows a scratch or sign of wear.’
‘Well
then, look!’ To Frodo’s astonishment and distress the wizard threw it suddenly
into the middle of a glowing corner of the fire. Frodo gave a cry and groped for
the tongs; but Gandalf held him back.
‘Wait!’ he said in a
commanding voice, giving Frodo a quick look from under his bristling
brows.
No apparent change came over the ring. After a while
Gandalf got up, closed the shutters outside the window, and drew the curtains.
The room became dark and silent, though the clack of Sam’s shears, now nearer to
the windows, could still be heard faintly from the garden. For a moment the
wizard stood looking at the fire; then he stooped and removed the ring to the
hearth with the tongs, and at once picked it up. Frodo
gasped.
‘It is quite cool,’ said Gandalf. ‘Take it!’ Frodo
received it on his shrinking palm: it seemed to have become thicker and heavier
than ever.
‘Hold it up!’ said Gandalf. ‘And look
closely!’
As Frodo did so, he now saw fine lines, finer
than the finest pen-strokes, running along the ring, outside and inside: lines
of fire that seemed to form the letters of a flowing script. They shone
piercingly bright, and yet remote, as if out of a great depth.
‘I cannot read the fiery letters,’ said Frodo
in a quavering voice.
‘No,’ said Gandalf, ‘but I can. The
letters are Elvish, of an ancient mode, but the language is that of Mordor,
which I will not utter here. But this in the Common Tongue is what is said,
close enough:
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,
One Ring
to bring them all and in the darkness bind
them.
It is only two lines of a
verse long known in Elven-lore:
Three Rings for the Elven-kings under the sky,
Seven for
the Dwarf-lords in their halls of stone,
Nine for Mortal Men doomed to
die,
One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor
where the Shadows lie.
One Ring to rule them all. One Ring to find
them,
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
In the
Land of Mordor where the Shadows
lie.’
He paused, and then said
slowly in a deep voice: ‘This is the Master-ring, the One Ring to rule them all.
This is the One Ring that he lost many ages ago, to the great weakening of his
power. He greatly desires it – but he must
not get
it.’
Frodo sat silent and motionless. Fear seemed to
stretch out a vast hand, like a dark cloud rising in the East and looming up to
engulf him. ‘This ring!’ he stammered. ‘How, how on earth did it come to
me?’
‘Ah!’ said Gandalf. ‘That is a very long story. The
beginnings lie back in the Black Years, which only the lore-masters now
remember. If I were to tell you all that tale, we should still be sitting here
when Spring had passed into Winter.
‘But last night I told
you of Sauron the Great, the Dark Lord. The rumours that you have heard are
true: he has indeed arisen again and left his hold in Mirkwood and returned to
his ancient fastness in the Dark Tower of Mordor. That name even you hobbits
have heard of, like a shadow on the borders of old stories. Always after a
defeat and a respite, the Shadow takes another shape and grows
again.’
‘I wish it need not have happened in my time,’ said
Frodo.
‘So do I,’ said Gandalf, ‘and so do all who live to
see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is
what to do with the time that is given us. And already, Frodo, our time is
beginning to look black. The Enemy is fast becoming very strong. His plans are
far from ripe, I think, but they are ripening. We shall be hard put to it. We
should be very hard put to it, even if it were not for this dreadful
chance.
‘The Enemy still lacks one thing to give him
strength and knowledge to beat down all resistance, break the last defences, and
cover all the lands in a second darkness. He lacks the One
Ring.
‘The Three, fairest of all, the Elf-lords hid from
him, and his hand never touched them or sullied them. Seven the Dwarf-kings
possessed, but three he has recovered, and the others the dragons have consumed.
Nine he gave to Mortal Men, proud and great, and so ensnared them. Long ago they
fell under the dominion of the One, and they became Ringwraiths, shadows under
his great Shadow, his most terrible servants. Long ago. It is many a year since
the Nine walked abroad. Yet who knows? As the Shadow grows once more, they too
may walk again. But come! We will not speak of such things even in the morning
of the Shire.
‘So it is now: the Nine he has gathered to
himself; the Seven also, or else they are destroyed. The Three are hidden still.
But that no longer troubles him. He only needs the One; for he made that Ring
himself, it is his, and he let a great part of his own former power pass into
it, so that he could rule all the others. If he recovers it, then he will
command them all again, wherever they be, even the Three, and all that has been
wrought with them will be laid bare, and he will be stronger than
ever.
‘And this is the dreadful chance, Frodo. He believed
that the One had perished; that the Elves had destroyed it, as should have been
done. But he knows now that it has
not perished, that it has been found.
So he is seeking it, seeking it, and all his thought is bent on it. It is his
great hope and our great fear.’
‘Why, why wasn’t it
destroyed?’ cried Frodo. ‘And how did the Enemy ever come to lose it, if he was
so strong, and it was so precious to him?’ He clutched the Ring in his hand, as
if he saw already dark fingers stretching out to seize
it.
‘It was taken from him,’ said Gandalf. ‘The strength of
the Elves to resist him was greater long ago; and not all Men were estranged
from them. The Men of Westernesse came to their aid. That is a chapter of
ancient history which it might be good to recall; for there was sorrow then too,
and gathering dark, but great valour, and great deeds that were not wholly vain.
One day, perhaps, I will tell you all the tale, or you shall hear it told in
full by one who knows it best.
‘But for the moment, since
most of all you need to know how this thing came to you, and that will be tale
enough, this is all that I will say. It was Gil-galad, Elven-king and Elendil of
Westernesse who overthrew Sauron, though they themselves perished in the deed;
and Isildur Elendil’s son cut the Ring from Sauron’s hand and took it for his
own. Then Sauron was vanquished and his spirit fled and was hidden for long
years, until his shadow took shape again in Mirkwood.
‘But
the Ring was lost. It fell into the Great River, Anduin, and vanished. For
Isildur was marching north along the east banks of the River, and near the
Gladden Fields he was waylaid by the Orcs of the Mountains, and almost all his
folk were slain. He leaped into the waters, but the Ring slipped from his finger
as he swam, and then the Orcs saw him and killed him with
arrows.’
Gandalf paused. ‘And there in the dark pools amid
the Gladden Fields,’ he said, ‘the Ring passed out of knowledge and legend; and
even so much of its history is known now only to a few, and the Council of the
Wise could discover no more. But at last I can carry on the story, I
think.
‘Long after, but still very long ago, there lived by
the banks of the Great River on the edge of Wilderland a clever-handed and
quiet-footed little people. I guess they were of hobbit-kind; akin to the
fathers of the fathers of the Stoors, for they loved the River, and often swam
in it, or made little boats of reeds. There was among them a family of high
repute, for it was large and wealthier than most, and it was ruled by a
grandmother of the folk, stern and wise in old lore, such as they had. The most
inquisitive and curious-minded of that family was called Smeagol. He was
interested in roots and beginnings; he dived into deep pools; he burrowed under
trees and growing plants; he tunnelled into green mounds; and he ceased to look
up at the hill-tops, or the leaves on trees, or the flowers opening in the air:
his head and his eyes were downward.
‘He had a friend
called Deagol, of similar sort, sharper-eyed but not so quick and strong. On a
time they took a boat and went down to the Gladden Fields, where there were
great beds of iris and flowering reeds. There Smeagol got out and went nosing
about the banks but Deagol sat in the boat and fished. Suddenly a great fish
took his hook, and before he knew where he was, he was dragged out and down into
the water, to the bottom. Then he let go of his line, for he thought he saw
something shining in the river-bed; and holding his breath he grabbed at
it.
‘Then up he came spluttering, with weeds in his hair
and a handful of mud; and he swam to the bank. And behold! when he washed the
mud away, there in his hand lay a beautiful golden ring; and it shone and
glittered in the sun, so that his heart was glad. But Smeagol had been watching
him from behind a tree, and as Deagol gloated over the ring, Smeagol came softly
up behind.
‘“Give us that, Deagol, my love,” said Smeagol,
over his friend’s shoulder.
‘“Why?” said
Deagol.
‘“Because it’s my birthday, my love, and I wants
it,” said Smeagol.
‘“I don’t care,” said Deagol. “I have
given you a present already, more than I could afford. I found this, and I’m
going to keep it.”
‘“Oh, are you indeed, my love,” said
Smeagol; and he caught Deagol by the throat and strangled him, because the gold
looked so bright and beautiful. Then he put the ring on his
finger.
‘No one ever found out what had become of Deagol;
he was murdered far from home, and his body was cunningly hidden. But Smeagol
returned alone; and he found that none of his family could see him, when he was
wearing the ring. He was very pleased with his discovery and he concealed it;
and he used it to find out secrets, and he put his knowledge to crooked and
malicious uses. He became sharp-eyed and keen-eared for all that was hurtful.
The ring had given him power according to his stature. It is not to be wondered
at that he became very unpopular and was shunned (when visible) by all his
relations. They kicked him, and he bit their feet. He took to thieving, and
going about muttering to himself, and gurgling in his throat. So they called him
Gollum, and cursed him, and told him to go far away; and his grandmother,
desiring peace, expelled him from the family and turned him out of her
hole.
‘He wandered in loneliness, weeping a little for the
hardness of the world, and he journeyed up the River, till he came to a stream
that flowed down from the mountains, and he went that way. He caught fish in
deep pools with invisible fingers and ate them raw. One day it was very hot, and
as he was bending over a pool, he felt a burning on the back of his head and a
dazzling light from the water pained his wet eyes. He wondered at it, for he had
almost forgotten about the Sun. Then for the last time he looked up and shook
his fist at her.
‘But as he lowered his eyes, he saw far
above the tops of the Misty Mountains, out of which the stream came. And he
thought suddenly: “It would be cool and shady under those mountains. The Sun
could not watch me there. The roots of those mountains must be roots indeed;
there must be great secrets buried there which have not been discovered since
the beginning.”
‘So he journeyed by night up into the
highlands, and he found a little cave out of which the dark stream ran; and he
wormed his way like a maggot into the heart of the hills, and vanished out of
all knowledge. The Ring went into the shadows with him, and even the maker, when
his power had begun to grow again, could learn nothing of
it.’
‘Gollum!’ cried Frodo. ‘Gollum? Do you mean that this
is the very Gollum-creature that Bilbo met? How
loathsome!’
‘I think it is a sad story,’ said the wizard,
‘and it might have happened to others, even to some hobbits that I have
known.’
‘I can’t believe that Gollum was connected with
hobbits, however distantly,’ said Frodo with some heat. ‘What an abominable
notion!’
‘It is true all the same,’ replied Gandalf. ‘About
their origins, at any rate, I know more than hobbits do themselves. And even
Bilbo’s story suggests the kinship. There was a great deal in the background of
their minds and memories that was very similar. They understood one another
remarkably well, very much better than a hobbit would understand, say, a Dwarf,
or an Orc, or even an Elf. Think of the riddles they both knew, for one
thing.’
‘Yes,’ said Frodo. ‘Though other folks besides
hobbits ask riddles, and of much the same sort. And hobbits don’t cheat. Gollum
meant to cheat all the time. He was just trying to put poor Bilbo off his guard.
And I daresay it amused his wickedness to start a game which might end in
providing him with an easy victim, but if he lost would not hurt
him.’
‘Only too true, I fear,’ said Gandalf. ‘But there was
something else in it, I think, which you don’t see yet. Even Gollum was not
wholly ruined. He had proved tougher than even one of the Wise would have
guessed -as a hobbit might. There was a little corner of his mind that was still
his own, and light came through it, as through a chink in the dark: light out of
the past. It was actually pleasant, I think, to hear a kindly voice again,
bringing up memories of wind, and trees, and sun on the grass, and such
forgotten things.
‘But that, of course, would only make the
evil part of him angrier in the end – unless it could be conquered. Unless it
could be cured.’ Gandalf sighed. ‘Alas! there is little hope of that for him.
Yet not no hope. No, not though he possessed the Ring so long, almost as far
back as he can remember. For it was long since he had worn it much: in the black
darkness it was seldom needed. Certainly he had never “faded”. He is thin and
tough still. But the thing was eating up his mind, of course, and the torment
had become almost unbearable.
‘All the “great secrets”
under the mountains had turned out to be just empty night: there was nothing
more to find out, nothing worth doing, only nasty furtive eating and resentful
remembering. He was altogether wretched. He hated the dark, and he hated light
more: he hated everything, and the Ring most of all.’
‘What
do you mean?’ said Frodo. ‘Surely the Ring was his precious and the only thing
he cared for? But if he hated it, why didn’t he get rid of it, or go away and
leave it?’
‘You ought to begin to understand, Frodo, after
all you have heard,’ said Gandalf. ‘He hated it and loved it, as he hated and
loved himself. He could not get rid of it. He had no will left in the
matter.
‘A Ring of Power looks after itself, Frodo.
It may slip off treacherously, but its keeper never abandons it. At most
he plays with the idea of handing it on to someone else’s care – and that only
at an early stage, when it first begins to grip. But as far as I know Bilbo
alone in history has ever gone beyond playing, and really done it. He needed all
my help, too. And even so he would never have just forsaken it, or cast it
aside. It was not Gollum, Frodo, but the Ring itself that decided things. The
Ring left
him.’ ‘What, just in time to meet Bilbo?’
said Frodo. ‘Wouldn’t an Orc have suited it better?’
‘It is
no laughing matter,’ said Gandalf. ‘Not for you. It was the strangest event in
the whole history of the Ring so far: Bilbo’s arrival just at that time, and
putting his hand on it, blindly, in the dark.
‘There was
more than one power at work, Frodo. The Ring was trying to get back to its
master. It had slipped from Isildur’s hand and betrayed him; then when a chance
came it caught poor Deagol, and he was murdered; and after that Gollum, and it
had devoured him. It could make no further use of him: he was too small and
mean; and as long as it stayed with him he would never leave his deep pool
again. So now, when its master was awake once more and sending out his dark
thought from Mirkwood, it abandoned Gollum. Only to be picked up by the most
unlikely person imaginable: Bilbo from the Shire!
‘Behind
that there was something else at work, beyond any design of the Ring-maker. I
can put it no plainer than by saying that Bilbo was
meant to find the
Ring, and
not by its maker. In which case you also were
meant to
have it. And that maybe an encouraging thought.’
‘It is
not,’ said Frodo. “Though I am not sure that I understand you. But how have you
learned all this about the Ring, and about Gollum? Do you really know it all, or
are you just guessing still?’
Gandalf looked at Frodo, and
his eyes glinted. ‘I knew much and I have learned much,’ he answered. ‘But I am
not going to give an account of all my doings to
you. The history of
Elendil and Isildur and the One Ring is known to all the Wise. Your ring is
shown to be that One Ring by the fire-writing alone, apart from any other
evidence.’
‘And when did you discover that?’ asked Frodo,
interrupting.
‘Just now in this room, of course,’ answered
the wizard sharply. ‘But I expected to find it. I have come back from dark
journeys and long search to make that final test. It is the last proof, and all
is now only too clear. Making out Gollum’s part, and fitting it into the gap in
the history, required some thought. I may have started with guesses about
Gollum, but I am not guessing now. I know. I have seen
him.’
‘You have seen Gollum?’ exclaimed Frodo in
amazement.
‘Yes. The obvious thing to do, of course, if one
could. I tried long ago; but I have managed it at
last.’
‘Then what happened after Bilbo escaped from him? Do
you know that?’
‘Not so clearly. What I have told you is
what Gollum was willing to tell – though not, of course, in the way I have
reported it. Gollum is a liar, and you have to sift his words. For instance, he
called the Ring his “birthday present”, and he stuck to that. He said it came
from his grandmother, who had lots of beautiful things of that kind. A
ridiculous story. I have no doubt that Smeagol's grandmother was a matriarch, a
great person in her way, but to talk of her possessing many Elven-rings was
absurd, and as for giving them away, it was a lie. But a lie with a grain of
truth.
‘The murder of Deagol haunted Gollum, and he had
made up a defence, repeating it to his “precious” over and over again, as he
gnawed bones in the dark, until he almost believed it. It
was his
birthday. Deagol ought to have given the ring to him. It had previously turned
up just so as to be a present. It
was his birthday present, and so on,
and on.
‘I endured him as long as I could, but the truth
was desperately important, and in the end I had to be harsh. I put the fear of
fire on him, and wrung the true story out of him, bit by bit, together with much
snivelling and snarling. He thought he was misunderstood and ill-used. But when
he had at last told me his history, as far as the end of the Riddle-game and
Bilbo’s escape, he would not say any more, except in dark hints. Some other fear
was on him greater than mine. He muttered that he was going to get his own back.
People would see if he would stand being kicked, and driven into a hole and then
robbed. Gollum had good friends now, good friends and very strong. They
would help him. Baggins would pay for it. That was his chief thought. He hated
Bilbo and cursed his name. What is more, he knew where he came
from.’
‘But how did he find that out?’ asked
Frodo.
‘Well, as for the name, Bilbo very foolishly told
Gollum himself; and after that it would not be difficult to discover his
country, once Gollum came out. Oh yes, he came out. His longing for the Ring
proved stronger than his fear of the Orcs, or even of the light. After a year or
two he left the mountains. You see, though still bound by desire of it, the Ring
was no longer devouring him; he began to revive a little. He felt old, terribly
old, yet less timid, and he was mortally hungry.
‘Light,
light of Sun and Moon, he still feared and hated, and he always will, I think;
but he was cunning. He found he could hide from daylight and moonshine, and make
his way swiftly and softly by dead of night with his pale cold eyes, and catch
small frightened or unwary things. He grew stronger and bolder with new food and
new air. He found his way into Mirkwood, as one would
expect.’
‘Is that where you found him?’ asked
Frodo.
‘I saw him there,’ answered Gandalf, ‘but before
that he had wandered far, following Bilbo’s trail. It was difficult to learn
anything from him for certain, for his talk was constantly interrupted by curses
and threats. “What had it got in its pocketses?” he said. “It wouldn’t say, no
precious. Little cheat. Not a fair question. It cheated first, it did. It broke
the rules. We ought to have squeezed it, yes precious. And we will,
precious!”
‘That is a sample of his talk. I don’t suppose
you want any more. I had weary days of it. But from hints dropped among the
snarls I even gathered that his padding feet had taken him at last to Esgaroth,
and even to the streets of Dale, listening secretly and peering. Well, the news
of the great events went far and wide in Wilderland, and many had heard Bilbo’s
name and knew where he came from. We had made no secret of our return journey to
his home in the West. Gollum’s sharp ears would soon learn what he
wanted.’
‘Then why didn’t he track Bilbo further?’ asked
Frodo. ‘Why didn’t he come to the Shire?’
‘Ah,’ said
Gandalf, ‘now we come to it. I think Gollum tried to. He set out and came back
westward, as far as the Great River. But then he turned aside. He was not
daunted by the distance, I am sure. No, something else drew him away. So my
friends think, those that hunted him for me.
‘The
Wood-elves tracked him first, an easy task for them, for his trail was still
fresh then. Through Mirkwood and back again it led them, though they never
caught him. The wood was full of the rumour of him, dreadful tales even among
beasts and birds. The Woodmen said that there was some new terror abroad, a
ghost that drank blood. It climbed trees to find nests; it crept into holes to
find the young; it slipped through windows to find
cradles.
‘But at the western edge of Mirkwood the trail
turned away. It wandered off southwards and passed out of the Wood-elves’ ken,
and was lost. And then I made a great mistake. Yes, Frodo, and not the first;
though I fear it may prove the worst. I let the matter be. I let him go; for I
had much else to think of at that time, and I still trusted the lore of
Saruman.
‘Well, that was years ago. I have paid for it
since with many dark and dangerous days. The trail was long cold when I took it
up again, after Bilbo left here. And my search would have been in vain, but for
the help that I had from a friend: Aragorn, the greatest traveller and huntsman
of this age of the world. Together we sought for Gollum down the whole length of
Wilderland, without hope, and without success. But at last, when I had given up
the chase and turned to other parts, Gollum was found. My friend returned out of
the great perils bringing the miserable creature with
him.
‘What he had been doing he would not say. He only wept
and called us cruel, with many a
gollum in his throat; and when we
pressed him he whined and cringed, and rubbed his long hands, licking his
fingers as if they pained him, as if he remembered some old torture. But I am
afraid there is no possible doubt: he had made his slow, sneaking way, step by
step, mile by mile, south, down at last to the Land of
Mordor.’
A heavy silence fell in the room. Frodo could hear
his heart beating. Even outside everything seemed still. No sound of Sam’s
shears could now be heard.
‘Yes, to Mordor,’ said Gandalf.
‘Alas! Mordor draws all wicked things, and the Dark Power was bending all its
will to gather them there. The Ring of the Enemy would leave its mark, too,
leave him open to the summons. And all folk were whispering then of the new
Shadow in the South, and its hatred of the West. There were his fine new
friends, who would help him in his revenge!
‘Wretched fool!
In that land he would learn much, too much for his comfort. And sooner or later
as he lurked and pried on the borders he would be caught, and taken – for
examination. That was the way of it, I fear. When he was found he had already
been there long, and was on his way back. On some errand of mischief. But that
does not matter much now. His worst mischief was
done.
‘Yes, alas! through him the Enemy has learned that
the One has been found again. He knows where Isildur fell. He knows where Gollum
found his ring. He knows that it is a Great Ring, for it gave long life. He
knows that it is not one of the Three, for they have never been lost, and they
endure no evil. He knows that it is not one of the Seven, or the Nine, for they
are accounted for. He knows that it is the One. And he has at last heard, I
think, of
hobbits and the
Shire.
‘The Shire –
he may be seeking for it now, if he has not already found out where it lies.
Indeed, Frodo, I fear that he may even think that the long-unnoticed name of
Baggins has become important.’
‘But this is
terrible!’ cried Frodo. ‘Far worse than the worst that I imagined from your
hints and warnings. O Gandalf, best of friends, what am I to do? For now I am
really afraid. What am I to do? What a pity that Bilbo did not stab that vile
creature, when he had a chance!’
‘Pity? It was Pity that
stayed his hand. Pity, and Mercy: not to strike without need. And he has been
well rewarded, Frodo. Be sure that he took so little hurt from the evil, and
escaped in the end, because he began his ownership of the Ring so. With
Pity.’
‘I am sorry,’ said Frodo. ‘But I am frightened; and
I do not feel any pity for Gollum.’
‘You have not seen
him,’ Gandalf broke in.
‘No, and I don’t want to,’ said
Frodo. ‘I can’t understand you. Do you mean to say that you, and the Elves, have
let him live on after all those horrible deeds? Now at any rate he is as bad as
an Orc, and just an enemy. He deserves death.’
‘Deserves
it! I daresay he does. Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve
life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in
judgement. For even the very wise cannot see all ends. I have not much hope that
Gollum can be cured before he dies, but there is a chance of it. And he is bound
up with the fate of the Ring. My heart tells me that he has some part to play
yet, for good or ill, before the end; and when that comes, the pity of Bilbo may
rule the fate of many – yours not least. In any case we did not kill him: he is
very old and very wretched. The Wood-elves have him in prison, but they treat
him with such kindness as they can find in their wise
hearts.’
‘All the same,’ said Frodo, ‘even if Bilbo could
not kill Gollum, I wish he had not kept the Ring. I wish he had never found it,
and that I had not got it! Why did you let me keep it? Why didn’t you make me
throw it away, or, or destroy it?’
‘Let you? Make you?’
said the wizard. ‘Haven’t you been listening to all that I have said? You are
not thinking of what you are saying. But as for throwing it away, that was
obviously wrong. These Rings have a way of being found. In evil hands it might
have done great evil. Worst of all, it might have fallen into the hands of the
Enemy. Indeed it certainly would; for this is the One, and he is exerting all
his power to find it or draw it to himself.
‘Of course, my
dear Frodo, it was dangerous for you; and that has troubled me deeply. But there
was so much at stake that I had to take some risk – though even when I was far
away there has never been a day when the Shire has not been guarded by watchful
eyes. As long as you never used it, I did not think that the Ring would have any
lasting effect on you, not for evil, not at any rate for a very long time. And
you must remember that nine years ago, when I last saw you, I still knew little
for certain.’
‘But why not destroy it, as you say should
have been done long ago?’ cried Frodo again. If you had warned me, or even sent
me a message, I would have done away with it.’
‘Would you?
How would you do that? Have you ever tried?’
‘No. But I
suppose one could hammer it or melt it.’
‘Try!’ said
Gandalf. ‘Try now!’
Frodo drew the Ring out of his pocket
again and looked at it. It now appeared plain and smooth, without mark or device
that he could see. The gold looked very fair and pure, and Frodo thought how
rich and beautiful was its colour, how perfect was its roundness. It was an
admirable thing and altogether precious. When he took it out he had intended to
fling it from him into the very hottest part of the fire. But he found now that
he could not do so, not without a great struggle. He weighed the Ring in his
hand, hesitating, and forcing himself to remember all that Gandalf had told him;
and then with an effort of will he made a movement, as if to cast it away – but
he found that he had put it back in his pocket.
Gandalf
laughed grimly. ‘You see? Already you too, Frodo, cannot easily let it go, nor
will to damage it. And I could not “make” you – except by force, which would
break your mind. But as for breaking the Ring, force is useless. Even if you
took it and struck it with a heavy sledge-hammer, it would make no dint in it.
It cannot be unmade by your hands, or by mine.
‘Your small
fire, of course, would not melt even ordinary gold. This Ring has already passed
through it unscathed, and even unheated. But there is no smith’s forge in this
Shire that could change it at all. Not even the anvils and furnaces of the
Dwarves could do that. It has been said that dragon-fire could melt and consume
the Rings of Power, but there is not now any dragon left on earth in which the
old fire is hot enough; nor was there ever any dragon, not even Ancalagon the
Black, who could have harmed the One Ring, the Ruling Ring, for that was made by
Sauron himself. There is only one way: to find the Cracks of Doom in the depths
of Orodruin, the Fire-mountain, and cast the Ring in there, if you really wish
to destroy it, to put it beyond the grasp of the Enemy for
ever.’
‘I do really wish to destroy it!’ cried Frodo. ‘Or,
well, to have it destroyed. I am not made for perilous quests. I wish I had
never seen the Ring! Why did it come to me? Why was I
chosen?’
‘Such questions cannot be answered,’ said Gandalf.
‘You may be sure that it was not for any merit that others do not possess: not
for power or wisdom, at any rate. But you have been chosen, and you must
therefore use such strength and heart and wits as you
have.’
‘But I have so little of any of these things! You
are wise and powerful. Will you not take the Ring?’
‘No!’
cried Gandalf, springing to his feet. ‘With that power I should have power too
great and terrible. And over me the Ring would gain a power still greater and
more deadly.’ His eyes flashed and his face was lit as by a fire within. ‘Do not
tempt me! For I do not wish to become like the Dark Lord himself. Yet the way of
the Ring to my heart is by pity, pity for weakness and the desire of strength to
do good. Do not tempt me! I dare not take it, not even to keep it safe, unused.
The wish to wield it would be too great, for my strength. I shall have such need
of it. Great perils lie before me.’
He went to the window
and drew aside the curtains and the shutters. Sunlight streamed back again into
the room. Sam passed along the path outside whistling. ‘And now,’ said the
wizard, turning back to Frodo, ‘the decision lies with you. But I will always
help you.’ He laid his hand on Frodo’s shoulder. ‘I will help you bear this
burden, as long as it is yours to bear. But we must do something, soon. The
Enemy is moving.’
There was a long silence. Gandalf sat
down again and puffed at his pipe, as if lost in thought. His eyes seemed
closed, but under the lids he was watching Frodo intently. Frodo gazed fixedly
at the red embers on the hearth, until they filled all his vision, and he seemed
to be looking down into profound wells of fire. He was thinking of the fabled
Cracks of Doom and the terror of the Fiery
Mountain.
‘Well!’ said Gandalf at last. ‘What are you
thinking about? Have you decided what to do?’
‘No!’
answered Frodo, coming back to himself out of darkness, and finding to his
surprise that it was not dark, and that out of the window he could see the
sunlit garden. ‘Or perhaps, yes. As far as I understand what you have said, I
suppose I must keep the Ring and guard it, at least for the present, whatever it
may do to me.’
‘Whatever it may do, it will be slow, slow
to evil, if you keep it with that purpose,’ said
Gandalf.
‘I hope so,’ said Frodo. ‘But I hope that you may
find some other better keeper soon. But in the meanwhile it seems that I am a
danger, a danger to all that live near me. I cannot keep the Ring and stay here.
I ought to leave Bag End, leave the Shire, leave everything and go away.’ He
sighed.
‘I should like to save the Shire, if I could –
though there have been times when I thought the inhabitants too stupid and dull
for words, and have felt that an earthquake or an invasion of dragons might be
good for them. But I don’t feel like that now. I feel that as long as the Shire
lies behind, safe and comfortable, I shall find wandering more bearable: I shall
know that somewhere there is a firm foothold, even if my feet cannot stand there
again.
‘Of course, I have sometimes thought of going away,
but I imagined that as a kind of holiday, a series of adventures like Bilbo’s or
better, ending in peace. But this would mean exile, a flight from danger into
danger, drawing it after me. And I suppose I must go alone, if I am to do that
and save the Shire. But I feel very small, and very uprooted, and well –
desperate. The Enemy is so strong and terrible.’
He did not
tell Gandalf, but as he was speaking a great desire to follow Bilbo flamed up in
his heart – to follow Bilbo, and even perhaps to find him again. It was so
strong that it overcame his fear: he could almost have run out there and then
down the road without his hat, as Bilbo had done on a similar morning long
ago.
‘My dear Frodo!’ exclaimed Gandalf. ‘Hobbits really
are amazing creatures, as I have said before. You can learn all that there is to
know about their ways in a month, and yet after a hundred years they can still
surprise you at a pinch. I hardly expected to get such an answer, not even from
you. But Bilbo made no mistake in choosing his heir, though he little thought
how important it would prove. I am afraid you are right. The Ring will not be
able to stay hidden in the Shire much longer; and for your own sake, as well as
for others, you will have to go, and leave the name of Baggins behind you. That
name will not be safe to have, outside the Shire or in the Wild. I will give you
a travelling name now. When you go, go as Mr.
Underhill.
‘But I don’t think you need go alone. Not if you
know of anyone you can trust, and who would be willing to go by your side – and
that you would be willing to take into unknown perils. But if you look for a
companion, be careful in choosing! And be careful of what you say, even to your
closest friends! The enemy has many spies and many ways of
hearing.’
Suddenly he stopped as if listening. Frodo became
aware that all was very quiet, inside and outside. Gandalf crept to one side of
the window. Then with a dart he sprang to the sill, and thrust a long arm out
and downwards. There was a squawk, and up came Sam Gamgee’s curly head hauled by
one ear.
‘Well, well, bless my beard!’ said Gandalf. ‘Sam
Gamgee is it? Now what may you be doing?’
‘Lor bless you,
Mr. Gandalf, sir!’ said Sam. ‘Nothing! Leastways I was just trimming the
grass-border under the window, if you follow me.’ He picked up his shears and
exhibited them as evidence.
‘I don’t,’ said Gandalf grimly.
‘It is some time since I last heard the sound of your shears. How long have you
been eavesdropping?’
‘Eavesdropping, sir? I don’t follow
you, begging your pardon. There ain’t no eaves at Bag End, and that’s a
fact.’
‘Don’t be a fool! What have you heard, and why did
you listen?’ Gandalf’s eyes flashed and his brows stuck out like
bristles.
‘Mr. Frodo, sir!’ cried Sam quaking. ‘Don’t let
him hurt me, sir! Don’t let him turn me into anything unnatural! My old dad
would take on so. I meant no harm, on my honour, sir!’
‘He
won’t hurt you,’ said Frodo, hardly able to keep from laughing, although he was
himself startled and rather puzzled. ‘He knows, as well as I do, that you mean
no harm. But just you up and answer his questions straight
away!’
‘Well, sir,’ said Sam dithering a little. ‘I heard a
deal that I didn’t rightly understand, about an enemy, and rings, and Mr. Bilbo,
sir, and dragons, and a fiery mountain, and – and Elves, sir. I listened because
I couldn’t help myself, if you know what I mean. Lor bless me, sir, but I do
love tales of that sort. And I believe them too, whatever Ted may say. Elves,
sir! I would dearly love to see
them. Couldn’t you take me to see Elves,
sir, when you go?’
Suddenly Gandalf laughed. ‘Come inside!’
he shouted, and putting out both his arms he lifted the astonished Sam, shears,
grass-clippings and all, right through the window and stood him on the floor.
‘Take you to see Elves, eh?’ he said, eyeing Sam closely, but with a smile
flickering on his face. ‘So you heard that Mr. Frodo is going
away?’
‘I did, sir. And that’s why I choked: which you
heard seemingly. I tried not to, sir, but it burst out of me: I was so
upset.’
‘It can’t be helped, Sam,’ said Frodo sadly. He had
suddenly realized that flying from the Shire would mean more painful partings
than merely saying farewell to the familiar comforts of Bag End. ‘I shall have
to go. But’ – and here he looked hard at Sam – ‘if you really care about me, you
will keep that
dead secret. See? If you don’t, if you even breathe a word
of what you’ve heard here, then I hope Gandalf will turn you into a spotted toad
and fill the garden full of grass-snakes.’
Sam fell on his
knees, trembling. ‘Get up, Sam!’ said Gandalf. I have thought of something
better than that. Something to shut your mouth, and punish you properly for
listening. You shall go away with Mr. Frodo!’
‘Me, sir!’
cried Sam, springing up like a dog invited for a walk. ‘Me go and see Elves and
all! Hooray!’ he shouted, and then burst into tears.
Chapter 3
Three is
Company
‘You ought to go quietly, and you ought to go soon,’ said
Gandalf. Two or three weeks had passed, and still Frodo made no sign of getting
ready to go.
‘I know. But it is difficult to do both,’ he
objected. If I just vanish like Bilbo, the tale will be all over the Shire in no
time.’
‘Of course you mustn’t vanish!’ said Gandalf. ‘That
wouldn’t do at all! I said
soon, not
instantly. If you can think
of any way of slipping out of the Shire without its being generally known, it
will be worth a little delay. But you must not delay too
long.’
‘What about the autumn, on or after Our Birthday?’
asked Frodo. ‘I think I could probably make some arrangements by
then.’
To tell the truth, he was very reluctant to start,
now that it had come to the point. Bag End seemed a more desirable residence
than it had for years, and he wanted to savour as much as he could of his last
summer in the Shire. When autumn came, he knew that part at least of his heart
would think more kindly of journeying, as it always did at that season. He had
indeed privately made up his mind to leave on his fiftieth birthday: Bilbo’s one
hundred and twenty-eighth. It seemed somehow the proper day on which to set out
and follow him. Following Bilbo was uppermost in his mind, and the one thing
that made the thought of leaving bearable. He thought as little as possible
about the Ring, and where it might lead him in the end. But he did not tell all
his thoughts to Gandalf. What the wizard guessed was always difficult to
tell.
He looked at Frodo and smiled. ‘Very well,’ he said.
‘I think that will do – but it must not be any later. I am getting very anxious.
In the mean-while, do take care, and don’t let out any hint of where you are
going! And see that Sam Gamgee does not talk. If he does, I really shall turn
him into a toad.’
‘As for
where I am going,’ said
Frodo, ‘it would be difficult to give that away, for I have no clear idea
myself, yet.’
‘Don’t be absurd!’ said Gandalf. ‘I am not
warning you against leaving an address at the post-office! But you are leaving
the Shire – and that should not be known, until you are far away. And you must
go, or at least set out, either North, South, West or East – and the direction
should certainly not be known.’
‘I have been so taken up
with the thoughts of leaving Bag End, and of saying farewell, that I have never
even considered the direction,’ said Frodo. ‘For where am I to go? And by what
shall I steer? What is to be my quest? Bilbo went to find a treasure, there and
back again; but I go to lose one, and not return, as far as I can
see.’
‘But you cannot see very far,’ said Gandalf. ‘Neither
can I. It may be your task to find the Cracks of Doom; but that quest may be for
others: I do not know. At any rate you are not ready for that long road
yet.’
‘No indeed!’ said Frodo. ‘But in the meantime what
course am I to lake?’
‘Towards danger; but not too rashly,
nor too straight,’ answered the wizard. ‘If you want my advice, make for
Rivendell. That journey should not prove too perilous, though the Road is less
easy than it was, and it will grow worse as the year
fails.’
‘Rivendell!’ said Frodo. ‘Very good: I will go
east, and I will make for Rivendell. I will take Sam to visit the Elves; he will
be delighted.’ He spoke lightly; but his heart was moved suddenly with a desire
to see the house of Elrond Halfelven, and breathe the air of that deep valley
where many of the Fair Folk still dwelt in peace.
One
summer’s evening an astonishing piece of news reached the
Ivy Bush and
Green Dragon. Giants and other portents on the borders of the Shire were
forgotten for more important matters: Mr. Frodo was selling Bag End, indeed he
had already sold it – to the Sackville-Bagginses!
‘For a
nice bit, loo,’ said some. ‘At a bargain price,’ said others, ‘and that’s more
likely when Mistress Lobelia’s the buyer.’ (Otho had died some years before, at
the ripe but disappointed age of 102.)
Just why Mr. Frodo
was selling his beautiful hole was even more debatable than the price. A few
held the theory – supported by the nods and hints of Mr. Baggins himself – that
Frodo’s money was running out: he was going to leave Hobbiton and live in a
quiet way on the proceeds of the sale down in Buckland among his Brandybuck
relations. ‘As far from the Sackville-Bagginses as may be,’ some added. But so
firmly fixed had the notion of the immeasurable wealth of the Bagginses of Bag
End become that most found this hard to believe, harder than any other reason or
unreason that their fancy could suggest: to most it suggested a dark and yet
unrevealed plot by Gandalf. Though he kept himself very quiet and did not go
about by day, it was well known that he was ‘hiding up in the Bag End’. But
however a removal might fit in with the designs of his wizardry, there was no
doubt about the fact: Frodo Baggins was going back to
Buckland.
‘Yes, I shall be moving this autumn,’ he said.
‘Merry Brandybuck is looking out for a nice little hole for me, or perhaps a
small house.’
As a matter of fact with Merry’s help he had
already chosen and bought a little house at Crickhollow in the country beyond
Bucklebury. To all but Sam he pretended he was going to settle down there
permanently. The decision to set out eastwards had suggested the idea to him;
for Buckland was on the eastern borders of the Shire, and as he had lived there
in childhood his going back would at least seem
credible.
Gandalf stayed in the Shire for over two months.
Then one evening, at the end of June, soon after Frodo’s plan had been finally
arranged, he suddenly announced that he was going off again next morning. ‘Only
for a short while, I hope,’ he said. ‘But I am going down beyond the southern
borders to get some news, if I can. I have been idle longer than I
should.’
He spoke lightly, but it seemed to Frodo that he
looked rather worried. ‘Has anything happened?’ he
asked.
‘Well no; but I have heard something that has made
me anxious and needs looking into. If I think it necessary after all for you to
get off at once, I shall come back immediately, or at least send word. In the
meanwhile stick to your plan; but be more careful than ever, especially of the
Ring. Let me impress on you once more:
don’t use
it!’ He went off at dawn. ‘I may be back any day,’ he
said. ‘At the very latest I shall come back for the farewell party. I think
after all you may need my company on the Road.’
At first
Frodo was a good deal disturbed, and wondered often what Gandalf could have
heard; but his uneasiness wore off, and in the fine weather he forgot his
troubles for a while. The Shire had seldom seen so fair a summer, or so rich an
autumn: the trees were laden with apples, honey was dripping in the combs, and
the corn was tall and full.
Autumn was well under way
before Frodo began to worry about Gandalf again. September was passing and there
was still no news of him. The Birthday and the removal drew nearer, and still he
did not come, or send word. Bag End began to be busy. Some of Frodo’s friends
came to stay and help him with the packing: there was Fredegar Bolger and Folco
Boffin, and of course his special friends Pippin Took and Merry Brandybuck.
Between them they turned the whole place upside-down.
On
September 20th two covered carts went off laden to Buckland, conveying the
furniture and goods that Frodo had not sold to his new home, by way of the
Brandywine Bridge. The next day Frodo became really anxious, and kept a constant
look-out for Gandalf. Thursday, his birthday morning, dawned as fair and clear
as it had long ago for Bilbo’s great party. Still Gandalf did not appear. In the
evening Frodo gave his farewell feast: it was quite small, just a dinner for
himself and his four helpers; but he was troubled and fell in no mood for it.
The thought that he would so soon have to part with his young friends weighed on
his heart. He wondered how he would break it to them.
The
four younger hobbits were, however, in high spirits, and the party soon became
very cheerful in spite of Gandalf’s absence. The dining-room was bare except for
a table and chairs, but the food was good, and there was good wine: Frodo’s wine
had not been included in the sale to the
Sackville-Bagginses.
‘Whatever happens to the rest of my
stuff, when the S.-B.s get their claws on it, at any rate I have found a good
home for this!’ said Frodo, as he drained his glass. It was the last drop of Old
Winyards.
When they had sung many songs, and talked of many
things they had done together, they toasted Bilbo’s birthday, and they drank his
health and Frodo’s together according to Frodo’s custom. Then they went out for
a sniff of air, and glimpse of the stars, and then they went to bed. Frodo’s
party was over, and Gandalf had not come.
The next morning
they were busy packing another cart with the remainder of the luggage. Merry
took charge of this, and drove off with Fatty (that is Fredegar Bolger).
‘Someone must get there and warm the house before you arrive,’ said Merry.
‘Well, see you later – the day after tomorrow, if you don’t go to sleep on the
way!’
Folco went home after lunch, but Pippin remained
behind. Frodo was restless and anxious, listening in vain for a sound of
Gandalf. He decided to wait until nightfall. After that, if Gandalf wanted him
urgently, he would go to Crickhollow, and might even get there first. For Frodo
was going on foot. His plan – for pleasure and a last look at the Shire as much
as any other reason – was to walk from Hobbiton to Bucklebury Ferry, taking it
fairly easy.
‘I shall get myself a bit into training, too,’
he said, looking at himself in a dusty mirror in the half-empty hall. He had not
done any strenuous walking for a long time, and the reflection looked rather
flabby, he thought.
After lunch, the Sackville-Bagginses,
Lobelia and her sandy-haired son, Lotho, turned up, much to Frodo’s annoyance.
‘Ours at last!’ said Lobelia, as she stepped inside. It was not polite; nor
strictly true, for the sale of Bag End did not take effect until midnight. But
Lobelia can perhaps be forgiven: she had been obliged to wait about
seventy-seven years longer for Bag End than she once hoped, and she was now a
hundred years old. Anyway, she had come to see that nothing she had paid for had
been carried off; and she wanted the keys. It took a long while to satisfy her,
as she had brought a complete inventory with her and went right through it. In
the end she departed with Lotho and the spare key and the promise that the other
key would be left at the Gamgees’ in Bagshot Row. She snorted, and showed
plainly that she thought the Gamgees capable of plundering the hole during the
night. Frodo did not offer her any tea.
He took his own tea
with Pippin and Sam Gamgee in the kitchen. It had been officially announced that
Sam was coming to Buckland ‘to do for Mr. Frodo and look after his bit of
garden’; an arrangement that was approved by the Gaffer, though it did not
console him for the prospect of having Lobelia as a
neighbour.
‘Our last meal at Bag End!’ said Frodo, pushing
back his chair. They left the washing up for Lobelia. Pippin and Sam strapped up
their three packs and piled them in the porch. Pippin went out for a last stroll
in the garden. Sam disappeared.
The sun went down. Bag End
seemed sad and gloomy and dishevelled. Frodo wandered round the familiar rooms,
and saw the light of the sunset fade on the walls, and shadows creep out of the
corners. It grew slowly dark indoors. He went out and walked down to the gate at
the bottom of the path, and then on a short way down the Hill Road. He half
expected to see Gandalf come striding up through the
dusk.
The sky was clear and the stars were growing bright.
‘It’s going to be a fine night,’ he said aloud. ‘That’s good for a beginning. I
feel like walking. I can’t bear any more hanging about. I am going to start, and
Gandalf must follow me.’ He turned to go back, and then slopped, for he heard
voices, just round the corner by the end of Bagshot Row. One voice was certainly
the old Gaffer’s; the other was strange, and somehow unpleasant. He could not
make out what it said, but he heard the Gaffer’s answers, which were rather
shrill. The old man seemed put out.
‘No, Mr. Baggins has
gone away. Went this morning, and my Sam went with him: anyway all his stuff
went. Yes, sold out and gone, I tell’ee. Why? Why’s none of my business, or
yours. Where to? That ain’t no secret. He’s moved to Bucklebury or some such
place, away down yonder. Yes it is – a tidy way. I’ve never been so far myself;
they’re queer folks in Buckland. No, I can’t give no message. Good night to
you!’
Footsteps went away down the Hill. Frodo wondered
vaguely why the fact that they did not come on up the Hill seemed a great
relief. ‘I am sick of questions and curiosity about my doings, I suppose,’ he
thought. ‘What an inquisitive lot they all are!’ He had half a mind to go and
ask the Gaffer who the inquirer was; but he thought better (or worse) of it, and
turned and walked quickly back to Bag End.
Pippin was
sitting on his pack in the porch. Sam was not there. Frodo stepped inside the
dark door. ‘Sam!’ he called. ‘Sam! Time!’
‘Coming, sir!’
came the answer from far within, followed soon by Sam himself, wiping his mouth.
He had been saying farewell to the beer-barrel in the
cellar.
‘All aboard, Sam?’ said
Frodo.
‘Yes, sir. I’ll last for a bit now,
sir.’
Frodo shut and locked the round door, and gave the
key to Sam. ‘Run down with this to your home, Sam!’ he said. ‘Then cut along the
Row and meet us as quick as you can at the gate in the lane beyond the meadows.
We are not going through the village tonight. Too many ears pricking and eyes
prying.’ Sam ran off at full speed.
‘Well, now we’re off at
last!’ said Frodo. They shouldered their packs and took up their sticks, and
walked round the corner to the west side of Bag End. ‘Good-bye!’ said Frodo,
looking at the dark blank windows. He waved his hand, and then turned and
(following Bilbo, if he had known it) hurried after Peregrin down the
garden-path. They jumped over the low place in the hedge at the bottom and took
to the fields, passing into the darkness like a rustle in the
grasses.
At the bottom of the Hill on its western side they
came to the gate opening on to a narrow lane. There they halted and adjusted the
straps of their packs. Presently Sam appeared, trotting quickly and breathing
hard; his heavy pack was hoisted high on his shoulders, and he had put on his
head a tall shapeless fell bag, which he called a hat. In the gloom he looked
very much like a dwarf.
‘I am sure you have given me all
the heaviest stuff,’ said Frodo. ‘I pity snails, and all that carry their homes
on their backs.’
‘I could take a lot more yet, sir. My
packet is quite light,’ said Sam stoutly and
untruthfully.
‘No, you don’t, Sam!’ said Pippin. ‘It is
good for him. He’s got nothing except what he ordered us to pack. He’s been
slack lately, and he’ll feel the weight less when he’s walked off some of his
own.’
‘Be kind to a poor old hobbit!’ laughed Frodo. ‘I
shall be as thin as a willow-wand, I’m sure, before I get to Buckland. But I was
talking nonsense. I suspect you have taken more than your share, Sam, and I
shall look into it at our next packing.’ He picked up his stick again. ‘Well, we
all like walking in the dark,’ he said, ‘so let’s put some miles behind us
before bed.’
For a short way they followed the lane
westwards. Then leaving it they turned left and took quietly to the fields
again. They went in single file along hedgerows and the borders of coppices, and
night fell dark about them. In their dark cloaks they were as invisible as if
they all had magic rings. Since they were all hobbits, and were trying to be
silent, they made no noise that even hobbits would hear. Even the wild things in
the fields and woods hardly noticed their passing.
After
some time they crossed the Water, west of Hobbiton, by a narrow plank-bridge.
The stream was there no more than a winding black ribbon, bordered with leaning
alder-trees. A mile or two further south they hastily crossed the great road
from the Brandywine Bridge; they were now in the Tookland and bending
south-eastwards they made for the Green Hill Country. As they began to climb its
first slopes they looked back and saw the lamps in Hobbiton far off twinkling in
the gentle valley of the Water. Soon it disappeared in the folds of the darkened
land, and was followed by Bywater beside its grey pool. When the light of the
last farm was far behind, peeping among the trees, Frodo turned and waved a hand
in farewell.
‘I wonder if I shall ever look down into that
valley again,’ he said quietly.
When they had walked for
about three hours they rested. The night was clear, cool, and starry, but
smoke-like wisps of mist were creeping up the hill-sides from the streams and
deep meadows. Thin-clad birches, swaying in a light wind above their heads, made
a black net against the pale sky. They ate a very frugal supper (for hobbits),
and then went on again. Soon they struck a narrow road, that went rolling up and
down, fading grey into the darkness ahead: the road to Woodhall, and Stock, and
the Bucklebury Ferry. It climbed away from the main road in the Water-valley,
and wound over the skirts of the Green Hills towards Woody-End, a wild corner of
the Eastfarthing.
After a while they plunged into a deeply
cloven track between tall trees that rustled their dry leaves in the night. It
was very dark. At first they talked, or hummed a tune softly together, being now
far away from inquisitive ears. Then they marched on in silence, and Pippin
began to lag behind. At last, as they began to climb a steep slope, he stopped
and yawned.
‘I am so sleepy,’ he said, ‘that soon I shall
fall down on the road. Are you going to sleep on your legs? It is nearly
midnight.’
‘I thought you liked walking in the dark,’ said
Frodo. ‘But there is no great hurry. Merry expects us some time the day after
tomorrow; but that leaves us nearly two days more. We’ll halt at the first
likely spot.’
‘The wind’s in the West,’ said Sam. ‘If we
get to the other side of this hill, we shall find a spot that is sheltered and
snug enough, sir. There is a dry fir-wood just ahead, if I remember rightly.’
Sam knew the land well within twenty miles of Hobbiton, but that was the limit
of his geography.
Just over the top of the hill they came
on the patch of fir-wood. Leaving the road they went into the deep resin-scented
darkness of the trees, and gathered dead sticks and cones to make a fire. Soon
they had a merry crackle of flame at the foot of a large fir-tree and they sat
round it for a while, until they began to nod. Then, each in an angle of the
great tree’s roots, they curled up in their cloaks and blankets, and were soon
fast asleep. They set no watch; even Frodo feared no danger yet, for they were
still in the heart of the Shire. A few creatures came and looked at them when
the fire had died away. A fox passing through the wood on business of his own
stopped several minutes and sniffed.
‘Hobbits!’ he thought.
‘Well, what next? I have heard of strange doings in this land, but I have seldom
heard of a hobbit sleeping out of doors under a tree. Three of them! There’s
something mighty queer behind this.’ He was quite right, but he never found out
any more about it.
The morning came, pale and clammy. Frodo
woke up first, and found that a tree-root had made a hole in his back, and that
his neck was stiff.
‘Walking for pleasure! Why didn’t I
drive?’ he thought, as he usually did at the beginning of an expedition. ‘And
all my beautiful feather beds are sold to the Sackville-Bagginses! These
tree-roots would do them good.’ He stretched. ‘Wake up, hobbits!’ he cried. It’s
a beautiful morning.’
‘What’s beautiful about it?’ said
Pippin, peering over the edge of his blanket with one eye. ‘Sam! Gel breakfast
ready for half-past nine! Have you got the bath-water
hot?’
Sam jumped up, looking rather bleary. ‘No, sir, I
haven’t, sir!’ he said.
Frodo stripped the blankets from
Pippin and rolled him over, and then walked off to the edge of the wood. Away
eastward the sun was rising red out of the mists that lay thick on the world.
Touched with gold and red the autumn trees seemed to be sailing rootless in a
shadowy sea. A little below him to the left the road ran down steeply into a
hollow and disappeared.
When he returned Sam and Pippin had
got a good fire going. ‘Water!’ shouted Pippin. ‘Where’s the
water?’
‘I don’t keep water in my pockets,’ said Frodo. ‘We
thought you had gone to find some,’ said Pippin, busy setting out the food, and
cups. ‘You had better go now.’
‘You can come too,’ said
Frodo, ‘and bring all the water-bottles.’ There was a stream at the foot of the
hill. They filled their bottles and the small camping kettle at a little fall
where the water fell a few feet over an outcrop of grey stone. It was icy cold;
and they spluttered and puffed as they bathed their faces and
hands.
When their breakfast was over, and their packs all
trussed up again, it was after ten o’clock, and the day was beginning to turn
fine and hot. They went down the slope, and across the stream where it dived
under the road, and up the next slope, and up and down another shoulder of the
hills; and by that time their cloaks, blankets, water, food, and other gear
already seemed a heavy burden.
The day’s march promised to
be warm and tiring work. After some miles, however, the road ceased to roll up
and down: it climbed to the top of a steep bank in a weary zig-zagging sort of
way, and then prepared to go down for the last time. In front of them they saw
the lower lands dotted with small clumps of trees that melted away in the
distance to a brown woodland haze. They were looking across the Woody End
towards the Brandywine River. The road wound away before them like a piece of
string.
‘The road goes on for ever,’ said Pippin; ‘but I
can’t without a rest. It is high time for lunch.’ He sat down on the bank at the
side of the road and looked away east into the haze, beyond which lay the River,
and the end of the Shire in which he had spent all his life. Sam stood by him.
His round eyes were wide open – for he was looking across lands he had never
seen to a new horizon.
‘Do Elves live in those woods?’ he
asked.
‘Not that I ever heard,’ said Pippin. Frodo was
silent. He too was gazing eastward along the road, as if he had never seen it
before. Suddenly he spoke, aloud but as if to himself, saying slowly:
The Road goes ever on and on
Down from the door where it
began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
And I must follow, if I
can,
Pursuing it with weary feet,
Until it joins some larger
way,
Where many paths and errands meet.
And whither then? I cannot
say.
‘That sounds like a bit of old
Bilbo’s rhyming,’ said Pippin. ‘Or is it one of your imitations? It does not
sound altogether encouraging.’
‘I don’t know,’ said Frodo.
‘It came to me then, as if I was making it up; but I may have heard it long ago.
Certainly it reminds me very much of Bilbo in the last years, before he went
away. He used often to say there was only one Road; that it was like a great
river: its springs were at every doorstep, and every path was its tributary.
“It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out of your door,” he used to say. “You
step into the Road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there is no knowing where
you might be swept off to. Do you realize that this is the very path that goes
through Mirkwood, and that if you let it, it might take you to the Lonely
Mountain or even further and to worse places?” He used to say that on the path
outside the front door at Bag End, especially after he had been out for a long
walk.’
‘Well, the Road won’t sweep me anywhere for an hour
at least,’ said Pippin, unslinging his pack. The others followed his example,
putting their packs against the bank and their legs out into the road. After a
rest they had a good lunch, and then more rest.
The sun was
beginning to get low and the light of afternoon was on the land as they went
down the hill. So far they had not met a soul on the road. This way was not much
used, being hardly fit for carts, and there was little traffic to the Woody End.
They had been jogging along again for an hour or more when Sam stopped a moment
as if listening. They were now on level ground, and the road after much winding
lay straight ahead through grass-land sprinkled with tall trees, outliers of the
approaching woods.
‘I can hear a pony or a horse coming
along the road behind,’ said Sam.
They looked back, but the
turn of the road prevented them from seeing far. ‘I wonder if that is Gandalf
coming after us,’ said Frodo; but even as he said it, he had a feeling that it
was not so, and a sudden desire to hide from the view of the rider came over
him.
‘It may not matter much,’ he said apologetically, ‘but
I would rather not be seen on the road – by anyone. I am sick of my doings being
noticed and discussed. And if it is Gandalf,’ he added as an afterthought, ‘we
can give him a little surprise, to pay him out for being so late. Let’s get out
of sight!’
The other two ran quickly to the left and down
into a little hollow not far from the road. There they lay flat. Frodo hesitated
for a second: curiosity or some other feeling was struggling with his desire to
hide. The sound of hoofs drew nearer. Just in time he threw himself down in a
patch of long grass behind a tree that overshadowed the road. Then he lifted his
head and peered cautiously above one of the great
roots.
Round the corner came a black horse, no hobbit-pony
but a full-sized horse; and on it sat a large man, who seemed to crouch in the
saddle, wrapped in a great black cloak and hood, so that only his boots in the
high stirrups showed below; his face was shadowed and
invisible.
When it reached the tree and was level with
Frodo the horse stopped. The riding figure sat quite still with its head bowed,
as if listening. From inside the hood came a noise as of someone sniffing to
catch an elusive scent; the head turned from side to side of the
road.
A sudden unreasoning fear of discovery laid hold of
Frodo, and he thought of his Ring. He hardly dared to breathe, and yet the
desire to get it out of his pocket became so strong that he began slowly to move
his hand. He felt that he had only to slip it on, and then he would be safe. The
advice of Gandalf seemed absurd. Bilbo had used the Ring. ‘And I am still in the
Shire,’ he thought, as his hand touched the chain on which it hung. At that
moment the rider sat up, and shook the reins. The horse stepped forward, walking
slowly at first, and then breaking into a quick trot.
Frodo
crawled to the edge of the road and watched the rider, until he dwindled into
the distance. He could not be quite sure, but it seemed to him that suddenly,
before it passed out of sight, the horse turned aside and went into the trees on
the right.
‘Well, I call that very queer, and indeed
disturbing,’ said Frodo to himself, as he walked towards his companions. Pippin
and Sam had remained flat in the grass, and had seen nothing; so Frodo described
the rider and his strange behaviour.
‘I can’t say why, but
I felt certain he was looking or
smelling for me; and also I felt certain
that I did not want him to discover me. I’ve never seen or fell anything like it
in the Shire before.’
‘But what has one of the Big People
got to do with us?’ said Pippin. ‘And what is he doing in this part of the
world?’
‘There are some Men about,’ said Frodo. ‘Down in
the Southfarthing they have had trouble with Big People, I believe. But I have
never heard of anything like this rider. I wonder where he comes
from.’
‘Begging your pardon,’ put in Sam suddenly, ‘I know
where he comes from. It’s from Hobbiton that this here black rider comes, unless
there’s more than one. And I know where he’s going
to.’
‘What do you mean?’ said Frodo sharply, looking at him
in astonishment. ‘Why didn’t you speak up before?’
‘I have
only just remembered, sir. It was like this: when I got back to our hole
yesterday evening with the key, my dad, he says to me:
Hello, Sam! he
says.
I thought you were away with Mr. Frodo this morning. There’s been a
strange customer asking for Mr. Baggins of Bag End, and he’s only just gone.
I’ve sent him on to Bucklebury. Not that I liked the sound of him. He seemed
mighty put out, when I told him Mr. Baggins had left his old home for good.
Hissed at me, he did. It gave me quite a shudder. What sort of a fellow was
he? says I to the Gaffer.
I don’t know, says he;
but he
wasn’t a hobbit. He was tall and black-like, and he stooped over me. I reckon it
was one of the Big Folk from foreign parts. He spoke
funny.
‘I couldn’t stay to hear more, sir, since you
were waiting; and I didn’t give much heed to it myself. The Gaffer is getting
old, and more than a bit blind, and it must have been near dark when this fellow
come up the Hill and found him taking the air at the end of our Row. I hope he
hasn’t done no harm, sir, nor me.’
‘The Gaffer can’t be
blamed anyway,’ said Frodo. ‘As a matter of fact I heard him talking to a
stranger, who seemed to be inquiring for me, and I nearly went and asked him who
it was. I wish I had, or you had told me about it before. I might have been more
careful on the road.’
‘Still, there may be no connexion
between this rider and the Gaffer’s stranger,’ said Pippin. ‘We left Hobbiton
secretly enough, and I don’t see how he could have followed
us.’
‘What about the
smelling, sir?’ said Sam. ‘And
the Gaffer said he was a black chap.’
‘I wish I had waited
for Gandalf,’ Frodo muttered. ‘But perhaps it would only have made matters
worse.’
‘Then you know or guess something about this
rider?’ said Pippin, who had caught the muttered words.
‘I
don’t know, and I would rather not guess,’ said Frodo.
‘All
right, cousin Frodo! You can keep your secret for the present, if you want to be
mysterious. In the meanwhile what are we to do? I should like a bite and a sup,
but somehow I think we had better move on from here. Your talk of sniffing
riders with invisible noses has unsettled me.’
‘Yes, I
think we will move on now,’ said Frodo; ‘but not on the road -in case that rider
comes back, or another follows him. We ought to do a good step more today.
Buckland is still miles away.’
The shadows of the trees
were long and thin on the grass, as they started off again. They now kept a
stone’s throw to the left of the road, and kept out of sight of it as much as
they could. But this hindered them; for the grass was thick and tussocky, and
the ground uneven, and the trees began to draw together into
thickets.
The sun had gone down red behind the hills at
their backs, and evening was coming on before they came back to the road at the
end of the long level over which it had run straight for some miles. At that
point it bent left and went down into the lowlands of the Yale making for Stock;
but a lane branched right, winding through a wood of ancient oak-trees on its
way to Woodhall. ‘That is the way for us,’ said Frodo.
Not
far from the road-meeting they came on the huge hulk of a tree: it was still
alive and had leaves on the small branches that it had put out round the broken
stumps of its long-fallen limbs; but it was hollow, and could be entered by a
great crack on the side away from the road. The hobbits crept inside, and sat
there upon a floor of old leaves and decayed wood. They rested and had a light
meal, talking quietly and listening from time to
time.
Twilight was about them as they crept back to the
lane. The West wind was sighing in the branches. Leaves were whispering. Soon
the road began to fall gently but steadily into the dusk. A star came out above
the trees in the darkening East before them. They went abreast and in step, to
keep up their spirits. After a time, as the stars grew thicker and brighter, the
feeling of disquiet left them, and they no longer listened for the sound of
hoofs. They began to hum softly, as hobbits have a way of doing as they walk
along, especially when they are drawing near to home at night. With most hobbits
it is a supper-song or a bed-song; but these hobbits hummed a walking-song
(though not, of course, without any mention of supper and bed). Bilbo Baggins
had made the words, to a tune that was as old as the hills, and taught it to
Frodo as they walked in the lanes of the Water-valley and talked about
Adventure.
Upon the hearth the fire is red,
Beneath the roof there is
a bed;
But not yet weary are our feet,
Still round the corner we may
meet
A sudden tree or standing stone
That none have seen but we
alone.
Tree and flower and leaf and grass,
Let them
pass! Let them pass!
Hill and water under sky,
Pass them by! Pass them
by!
Still round the corner there may wait
A new road
or a secret gate,
And though we pass them by today,
Tomorrow we may come
this way
And take the hidden paths that run
Towards the Moon or to the
Sun.
Apple, thorn, and nut and sloe,
Let them go!
Let them go!
Sand and stone and pool and dell,
Fare you well! Fare you
well!
Home is behind, the world ahead,
And there are
many paths to tread
Through shadows to the edge of night,
Until the
stars are all alight.
Then world behind and home ahead,
We’ll wander
back to home and bed.
Mist and twilight, cloud and
shade,
Away shall fade! Away shall fade!
Fire and lamp, and meat and
bread,
And then to bed! And then to
bed!
The song ended. ‘And
now
to bed! And
now to bed!’ sang Pippin in a high
voice.
‘Hush!’ said Frodo. ‘I think I hear hoofs
again.’
They slopped suddenly and stood as silent as
tree-shadows, listening. There was a sound of hoofs in the lane, some way
behind, but coming slow and clear down the wind. Quickly and quietly they
slipped off the path, and ran into the deeper shade under the
oak-trees.
‘Don’t let us go too far!’ said Frodo. ‘I don’t
want to be seen, but I want to see if it is another Black
Rider.’
‘Very well!’ said Pippin. ‘But don’t forget the
sniffing!’
The hoofs drew nearer. They had no time to find
any hiding-place better than the general darkness under the trees; Sam and
Pippin crouched behind a large tree-bole, while Frodo crept back a few yards
towards the lane. It showed grey and pale, a line of fading light through the
wood. Above it the stars were thick in the dim sky, but there was no
moon.
The sound of hoofs stopped. As Frodo watched he saw
something dark pass across the lighter space between two trees, and then halt.
It looked like the black shade of a horse led by a smaller black shadow. The
black shadow stood close to the point where they had left the path, and it
swayed from side to side. Frodo thought he heard the sound of snuffling. The
shadow bent to the ground, and then began to crawl towards
him.
Once more the desire to slip on the Ring came over
Frodo; but this time it was stronger than before. So strong that, almost before
he realized what he was doing, his hand was groping in his pocket. But at that
moment there came a sound like mingled song and laughter. Clear voices rose and
fell in the starlit air. The black shadow straightened up and retreated. It
climbed on to the shadowy horse and seemed to vanish across the lane into the
darkness on the other side. Frodo breathed again.
‘Elves!’
exclaimed Sam in a hoarse whisper. ‘Elves, sir!’ He would have burst out of the
trees and dashed off towards the voices, if they had not pulled him
back.
‘Yes, it is Elves,’ said Frodo. ‘One can meet them
sometimes in the Woody End. They don’t live in the Shire, but they wander into
it in Spring and Autumn, out of their own lands away beyond the Tower Hills. I
am thankful that they do! You did not see, but that Black Rider stopped just
here and was actually crawling towards us when the song began. As soon as he
heard the voices he slipped away.’
‘What about the Elves?’
said Sam, too excited to trouble about the rider. ‘Can’t we go and see
them?’
‘Listen! They are coming this way,’ said Frodo. ‘We
have only to wait.’ The singing drew nearer. One clear voice rose now above the
others. It was singing in the fair elven-tongue, of which Frodo knew only a
little, and the others knew nothing. Yet the sound blending with the melody
seemed to shape itself in their thought into words which they only partly
understood. This was the song as Frodo heard it:
Snow-white! Snow-white! O Lady clear!
O Queen beyond the
Western Seas!
O Light to us that wander here
Amid the world of woven
trees!
Gilthoniel! O Elbereth!
Clear are thy eyes
and bright thy breath!
Snow-white! Snow-white! We sing to thee
In a far
land beyond the Sea.
O stars that in the Sunless
Year
With shining hand by her were sawn,
In windy fields now bright and
clear
We see your silver blossom blown!
O Elbereth!
Gilthoniel!
We still remember, we who dwell
In this far land beneath the
trees,
Thy starlight on the Western
Seas.
The song ended. ‘These are
High Elves! They spoke the name of Elbereth!’ said Frodo in amazement, ‘Few of
that fairest folk are ever seen in the Shire. Not many now remain in
Middle-earth, east of the Great Sea. This is indeed a strange
chance!’
The hobbits sat in shadow by the wayside. Before
long the Elves came down the lane towards the valley. They passed slowly, and
the hobbits could see the starlight glimmering on their hair and in their eyes.
They bore no lights, yet as they walked a shimmer, like the light of the moon
above the rim of the hills before it rises, seemed to fall about their feet.
They were now silent, and as the last Elf passed he turned and looked towards
the hobbits and laughed.
‘Hail, Frodo!’ he cried. ‘You are
abroad late. Or are you perhaps lost?’ Then he called aloud to the others, and
all the company stopped and gathered round.
‘This is indeed
wonderful!’ they said. ‘Three hobbits in a wood at night! We have not seen such
a thing since Bilbo went away. What is the meaning of
it?’
‘The meaning of it, fair people,’ said Frodo, ‘is
simply that we seem to be going the same way as you are. I like walking under
the stars. But I would welcome your company.’
‘But we have
no need of other company, and hobbits are so dull,’ they laughed. ‘And how do
you know that we go the same way as you, for you do not know whither we are
going?’
‘And how do you know my name?’ asked Frodo in
return.
‘We know many things,’ they said. ‘We have seen you
often before with Bilbo, though you may not have seen
us.’
‘Who are you, and who is your lord?’ asked
Frodo.
‘I am Gildor,’ answered their leader, the Elf who
had first hailed him. ‘Gildor Inglorion of the House of Finrod. We are Exiles,
and most of our kindred have long ago departed and we too are now only tarrying
here a while, ere we return over the Great Sea. But some of our kinsfolk dwell
still in peace in Rivendell. Come now, Frodo, tell us what you are doing? For we
see that there is some shadow of fear upon you.’
‘O Wise
People!’ interrupted Pippin eagerly. ‘Tell us about the Black
Riders!’
‘Black Riders?’ they said in low voices. ‘Why do
you ask about Black Riders?’
‘Because two Black Riders have
overtaken us today, or one has done so twice,’ said Pippin; ‘only a little while
ago he slipped away as you drew near.’
The Elves did not
answer at once, but spoke together softly in their own tongue. At length Gildor
turned to the hobbits. ‘We will not speak of this here,’ he said. ‘We think you
had best come now with us. It is not our custom, but for this time we will lake
you on our road, and you shall lodge with us tonight, if you
will.’
‘O Fair Folk! This is good fortune beyond my hope,’
said Pippin. Sam was speechless. ‘I thank you indeed, Gildor Inglorion,’ said
Frodo bowing.
‘Elen sila lumenn’ omentielvo, a star shines on the hour of
our meeting,’ he added in the high-elven speech.
‘Be
careful, friends!’ cried Gildor laughing. ‘Speak no secrets! Here is a scholar
in the Ancient Tongue. Bilbo was a good master. Hail, Elf-friend!’ he said,
bowing to Frodo. ‘Come now with your friends and join our company! You had best
walk in the middle so that you may not stray. You may be weary before we
halt.’
‘Why? Where are you going?’ asked
Frodo.
‘For tonight we go to the woods on the hills above
Woodhall. It is some miles, but you shall have rest at the end of it, and it
will shorten your journey tomorrow.’
They now marched on
again in silence, and passed like shadows and faint lights: for Elves (even more
than hobbits) could walk when they wished without sound of footfall. Pippin soon
began to feel sleepy, and staggered once or twice; but each time a tall Elf at
his side put out his arm and saved him from a fall. Sam walked along at Frodo’s
side, as if in a dream, with an expression on his face half of fear and half of
astonished joy.
The woods on either side became denser; the
trees were now younger and thicker; and as the lane went lower, running down
into a fold of the hills, there were many deep brakes of hazel on the rising
slopes at either hand. At last the Elves turned aside from the path. A green
ride lay almost unseen through the thickets on the right; and this they followed
as it wound away back up the wooded slopes on to the top of a shoulder of the
hills that stood out into the lower land of the river-valley. Suddenly they came
out of the shadow of the trees, and before them lay a wide space of grass, grey
under the night. On three sides the woods pressed upon it; but eastward the
ground fell steeply and the tops of the dark trees, growing at the bottom of the
slope, were below their feet. Beyond, the low lands lay dim and flat under the
stars. Nearer at hand a few lights twinkled in the village of
Woodhall.
The Elves sat on the grass and spoke together in
soft voices; they seemed to take no further notice of the hobbits. Frodo and his
companions wrapped themselves in cloaks and blankets, and drowsiness stole over
them. The night grew on, and the lights in the valley went out. Pippin fell
asleep, pillowed on a green hillock.
Away high in the East
swung Remmirath, the Netted Stars, and slowly above the mists red Borgil rose,
glowing like a jewel of fire. Then by some shift of airs all the mist was drawn
away like a veil, and there leaned up, as he climbed over the rim of the world,
the Swordsman of the Sky, Menelvagor with his shining belt. The Elves all burst
into song. Suddenly under the trees a fire sprang up with a red
light.
‘Come!’ the Elves called to the hobbits. ‘Come! Now
is the time for speech and merriment!’
Pippin sat up and
rubbed his eyes. He shivered. ‘There is a fire in the hall, and food for hungry
guests,’ said an Elf standing before him.
At the south end
of the greensward there was an opening. There the green floor ran on into the
wood, and formed a wide space like a hall, roofed by the boughs of trees. Their
great trunks ran like pillars down each side. In the middle there was a
wood-fire blazing, and upon the tree-pillars torches with lights of gold and
silver were burning steadily. The Elves sat round the fire upon the grass or
upon the sawn rings of old trunks. Some went to and fro bearing cups and pouring
drink; others brought food on heaped plates and dishes.
‘This is poor fare,’ they said to the
hobbits; ‘for we are lodging in the greenwood far from our halls. If ever you
are our guests at home, we will treat you better.’
‘It
seems to me good enough for a birthday-party,’ said
Frodo.
Pippin afterwards recalled little of either food or
drink, for his mind was filled with the light upon the elf-faces, and the sound
of voices so various and so beautiful that he felt in a waking dream. But he
remembered that there was bread, surpassing the savour of a fair white loaf to
one who is starving; and fruits sweet as wildberries and richer than the tended
fruits of gardens; he drained a cup that was filled with a fragrant draught,
cool as a clear fountain, golden as a summer afternoon.
Sam
could never describe in words, nor picture clearly to himself, what he felt or
thought that night, though it remained in his memory as one of the chief events
of his life. The nearest he ever got was to say: ‘Well, sir, if I could grow
apples like that, I would call myself a gardener. But it was the singing that
went to my heart, if you know what I mean.’
Frodo sat,
eating, drinking, and talking with delight; but his mind was chiefly on the
words spoken. He knew a little of the elf-speech and listened eagerly. Now and
again he spoke to those that served him and thanked them in their own language.
They smiled at him and said laughing: ‘Here is a jewel among
hobbits!’
After a while Pippin fell fast asleep, and was
lifted up and borne away to a bower under the trees; there he was laid upon a
soft bed and slept the rest of the night away. Sam refused to leave his master.
When Pippin had gone, he came and sat curled up at Frodo’s feet, where at last
he nodded and closed his eyes. Frodo remained long awake, talking with
Gildor.
They spoke of many things, old and new, and Frodo
questioned Gildor much about happenings in the wide world outside the Shire. The
tidings were mostly sad and ominous: of gathering darkness, the wars of Men, and
the flight of the Elves. At last Frodo asked the question that was nearest to
his heart:
‘Tell me, Gildor, have you ever seen Bilbo since
he left us?’
Gildor smiled. ‘Yes,’ he answered. ‘Twice. He
said farewell to us on this very spot. But I saw him once again, far from here.’
He would say no more about Bilbo, and Frodo fell
silent.
‘You do not ask me or tell me much that concerns
yourself, Frodo,’ said Gildor. ‘But I already know a little, and I can read more
in your face and in the thought behind your questions. You are leaving the
Shire, and yet you doubt that you will find what you seek, or accomplish what
you intend, or that you will ever return. Is not that
so?’
‘It is,’ said Frodo; ‘but I thought my going was a
secret known only to Gandalf and my faithful Sam.’ He looked down at Sam, who
was snoring gently.
‘The secret will not reach the Enemy
from us,’ said Gildor.
‘The Enemy?’ said Frodo. ‘Then you
know why I am leaving the Shire?’
‘I do not know for what
reason the Enemy is pursuing you,’ answered Gildor; ‘but I perceive that he is –
strange indeed though that seems to me. And I warn you that peril is now both
before you and behind you, and upon either side.’
‘You mean
the Riders? I feared that they were servants of the Enemy. What
are the
Black Riders?’
‘Has Gandalf told you
nothing?’
‘Nothing about such
creatures.’
‘Then I think it is not for me to say more –
lest terror should keep you from your journey. For it seems to me that you have
set out only just in time, if indeed you are in time. You must now make haste,
and neither stay nor turn back; for the Shire is no longer any protection to
you.’
‘I cannot imagine what information could be more
terrifying than your hints and warnings,’ exclaimed Frodo. ‘I knew that danger
lay ahead, of course; but I did not expect to meet it in our own Shire. Can’t a
hobbit walk from the Water to the River in peace?’
‘But it
is not your own Shire,’ said Gildor. ‘Others dwelt here before hobbits were; and
others will dwell here again when hobbits are no more. The wide world is all
about you: you can fence yourselves in, but you cannot for ever fence it
out.’
‘I know – and yet it has always seemed so safe and
familiar. What can I do now? My plan was to leave the Shire secretly, and make
my way to Rivendell; but now my footsteps are dogged, before ever I get to
Buckland.’
‘I think you should still follow that plan,’
said Gildor. ‘I do not think the Road will prove too hard for your courage. But
if you desire clearer counsel, you should ask Gandalf. I do not know the reason
for your flight, and therefore I do not know by what means your pursuers will
assail you. These things Gandalf must know. I suppose that you will see him
before you leave the Shire?’
‘I hope so. But that is
another thing that makes me anxious. I have been expecting Gandalf for many
days. He was to have come to Hobbiton at the latest two nights ago; but he has
never appeared. Now I am wondering what can have happened. Should I wait for
him?’
Gildor was silent for a moment. ‘I do not like this
news,’ he said at last. ‘That Gandalf should be late, does not bode well. But it
is said:
Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle and
quick to anger. The choice is yours: to go or
wait.’
‘And it is also said,’ answered Frodo: ‘Go
not to
the Elves for counsel, for they will say both no and
yes.’ ‘Is it indeed?’ laughed Gildor. ‘Elves seldom
give unguarded advice, for advice is a dangerous gift, even from the wise to the
wise, and all courses may run ill. But what would you? You have not told me all
concerning yourself; and how then shall I choose better than you? But if you
demand advice, I will for friendship’s sake give it. I think you should now go
at once, without delay; and if Gandalf does not come before you set out, then I
also advise this: do not go alone. Take such friends as are trusty and willing.
Now you should be grateful, for I do not give this counsel gladly. The Elves
have their own labours and their own sorrows, and they are little concerned with
the ways of hobbits, or of any other creatures upon earth. Our paths cross
theirs seldom, by chance or purpose. In this meeting there may be more than
chance; but the purpose is not clear to me, and I fear to say too
much.’
‘I am deeply grateful,’ said Frodo; ‘but I wish you
would tell me plainly what the Black Riders are. If I take your advice I may not
see Gandalf for a long while, and I ought to know what is the danger that
pursues me.’
‘Is it not enough to know that they are
servants of the Enemy?’ answered Gildor. ‘Flee them! Speak no words to them!
They are deadly. Ask no more of me! But my heart forbodes that, ere all is
ended, you, Frodo son of Drogo, will know more of these fell things than Gildor
Inglorion. May Elbereth protect you!’
‘But where shall I
find courage?’ asked Frodo. ‘That is what I chiefly
need.’
‘Courage is found in unlikely places,’ said Gildor.
‘Be of good hope! Sleep now! In the morning we shall have gone; but we will send
our messages through the lands. The Wandering Companies shall know of your
journey, and those that have power for good shall be on the watch. I name you
Elf-friend; and may the stars shine upon the end of your road! Seldom have we
had such delight in strangers, and it is fair to hear words of the Ancient
Speech from the lips of other wanderers in the
world.’
Frodo felt sleep coming upon him, even as Gildor
finished speaking. ‘I will sleep now,’ he said; and the Elf led him to a bower
beside Pippin, and he threw himself upon a bed and fell at once into a dreamless
slumber.
Chapter 4
A Short Cut to
Mushrooms
In the morning Frodo woke refreshed. He was lying in a
bower made by a living tree with branches laced and drooping to the ground; his
bed was of fern and grass, deep and soft and strangely fragrant. The sun was
shining through the fluttering leaves, which were still green upon the tree. He
jumped up and went out.
Sam was sitting on the grass near
the edge of the wood. Pippin was standing studying the sky and weather. There
was no sign of the Elves.
‘They have left us fruit and
drink, and bread,’ said Pippin. ‘Come and have your breakfast. The bread tastes
almost as good as it did last night. I did not want to leave you any, but Sam
insisted.’
Frodo sat down beside Sam and began to eat.
‘What is the plan for today?’ asked Pippin.
‘To walk to
Bucklebury as quickly as possible,’ answered Frodo, and gave his attention to
the food.
‘Do you think we shall see anything of those
Riders?’ asked Pippin cheerfully. Under the morning sun the prospect of seeing a
whole troop of them did not seem very alarming to
him.
‘Yes, probably,’ said Frodo, not liking the reminder.
‘But I hope to get across the river without their seeing
us.’
‘Did you find out anything about them from
Gildor?’
‘Not much – only hints and riddles,’ said Frodo
evasively.
‘Did you ask about the
sniffing?’
‘We didn’t discuss it,’ said Frodo with his
mouth full.
‘You should have. I am sure it is very
important.’
‘In that case I am sure Gildor would have
refused to explain it,’ said Frodo sharply. ‘And now leave me in peace for a
bit! I don’t want to answer a string of questions while I am eating. I want to
think!’
‘Good heavens!’ said Pippin. ‘At breakfast?’ He
walked away towards the edge of the green.
From Frodo’s
mind the bright morning – treacherously bright, he thought – had not banished
the fear of pursuit; and he pondered the words of Gildor. The merry voice of
Pippin came to him. He was running on the green turf and
singing.
‘No! I could not!’ he said to himself. ‘It is one
thing to take my young friends walking over the Shire with me, until we are
hungry and weary, and food and bed are sweet. To take them into exile, where
hunger and weariness may have no cure, is quite another – even if they are
willing to come. The inheritance is mine alone. I don’t think I ought even to
take Sam.’ He looked at Sam Gamgee, and discovered that Sam was watching
him.
‘Well, Sam!’ he said. ‘What about it? I am leaving the
Shire as soon as ever I can – in fact I have made up my mind now not even to
wait a day at Crickhollow, if it can be helped.’
‘Very
good, sir!’
‘You still mean to come with
me?’
‘I do.’
‘It is going to be very
dangerous, Sam. ‘It is already dangerous. Most likely neither of us will come
back.’
‘If you don’t come back, sir, then I shan’t, that’s
certain,’ said Sam.
‘Don’t you leave him! they said to me.
Leave
him! I said.
I never mean to. I am going with him, if he climbs to the
Moon, and if any of those Black Riders try to stop him, they’ll have Sam Gamgee
to reckon with, I said. They laughed.’
‘Who are
they, and what are you talking about?’
‘The Elves,
sir. We had some talk last night; and they seemed to know you were going away,
so I didn’t see the use of denying it. Wonderful folk, Elves, sir!
Wonderful!’
‘They are,’ said Frodo. ‘Do you like them
still, now you have had a closer view?’
‘They seem a bit
above my likes and dislikes, so to speak,’ answered Sam slowly. ‘It don’t seem
to matter what I think about them. They are quite different from what I expected
– so old and young, and so gay and sad, as it were.’
Frodo
looked at Sam rather startled, half expecting to see some outward sign of the
odd change that seemed to have come over him. It did not sound like the voice of
the old Sam Gamgee that he thought he knew. But it looked like the old Sam
Gamgee sitting there, except that his face was unusually
thoughtful.
‘Do you feel any need to leave the Shire now –
now that your wish to see them has come true already?’ he
asked.
‘Yes, sir. I don’t know how to say it, but after
last night I feel different. I seem to see ahead, in a kind of way. I know we
are going to take a very long road, into darkness; but I know I can’t turn back.
It isn’t to see Elves now, nor dragons, nor mountains, that I want – I don’t
rightly know what I want: but I have something to do before the end, and it lies
ahead, not in the Shire. I must see it through, sir, if you understand
me.’
‘I don’t altogether. But I understand that Gandalf
chose me a good companion. I am content. We will go
together.’
Frodo finished his breakfast in silence. Then
standing up he looked over the land ahead, and called to
Pippin.
‘All ready to start?’ he said as Pippin ran up. ‘We
must be getting off at once. We slept late; and there are a good many miles to
go.’
‘You slept late, you mean,’ said Pippin. ‘I was
up long before; and we are only waiting for you to finish eating and
thinking.’
‘I have finished both now. And I am going to
make for Bucklebury Ferry as quickly as possible. I am not going out of the way,
back to the road we left last night: I am going to cut straight across country
from here.’
‘Then you are going to fly,’ said Pippin. ‘You
won’t cut straight on foot anywhere in this country.’
‘We
can cut straighter than the road anyway,’ answered Frodo. ‘The Ferry is east
from Woodhall; but the hard road curves away to the left – you can see a bend of
it away north over there. It goes round the north end of the Marish so as to
strike the causeway from the Bridge above Stock. But that is miles out of the
way. We could save a quarter of the distance if we made a line for the Ferry
from where we stand.’
‘Short cuts make long delays,’
argued Pippin. ‘The country is rough round here, and there are bogs and all
kinds of difficulties down in the Marish – I know the land in these parts. And
if you are worrying about Black Riders, I can’t see that it is any worse meeting
them on a road than in a wood or a field.’
‘It is less easy
to find people in the woods and fields,’ answered Frodo. ‘And if you are
supposed to be on the road, there is some chance that you will be looked for on
the road and not off it.’
‘All right!’ said Pippin. ‘I will
follow you into every bog and ditch. But it is hard! I had counted on passing
the
Golden Perch at Stock before sundown. The best beer in the
Eastfarthing, or used to be: it is a long time since I tasted
it.’
‘That settles it!’ said Frodo. ‘Short cuts make
delays, but inns make longer ones. At all costs we must keep you away from the
Golden Perch. We want to get to Bucklebury before dark. What do you say,
Sam?’
‘I will go along with you, Mr. Frodo,’ said Sam (in
spite of private misgiving and a deep regret for the best beer in the
Eastfarthing).
‘Then if we are going to toil through bog
and briar, let’s go now!’ said Pippin.
It was already
nearly as hot as it had been the day before; but clouds were beginning to come
up from the West. It looked likely to turn to rain. The hobbits scrambled down a
steep green bank and plunged into the thick trees below. Their course had been
chosen to leave Woodhall to their left, and to cut slanting through the woods
that clustered along the eastern side of the hills, until they reached the flats
beyond. Then they could make straight for the Ferry over country that was open,
except for a few ditches and fences. Frodo reckoned they had eighteen miles to
go in a straight line.
He soon found that the thicket was
closer and more tangled than it had appeared. There were no paths in the
undergrowth, and they did not get on very fast. When they had struggled to the
bottom of the bank, they found a stream running down from the hills behind in a
deeply dug bed with steep slippery sides overhung with brambles. Most
inconveniently it cut across the line they had chosen. They could not jump over
it, nor indeed get across it at all without getting wet, scratched, and muddy.
They halted, wondering what to do. ‘First check!’ said Pippin, smiling
grimly.
Sam Gamgee looked back. Through an opening in the
trees he caught a glimpse of the top of the green bank from which they had
climbed down.
‘Look!’ he said, clutching Frodo by the arm.
They all looked, and on the edge high above them they saw against the sky a
horse standing. Beside it stooped a black figure.
They at
once gave up any idea of going back. Frodo led the way, and plunged quickly into
the thick bushes beside the stream. ‘Whew!’ he said to Pippin. ‘We were both
right! The short cut has gone crooked already; but we got under cover only just
in time. You’ve got sharp ears, Sam: can you hear anything
coming?’
They stood still, almost holding their breath as
they listened; but there was no sound of pursuit. ‘I don’t fancy he would try
bringing his horse down that bank,’ said Sam. ‘But I guess he knows we came down
it. We had better be going on.’
Going on was not altogether
easy. They had packs to carry, and the bushes and brambles were reluctant to let
them through. They were cut off from the wind by the ridge behind, and the air
was still and stuffy. When they forced their way at last into more open ground,
they were hot and tired and very scratched, and they were also no longer certain
of the direction in which they were going. The banks of the stream sank, as it
reached the levels and became broader and shallower, wandering off towards the
Marish and the River.
‘Why, this is the Stock-brook!’ said
Pippin. ‘If we are going to try and get back on to our course, we must cross at
once and bear right.’
They waded the stream, and hurried
over a wide open space, rush-grown and treeless, on the further side. Beyond
that they came again to a belt of trees: tall oaks, for the most part, with here
and there an elm tree or an ash. The ground was fairly level, and there was
little undergrowth; but the trees were loo close for them to see far ahead. The
leaves blew upwards in sudden gusts of wind, and spots of rain began to fall
from the overcast sky. Then the wind died away and the rain came streaming down.
They trudged along as fast as they could, over patches of grass, and through
thick drifts of old leaves; and all about them the rain pattered and trickled.
They did not talk, but kept glancing back, and from side to
side.
After half an hour Pippin said: ‘I hope we have not
turned too much towards the south, and are not walking longwise through this
wood! It is not a very broad belt –I should have said no more than a mile at the
widest – and we ought to have been through it by now.’
‘It
is no good our starting to go in zig-zags,’ said Frodo. ‘That won’t mend
matters. Let us keep on as we are going! I am not sure that I want to come out
into the open yet.’
They went on for perhaps another couple
of miles. Then the sun gleamed out of ragged clouds again and the rain lessened.
It was now past mid-day, and they felt it was high time for lunch. They halted
under an elm tree: its leaves though fast turning yellow were still thick, and
the ground at its feel was fairly dry and sheltered. When they came to make
their meal, they found that the Elves had filled their bottles with a clear
drink, pale golden in colour: it had the scent of a honey made of many flowers,
and was wonderfully refreshing. Very soon they were laughing, and snapping their
fingers at rain, and at Black Riders. The last few miles, they felt, would soon
be behind them.
Frodo propped his back against the
tree-trunk, and closed his eyes. Sam and Pippin sat near, and they began to hum,
and then to sing softly:
Ho! Ho! Ho! to the bottle I go
To heal my heart and drown
my woe.
Rain may fall and wind may blow,
And many miles be still to
go,
But under a tall tree I will lie,
And let the clouds go sailing
by.
Ho! Ho! Ho! they began
again louder. They stopped short suddenly. Frodo sprang to his feet. A
long-drawn wail came down the wind, like the cry of some evil and lonely
creature. It rose and fell, and ended on a high piercing note. Even as they sat
and stood, as if suddenly frozen, it was answered by another cry, fainter and
further off, but no less chilling to the blood. There was then a silence, broken
only by the sound of the wind in the leaves.
‘And what do
you think that was?’ Pippin asked at last, trying to speak lightly, but
quavering a little. ‘If it was a bird, it was one that I never heard in the
Shire before.’
‘It was not bird or beast,’ said Frodo. ‘It
was a call, or a signal – there were words in that cry, though I could not catch
them. But no hobbit has such a voice.’
No more was said
about it. They were all thinking of the Riders, but no one spoke of them. They
were now reluctant either to stay or go on; but sooner or later they had got to
get across the open country to the Ferry, and it was best to go sooner and in
daylight. In a few moments they had shouldered their packs again and were
off.
Before long the wood came to a sudden end. Wide
grass-lands stretched before them. They now saw that they had, in fact, turned
too much to the south. Away over the flats they could glimpse the low hill of
Bucklebury across the River, but it was now to their left. Creeping cautiously
out from the edge of the trees, they set off across the open as quickly as they
could.
At first they felt afraid, away from the shelter of
the wood. Far back behind them stood the high place where they had breakfasted.
Frodo half expected to see the small distant figure of a horseman on the ridge
dark against the sky; but there was no sign of one. The sun escaping from the
breaking clouds, as it sank towards the hills they had left, was now shining
brightly again. Their fear left them, though they still felt uneasy. But the
land became steadily more tame and well-ordered. Soon they came into well-tended
fields and meadows: there were hedges and gates and dikes for drainage.
Everything seemed quiet and peaceful, just an ordinary corner of the Shire.
Their spirits rose with every step. The line of the River grew nearer; and the
Black Riders began to seem like phantoms of the woods now left far
behind.
They passed along the edge of a huge turnip-field,
and came to a stout gate. Beyond it a rutted lane ran between low well-laid
hedges towards a distant clump of trees. Pippin stopped.
‘I
know these fields and this gate!’ he said. ‘This is Bamfurlong, old Farmer
Maggot’s land. That’s his farm away there in the
trees.’
‘One trouble after another!’ said Frodo, looking
nearly as much alarmed as if Pippin had declared the lane was the slot leading
to a dragon’s den. The others looked at him in
surprise.
‘What’s wrong with old Maggot?’ asked Pippin.
‘He’s a good friend to all the Brandybucks. Of course he’s a terror to
trespassers, and keeps ferocious dogs – but after all, folk down here are near
the border and have to be more on their guard.’
‘I know,’
said Frodo. ‘But all the same,’ he added with a shamefaced laugh, ‘I am
terrified of him and his dogs. I have avoided his farm for years and years. He
caught me several times trespassing after mushrooms, when I was a youngster at
Brandy Hall. On the last occasion he beat me, and then took me and showed me to
his dogs. “See, lads,” he said, “next time this young varmint sets foot on my
land, you can eat him. Now see him off!” They chased me all the way to the
Ferry. I have never got over the fright – though I daresay the beasts knew their
business and would not really have touched me.’
Pippin
laughed. ‘Well, it’s time you made it up. Especially if you are coming back to
live in Buckland. Old Maggot is really a stout fellow – if you leave his
mushrooms alone. Let’s get into the lane and then we shan’t be trespassing. If
we meet him, I’ll do the talking. He is a friend of Merry’s, and I used to come
here with him a good deal at one time.’
They went along the
lane, until they saw the thatched roofs of a large house and farm-buildings
peeping out among the trees ahead. The Maggots, and the Puddifoots of Stock, and
most of the inhabitants of the Marish, were house-dwellers; and this farm was
stoutly built of brick and had a high wall all round it. There was a wide wooden
gate opening out of the wall into the lane.
Suddenly as
they drew nearer a terrific baying and barking broke out, and a loud voice was
heard shouting: ‘Grip! Fang! Wolf! Come on, lads!’
Frodo
and Sam stopped dead, but Pippin walked on a few paces. The gate opened and
three huge dogs came pelting out into the lane, and dashed towards the
travellers, barking fiercely. They took no notice of Pippin; but Sam shrank
against the wall, while two wolvish-looking dogs sniffed at him suspiciously,
and snarled if he moved. The largest and most ferocious of the three halted in
front of Frodo, bristling and growling.
Through the gate
there now appeared a broad thick-set hobbit with a round red face. ‘Hallo!
Hallo! And who may you be, and what may you be wanting?’ he
asked.
‘Good afternoon, Mr. Maggot!’ said
Pippin.
The farmer looked at him closely. ‘Well, if it
isn’t Master Pippin – Mr. Peregrin Took, I should say!’ he cried, changing from
a scowl to a grin. ‘It’s a long time since I saw you round here. It’s lucky for
you that I know you. I was just going out to set my dogs on any strangers. There
are some funny things going on today. Of course, we do get queer folk wandering
in these parts at times. Too near the River,’ he said, shaking his head. ‘But
this fellow was the most outlandish I have ever set eyes on. He won’t cross my
land without leave a second time, not if I can stop
it.’
‘What fellow do you mean?’ asked
Pippin.
‘Then you haven’t seen him?’ said the farmer. ‘He
went up the lane towards the causeway not a long while back. He was a funny
customer and asking funny questions. But perhaps you’ll come along inside, and
we’ll pass the news more comfortable. I’ve a drop of good ale on tap, if you and
your friends are willing, Mr. Took.’
It seemed plain that
the farmer would tell them more, if allowed to do it in his own time and
fashion, so they all accepted the invitation. ‘What about the dogs?’ asked Frodo
anxiously.
The farmer laughed. ‘They won’t harm you – not
unless I tell ‘em to. Here, Grip! Fang! Heel!’ he cried. ‘Heel, Wolf!’ To the
relief of Frodo and Sam, the dogs walked away and let them go
free.
Pippin introduced the other two to the farmer. ‘Mr.
Frodo Baggins,’ he said. ‘You may not remember him, but he used to live at
Brandy Hall.’ At the name Baggins the farmer started, and gave Frodo a sharp
glance. For a moment Frodo thought that the memory of stolen mushrooms had been
aroused, and that the dogs would be told to see him off. But Farmer Maggot took
him by the arm.
‘Well, if that isn’t queerer than ever?’ he
exclaimed. ‘Mr. Baggins is it? Come inside! We must have a
talk.’
They went into the farmer’s kitchen, and sat by the
wide fire-place. Mrs. Maggot brought out beer in a huge jug, and filled four
large mugs. It was a good brew, and Pippin found himself more than compensated
for missing the
Golden Perch. Sam sipped his beer suspiciously. He had a
natural mistrust of the inhabitants of other parts of the Shire; and also he was
not disposed to be quick friends with anyone who had beaten his master, however
long ago.
After a few remarks about the weather and the
agricultural prospects (which were no worse than usual), Farmer Maggot put down
his mug and looked at them all in turn.
‘Now, Mr.
Peregrin,’ he said, ‘where might you be coming from, and where might you be
going to? Were you coming to visit’ me? For, if so, you had gone past my gate
without my seeing you.’
‘Well, no,’ answered Pippin. ‘To
tell you the truth, since you have guessed it, we got into the lane from the
other end: we had come over your fields. But that was quite by accident. We lost
our way in the woods, back near Woodhall, trying to take a short cut to the
Ferry.’
‘If you were in a hurry, the road would have served
you better,’ said the farmer. ‘But I wasn’t worrying about that. You have leave
to walk over my land, if you have a mind, Mr. Peregrin. And you, Mr. Baggins –
though I daresay you still like mushrooms.’ He laughed. ‘Ah yes, I recognized
the name. I recollect the time when young Frodo Baggins was one of the worst
young rascals of Buckland. But it wasn’t mushrooms I was thinking of. I had just
heard the name Baggins before you turned up. What do you think that funny
customer asked me?’
They waited anxiously for him to go on.
‘Well,’ the farmer continued, approaching his point with slow relish, ‘he came
riding on a big black horse in at the gate, which happened to be open, and right
up to my door. All black he was himself, too, and cloaked and hooded up, as if
he did not want to be known. “Now what in the Shire can he want?” I thought to
myself. We don’t see many of the Big Folk over the border; and anyway I had
never heard of any like this black fellow.
‘ “Good-day to
you!” I says, going out to him. “This lane don’t lead anywhere, and wherever you
may be going, your quickest way will be back to the road.” I didn’t like the
looks of him; and when Grip came out, he took one sniff and let out a yelp as if
he had been slung: he put down his tail and bolted off howling. The black fellow
sat quite still.
‘ “I come from yonder,” he said, slow and
stiff-like, pointing back west, over
my fields, if you please. “Have you
seen
Baggins?” he asked in a queer voice, and bent down towards me. I
could not see any face, for his hood fell down so low; and I felt a sort of
shiver down my back. But I did not see why he should come riding over my land so
bold.
‘ “Be off!” I said. “There are no Bagginses here.
You’re in the wrong part of the Shire. You had better go back west to Hobbiton –
but you can go by road this time.”
‘ “Baggins has left,” he
answered in a whisper. “He is coming. He is not far away. I wish to find him. If
he passes will you tell me? I will come back with gold.”
‘
“No you won’t,” I said. “You’ll go back where you belong, double quick. I give
you one minute before I call all my dogs.”
‘He gave a sort
of hiss. It might have been laughing, and it might not. Then he spurred his
great horse right at me, and I jumped out of the way only just in time. I called
the dogs, but he swung off, and rode through the gate and up the lane towards
the causeway like a bolt of thunder. What do you think of
that?’
Frodo sat for a moment looking at the fire, but his
only thought was how on earth would they reach the Ferry. ‘I don’t know what to
think,’ he said at last.
‘Then I’ll tell you what to
think,’ said Maggot. ‘You should never have gone mixing yourself up with
Hobbiton folk, Mr. Frodo. Folk are queer up there.’ Sam stirred in his chair,
and looked at the farmer with an unfriendly eye. ‘But you were always a reckless
lad. When I heard you had left the Brandybucks and gone off to that old Mr.
Bilbo, I said that you were going to find trouble. Mark my words, this all comes
of those strange doings of Mr. Bilbo’s. His money was got in some strange
fashion in foreign parts, they say. Maybe there is some that want to know what
has become of the gold and jewels that he buried in the hill of Hobbiton, as I
hear?’
Frodo said nothing: the shrewd guesses of the farmer
were rather disconcerting.
‘Well, Mr. Frodo,’ Maggot went
on, ‘I’m glad that you’ve had the sense to come back to Buckland. My advice is:
stay there! And don’t get mixed up with these outlandish folk. You’ll have
friends in these parts. If any of these black fellows come after you again, I’ll
deal with them. I’ll say you’re dead, or have left the Shire, or anything you
like. And that might be true enough; for as like as not it is old Mr. Bilbo they
want news of.’
‘Maybe you’re right,’ said Frodo, avoiding
the farmer’s eye and staring at the fire.
Maggot looked at
him thoughtfully. ‘Well, I see you have ideas of your own,’ he said. ‘It is as
plain as my nose that no accident brought you and that rider here on the same
afternoon; and maybe my news was no great news to you, after all. I am not
asking you to tell me anything you have a mind to keep to yourself; but I see
you are in some kind of trouble. Perhaps you are thinking it won’t be too easy
to get to the Ferry without being caught?’
‘I was thinking
so,’ said Frodo. ‘But we have got to try and get there; and it won’t be done by
sitting and thinking. So I am afraid we must be going. Thank you very much
indeed for your kindness! I’ve been in terror of you and your dogs for over
thirty years, Farmer Maggot, though you may laugh to hear it. It’s a pity: for
I’ve missed a good friend. And now I’m sorry to leave so soon. But I’ll come
back, perhaps, one day – if I get a chance.’
‘You’ll be
welcome when you come,’ said Maggot. ‘But now I’ve a notion. It’s near sundown
already, and we are going to have our supper; for we mostly go to bed soon after
the Sun. If you and Mr. Peregrin and all could stay and have a bite with us, we
would be pleased!’
‘And so should we!’ said Frodo. ‘But we
must be going at once, I’m afraid. Even now it will be dark before we can reach
the Ferry.’
‘Ah! but wait a minute! I was going to say:
after a bit of supper, I’ll get out a small waggon, and I’ll drive you all to
the Ferry. That will save you a good step, and it might also save you trouble of
another sort.’
Frodo now accepted the invitation
gratefully, to the relief of Pippin and Sam. The sun was already behind the
western hills, and the light was failing. Two of Maggot’s sons and his three
daughters came in, and a generous supper was laid on the large table. The
kitchen was lit with candles and the fire was mended. Mrs. Maggot hustled in and
out. One or two other hobbits belonging to the farm-household came in. In a
short while fourteen sat down to eat. There was beer in plenty, and a mighty
dish of mushrooms and bacon, besides much other solid farmhouse fare. The dogs
lay by the fire and gnawed rinds and cracked bones.
When
they had finished, the farmer and his sons went out with a lantern and got the
waggon ready. It was dark in the yard, when the guests came out. They threw
their packs on board and climbed in. The farmer sat in the driving-seat, and
whipped up his two stout ponies. His wife stood in the light of the open
door.
‘You be careful of yourself, Maggot!’ she called.
‘Don’t go arguing with any foreigners, and come straight
back!’
‘I will!’ said he, and drove out of the gate. There
was now no breath of wind stirring; the night was still and quiet, and a chill
was in the air. They went without lights and took it slowly. After a mile or two
the lane came to an end, crossing a deep dike, and climbing a short slope up on
to the high-banked causeway.
Maggot got down and took a
good look either way, north and south, but nothing could be seen in the
darkness, and there was not a sound in the still air. Thin strands of river-mist
were hanging above the dikes, and crawling over the
fields.
‘It’s going to be thick,’ said Maggot; ‘but I’ll
not light my lantern till I turn for home. We’ll hear anything on the road long
before we meet it tonight.’
It was five miles or more from
Maggot’s lane to the Ferry. The hobbits wrapped themselves up, but their ears
were strained for any sound above the creak of the wheels and the slow
clop of the ponies’ hoofs. The waggon seemed slower than a snail to
Frodo. Beside him Pippin was nodding towards sleep; but Sam was staring forwards
into the rising fog.
They reached the entrance to the Ferry
lane at last. It was marked by two tall white posts that suddenly loomed up on
their right. Farmer Maggot drew in his ponies and the waggon creaked to a halt.
They were just beginning lo scramble out, when suddenly they heard what they had
all been dreading: hoofs on the road ahead. The sound was coming towards
them.
Maggot jumped down and stood holding the ponies’
heads, and peering forward into the gloom.
Clip-clop, clip-clop came the
approaching rider. The fall of the hoofs sounded loud in the still, foggy
air.
‘You’d better be hidden, Mr. Frodo,’ said Sam
anxiously. ‘You get down in the waggon and cover up with blankets, and we’ll
send this rider to the rightabouts!’ He climbed out and went to the farmer’s
side. Black Riders would have to ride over him to get near the
waggon.
Clop-clop, clop-clop. The rider was nearly
on them.
‘Hallo there!’ called Farmer Maggot. The advancing
hoofs stopped short. They thought they could dimly guess a dark cloaked shape in
the mist, a yard or two ahead. ‘Now then!’ said the farmer, throwing the reins
to Sam and striding forward. ‘Don’t you come a step nearer! What do you want,
and where are you going?’
‘I want Mr. Baggins. Have you
seen him?’ said a muffled voice – but the voice was the voice of Merry
Brandybuck. A dark lantern was uncovered, and its light fell on the astonished
face of the farmer.
‘Mr. Merry!’ he
cried.
‘Yes, of course! Who did you think it was?’ said
Merry coming forward. As he came out of the mist and their fears subsided, he
seemed suddenly to diminish to ordinary hobbit-size. He was riding a pony, and a
scarf was swathed round his neck and over his chin to keep out the
fog.
Frodo sprang out of the waggon to greet him. ‘So there
you are at last!’ said Merry. ‘I was beginning to wonder if you would turn up at
all today, and I was just going back to supper. When it grew foggy I came across
and rode up towards Stock to see if you had fallen in any ditches. But I’m blest
if I know which way you have come. Where did you find them, Mr. Maggot? In your
duck-pond?’
‘No, I caught ‘em trespassing,’ said the
farmer, ‘and nearly set my dogs on ‘em; but they’ll tell you all the story, I’ve
no doubt. Now, if you’ll excuse me, Mr. Merry and Mr. Frodo and all, I’d best be
turning for home. Mrs. Maggot will be worriting with the night getting
thick.’
He backed the waggon into the lane and turned it.
‘Well, good night to you all,’ he said. ‘It’s been a queer day, and no mistake.
But all’s well as ends well; though perhaps we should not say that until we
reach our own doors. I’ll not deny that I’ll be glad now when I do.’ He lit his
lanterns, and got up. Suddenly he produced a large basket from under the seat.
‘I was nearly forgetting,’ he said. ‘Mrs. Maggot put this up for Mr. Baggins,
with her compliments.’ He handed it down and moved off, followed by a chorus of
thanks and good-nights.
They watched the pale rings of
light round his lanterns as they dwindled into the foggy night. Suddenly Frodo
laughed: from the covered basket he held, the scent of mushrooms was
rising.
Chapter 5
A Conspiracy
Unmasked
‘Now we had better get home ourselves,’ said Merry.
There’s something funny about all this, I see; but it must wait till we get
in.’
They turned down the Ferry lane, which was straight
and well-kept and edged with large white-washed stones. In a hundred yards or so
it brought them to the river-bank, where there was a broad wooden landing-stage.
A large flat ferry-boat was moored beside it. The white bollards near the
water’s edge glimmered in the light of two lamps on high posts. Behind them the
mists in the flat fields were now above the hedges; but the water before them
was dark, with only a few curling wisps like steam among the reeds by the bank.
There seemed to be less fog on the further side.
Merry led
the pony over a gangway on to the ferry, and the others followed. Merry then
pushed slowly off with a long pole. The Brandywine flowed slow and broad before
them. On the other side the bank was steep, and up it a winding path climbed
from the further landing. Lamps were twinkling there. Behind loomed up the Buck
Hill; and out of it, through stray shrouds of mist, shone many round windows,
yellow and red. They were the windows of Brandy Hall, the ancient home of the
Brandybucks.
Long ago Gorhendad Oldbuck, head of the
Oldbuck family, one of the oldest in the Marish or indeed in the Shire, had
crossed the river, which was the original boundary of the land eastwards. He
built (and excavated) Brandy Hall, changed his name to Brandybuck, and settled
down to become master of what was virtually a small independent country. His
family grew and grew, and after his days continued to grow, until Brandy Hall
occupied the whole of the low hill, and had three large front-doors, many
side-doors, and about a hundred windows. The Brandybucks and their numerous
dependants then began to burrow, and later to build, all round about. That was
the origin of Buckland, a thickly inhabited strip between the river and the Old
Forest, a sort of colony from the Shire. Its chief village was Bucklebury,
clustering in the banks and slopes behind Brandy Hall.
The
people in the Marish were friendly with the Bucklanders, and the authority of
the Master of the Hall (as the head of the Brandybuck family was called) was
still acknowledged by the farmers between Stock and Rushey. But most of the folk
of the old Shire regarded the Bucklanders as peculiar, half foreigners as it
were. Though, as a matter of fact, they were not very different from the other
hobbits of the Four Farthings. Except in one point: they were fond of boats, and
some of them could swim.
Their land was originally
unprotected from the East; but on that side they had built a hedge: the High
Hay. It had been planted many generations ago, and was now thick and tall, for
it was constantly tended. It ran all the way from Brandywine Bridge, in a big
loop curving away from the river, to Haysend (where the Withywindle flowed out
of the Forest into the Brandywine): well over twenty miles from end to end. But,
of course, it was not a complete protection. The Forest drew close to the hedge
in many places. The Bucklanders kept their doors locked after dark, and that
also was not usual in the Shire.
The ferry-boat moved
slowly across the water. The Buckland shore drew nearer. Sam was the only member
of the party who had not been over the river before. He had a strange feeling as
the slow gurgling stream slipped by: his old life lay behind in the mists, dark
adventure lay in front. He scratched his head, and for a moment had a passing
wish that Mr. Frodo could have gone on living quietly at Bag
End.
The four hobbits stepped off the ferry. Merry was
tying it up, and Pippin was already leading the pony up the path, when Sam (who
had been looking back, as if to take farewell of the Shire) said in a hoarse
whisper:
‘Look back, Mr. Frodo! Do you see
anything?’
On the far stage, under the distant lamps, they
could just make out a figure: it looked like a dark black bundle left behind.
But as they looked it seemed to move and sway this way and that, as if searching
the ground. It then crawled, or went crouching, back into the gloom beyond the
lamps.
‘What in the Shire is that?’ exclaimed
Merry.
‘Something that is following us,’ said Frodo. ‘But
don’t ask any more now! Let’s get away at once!’ They hurried up the path to the
top of the bank, but when they looked back the far shore was shrouded in mist,
and nothing could be seen.
‘Thank goodness you don’t keep
any boats on the west-bank!’ said Frodo. ‘Can horses cross the
river?’
‘They can go twenty miles north to Brandywine
Bridge – or they might swim,’ answered Merry. ‘Though I never heard of any horse
swimming the Brandywine. But what have horses to do with it?’ I’ll tell you
later. Let’s get indoors and then we can talk.’
‘All right!
You and Pippin know your way; so I’ll just ride on and tell Fatty Bolger that
you are coming. We’ll see about supper and things.’
‘We had
our supper early with Farmer Maggot,’ said Frodo; ‘but we could do with
another.’
‘You shall have it! Give me that basket!’ said
Merry, and rode ahead into the darkness.
It was some
distance from the Brandywine to Frodo’s new house at Crickhollow. They passed
Buck Hill and Brandy Hall on their left, and on the outskirts of Bucklebury
struck the main road of Buckland that ran south from the Bridge. Half a mile
northward along this they came to a lane opening on their right. This they
followed for a couple of miles as it climbed up and down into the
country.
At last they came to a narrow gate in a thick
hedge. Nothing could be seen of the house in the dark: it stood back from the
lane in the middle of a wide circle of lawn surrounded by a belt of low trees
inside the outer hedge. Frodo had chosen it, because it stood in an
out-of-the-way corner of the country, and there were no other dwellings close
by. You could get in and out without being noticed. It had been built a long
while before by the Brandybucks, for the use of guests, or members of the family
that wished to escape from the crowded life of Brandy Hall for a time. It was an
old-fashioned countrified house, as much like a hobbit-hole as possible: it was
long and low, with no upper storey; and it had a roof of turf, round windows,
and a large round door.
As they walked up the green path
from the gate no light was visible; the windows were dark and shuttered. Frodo
knocked on the door, and Fatty Bolger opened it. A friendly light streamed out.
They slipped in quickly and shut themselves and the light inside. They were in a
wide hall with doors on either side; in front of them a passage ran back down
the middle of the house.
‘Well, what do you think of it?’
asked Merry coming up the passage. ‘We have done our best in a short time to
make it look like home. After all Fatty and I only got here with the last
cart-load yesterday.’
Frodo looked round. It did look like
home. Many of his own favourite things – or Bilbo’s things (they reminded him
sharply of him in their new selling) – were arranged as nearly as possible as
they had been at Bag End. It was a pleasant, comfortable, welcoming place; and
he found himself wishing that he was really coming here to settle down in quiet
retirement. It seemed unfair to have put his friends to all this trouble; and he
wondered again how he was going to break the news to them that he must leave
them so soon, indeed at once. Yet that would have to be done that very night,
before they all went to bed.
‘It’s delightful!’ he said
with an effort. ‘I hardly feel that I have moved at
all.’
The travellers hung up their cloaks, and piled their
packs on the floor. Merry led them down the passage and threw open a door at the
far end. Firelight came out, and a puff of steam.
‘A bath!’
cried Pippin. ‘O blessed Meriadoc!’
‘Which order shall we
go in?’ said Frodo. ‘Eldest first, or quickest first? You’ll be last either way,
Master Peregrin.’
‘Trust me to arrange things better than
that!’ said Merry. ‘We can’t begin life at Crickhollow with a quarrel over
baths. In that room there are
three tubs, and a copper full of boiling
water. There are also towels, mats and soap. Get inside, and be
quick!’
Merry and Fatty went into the kitchen on the other
side of the passage, and busied themselves with the final preparations for a
late supper. Snatches of competing songs came from the bathroom mixed with the
sound of splashing and wallowing. The voice of Pippin was suddenly lifted up
above the others in one of Bilbo’s favourite bath-songs.
Sing hey! for the bath at close of day
that washes the
weary mud away!
A loon is he that will not sing:
O! Water Hot is a noble
thing!
O! Sweet is the sound of falling rain,
and
the brook that leaps from hill to plain;
but better than rain or rippling
streams
is Water Hot that smokes and steams.
O!
Water cold we may pour at need
down a thirsty throat and be glad
indeed;
but better is Beer, if drink we lack,
and Water Hot poured down
the back.
O! Water is fair that leaps on high
in a
fountain white beneath the sky;
but never did fountain sound so sweet
as
splashing Hot Water with my
feet!
There was a terrific splash,
and a shout of
Whoa! from Frodo. It appeared that a lot of Pippin’s bath
had imitated a fountain and leaped on high.
Merry went to
the door: ‘What about supper and beer in the throat?’ he called. Frodo came out
drying his hair.
‘There’s so much water in the air that I’m
coming into the kitchen to finish,’ he said.
‘Lawks!’ said
Merry, looking in. The stone floor was swimming. ‘You ought to mop all that up
before you get anything to eat. Peregrin,’ he said. ‘Hurry up, or we shan’t wait
for you.’
They had supper in the kitchen on a table near
the fire. ‘I suppose you three won’t want mushrooms again?’ said Fredegar
without much hope.
‘Yes we shall!’ cried
Pippin.
‘They’re mine!’ said Frodo. ‘Given to
me by
Mrs. Maggot, a queen among farmers’ wives. Take your greedy hands away, and I’ll
serve them.’
Hobbits have a passion for mushrooms,
surpassing even the greediest likings of Big People. A fact which partly
explains young Frodo’s long expeditions to the renowned fields of the Marish,
and the wrath of the injured Maggot. On this occasion there was plenty for all,
even according to hobbit standards. There were also many other things to follow,
and when they had finished even Fatty Bolger heaved a sigh of content. They
pushed back the table, and drew chairs round the
fire.
‘We’ll clear up later,’ said Merry. ‘Now tell me all
about it! I guess that you have been having adventures, which was not quite fair
without me. I want a full account; and most of all I want to know what was the
matter with old Maggot, and why he spoke to me like that. He sounded almost as
if he was
scared, if that is possible.’
‘We have all
been scared,’ said Pippin after a pause, in which Frodo stared at the fire and
did not speak. ‘You would have been, too, if you had been chased for two days by
Black Riders.’
‘And what are
they?’
‘Black figures riding on black horses,’ answered
Pippin. ‘If Frodo won’t talk, I will tell you the whole tale from the
beginning.’ He then gave a full account of their journey from the time when they
left Hobbiton. Sam gave various supporting nods and exclamations. Frodo remained
silent.
‘I should think you were making it all up,’ said
Merry, ‘if I had not seen that black shape on the landing-stage – and heard the
queer sound in Maggot’s voice. What do you make of it all,
Frodo?’
‘Cousin Frodo has been very close,’ said Pippin.
‘But the time has come for him to open out. So far we have been given nothing
more to go on than Farmer Maggot’s guess that it has something to do with old
Bilbo’s treasure.’
‘That was only a guess,’ said Frodo
hastily. ‘Maggot does not
know anything.’
‘Old
Maggot is a shrewd fellow,’ said Merry. ‘A lot goes on behind his round face
that does not come out in his talk. I’ve heard that he used to go into the Old
Forest at one time, and he has the reputation of knowing a good many strange
things. But you can at least tell us, Frodo, whether you think his guess good or
bad.’
‘I
think,’ answered Frodo slowly, ‘that it was
a good guess, as far as it goes. There
is a connexion with Bilbo’s old
adventures, and the Riders are looking, or perhaps one ought to say
searching, for him or for me. I also fear, if you want to know, that it
is no joke at all; and that I am not safe here or anywhere else.’ He looked
round at the windows and walls, as if he was afraid they would suddenly give
way. The others looked at him in silence, and exchanged meaning glances among
themselves.
‘It’s coming out in a minute,’ whispered Pippin
to Merry. Merry nodded.
‘Well!’ said Frodo at last, sitting
up and straightening his back, as if he had made a decision. ‘I can’t keep it
dark any longer. I have got something to tell you all. But I don’t know quite
how to begin.’
‘I think I could help you,’ said Merry
quietly, ‘by telling you some of it myself.’
‘What do you
mean?’ said Frodo, looking at him anxiously. ‘Just this, my dear old Frodo: you
are miserable, because you don’t know how to say good-bye. You meant to leave
the Shire, of course. But danger has come on you sooner than you expected, and
now you are making up your mind to go at once. And you don’t want to. We are
very sorry for you.’
Frodo opened his mouth and shut it
again. His look of surprise was so comical that they laughed. ‘Dear old Frodo!’
said Pippin. ‘Did you really think you had thrown dust in all our eyes? You have
not been nearly careful or clever enough for that! You have obviously been
planning to go and saying farewell to all your haunts all this year since April.
We have constantly heard you muttering: “Shall I ever look down into that valley
again, I wonder”, and things like that. And pretending that you had come to the
end of your money, and actually selling your beloved Bag End to those
Sackville-Bagginses! And all those close talks with
Gandalf.’
‘Good heavens!’ said Frodo. ‘I thought I had been
both careful and clever. I don’t know what Gandalf would say. Is all the Shire
discussing my departure then?’
‘Oh no!’ said Merry. ‘Don’t
worry about that! The secret won’t keep for long, of course; but at present it
is, I think, only known to us conspirators. After all, you must remember that we
know you well, and are often with you. We can usually guess what you are
thinking. I knew Bilbo, too. To tell you the truth, I had been watching you
rather closely ever since he left. I thought you would go after him sooner or
later; indeed I expected you to go sooner, and lately we have been very anxious.
We have been terrified that you might give us the slip, and go off suddenly, all
on your own like he did. Ever since this spring we have kept our eyes open, and
done a good deal of planning on our own account. You are not going to escape so
easily!’
‘But I must go,’ said Frodo. ‘It cannot be helped,
dear friends. It is wretched for us all, but it is no use your trying to keep
me. Since you have guessed so much, please help me and do not hinder
me!’
‘You do not understand!’ said Pippin. ‘You must go –
and therefore we must, too. Merry and I are coming with you. Sam is an excellent
fellow, and would jump down a dragon’s throat to save you, if he did not trip
over his own feet; but you will need more than one companion in your dangerous
adventure.’
‘My dear and most beloved hobbits!’ said Frodo
deeply moved. ‘But I could not allow it. I decided that long ago, too. You speak
of danger, but you do not understand. This is no treasure-hunt, no
there-and-back journey. I am flying from deadly peril into deadly
peril.’
‘Of course we understand,’ said Merry firmly. ‘That
is why we have decided to come. We know the Ring is no laughing-matter; but we
are going to do our best to help you against the
Enemy.’
‘The Ring!’ said Frodo, now completely
amazed.
‘Yes, the Ring,’ said Merry. ‘My dear old hobbit,
you don’t allow for the inquisitiveness of friends. I have known about the
existence of the Ring for years – before Bilbo went away, in fact; but since he
obviously regarded it as secret, I kept the knowledge in my head, until we
formed our conspiracy. I did not know Bilbo, of course, as well as I know you; I
was too young, and he was also more careful – but he was not careful enough. If
you want to know how I first found out, I will tell
you.’
‘Go on!’ said Frodo faintly.
'It
was the Sackville-Bagginses that were his downfall, as you might expect. One
day, a year before the Party, I happened to be walking along the road, when I
saw Bilbo ahead. Suddenly in the distance the S.-B.s appeared, coming towards
us. Bilbo slowed down, and then hey presto! he vanished. I was so startled that
I hardly had the wits to hide myself in a more ordinary fashion; but I got
through the hedge and walked along the field inside. I was peeping through into
the road, after the S.-B.s had passed, and was looking straight at Bilbo when he
suddenly reappeared. I caught a glint of gold as he put something back in his
trouser-pocket.
‘After that I kept my eyes open. In fact, I
confess that I spied. But you must admit that it was very intriguing, and I was
only in my teens. I must be the only one in the Shire, besides you Frodo, that
has ever seen the old fellow’s secret book.’
‘You have read
his book!’ cried Frodo. ‘Good heavens above! Is nothing
safe?’
‘Not too safe, I should say,’ said Merry. ‘But I
have only had one rapid glance, and that was difficult to get. He never left the
book about. I wonder what became of it. I should like another look. Have you got
it, Frodo?’
‘No. It was not at Bag End. He must have taken
it away.’
‘Well, as I was saying,’ Merry proceeded, ‘I kept
my knowledge to myself, till this Spring when things got serious. Then we formed
our conspiracy; and as we were serious, too, and meant business, we have not
been too scrupulous. You are not a very easy nut to crack, and Gandalf is worse.
But if you want to be introduced to our chief investigator, I can produce
him.’
‘Where is he?’ said Frodo, looking round, as if he
expected a masked and sinister figure to come out of a
cupboard.
‘Step forward, Sam!’ said Merry; and Sam stood up
with a face scarlet up to the ears. ‘Here’s our collector of information! And he
collected a lot, I can tell you, before he was finally caught. After which, I
may say, he seemed to regard himself as on parole, and dried
up.’
‘Sam!’ cried Frodo, feeling that amazement could go no
further, and quite unable to decide whether he felt angry, amused, relieved, or
merely foolish.
‘Yes, sir!’ said Sam. ‘Begging your pardon,
sir! But I meant no wrong to you, Mr. Frodo, nor to Mr. Gandalf for that matter.
He has some sense, mind you; and when you said
go alone, he said
no! take someone as you can trust.’ ‘But it does not
seem that I can trust anyone,’ said Frodo. Sam looked at him
unhappily.
‘It all depends on what you want,’ put in Merry.
‘You can trust us to stick to you through thick and thin – to the bitter end.
And you can trust us to keep any secret of yours – closer than you keep it
yourself. But you cannot trust us to let you face trouble alone, and go off
without a word. We are your friends, Frodo. Anyway: there it is. We know most of
what Gandalf has told you. We know a good deal about the Ring. We are horribly
afraid – but we are coming with you; or following you like
hounds.’
‘And after all, sir,’ added Sam, ‘you did ought to
take the Elves’ advice. Gildor said you should take them as was willing, and you
can’t deny it.’
‘I don’t deny it,’ said Frodo, looking at
Sam, who was now grinning. ‘I don’t deny it, but I’ll never believe you are
sleeping again, whether you snore or not. I shall kick you hard to make
sure.
‘You are a set of deceitful scoundrels!’ he said,
turning to the others. ‘But bless you!’ he laughed, getting up and waving his
arms, ‘I give in. I will take Gildor’s advice. If the danger were not so dark, I
should dance for joy. Even so, I cannot help feeling happy; happier than I have
felt for a long time. I had dreaded this evening.’
‘Good!
That’s settled. Three cheers for Captain Frodo and company!’ they shouted; and
they danced round him. Merry and Pippin began a song, which they had apparently
got ready for the occasion.
It was made on the model of the
dwarf-song that started Bilbo on his adventure long ago, and went to the same
tune:
Farewell we call to hearth and hall!
Though wind may blow
and rain may fall,
We must away ere break of day
Far over wood and
mountain tall.
To Rivendell, where Elves yet
dwell
In glades beneath the misty fell,
Through moor and waste we ride
in haste,
And whither then we cannot tell.
With foes
ahead, behind us dread,
Beneath the sky shall be our bed,
Until at last
our toil be passed,
Our journey done, our errand
sped.
We must away! We must away!
We ride before the
break of day!
‘Very good!’ said
Frodo. ‘But in that case there are a lot of things to do before we go to bed –
under a roof, for tonight at any rate.’
‘Oh! That was
poetry!’ said Pippin. ‘Do you really mean to start before the break of
day?’
‘I don’t know,’ answered Frodo. ‘I fear those Black
Riders, and I am sure it is unsafe to stay in one place long, especially in a
place to which it is known I was going. Also Gildor advised me not to wait. But
I should very much like to see Gandalf. I could see that even Gildor was
disturbed when he heard that Gandalf had never appeared. It really depends on
two things. How soon could the Riders get to Bucklebury? And how soon could we
get off? It will take a good deal of preparation.’
‘The
answer to the second question,’ said Merry, ‘is that we could get off in an
hour. I have prepared practically everything. There are six ponies in a stable
across the fields; stores and tackle are all packed, except for a few extra
clothes, and the perishable food.’
‘It seems to have been a
very efficient conspiracy,’ said Frodo. ‘But what about the Black Riders? Would
it be safe to wait one day for Gandalf?’
‘That all depends
on what you think the Riders would do, if they found you here,’ answered Merry.
‘They
could have reached here by now, of course, if they were not stopped
at the North-gate, where the Hedge runs down to the river-bank, just this side
of the Bridge. The gate-guards would not let them through by night, though they
might break through. Even in the daylight they would try to keep them out, I
think, at any rate until they got a message through to the Master of the Hall –
for they would not like the look of the Riders, and would certainly be
frightened by them. But, of course, Buckland cannot resist a determined attack
for long. And it is possible that in the morning even a Black Rider that rode up
and asked for Mr. Baggins would be let through. It is pretty generally known
that you are coming back to live at Crickhollow.’
Frodo sat
for a while in thought. ‘I have made up my mind,’ he said finally. ‘I am
starting tomorrow, as soon as it is light. But I am not going by road: it would
be safer to wait here than that. If I go through the North-gate my departure
from Buckland will be known at once, instead of being secret for several days at
least, as it might be. And what is more, the Bridge and the East Road near the
borders will certainly be watched, whether any Rider gets into Buckland or not.
We don’t know how many there are; but there are at least two, and possibly more.
The only thing to do is to go off in a quite unexpected
direction.’
‘But that can only mean going into the Old
Forest!’ said Fredegar horrified. ‘You can’t be thinking of doing that. It is
quite as dangerous as Black Riders.’
‘Not quite,’ said
Merry. ‘It sounds very desperate, but I believe Frodo is right. It is the only
way of getting off without being followed at once. With luck we might get a
considerable start.’
‘But you won’t have any luck in the
Old Forest,’ objected Fredegar. ‘No one ever has luck in there. You’ll get lost.
People don’t go in there.’
‘Oh yes they do!’ said Merry.
‘The Brandybucks go in – occasionally when the fit takes them. We have a private
entrance. Frodo went in once, long ago. I have been in several times: usually in
daylight, of course, when the trees are sleepy and fairly
quiet.’
‘Well, do as you think best!’ said Fredegar. ‘I am
more afraid of the Old Forest than of anything I know about: the stories about
it are a nightmare; but my vote hardly counts, as I am not going on the journey.
Still, I am very glad someone is stopping behind, who can tell Gandalf what you
have done, when he turns up, as I am sure he will before
long.’
Fond as he was of Frodo, Fatty Bolger had no desire
to leave the Shire, nor to see what lay outside it. His family came from the
Eastfarthing, from Budgeford in Bridgefields in fact, but he had never been over
the Brandywine Bridge. His task, according to the original plans of the
conspirators, was to stay behind and deal with inquisitive folk, and to keep up
as long as possible the pretence that Mr. Baggins was still living at
Crickhollow. He had even brought along some old clothes of Frodo’s to help him
in playing the part. They little thought how dangerous that part might
prove.
‘Excellent!’ said Frodo, when he understood the
plan. ‘We could not have left any message behind for Gandalf otherwise. I don’t
know whether these Riders can read or not, of course, but I should not have
dared to risk a written message, in case they got in and searched the house. But
if Fatty is willing to hold the fort, and I can be sure of Gandalf knowing the
way we have gone, that decides me. I am going into the Old Forest first thing
tomorrow.’
‘Well, that’s that,’ said Pippin. ‘On the whole
I would rather have our job than Fatty’s – waiting here till Black Riders
come.’
‘You wait till you are well inside the Forest,’ said
Fredegar. ‘You’ll wish you were back here with me before this time
tomorrow.’
‘It’s no good arguing about it any more,’ said
Merry. ‘We have still got to tidy up and put the finishing touches to the
packing, before we get to bed. I shall call you all before the break of
day.’
When at last he had got to bed, Frodo could not sleep
for some time. His legs ached. He. was glad that he was riding in the morning.
Eventually he fell into a vague dream, in which he seemed to be looking out of a
high window over a dark sea of tangled trees. Down below among the roots there
was the sound of creatures crawling and snuffling. He felt sure they would smell
him out sooner or later.
Then he heard a noise in the
distance. At first he thought it was a great wind coming over the leaves of the
forest. Then he knew that it was not leaves, but the sound of the Sea far-off; a
sound he had never heard in waking life, though it had often troubled his
dreams. Suddenly he found he was out in the open. There were no trees after all.
He was on a dark heath, and there was a strange salt smell in the air. Looking
up he saw before him a tall white tower, standing alone on a high ridge. A great
desire came over him to climb the tower and see the Sea. He started to struggle
up the ridge towards the tower: but suddenly a light came in the sky, and there
was a noise of thunder.
Chapter 6
The Old Forest
Frodo woke suddenly. It was still dark in the room. Merry
was standing there with a candle in one hand, and banging on the door with the
other. ‘All right! What is it?’ said Frodo, still shaken and
bewildered.
‘What is it!’ cried Merry. ‘It is time to get
up. It is half past four and very foggy. Come on! Sam is already getting
breakfast ready. Even Pippin is up. I am just going to saddle the ponies, and
fetch the one that is to be the baggage-carrier. Wake that sluggard Fatty! At
least he must get up and see us off.’
Soon after six
o’clock the five hobbits were ready to start. Fatty Bolger was still yawning.
They stole quietly out of the house. Merry went in front leading a laden pony,
and took his way along a path that went through a spinney behind the house, and
then cut across several fields. The leaves of trees were glistening, and every
twig was dripping; the grass was grey with cold dew. Everything was still, and
far-away noises seemed near and clear: fowls chattering in a yard, someone
closing a door of a distant house.
In their shed they found
the ponies; sturdy little beasts of the kind loved by hobbits, not speedy, but
good for a long day’s work. They mounted, and soon they were riding off into the
mist, which seemed to open reluctantly before them and close forbiddingly behind
them. After riding for about an hour, slowly and without talking, they saw the
Hedge looming suddenly ahead. It was tall and netted over with silver cobwebs.
‘How are you going to get through this?’ asked Fredegar. ‘Follow me!’ said
Merry, ‘and you will see.’ He turned to the left along the Hedge, and soon they
came to a point where it bent inwards, running along the lip of a hollow. A
cutting had been made, at some distance from the Hedge, and went sloping gently
down into the ground. It had walls of brick at the sides, which rose steadily,
until suddenly they arched over and formed a tunnel that dived deep under the
Hedge and came out in the hollow on the other side.
Here
Fatty Bolger halted. ‘Good-bye, Frodo!’ he said. ‘I wish you were not going into
the Forest. I only hope you will not need rescuing before the day is out. But
good luck to you – today and every day!’
‘If there are no
worse things ahead than the Old Forest, I shall be lucky,’ said Frodo. ‘Tell
Gandalf to hurry along the East Road: we shall soon be back on it and going as
fast as we can.’ ‘Good-bye!’ they cried, and rode down the slope and disappeared
from Fredegar’s sight into the tunnel.
It was dark and
damp. At the far end it was closed by a gate of thick-set iron bars. Merry got
down and unlocked the gate, and when they had all passed through he pushed it to
again. It shut with a clang, and the lock clicked. The sound was
ominous.
‘There!’ said Merry. ‘You have left the Shire, and
are now outside, and on the edge of the Old Forest.’
‘Are
the stories about it true?’ asked Pippin.
‘I don’t know
what stories you mean,’ Merry answered. ‘If you mean the old bogey-stories
Fatty’s nurses used to tell him, about goblins and wolves and things of that
sort, I should say no. At any rate I don’t believe them. But the Forest
is queer. Everything in it is very much more alive, more aware of what is
going on, so to speak, than things are in the Shire. And the trees do not like
strangers. They watch you. They are usually content merely to watch you, as long
as daylight lasts, and don’t do much. Occasionally the most unfriendly ones may
drop a branch, or stick a root out, or grasp at you with a long trailer. But at
night things can be most alarming, or so I am told. I have only once or twice
been in here after dark, and then only near the hedge. I thought all the trees
were whispering to each other, passing news and plots along in an unintelligible
language; and the branches swayed and groped without any wind. They do say the
trees do actually move, and can surround strangers and hem them in. In fact long
ago they attacked the Hedge: they came and planted themselves right by it, and
leaned over it. But the hobbits came and cut down hundreds of trees, and made a
great bonfire in the Forest, and burned all the ground in a long strip east of
the Hedge. After that the trees gave up the attack, but they became very
unfriendly. There is still a wide bare space not far inside where the bonfire
was made.’
‘Is it only the trees that are dangerous?’ asked
Pippin.
‘There are various queer things living deep in the
Forest, and on the far side,’ said Merry, ‘or at least I have heard so; but I
have never seen any of them. But something makes paths. Whenever one comes
inside one finds open tracks; but they seem to shift and change from time to
time in a queer fashion. Not far from this tunnel there is, or was for a long
time, the beginning of quite a broad path leading to the Bonfire Glade, and then
on more or less in our direction, east and a little north. That is the path I am
going to try and find.’
The hobbits now left the
tunnel-gate and rode across the wide hollow. On the far side was a faint path
leading up on to the floor of the Forest, a hundred yards and more beyond the
Hedge; but it vanished as soon as it brought them under the trees. Looking back
they could see the dark line of the Hedge through the stems of trees that were
already thick about them. Looking ahead they could see only tree-trunks of
innumerable sizes and shapes: straight or bent, twisted, leaning, squat or
slender, smooth or gnarled and branched; and all the stems were green or grey
with moss and slimy, shaggy growths.
Merry alone seemed
fairly cheerful. ‘You had better lead on and find that path,’ Frodo said to him.
‘Don’t let us lose one another, or forget which way the Hedge
lies!’
They picked a way among the trees, and their ponies
plodded along, carefully avoiding the many writhing and interlacing roots. There
was no undergrowth. The ground was rising steadily, and as they went forward it
seemed that the trees became taller, darker, and thicker. There was no sound,
except an occasional drip of moisture falling through the still leaves. For the
moment there was no whispering or movement among the branches; but they all got
an uncomfortable feeling that they were being watched with disapproval,
deepening to dislike and even enmity. The feeling steadily grew, until they
found themselves looking up quickly, or glancing back over their shoulders, as
if they expected a sudden blow.
There was not as yet any
sign of a path, and the trees seemed constantly to bar their way. Pippin
suddenly felt that he could not bear it any longer, and without warning let out
a shout. ‘Oi! Oi!’ he cried. ‘I am not going to do anything. Just let me pass
through, will you!’
The others halted startled; but the cry
fell as if muffled by a heavy curtain. There was no echo or answer though the
wood seemed to become more crowded and more watchful than
before.
‘I should not shout, if I were you,’ said Merry. It
does more harm than good.’
Frodo began to wonder if it were
possible to find a way through, and if he had been right to make the others come
into this abominable wood. Merry was looking from side to side, and seemed
already uncertain which way to go. Pippin noticed it. ‘It has not taken you long
to lose us,’ he said. But at that moment Merry gave a whistle of relief and
pointed ahead.
‘Well, well!’ he said. ‘These trees
do shift. There is the Bonfire Glade in front of us (or I hope so), but
the path to it seems to have moved away!’
The light grew
clearer as they went forward. Suddenly they came out of the trees and found
themselves in a wide circular space. There was sky above them, blue and clear to
their surprise, for down under the Forest-roof they had not been able to see the
rising morning and the lifting of the mist. The sun was not, however, high
enough yet to shine down into the clearing, though its light was on the
tree-tops. The leaves were all thicker and greener about the edges of the glade,
enclosing it with an almost solid wall. No tree grew there, only rough grass and
many tall plants: stalky and faded hemlocks and wood-parsley, fire-weed seeding
into fluffy ashes, and rampant nettles and thistles. A dreary place: but it
seemed a charming and cheerful garden after the close
Forest.
The hobbits felt encouraged, and looked up
hopefully at the broadening daylight in the sky. At the far side of the glade
there was a break in the wall of trees, and a clear path beyond it. They could
see it running on into the wood, wide in places and open above, though every now
and again the trees drew in and overshadowed it with their dark boughs. Up this
path they rode. They were still climbing gently, but they now went much quicker,
and with better heart; for it seemed to them that the Forest had relented, and
was going to let them pass unhindered after all.
But after
a while the air began to get hot and stuffy. The trees drew close again on
either side, and they could no longer see far ahead. Now stronger than ever they
felt again the ill will of the wood pressing on them. So silent was it that the
fall of their ponies’ hoofs, rustling on dead leaves and occasionally stumbling
on hidden roots, seemed to thud in their ears. Frodo tried to sing a song to
encourage them, but his voice sank to a murmur.
O! Wanderers in the shadowed land
despair not! For though
dark they stand,
all woods there be must end at last,
and see the open
sun go past:
the setting sun, the rising sun,
the day’s end, or the day
begun.
For east or west all woods must
fail…
Fail - even as
he said the word his voice faded into silence. The air seemed heavy and the
making of words wearisome. Just behind them a large branch fell from an old
overhanging tree with a crash into the path. The trees seemed to close in before
them.
‘They do not like all that about ending and failing,’
said Merry. ‘I should not sing any more at present. Wait till we do get to the
edge, and then we’ll turn and give them a rousing
chorus!’
He spoke cheerfully, and if he felt any great
anxiety, he did not show it. The others did not answer. They were depressed. A
heavy weight was settling steadily on Frodo’s heart, and he regretted now with
every step forward that he had ever thought of challenging the menace of the
trees. He was, indeed, just about to stop and propose going back (if that was
still possible), when things took a new turn. The path stopped climbing, and
became for a while nearly level. The dark trees drew aside, and ahead they could
see the path going almost straight forward. Before them, but some distance off,
there stood a green hill-top, treeless, rising like a bald head out of the
encircling wood. The path seemed to be making directly for
it.
They now hurried forward again, delighted with the
thought of climbing out for a while above the roof of the Forest. The path
dipped, and then again began to climb upwards, leading them at last to the foot
of the steep hillside. There it left the trees and faded into the turf. The wood
stood all round the hill like thick hair that ended sharply in a circle round a
shaven crown.
The hobbits led their ponies up, winding
round and round until they reached the top. There they stood and gazed about
them. The air was gleaming and sunlit, but hazy; and they could not see to any
great distance. Near at hand the mist was now almost gone; though here and there
it lay in hollows of the wood, and to the south of them, out of a deep fold
cutting right across the Forest, the fog still rose like steam or wisps of white
smoke.
‘That,’ said Merry, pointing with his hand, ‘that is
the line of the Withywindle. It comes down out of the Downs and flows south-west
through the midst of the Forest to join the Brandywine below Haysend. We don’t
want to go
that way! The Withywindle valley is said to be the queerest
part of the whole wood – the centre from which all the queerness comes, as it
were.’
The others looked in the direction that Merry
pointed out, but they could see little but mists over the damp and deep-cut
valley; and beyond it the southern half of the Forest faded from
view.
The sun on the hill-top was now getting hot. It must
have been about eleven o’clock; but the autumn haze still prevented them from
seeing much in other directions. In the west they could not make out either the
line of the Hedge or the valley of the Brandywine beyond it. Northward, where
they looked most hopefully, they could see nothing that might be the line of the
great East Road, for which they were making. They were on an island in a sea of
trees, and the horizon was veiled.
On the south-eastern
side the ground fell very steeply, as if the slopes of the hill were continued
far down under the trees, like island-shores that really are the sides of a
mountain rising out of deep waters. They sat on the green edge and looked out
over the woods below them, while they ate their mid-day meal. As the sun rose
and passed noon they glimpsed far off in the east the grey-green lines of the
Downs that lay beyond the Old Forest on that side. That cheered them greatly;
for it was good to see a sight of anything beyond the wood’s borders, though
they did not mean to go that way, if they could help it: the Barrow-downs had as
sinister a reputation in hobbit-legend as the Forest
itself.
At length they made up their minds to go on again.
The path that had brought them to the hill reappeared on the northward side; but
they had not followed it far before they became aware that it was bending
steadily to the right. Soon it began to descend rapidly and they guessed that it
must actually be heading towards the Withywindle valley: not at all the
direction they wished lo take. After some discussion they decided to leave this
misleading path and strike northward; for although they had not been able to see
it from the hill-top, the Road must lie that way, and it could not be many miles
off. Also northward, and to the left of the path, the land seemed lo be drier
and more open, climbing up to slopes where the trees were thinner, and pines and
firs replaced the oaks and ashes and other strange and nameless trees of the
denser wood.
At first their choice seemed to be good: they
got along at a fair speed, though whenever they got a glimpse of the sun in an
open glade they seemed unaccountably to have veered eastwards. But after a time
the trees began to close in again, just where they had appeared from a distance
to be thinner and less tangled. Then deep folds in the ground were discovered
unexpectedly, like the ruts of great giant-wheels or wide moats and sunken roads
long disused and choked with brambles. These lay usually right across their line
of march, and could only be crossed by scrambling down and out again, which was
troublesome and difficult with their ponies. Each time they climbed down they
found the hollow filled with thick bushes and matted undergrowth, which somehow
would not yield to the left, but only gave way when they turned to the right;
and they had to go some distance along the bottom before they could find a way
up the further bank. Each time they clambered out, the trees seemed deeper and
darker; and always to the left and upwards it was most difficult to find a way,
and they were forced to the right and downwards.
After an
hour or two they had lost all clear sense of direction, though they knew well
enough that they had long ceased to go northward at all. They were being headed
off, and were simply following a course chosen for them – eastwards and
southwards, into the heart of the Forest and not out of
it.
The afternoon was wearing away when they scrambled and
stumbled into a fold that was wider and deeper than any they had yet met. It was
so sleep and overhung that it proved impossible to climb out of it again, either
forwards or backwards, without leaving their ponies and their baggage behind.
All they could do was to follow the fold – downwards. The ground grew soft, and
in places boggy; springs appeared in the banks, and soon they found themselves
following a brook that trickled and babbled through a weedy bed. Then the ground
began to fall rapidly, and the brook growing strong and noisy, flowed and leaped
swiftly downhill. They were in a deep dim-lit gully over-arched by trees high
above them.
After stumbling along for some way along the
stream, they came quite suddenly out of the gloom. As if through a gate they saw
the sunlight before them. Coming to the opening they found that they had made
their way down through a cleft in a high sleep bank, almost a cliff. At its feet
was a wide space of grass and reeds; and in the distance could be glimpsed
another bank almost as steep. A golden afternoon of late sunshine lay warm and
drowsy upon the hidden land between. In the midst of it there wound lazily a
dark river of brown water, bordered with ancient willows, arched over with
willows, blocked with fallen willows, and flecked with thousands of faded
willow-leaves. The air was thick with them, fluttering yellow from the branches;
for there was a warm and gentle breeze blowing softly in the valley, and the
reeds were rustling, and the willow-boughs were
creaking.
‘Well, now I have at least some notion of where
we are!’ said Merry. ‘We have come almost in the opposite direction to which we
intended. This is the River Withywindle! I will go on and
explore.’
He passed out into the sunshine and disappeared
into the long grasses. After a while he reappeared, and reported that there was
fairly solid ground between the cliff-foot and the river; in some places firm
turf went down to the water’s edge. ‘What’s more,’ he said, ‘there seems to be
something like a footpath winding along on this side of the river. If we turn
left and follow it, we shall be bound to come out on the east side of the Forest
eventually.’
‘I dare say!’ said Pippin. ‘That is, if the
track goes on so far, and does not simply lead us into a bog and leave us there.
Who made the track, do you suppose, and why? I am sure it was not for our
benefit. I am getting very suspicious of this Forest and everything in it, and I
begin to believe all the stories about it. And have you any idea how far
eastward we should have to go?’
‘No,’ said Merry, ‘I
haven’t. I don’t know in the least how far down the Withywindle we are, or who
could possibly come here often enough to make a path along it. But there is no
other way out that I can see or think of.’
There being
nothing else for it, they filed out, and Merry led them to the path that he had
discovered. Everywhere the reeds and grasses were lush and tall, in places far
above their heads; but once found, the path was easy to follow, as it turned and
twisted, picking out the sounder ground among the bogs and pools. Here and there
it passed over other rills, running down gullies into the Withywindle out of the
higher forest-lands, and at these points there were tree-trunks or bundles of
brushwood laid carefully across.
The hobbits began to feel very hot.
There were armies of flies of all kinds buzzing round their ears, and the
afternoon sun was burning on their backs. At last they came suddenly into a thin
shade; great grey branches reached across the path. Each step forward became
more reluctant than the last. Sleepiness seemed to be creeping out of the ground
and up their legs, and falling softly out of the air upon their heads and
eyes.
Frodo felt his chin go down and his head nod. Just in
front of him Pippin fell forward on to his knees. Frodo halted. ‘It’s no good,’
he heard Merry saying. ‘Can’t go another step without rest. Must have nap. It’s
cool under the willows. Less flies!’
Frodo did not like the
sound of this. ‘Come on!’ he cried. ‘We can’t have a nap yet. We must get clear
of the Forest first.’ But the others were too far gone to care. Beside them Sam
stood yawning and blinking stupidly.
Suddenly Frodo himself
felt sleep overwhelming him. His head swam. There now seemed hardly a sound in
the air. The flies had stopped buzzing. Only a gentle noise on the edge of
hearing, a soft fluttering as of a song half whispered, seemed to stir in the
boughs above. He lifted his heavy eyes and saw leaning over him a huge
willow-tree, old and hoary. Enormous it looked, its sprawling branches going up
like reaching arms with many long-fingered hands, its knotted and twisted trunk
gaping in wide fissures that creaked faintly as the boughs moved. The leaves
fluttering against the bright sky dazzled him, and he toppled over, lying where
he fell upon the grass.
Merry and Pippin dragged themselves
forward and lay down with their backs to the willow-trunk. Behind them the great
cracks gaped wide to receive them as the tree swayed and creaked. They looked up
at the grey and yellow leaves, moving softly against the light, and singing.
They shut their eyes, and then it seemed that they could almost hear words, cool
words, saying something about water and sleep. They gave themselves up to the
spell and fell fast asleep at the foot of the great grey
willow.
Frodo lay for a while fighting with the sleep that
was overpowering him; then with an effort he struggled to his feel again. He
felt a compelling desire for cool water. ‘Wait for me, Sam,’ he stammered. ‘Must
bathe feet a minute.’
Half in a dream he wandered forward
to the riverward side of the tree, where great winding roots grew out into the
stream, like gnarled dragonets straining down to drink. He straddled one of
these, and paddled his hot feet in the cool brown water; and there he too
suddenly fell asleep with his back against the tree.
Sam
sat down and scratched his head, and yawned like a cavern. He was worried. The
afternoon was getting late, and he thought this sudden sleepiness uncanny.
‘There’s more behind this than sun and warm air,’ he muttered to himself. ‘I
don’t like this great big tree. I don’t trust it. Hark at it singing about sleep
now! This won’t do at all!’
He pulled himself to his feet,
and staggered off to see what had become of the ponies. He found that two had
wandered on a good way along the path; and he had just caught them and brought
them back towards the others, when he heard two noises; one loud, and the other
soft but very clear. One was the splash of something heavy falling into the
water; the other was a noise like the snick of a lock when a door quietly closes
fast.
He rushed back to the bank. Frodo was in the water
close to the edge, and a great tree-root seemed to be over him and holding him
down, but he was not struggling. Sam gripped him by the jacket, and dragged him
from under the root; and then with difficulty hauled him on to the bank. Almost
at once he woke, and coughed and spluttered.
‘Do you know,
Sam,’ he said at length, ‘the beastly tree
threw me in! I felt it. The
big root just twisted round and tipped me in!’
‘You were
dreaming I expect, Mr. Frodo,’ said Sam. ‘You shouldn’t sit in such a place, if
you feel sleepy.’
‘What about the others?’ Frodo asked. ‘I
wonder what sort of dreams they are having.’
They went
round to the other side of the tree, and then Sam understood the click that he
had heard. Pippin had vanished. The crack by which he had laid himself had
closed together, so that not a chink could be seen. Merry was trapped: another
crack had closed about his waist; his legs lay outside, but the rest of him was
inside a dark opening, the edges of which gripped like a pair of
pincers.
Frodo and Sam beat first upon the tree-trunk where
Pippin had lain. They then struggled frantically to pull open the jaws of the
crack that held poor Merry. It was quite useless.
‘What a
foul thing to happen!’ cried Frodo wildly. ‘Why did we ever come into this
dreadful Forest? I wish we were all back at Crickhollow!’ He kicked the tree
with all his strength, heedless of his own feet. A hardly perceptible shiver ran
through the stem and up into the branches; the leaves rustled and whispered, but
with a sound now of faint and far-off laughter.
‘I suppose
we haven’t got an axe among our luggage, Mr. Frodo?’ asked
Sam.
‘I brought a little hatchet for chopping firewood,’
said Frodo. ‘That wouldn’t be much use.’
‘Wait a minute!’
cried Sam, struck by an idea suggested by firewood. ‘We might do something with
fire!’
‘We might,’ said Frodo doubtfully. ‘We might succeed
in roasting Pippin alive inside.’
‘We might try to hurt or
frighten this tree to begin with,’ said Sam fiercely. ‘If it don’t let them go,
I’ll have it down, if I have to gnaw it.’ He ran to the ponies and before long
came back with two tinder-boxes and a hatchet.
Quickly they
gathered dry grass and leaves, and bits of bark; and made a pile of broken twigs
and chopped sticks. These they heaped against the trunk on the far side of the
tree from the prisoners. As soon as Sam had struck a spark into the tinder, it
kindled the dry grass and a flurry of flame and smoke went up. The twigs
crackled. Little fingers of fire licked against the dry scored rind of the
ancient tree and scorched it. A tremor ran through the whole willow. The leaves
seemed to hiss above their heads with a sound of pain and anger. A loud scream
came from Merry, and from far inside the tree they heard Pippin give a muffled
yell.
‘Put it out! Put it out!’ cried Merry. ‘He’ll squeeze
me in two, if you don’t. He says so!’
‘Who? What?’ shouted
Frodo, rushing round to the other side of the tree.
‘Put it
out! Put it out!’ begged Merry. The branches of the willow began to sway
violently. There was a sound as of a wind rising and spreading outwards to the
branches of all the other trees round about, as though they had dropped a stone
into the quiet slumber of the river-valley and set up ripples of anger that ran
out over the whole Forest. Sam kicked at the little fire and stamped out the
sparks. But Frodo, without any clear idea of why he did so, or what he hoped
for, ran along the path crying
help! help! help! It seemed to him that he
could hardly hear the sound of his own shrill voice: it was blown away from him
by the willow-wind and drowned in a clamour of leaves, as soon as the words left
his mouth. He felt desperate: lost and witless.
Suddenly he
slopped. There was an answer, or so he thought; but it seemed to come from
behind him, away down the path further back in the Forest. He turned round and
listened, and soon there could be no doubt: someone was singing a song; a deep
glad voice was singing carelessly and happily, but it was singing nonsense:
Hey dol! merry dol! ring a dong dillo!
Ring a dong! hop
along! fal lal the willow!
Tom Bom, jolly Tom, Tom
Bombadillo!
Half hopeful and half
afraid of some new danger, Frodo and Sam now both stood still. Suddenly out of a
long string of nonsense-words (or so they seemed) the voice rose up loud and
clear and burst into this song:
Hey! Come merry dol! derry dol! My darling!
Light goes the
weather-wind and the feathered starling.
Down along under Hill, shining in
the sunlight,
Waiting on the doorstep for the cold starlight,
There my
pretty lady is. River-woman’s daughter,
Slender as the willow-wand, clearer
than the water.
Old Tom Bombadil water-lilies bringing
Comes hopping
home again. Can you hear him singing?
Hey! Come merry dol! derry dol! and
merry-o,
Goldberry, Goldberry, merry yellow berry-o!
Poor old
Willow-man, you tuck your roots away!
Tom’s in a hurry now. Evening will
follow day.
Tom’s going home again water-lilies bringing.
Hey! Come
derry dol! Can you hear me
singing?
Frodo and Sam stood as if
enchanted. The wind puffed out. The leaves hung silently again on stiff
branches. There was another burst of song, and then suddenly, hopping and
dancing along the path, there appeared above the reeds an old battered hat with
a tall crown and a long blue feather stuck in the band. With another hop and a
bound there came into view a man, or so it seemed. At any rate he was too large
and heavy for a hobbit, if not quite tall enough for one of the Big People,
though he made noise enough for one, slumping along with great yellow boots on
his thick legs, and charging through grass and rushes like a cow going down to
drink. He had a blue coat and a long brown beard; his eyes were blue and bright,
and his face was red as a ripe apple, but creased into a hundred wrinkles of
laughter. In his hands he carried on a large leaf as on a tray a small pile of
white water-lilies.
‘Help!’ cried Frodo and Sam running
towards him with their hands stretched out.
‘Whoa! Whoa!
steady there!’ cried the old man, holding up one hand, and they stopped short,
as if they had been struck stiff. ‘Now, my little fellows, where be you a-going
to, puffing like a bellows? What’s the matter here then? Do you know who I am?
I’m Tom Bombadil. Tell me what’s your trouble! Tom’s in a hurry now. Don’t you
crush my lilies!’
‘My friends are caught in the
willow-tree,’ cried Frodo breathlessly.
‘Master Merry’s
being squeezed in a crack!’ cried Sam.
‘What?’ shouted Tom
Bombadil, leaping up in the air. ‘Old Man Willow? Naught worse than that, eh?
That can soon be mended. I know the tune for him. Old grey Willow-man! I’ll
freeze his marrow cold, if he don’t behave himself. I’ll sing his roots off.
I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Old Man Willow!’ Setting down
his lilies carefully on the grass, he ran to the tree. There he saw Merry’s feet
still sticking out – the rest had already been drawn further inside. Tom put his
mouth to the crack and began singing into it in a low voice. They could not
catch the words, but evidently Merry was aroused. His legs began to kick. Tom
sprang away, and breaking off a hanging branch smote the side of the willow with
it. ‘You let them out again, Old Man Willow!’ he said. ‘What be you a-thinking
of? You should not be waking. Eat earth! Dig deep! Drink water! Go to sleep!
Bombadil is talking!’ He then seized Merry’s feet and drew him out of the
suddenly widening crack.
There was a tearing creak and the
other crack split open, and out of it Pippin sprang, as if he had been kicked.
Then with a loud snap both cracks closed fast again. A shudder ran through the
tree from root to tip, and complete silence fell.
‘Thank
you!’ said the hobbits, one after the other.
Tom Bombadil
burst out laughing. ‘Well, my little fellows!’ said he, stooping so that he
peered into their faces. ‘You shall come home with me! The table is all laden
with yellow cream, honeycomb, and white bread and butter. Goldberry is waiting.
Time enough for questions around the supper table. You follow after me as quick
as you are able!’ With that he picked up his lilies, and then with a beckoning
wave of his hand went hopping and dancing along the path eastward, still singing
loudly and nonsensically.
Too surprised and too relieved to
talk, the hobbits followed after him as fast as they could. But that was not
fast enough. Tom soon disappeared in front of them, and the noise of his singing
got fainter and further away. Suddenly his voice came floating back to them in a
loud halloo!
Hop along, my little friends, up the Withywindle!
Tom’s
going on ahead candles for to kindle.
Down west sinks the Sun: soon you
will be groping.
When the night-shadows fall, then the door will
open,
Out of the window-panes light will twinkle yellow.
Fear no alder
black! Heed no hoary willow!
Fear neither root nor bough! Tom goes on
before you.
Hey now! merry dol! We’ll be waiting for
you!
After that the hobbits heard no
more. Almost at once the sun seemed to sink into the trees behind them. They
thought of the slanting light of evening glittering on the Brandywine River, and
the windows of Bucklebury beginning to gleam with hundreds of lights. Great
shadows fell across them; trunks and branches of trees hung dark and threatening
over the path. White mists began to rise and curl on the surface of the river
and stray about the roots of the trees upon its borders. Out of the very ground
at their feet a shadowy steam arose and mingled with the swiftly falling
dusk.
It became difficult to follow the path, and they were
very tired. Their legs seemed leaden. Strange furtive noises ran among the
bushes and reeds on either side of them; and if they looked up to the pale sky,
they caught sight of queer gnarled and knobbly faces that gloomed dark against
the twilight, and leered down at them from the high bank and the edges of the
wood. They began to feel that all this country was unreal, and that they were
stumbling through an ominous dream that led to no
awakening.
Just as they felt their feet slowing down to a
standstill, they noticed that the ground was gently rising. The water began to
murmur. In the darkness they caught the white glimmer of foam, where the river
flowed over a short fall. Then suddenly the trees came to an end and the mists
were left behind. They stepped out from the Forest, and found a wide sweep of
grass welling up before them. The river, now small and swift, was leaping
merrily down to meet them, glinting here and there in the light of the stars,
which were already shining in the sky.
The grass under
their feet was smooth and short, as if it had been mown or shaven. The eaves of
the Forest behind were clipped, and trim as a hedge. The path was now plain
before them, well-tended and bordered with stone. It wound up on to the top of a
grassy knoll, now grey under the pale starry night; and there, still high above
them on a further slope, they saw the twinkling lights of a house. Down again
the path went, and then up again, up a long smooth hillside of turf, towards the
light. Suddenly a wide yellow beam flowed out brightly from a door that was
opened. There was Tom Bombadil’s house before them, up, down, under hill. Behind
it a steep shoulder of the land lay grey and bare, and beyond that the dark
shapes of the Barrow-downs stalked away into the eastern
night.
They all hurried forward, hobbits and ponies.
Already half their weariness and all their fears had fallen from them.
Hey!
Come merry dol! rolled out the song to greet them.
Hey! Come derry dol! Hop along, my hearties!
Hobbits!
Ponies all! We are fond of parties.
Now let the fun begin! Let us sing
together!
Then another clear voice,
as young and as ancient as Spring, like the song of a glad water flowing down
into the night from a bright morning in the hills, came falling like silver to
meet them:
Now let the song begin! Let us sing together
Of sun, stars,
moon and mist, rain and cloudy weather,
Light on the budding leaf, dew on
the feather,
Wind on the open hill, bells on the heather,
Reeds by the
shady pool, lilies on the water:
Old Tom Bombadil and the
River-daughter!
And with that song
the hobbits stood upon the threshold, and a golden light was all about
them.
Chapter 7
In the House of Tom
Bombadil
The four hobbits stepped over the wide stone
threshold, and stood still, blinking. They were in a long low room, filled with
the light of lamps swinging from the beams of the roof; and on the table of dark
polished wood stood many candles, tall and yellow, burning
brightly.
In a chair, at the far side of the room facing
the outer door, sat a woman. Her long yellow hair rippled down her shoulders;
her gown was green, green as young reeds, shot with silver like beads of dew;
and her belt was of gold, shaped like a chain of flag-lilies set with the
pale-blue eyes of forget-me-nots. About her feet in wide vessels of green and
brown earthenware, white water-lilies were floating, so that she seemed to be
enthroned in the midst of a pool.
‘Enter, good guests!’ she
said, and as she spoke they knew that it was her clear voice they had heard
singing. They came a few timid steps further into the room, and began to bow
low, feeling strangely surprised and awkward, like folk that, knocking at a
cottage door to beg for a drink of water, have been answered by a fair young
elf-queen clad in living flowers. But before they could say anything, she sprang
lightly up and over the lily-bowls, and ran laughing towards them; and as she
ran her gown rustled softly like the wind in the flowering borders of a
river.
‘Come dear folk!’ she said, taking Frodo by the
hand. ‘Laugh and be merry! I am Goldberry, daughter of the River.’ Then lightly
she passed them and closing the door she turned her back to it, with her white
arms spread out across it. ‘Let us shut out the night!’ she said. ‘For you are
still afraid, perhaps, of mist and tree-shadows and deep water, and untame
things. Fear nothing! For tonight you are under the roof of Tom
Bombadil.’
The hobbits looked at her in wonder; and she
looked at each of them and smiled. ‘Fair lady Goldberry!’ said Frodo at last,
feeling his heart moved with a joy that he did not understand. He stood as he
had at times stood enchanted by fair elven-voices; but the spell that was now
laid upon him was different: less keen and lofty was the delight, but deeper and
nearer to mortal heart; marvellous and yet not strange. ‘Fair lady Goldberry!’
he said again. ‘Now the joy that was hidden in the songs we heard is made plain
to me.
O slender as a willow-wand! O clearer than clear water!
O
reed by the living pool! Fair River-daughter!
O spring-time and
summer-time, and spring again after!
O wind on the waterfall, and the
leaves’ laughter!’
Suddenly he
stopped and stammered, overcome with surprise to hear himself saying such
things. But Goldberry laughed.
‘Welcome!’ she said. ‘I had
not heard that folk of the Shire were so sweet-tongued. But I see you are an
elf-friend; the light in your eyes and the ring in your voice tells it. This is
a merry meeting! Sit now, and wait for the Master of the house! He will not be
long. He is tending your tired beasts.’
The hobbits sat
down gladly in low rush-seated chairs, while Goldberry busied herself about the
table; and their eyes followed her, for the slender grace of her movement filled
them with quiet delight. From somewhere behind the house came the sound of
singing. Every now and again they caught, among many a
derry dol and a
merry dol and a
ring a ding dillo the repeated words:
Old Tom Bombadil is a merry fellow;
Bright blue his jacket
is, and his boots are yellow.
‘Fair
lady!’ said Frodo again after a while. ‘Tell me, if my asking does not seem
foolish, who is Tom Bombadil?’
‘He is,’ said Goldberry,
staying her swift movements and smiling.
Frodo looked at
her questioningly. ‘He is, as you have seen him,’ she said in answer to his
look. ‘He is the Master of wood, water, and hill.’
‘Then
all this strange land belongs to him?’
‘No indeed!’ she
answered, and her smile faded. ‘That would indeed be a burden,’ she added in a
low voice, as if to herself. ‘The trees and the grasses and all things growing
or living in the land belong each to themselves. Tom Bombadil is the Master. No
one has ever caught old Tom walking in the forest, wading in the water, leaping
on the hill-tops under light and shadow. He has no fear. Tom Bombadil is
master.’
A door opened and in came Tom Bombadil. He had now
no hat and his thick brown hair was crowned with autumn leaves. He laughed, and
going to Goldberry, took her hand.
‘Here’s my pretty lady!’
he said, bowing to the hobbits. ‘Here’s my Goldberry clothed all in silver-green
with flowers in her girdle! Is the table laden? I see yellow cream and
honeycomb, and white bread, and butter; milk, cheese, and green herbs and ripe
berries gathered. Is that enough for us? Is the supper
ready?’
‘It is,’ said Goldberry; ‘but the guests perhaps
are not?’
Tom clapped his hands and cried: ‘Tom, Tom! your
guests are tired, and you had near forgotten! Come now, my merry friends, and
Tom will refresh you! You shall clean grimy hands, and wash your weary faces;
cast off your muddy cloaks and comb out your tangles!’
He
opened the door, and they followed him down a short passage and round a sharp
turn. They came to a low room with a sloping roof (a penthouse, it seemed, built
on to the north end of the house). Its walls were of clean stone, but they were
mostly covered with green hanging mats and yellow curtains. The floor was
flagged, and strewn with fresh green rushes. There were four deep mattresses,
each piled with white blankets, laid on the floor along one side. Against the
opposite wall was a long bench laden with wide earthenware basins, and beside it
stood brown ewers filled with water, some cold, some steaming hot. There were
soft green slippers set ready beside each bed.
Before long,
washed and refreshed, the hobbits were seated at the table, two on each side,
while at either end sat Goldberry and the Master. It was a long and merry meal.
Though the hobbits ate, as only famished hobbits can eat, there was no lack. The
drink in their drinking-bowls seemed to be clear cold water, yet it went to
their hearts like wine and set free their voices. The guests became suddenly
aware that they were singing merrily, as if it was easier and more natural than
talking.
At last Tom and Goldberry rose and cleared the
table swiftly. The guests were commanded to sit quiet, and were set in chairs,
each with a footstool to his tired feet. There was a fire in the wide hearth
before them, and it was burning with a sweet smell, as if it were built of
apple-wood. When everything was set in order, all the lights in the room were
put out, except one lamp and a pair of candles at each end of the chimney-shelf.
Then Goldberry came and stood before them, holding a candle; and she wished them
each a good night and deep sleep.
‘Have peace now,’ she
said, ‘until the morning! Heed no nightly noises! For nothing passes door and
window here save moonlight and starlight and the wind off the hill-top. Good
night!’ She passed out of the room with a glimmer and a rustle. The sound of her
footsteps was like a stream falling gently away downhill over cool stones in the
quiet of night.
Tom sat on a while beside them in silence,
while each of them tried to muster the courage to ask one of the many questions
he had meant to ask at supper. Sleep gathered on their eyelids. At last Frodo
spoke:
‘Did you hear me calling, Master, or was it just
chance that brought you at that moment?’
Tom stirred like a
man shaken out of a pleasant dream. ‘Eh, what?’ said he. ‘Did I hear you
calling? Nay, I did not hear: I was busy singing. Just chance brought me then,
if chance you call it. It was no plan of mine, though I was waiting for you. We
heard news of you, and learned that you were wandering. We guessed you’d come
ere long down to the water: all paths lead that way, down to Withywindle. Old
grey Willow-man, he’s a mighty singer; and it’s hard for little folk to escape
his cunning mazes. But Tom had an errand there, that he dared not hinder.’ Tom
nodded as if sleep was taking him again; but he went on in a soft singing
voice:
I had an errand there: gathering water-lilies,
green leaves
and lilies white to please my pretty lady,
the last ere the year’s end to
keep them from the winter,
to flower by her pretty feet till the snows are
melted.
Each year at summer’s end I go to find them for her,
in a wide
pool, deep and clear, far down Withywindle;
there they open first in spring
and there they linger latest.
By that pool long ago I found the
River-daughter,
fair young Goldberry sitting in the rushes.
Sweet was
her singing then, and her heart was
beating!
He opened his eyes and
looked at them with a sudden glint of blue:
And that proved well for you – for now I shall no longer
go
down deep again along the forest-water,
not while the year is old. Nor
shall I be passing
Old Man Willow’s house this side of spring-time,
not
till the merry spring, when the River-daughter
dances down the withy-path
to bathe in the water.
He fell
silent again; but Frodo could not help asking one more question: the one he most
desired to have answered. ‘Tell us, Master,’ he said, ‘about the Willow-man.
What is he? I have never heard of him before.’
‘No, don’t!’
said Merry and Pippin together, sitting suddenly upright. ‘Not now! Not until
the morning!’
‘That is right!’ said the old man. ‘Now is
the time for resting. Some things are ill to hear when the world’s in shadow.
Sleep till the morning-light, rest on the pillow! Heed no nightly noise! Fear no
grey willow!’ And with that he took down the lamp and blew it out, and grasping
a candle in either hand he led them out of the room.
Their
mattresses and pillows were soft as down, and the blankets were of white wool.
They had hardly laid themselves on the deep beds and drawn the light covers over
them before they were asleep.
In the dead night, Frodo lay
in a dream without light. Then he saw the young moon rising; under its thin
light there loomed before him a black wall of rock, pierced by a dark arch like
a great gate. It seemed to Frodo that he was lifted up, and passing over he saw
that the rock-wall was a circle of hills, and that within it was a plain, and in
the midst of the plain stood a pinnacle of stone, like a vast tower but not made
by hands. On its top stood the figure of a man. The moon as it rose seemed to
hang for a moment above his head and glistened in his white hair as the wind
stirred it. Up from the dark plain below came the crying of fell voices, and the
howling of many wolves. Suddenly a shadow, like the shape of great wings, passed
across the moon. The figure lifted his arms and a light flashed from the staff
that he wielded. A mighty eagle swept down and bore him away. The voices wailed
and the wolves yammered. There was a noise like a strong wind blowing, and on it
was borne the sound of hoofs, galloping, galloping, galloping from the East.
‘Black Riders!’ thought Frodo as he wakened, with the sound of the hoofs still
echoing in his mind. He wondered if he would ever again have the courage to
leave the safety of these stone walls. He lay motionless, still listening; but
all was now silent, and at last he turned and fell asleep again or wandered into
some other unremembered dream.
At his side Pippin lay
dreaming pleasantly; but a change came over his dreams and he turned and
groaned. Suddenly he woke, or thought he had waked, and yet still heard in the
darkness the sound that had disturbed his dream:
tip-tap, squeak; the
noise was like branches fretting in the wind, twig-fingers scraping wall and
window:
creak, creak, creak. He wondered if there were willow-trees close
to the house; and then suddenly he had a dreadful feeling that he was not in an
ordinary house at all, but inside the willow and listening to that horrible dry
creaking voice laughing at him again. He sat up, and felt the soft pillows yield
to his hands, and he lay down again relieved. He seemed to hear the echo of
words in his ears: ‘Fear nothing! Have peace until the morning! Heed no nightly
noises!’ Then he went to sleep again.
It was the sound of
water that Merry heard falling into his quiet sleep: water streaming down
gently, and then spreading, spreading irresistibly all round the house into a
dark shoreless pool. It gurgled under the walls, and was rising slowly but
surely. ‘I shall be drowned!’ he thought. It will find its way in, and then I
shall drown.’ He felt that he was lying in a soft slimy bog, and springing up he
set his fool on the corner of a cold hard flagstone. Then he remembered where he
was and lay down again. He seemed to hear or remember hearing: ‘Nothing passes
doors or windows save moonlight and starlight and the wind off the hill-top.’ A
little breath of sweet air moved the curtain. He breathed deep and fell asleep
again.
As far as he could remember, Sam slept through the
night in deep content, if logs are contented.
They woke up,
all four at once, in the morning light. Tom was moving about the room whistling
like a starling. When he heard them stir he clapped his hands, and cried: ‘Hey!
Come merry dol! derry dol! My hearties!’ He drew back the yellow curtains, and
the hobbits saw that these had covered the windows, at either end of the room,
one looking east and the other looking west.
They leapt up
refreshed. Frodo ran to the eastern window, and found himself looking into a
kitchen-garden grey with dew. He had half expected to see turf right up to the
walls, turf all pocked with hoof-prints. Actually his view was screened by a
tall line of beans on poles; but above and far beyond them the grey top of the
hill loomed up against the sunrise. It was a pale morning: in the East, behind
long clouds like lines of soiled wool stained red at the edges, lay glimmering
deeps of yellow. The sky spoke of rain to come; but the light was broadening
quickly, and the red flowers on the beans began to glow against the wet green
leaves.
Pippin looked out of the western window, down into
a pool of mist. The Forest was hidden under a fog. It was like looking down on
to a sloping cloud-roof from above. There was a fold or channel where the mist
was broken into many plumes and billows; the valley of the Withywindle. The
stream ran down the hill on the left and vanished into the white shadows. Near
at hand was a flower-garden and a clipped hedge silver-netted, and beyond that
grey shaven grass pale with dew-drops. There was no willow-tree to be
seen.
‘Good morning, merry friends!’ cried Tom, opening the
eastern window wide. A cool air flowed in; it had a rainy smell. ‘Sun won’t show
her face much today. I’m thinking. I have been walking wide, leaping on the
hilltops, since the grey dawn began, nosing wind and weather, wet grass
underfoot, wet sky above me. I wakened Goldberry singing under window; but
nought wakes hobbit-folk in the early morning. In the night little folk wake up
in the darkness, and sleep after light has come! Ring a ding dillo! Wake now, my
merry friends! Forget the nightly noises! Ring a ding dillo del! derry del, my
hearties! If you come soon you’ll find breakfast on the table. If you come late
you’ll get grass and rain-water!’
Needless to say – not
that Tom’s threat sounded very serious – the hobbits came soon, and left the
table late and only when it was beginning lo look rather empty. Neither Tom nor
Goldberry were there. Tom could be heard about the house, clattering in the
kitchen, and up and down the stairs, and singing here and there outside. The
room looked westward over the mist-clouded valley, and the window was open.
Water dripped down from the thatched eaves above. Before they had finished
breakfast the clouds had joined into an unbroken roof, and a straight grey rain
came softly and steadily down. Behind its deep curtain the Forest was completely
veiled.
As they looked out of the window there came falling
gently as if it was flowing down the rain out of the sky, the clear voice of
Goldberry singing up above them. They could hear few words, but it seemed plain
to them that the song was a rain-song, as sweet as showers on dry hills, that
told the tale of a river from the spring in the highlands to the Sea far below.
The hobbits listened with delight; and Frodo was glad in his heart, and blessed
the kindly weather, because it delayed them from departing. The thought of going
had been heavy upon him from the moment he awoke; but he guessed now that they
would not go further that day.
The upper wind settled in
the West and deeper and wetter clouds rolled up to spill their laden rain on the
bare heads of the Downs. Nothing could be seen all round the house but falling
water. Frodo stood near the open door and watched the white chalky path turn
into a little river of milk and go bubbling away down into the valley. Tom
Bombadil came trotting round the corner of the house, waving his arms as if he
was warding off the rain – and indeed when he sprang over the threshold he
seemed quite dry, except for his boots. These he took off and put in the
chimney-corner. Then he sat in the largest chair and called the hobbits to
gather round him.
‘This is Goldberry’s washing day,’ he
said, ‘and her autumn-cleaning. Too wet for hobbit-folk – let them rest while
they are able! It’s a good day for long tales, for questions and for answers, so
Tom will start the talking.’
He then told them many
remarkable stories, sometimes half as if speaking to himself, sometimes looking
at them suddenly with a bright blue eye under his deep brows. Often his voice
would turn to song, and he would get out of his chair and dance about. He told
them tales of bees and flowers, the ways of trees, and the strange creatures of
the Forest, about the evil things and good things, things friendly and things
unfriendly, cruel things and kind things, and secrets hidden under
brambles.
As they listened, they began to understand the
lives of the Forest, apart from themselves, indeed to feel themselves as the
strangers where all other things were at home. Moving constantly in and out of
his talk was Old Man Willow, and Frodo learned now enough to content him, indeed
more than enough, for it was not comfortable lore. Tom’s words laid bare the
hearts of trees and their thoughts, which were often dark and strange, and
filled with a hatred of things that go free upon the earth, gnawing, biting,
breaking, hacking, burning: destroyers and usurpers. It was not called the Old
Forest without reason, for it was indeed ancient, a survivor of vast forgotten
woods; and in it there lived yet, ageing no quicker than the hills, the fathers
of the fathers of trees, remembering times when they were lords. The countless
years had filled them with pride and rooted wisdom, and with malice. But none
were more dangerous than the Great Willow: his heart was rotten, but his
strength was green; and he was cunning, and a master of winds, and his song and
thought ran through the woods on both sides of the river. His grey thirsty
spirit drew power out of the earth and spread like fine root-threads in the
ground, and invisible twig-fingers in the air, till it had under its dominion
nearly all the trees of the Forest from the Hedge to the
Downs.
Suddenly Tom’s talk left the woods and went leaping
up the young stream, over bubbling waterfalls, over pebbles and worn rocks, and
among small flowers in close grass and wet crannies, wandering at last up on to
the Downs. They heard of the Great Barrows, and the green mounds, and the
stone-rings upon the hills and in the hollows among the hills. Sheep were
bleating in flocks. Green walls and white walls rose. There were fortresses on
the heights. Kings of little kingdoms fought together, and the young Sun shone
like fire on the red metal of their new and greedy swords. There was victory and
defeat; and towers fell, fortresses were burned, and flames went up into the
sky. Gold was piled on the biers of dead kings and queens; and mounds covered
them, and the stone doors were shut; and the grass grew over all. Sheep walked
for a while biting the grass, but soon the hills were empty again. A shadow came
out of dark places far away, and the bones were stirred in the mounds.
Barrow-wights walked in the hollow places with a clink of rings on cold fingers,
and gold chains in the wind.’ Stone rings grinned out of the ground like broken
teeth in the moonlight.
The hobbits shuddered. Even in the
Shire the rumour of the Barrow-wights of the Barrow-downs beyond the Forest had
been heard. But it was not a tale that any hobbit liked to listen to, even by a
comfortable fireside far away. These four now suddenly remembered what the joy
of this house had driven from their minds: the house of Tom Bombadil nestled
under the very shoulder of those dreaded hills. They lost the thread of his tale
and shifted uneasily, looking aside at one another.
When
they caught his words again they found that he had now wandered into strange
regions beyond their memory and beyond their waking thought, into times when the
world was wider, and the seas flowed straight to the western Shore; and still on
and back Tom went singing out into ancient starlight, when only the Elf-sires
were awake. Then suddenly he stopped, and they saw that he nodded as if he was
falling asleep. The hobbits sat still before him, enchanted; and it seemed as
if, under the spell of his words, the wind had gone, and the clouds had dried
up, and the day had been withdrawn, and darkness had come from East and West,
and all the sky was filled with the light of white
stars.
Whether the morning and evening of one day or of
many days had passed Frodo could not tell. He did not feel either hungry or
tired, only filled with wonder. The stars shone through the window and the
silence of the heavens seemed to be round him. He spoke at last out of his
wonder and a sudden fear of that silence:
‘Who are you,
Master?’ he asked.
‘Eh, what?’ said Tom sitting up, and his
eyes glinting in the gloom. ‘Don’t you know my name yet? That’s the only answer.
Tell me, who are you, alone, yourself and nameless? But you are young and I am
old. Eldest, that’s what I am. Mark my words, my friends: Tom was here before
the river and the trees; Tom remembers the first raindrop and the first acorn.
He made paths before the Big People, and saw the little People arriving. He was
here before the Kings and the graves and the Barrow-wights. When the Elves
passed westward, Tom was here already, before the seas were bent. He knew the
dark under the stars when it was fearless – before the Dark Lord came from
Outside.’
A shadow seemed to pass by the window, and the
hobbits glanced hastily through the panes. When they turned again, Goldberry
stood in the door behind, framed in light. She held a candle, shielding its
flame from the draught with her hand; and the light flowed through it, like
sunlight through a white shell.
‘The rain has ended,’ she
said; ‘and new waters are running downhill, under the stars. Let us now laugh
and be glad!’
‘And let us have food and drink!’ cried Tom.
‘Long tales are thirsty. And long listening’s hungry work, morning, noon, and
evening!’ With that he jumped out of his chair, and with a bound took a candle
from the chimney-shelf and lit it in the flame that Goldberry held; then he
danced about the table. Suddenly he hopped through the door and
disappeared.
Quickly he returned, bearing a large and laden
tray. Then Tom and Goldberry set the table; and the hobbits sat half in wonder
and half in laughter: so fair was the grace of Goldberry and so merry and odd
the caperings of Tom. Yet in some fashion they seemed to weave a single dance,
neither hindering the other, in and out of the room, and round about the table;
and with great speed food and vessels and lights were set in order. The boards
blazed with candles, white and yellow. Tom bowed to his guests. ‘Supper is
ready,’ said Goldberry; and now the hobbits saw that she was clothed all in
silver with a white girdle, and her shoes were like fishes’ mail. But Tom was
all in clean blue, blue as rain-washed forget-me-nots, and he had green
stockings.
It was a supper even better than before. The
hobbits under the spell of Tom’s words may have missed one meal or many, but
when the food was before them it seemed at least a week since they had eaten.
They did not sing or even speak much for a while, and paid close attention to
business. But after a time their hearts and spirit rose high again, and their
voices rang out in mirth and laughter.
After they had
eaten, Goldberry sang many songs for them, songs that began merrily in the hills
and fell softly down into silence; and in the silences they saw in their minds
pools and waters wider than any they had known, and looking into them they saw
the sky below them and the stars like jewels in the depths. Then once more she
wished them each good night and left them by the fireside. But Tom now seemed
wide awake and plied them with questions.
He appeared
already to know much about them and all their families, and indeed to know much
of all the history and doings of the Shire down from days hardly remembered
among the hobbits themselves. It no longer surprised them; but he made no secret
that he owed his recent knowledge largely to Farmer Maggot, whom he seemed to
regard as a person of more importance than they had imagined. ‘There’s earth
under his old feet, and clay on his fingers; wisdom in his bones, and both his
eyes are open,’ said Tom. It was also clear that Tom had dealings with the
Elves, and it seemed that in some fashion, news had reached him from Gildor
concerning the flight of Frodo.
Indeed so much did Tom
know, and so cunning was his questioning, that Frodo found himself telling him
more about Bilbo and his own hopes and fears than he had told before even to
Gandalf. Tom wagged his head up and down, and there was a glint in his eyes when
he heard of the Riders.
‘Show me the precious Ring!’ he
said suddenly in the midst of the story: and Frodo, to his own astonishment,
drew out the chain from his pocket, and unfastening the Ring handed it at once
to Tom.
It seemed to grow larger as it lay for a moment on
his big brown-skinned hand. Then suddenly he put it to his eye and laughed. For
a second the hobbits had a vision, both comical and alarming, of his bright blue
eye gleaming through a circle of gold. Then Tom put the Ring round the end of
his little finger and held it up to the candlelight. For a moment the hobbits
noticed nothing strange about this. Then they gasped. There was no sign of Tom
disappearing!
Tom laughed again, and then he spun the Ring
in the air – and it vanished with a flash. Frodo gave a cry – and Tom leaned
forward and handed it back to him with a smile.
Frodo
looked at it closely, and rather suspiciously (like one who has lent a trinket
to a juggler). It was the same Ring, or looked the same and weighed the same:
for that Ring had always seemed to Frodo to weigh strangely heavy in the hand.
But something prompted him to make sure. He was perhaps a trifle annoyed with
Tom for seeming to make so light of what even Gandalf thought so perilously
important. He waited for an opportunity, when the talk was going again, and Tom
was telling an absurd story about badgers and their queer ways – then he slipped
the Ring on.
Merry turned towards him to say something and
gave a start, and checked an exclamation. Frodo was delighted (in a way): it was
his own ring all right, for Merry was staring blankly at his chair, and
obviously could not see him. He got up and crept quietly away from the fireside
towards the outer door.
‘Hey there!’ cried Tom, glancing
towards him with a most seeing look in his shining eyes. ‘Hey! Come Frodo,
there! Where be you a-going? Old Tom Bombadil’s not as blind as that yet. Take
off your golden ring! Your hand’s more fair without it. Come back! Leave your
game and sit down beside me! We must talk a while more, and think about the
morning. Tom must teach the right road, and keep your feet from
wandering.’
Frodo laughed (trying to feel pleased), and
taking off the Ring he came and sat down again. Tom now told them that he
reckoned the Sun would shine tomorrow, and it would be a glad morning, and
setting out would be hopeful. But they would do well to start early; for weather
in that country was a thing that even Tom could not be sure of for long, and it
would change sometimes quicker than he could change his jacket. ‘I am no
weather-master,’ he said; ‘nor is aught that goes on two
legs.’
By his advice they decided to make nearly due North
from his house, over the western and lower slopes of the Downs: they might hope
in that way to strike the East Road in a day’s journey, and avoid the Barrows.
He told them not to be afraid – but to mind their own
business.
‘Keep to the green grass. Don’t you go a-meddling
with old stone or cold Wights or prying in their houses, unless you be strong
folk with hearts that never falter!’ He said this more than once; and he advised
them to pass barrows by on the west-side, if they chanced to stray near one.
Then he taught them a rhyme to sing, if they should by ill-luck fall into any
danger or difficulty the next day.
Ho! Tom Bombadil, Tom Bombadillo!
By water, wood and hill,
by the reed and willow,
By fire, sun and moon, harken now and hear
us!
Come, Tom Bombadil, for our need is near
us!
When they had sung this
altogether after him, he clapped them each on the shoulder with a laugh, and
taking candles led them back to their bedroom.
Chapter 8
Fog on the
Barrow-Downs
That night they heard no noises. But either in his dreams
or out of them, he could not tell which, Frodo heard a sweet singing running in
his mind; a song that seemed to come like a pale light behind a grey
rain-curtain, and growing stronger to turn the veil all to glass and silver,
until at last it was rolled back, and a far green country opened before him
under a swift sunrise.
The vision melted into waking; and
there was Tom whistling like a tree-full of birds; and the sun was already
slanting down the hill and through the open window. Outside everything was green
and pale gold.
After breakfast, which they again ate alone,
they made ready to say farewell, as nearly heavy of heart as was possible on
such a morning: cool, bright, and clean under a washed autumn sky of thin blue.
The air came fresh from the North-west. Their quiet ponies were almost frisky,
sniffing and moving restlessly. Tom came out of the house and waved his hat and
danced upon the doorstep, bidding the hobbits to get up and be off and go with
good speed.
They rode off along a path that wound away from
behind the house, and went slanting up towards the north end of the hill-brow
under which it sheltered. They had just dismounted to lead their ponies up the
last steep slope, when suddenly Frodo stopped.
'Goldberry!'
he cried. 'My fair lady, clad all in silver green! We have never said farewell
to her, nor seen her since the evening!' He was so distressed that he turned
back; but at that moment a clear call came rippling down. There on the hill-brow
she stood beckoning to them: her hair was flying loose, and as it caught the sun
it shone and shimmered. A light like the glint of water on dewy grass flashed
from under her feet as she danced.
They hastened up the
last slope, and stood breathless beside her. They bowed, but with a wave of her
arm she bade them look round; and they looked out from the hill-top over lands
under the morning. It was now as clear and far-seen as it had been veiled and
misty when they stood upon the knoll in the Forest, which could now be seen
rising pale and green out of the dark trees in the West. In that direction the
land rose in wooded ridges, green, yellow, russet under the sun, beyond which
lay hidden the valley of the Brandywine. To the South, over the line of the
Withywindle, there was a distant glint like pale glass where the Brandywine
River made a great loop in the lowlands and flowed away out of the knowledge of
the hobbits. Northward beyond the dwindling downs the land ran away in flats and
swellings of grey and green and pale earth-colours, until it faded into a
featureless and shadowy distance. Eastward the Barrow-downs rose, ridge behind
ridge into the morning, and vanished out of eyesight into a guess: it was no
more than a guess of blue and a remote white glimmer blending with the hem of
the sky, but it spoke to them, out of memory and old tales, of the high and
distant mountains.
They took a deep draught of the air, and
felt that a skip and a few stout strides would bear them wherever they wished.
It seemed fainthearted to go jogging aside over the crumpled skirts of the downs
towards the Road, when they should be leaping, as lusty as Tom, over the
stepping stones of the hills straight towards the
Mountains.
Goldberry spoke to them and recalled their eyes
and thoughts. 'Speed now, fair guests!' she said. 'And hold to your purpose!
North with the wind in the left eye and a blessing on your footsteps! Make haste
while the Sun shines!' And to Frodo she said: 'Farewell, Elf-friend, it was a
merry meeting!'
But Frodo found no words to answer. He
bowed low, and mounted his pony, and followed by his friends jogged slowly down
the gentle slope behind the hill. Tom Bombadil's house and the valley, and the
Forest were lost to view. The air grew warmer between the green walls of
hillside and hillside, and the scent of turf rose strong and sweet as they
breathed. Turning back, when they reached the bottom of the green hollow, they
saw Goldberry, now small and slender like a sunlit flower against the sky: she
was standing still watching them, and her hands were stretched out towards them.
As they looked she gave a clear call, and lifting up her hand she turned and
vanished behind the hill.
Their way wound along the floor
of the hollow, and round the green feet of a steep hill into another deeper and
broader valley, and then over the shoulder of further hills, and down their long
limbs, and up their smooth sides again, up on to new hill-tops and down into new
valleys. There was no tree nor any visible water: it was a country of grass and
short springy turf, silent except for the whisper of the air over the edges of
the land, and high lonely cries of strange birds. As they journeyed the sun
mounted, and grew hot. Each time they climbed a ridge the breeze seemed to have
grown less. When they caught a glimpse of the country westward the distant
Forest seemed to be smoking, as if the fallen rain was steaming up again from
leaf and root and mould. A shadow now lay round the edge of sight, a dark haze
above which the upper sky was like a blue cap, hot and
heavy.
About mid-day they came to a hill whose top was wide
and flattened, like a shallow saucer with a green mounded rim. Inside there was
no air stirring, and the sky seemed near their heads. They rode across and
looked northwards. Then their hearts rose, for it seemed plain that they had
come further already than they had expected. Certainly the distances had now all
become hazy and deceptive, but there could be no doubt that the Downs were
coming to an end. A long valley lay below them winding away northwards, until it
came to an opening between two steep shoulders. Beyond, there seemed to be no
more hills. Due north they faintly glimpsed a long dark line. That is a line of
trees,' said Merry, 'and that must mark the Road. All along it for many leagues
east of the Bridge there are trees growing. Some say they were planted in the
old days.'
'Splendid!' said Frodo. ‘If we make as good
going this afternoon as we have done this morning, we shall have left the Downs
before the Sun sets and be jogging on in search of a camping place.' But even as
he spoke he turned his glance eastwards, and he saw that on that side the hills
were higher and looked down upon them; and all those hills were crowned with
green mounds, and on some were standing stones, pointing upwards like jagged
teeth out of green gums.
That view was somehow disquieting;
so they turned from the sight and went down into the hollow circle. In the midst
of it there stood a single stone, standing tall under the sun above, and at this
hour casting no shadow. It was shapeless and yet significant: like a landmark,
or a guarding finger, or more like a warning. But they were now hungry, and the
sun was still at the fearless noon; so they set their backs against the east
side of the stone. It was cool, as if the sun had had no power to warm it; but
at that time this seemed pleasant. There they took food and drink, and made as
good a noon-meal under the open sky as anyone could wish; for the food came from
'down under Hill'. Tom had provided them with plenty for the comfort of the day.
Their ponies unburdened strayed upon the grass.
Riding over
the hills, and eating their fill, the warm sun and the scent of turf, lying a
little too long, stretching out their legs and looking at the sky above their
noses: these things are, perhaps, enough to explain what happened. However, that
may be: they woke suddenly and uncomfortably from a sleep they had never meant
to take. The standing stone was cold, and it cast a long pale shadow that
stretched eastward over them. The sun, a pale and watery yellow, was gleaming
through the mist just above the west wall of the hollow in which they lay;
north, south, and east, beyond the wall the fog was thick, cold and white. The
air was silent, heavy and chill. Their ponies were standing crowded together
with their heads down.
The hobbits sprang to their feet in
alarm, and ran to the western rim. They found that they were upon an island in
the fog. Even as they looked out in dismay towards the setting sun, it sank
before their eyes into a white sea, and a cold grey shadow sprang up in the East
behind. The fog rolled up to the walls and rose above them, and as it mounted it
bent over their heads until it became a roof: they were shut in a hall of mist
whose central pillar was the standing stone.
They felt as
if a trap was closing about them; but they did not quite lose heart. They still
remembered the hopeful view they had had of the line of the Road ahead, and they
still knew in which direction it lay. In any case, they now had so great a
dislike for that hollow place about the stone that no thought of remaining there
was in their minds. They packed up as quickly as their chilled fingers would
work.
Soon they were leading their ponies in single file
over the rim and down the long northward slope of the hill, down into a foggy
sea. As they went down the mist became colder and damper, and their hair hung
lank and dripping on their foreheads. When they reached the bottom it was so
cold that they halted and got out cloaks and hoods, which soon became bedewed
with grey drops. Then, mounting their ponies, they went slowly on again, feeling
their way by the rise and fall of the ground. They were steering, as well as
they could guess, for the gate-like opening at the far northward end of the long
valley which they had seen in the morning. Once they were through the gap, they
had only to keep on in anything like a straight line and they were bound in the
end to strike the Road. Their thoughts did not go beyond that, except for a
vague hope that perhaps away beyond the Downs there might be no
fog.
Their going was very slow. To prevent their getting
separated and wandering in different directions they went in file, with Frodo
leading. Sam was behind him, and after him came Pippin, and then Merry. The
valley seemed to stretch on endlessly. Suddenly Frodo saw a hopeful sign. On
either side ahead a darkness began to loom through the mist; and he guessed that
they were at last approaching the gap in the hills, the north-gate of the
Barrow-downs. If they could pass that, they would be
free.
'Come on! Follow me!' he called back over his
shoulder, and he hurried forward. But his hope soon changed to bewilderment and
alarm. The dark patches grew darker, but they shrank; and suddenly he saw,
towering ominous before him and leaning slightly towards one another like the
pillars of a headless door, two huge standing stones. He could not remember
having seen any sign of these in the valley, when he looked out from the hill in
the morning. He had passed between them almost before he was aware: and even as
he did so darkness seemed to fall round him. His pony reared and snorted, and he
fell off. When he looked back he found that he was alone: the others had not
followed him. 'Sam!' he called. 'Pippin! Merry! Come along! Why don't you keep
up?'
There was no answer. Fear took him, and he ran back
past the stones shouting wildly: 'Sam! Sam! Merry! Pippin!' The pony bolted into
the mist and vanished. From some way off, or so it seemed, he thought he heard a
cry: 'Hoy! Frodo! Hoy!' It was away eastward, on his left as he stood under the
great stones, staring and straining into the gloom. He plunged off in the
direction of the call, and found himself going steeply
uphill.
As he struggled on he called again, and kept on
calling more and more frantically; but he heard no answer for some time, and
then it seemed faint and far ahead and high above him. 'Frodo! Hoy!' came the
thin voices out of the mist: and then a cry that sounded like
help, help!
often repeated, ending with a last
help! that trailed off into a long
wail suddenly cut short. He stumbled forward with all the speed he could towards
the cries; but the light was now gone, and clinging night had closed about him,
so that it was impossible to be sure of any direction. He seemed all the time to
be climbing up and up.
Only the change in the level of the
ground at his feet told him when he at last came to the top of a ridge or hill.
He was weary, sweating and yet chilled. It was wholly
dark.
'Where are you?' he cried out
miserably.
There was no reply. He stood listening. He was
suddenly aware that it was getting very cold, and that up here a wind was
beginning to blow, an icy wind. A change was coming in the weather. The mist was
flowing past him now in shreds and tatters. His breath was smoking, and the
darkness was less near and thick. He looked up and saw with surprise that faint
stars were appearing overhead amid the strands of hurrying cloud and fog. The
wind began to hiss over the grass.
He imagined suddenly
that he caught a muffled cry, and he made towards it; and even as he went
forward the mist was rolled up and thrust aside, and the starry sky was
unveiled. A glance showed him that he was now facing southwards and was on a
round hill-top, which he must have climbed from the north. Out of the east the
biting wind was blowing. To his right there loomed against the westward stars a
dark black shape. A great barrow stood there.
'Where are
you?' he cried again, both angry and afraid.
'Here!' said a
voice, deep and cold, that seemed to come out of the ground. 'I am waiting for
you!'
'No!' said Frodo; but he did not run away. His knees
gave, and he fell on the ground. Nothing happened, and there was no sound.
Trembling he looked up, in time to see a tall dark figure like a shadow against
the stars. It leaned over him. He thought there were two eyes, very cold though
lit with a pale light that seemed to come from some remote distance. Then a grip
stronger and colder than iron seized him. The icy touch froze his bones, and he
remembered no more.
When he came to himself again, for a
moment he could recall nothing except a sense of dread. Then suddenly he knew
that he was imprisoned, caught hopelessly; he was in a barrow. A Barrow-wight
had taken him, and he was probably already under the dreadful spells of the
Barrow-wights about which whispered tales spoke. He dared not move, but lay as
he found himself: flat on his back upon a cold stone with his hands on his
breast.
But though his fear was so great that it seemed to
be part of the very darkness that was round him, he found himself as he lay
thinking about Bilbo Baggins and his stories, of their jogging along together in
the lanes of the Shire and talking about roads and adventures. There is a seed
of courage hidden (often deeply, it is true) in the heart of the fattest and
most timid hobbit, wailing for some final and desperate danger to make it grow.
Frodo was neither very fat nor very timid; indeed, though he did not know it,
Bilbo (and Gandalf) had thought him the best hobbit in the Shire. He thought he
had come to the end of his adventure, and a terrible end, but the thought
hardened him. He found himself stiffening, as if for a final spring; he no
longer felt limp like a helpless prey.
As he lay there,
thinking and getting a hold of himself, he noticed all at once that the darkness
was slowly giving way: a pale greenish light was growing round him. It did not
at first show him what kind of a place he was in, for the light seemed to be
coming out of himself, and from the floor beside him, and had not yet reached
the roof or wall. He turned, and there in the cold glow he saw lying beside him
Sam, Pippin, and Merry. They were on their backs, and their faces looked deathly
pale; and they were clad in white. About them lay many treasures, of gold maybe,
though in that light they looked cold and unlovely. On their heads were
circlets, gold chains were about their waists, and on their fingers were many
rings. Swords lay by their sides, and shields were at their feet. But across
their three necks lay one long naked sword.
Suddenly a song
began: a cold murmur, rising and falling. The voice seemed far away and
immeasurably dreary, sometimes high in the air and thin, sometimes like a low
moan from the ground. Out of the formless stream of sad but horrible sounds,
strings of words would now and again shape themselves: grim, hard, cold words,
heartless and miserable. The night was railing against the morning of which it
was bereaved, and the cold was cursing the warmth for which it hungered. Frodo
was chilled to the marrow. After a while the song became clearer, and with dread
in his heart he perceived that it had changed into an incantation:
Cold be hand and heart and bone,
and cold be sleep under
stone:
never mare to wake on stony bed,
never, till the Sun fails and
the Moon is dead.
In the black wind the stars shall die,
and still on
gold here let them lie,
till the dark lord lifts his hand
over dead sea
and withered land.
He heard behind
his head a creaking and scraping sound. Raising himself on one arm he looked,
and saw now in the pale light that they were in a kind of passage which behind
them turned a corner. Round the corner a long arm was groping, walking on its
fingers towards Sam, who was lying nearest, and towards the hilt of the sword
that lay upon him.
At first Frodo felt as if he had indeed
been turned into stone by the incantation. Then a wild thought of escape came to
him. He wondered if he put on the Ring, whether the Barrow-wight would miss him,
and he might find some way out. He thought of himself running free over the
grass, grieving for Merry, and Sam, and Pippin, but free and alive himself.
Gandalf would admit that there had been nothing else he could
do.
But the courage that had been awakened in him was now
too strong: he could not leave his friends so easily. He wavered, groping in his
pocket, and then fought with himself again; and as he did so the arm crept
nearer. Suddenly resolve hardened in him, and he seized a short sword that lay
beside him, and kneeling he stooped low over the bodies of his companions. With
what strength he had he hewed at the crawling arm near the wrist, and the hand
broke off; but at the same moment the sword splintered up to the hilt. There was
a shriek and the light vanished. In the dark there was a snarling
noise.
Frodo fell forward over Merry, and Merry's face felt
cold. All at once back into his mind, from which it had disappeared with the
first coming of the fog, came the memory of the house down under the Hill, and
of Tom singing. He remembered the rhyme that Tom had taught them. In a small
desperate voice he began:
Ho! Tom Bombadil! and with that name his voice
seemed to grow strong: it had a full and lively sound, and the dark chamber
echoed as if to drum and trumpet.
Ho! Tom Bombadil, Tom Bombadillo!
By water, wood and hill,
by the reed and willow,
By fire, sun and moon, harken now and hear
us!
Come, Tom Bombadil, for our need is near
us!
There was a sudden deep silence,
in which Frodo could hear his heart beating. After a long slow moment he heard
plain, but far away, as if it was coming down through the ground or through
thick walls, an answering voice singing:
Old Tom Bombadil is a merry fellow,
Bright blue his jacket
is, and his boots are yellow.
None has ever caught him yet, for Tom, he is
the master:
His songs are stronger songs, and his feet are
faster.
There was a loud rumbling
sound, as of stones rolling and falling, and suddenly light streamed in, real
light, the plain light of day. A low door-like opening appeared at the end of
the chamber beyond Frodo's feet; and there was Tom's head (hat, feather, and
all) framed against the light of the sun rising red behind him. The light fell
upon the floor, and upon the faces of the three hobbits lying beside Frodo. They
did not stir, but the sickly hue had left them. They looked now as if they were
only very deeply asleep.
Tom stooped, removed his hat, and
came into the dark chamber, singing:
Get out, you old Wight! Vanish in the sunlight!
Shrivel
like the cold mist, like the winds go wailing,
Out into the barren lands
far beyond the mountains!
Come never here again! Leave your barrow
empty!
Lost and forgotten be, darker than the darkness,
Where gates
stand for ever shut, till the world is
mended.
At these words there was a
cry and part of the inner end of the chamber fell in with a crash. Then there
was a long trailing shriek, fading away into an unguessable distance; and after
that silence.
'Come, friend Frodo!' said Tom. 'Let us get
out on to clean grass! You must help me bear
them.'
Together they carried out Merry, Pippin, and Sam. As
Frodo left the barrow for the last time he thought he saw a severed hand
wriggling still, like a wounded spider, in a heap of fallen earth. Tom went back
in again, and there was a sound of much thumping and stamping. When he came out
he was bearing in his arms a great load of treasure: things of gold, silver,
copper, and bronze; many beads and chains and jewelled ornaments. He climbed the
green barrow and laid them all on top in the
sunshine.
There he stood, with his hat in his hand and the
wind in his hair, and looked down upon the three hobbits, that had been laid on
their backs upon the grass at the west side of the mound. Raising his right hand
he said in a clear and commanding voice:
Wake now my merry tads! Wake and hear me calling!
Warm now
be heart and limb! The cold stone is fallen;
Dark door is standing wide;
dead hand is broken.
Night under Night is flown, and the Gate is
open!
To Frodo's great joy the
hobbits stirred, stretched their arms, rubbed their eyes, and then suddenly
sprang up. They looked about in amazement, first at Frodo, and then at Tom
standing large as life on the barrow-top above them; and then at themselves in
their thin white rags, crowned and belted with pale gold, and jingling with
trinkets.
'What in the name of wonder?' began Merry,
feeling the golden circlet that had slipped over one eye. Then he stopped, and a
shadow came over his face, and he closed his eyes. 'Of course, I remember!' he
said. 'The men of Carn Dum came on us at night, and we were worsted. Ah! the
spear in my heart!' He clutched at his breast. 'No! No!' he said, opening his
eyes. 'What am I saying? I have been dreaming. Where did you get to,
Frodo?'
‘I thought that I was lost,' said Frodo; 'but I
don't want to speak of it. Let us think of what we are to do now! Let us go
on!'
'Dressed up like this, sir?' said Sam. 'Where are my
clothes?' He flung his circlet, belt, and rings on the grass, and looked round
helplessly, as if he expected to find his cloak, jacket, and breeches, and other
hobbit-garments lying somewhere to hand.
'You won't find
your clothes again,' said Tom, bounding down from the mound, and laughing as he
danced round them in the sunlight. One would have thought that nothing dangerous
or dreadful had happened; and indeed the horror faded out of their hearts as
they looked at him, and saw the merry glint in his
eyes.
'What do you mean?' asked Pippin, looking at him,
half puzzled and half amused. 'Why not?'
But Tom shook his
head, saying: 'You've found yourselves again, out of the deep water. Clothes are
but little loss, if you escape from drowning. Be glad, my merry friends, and let
the warm sunlight heal now heart and limb! Cast off these cold rags! Run naked
on the grass, while Tom goes a-hunting!'
He sprang away
down hill, whistling and calling. Looking down after him Frodo saw him running
away southwards along the green hollow between their hill and the next, still
whistling and crying:
Hey! now! Come hoy now! Whither do you wander?
Up, down,
near or far, here, there or yonder?
Sharp-ears, Wise-nose, Swish-tail and
Bumpkin,
White-socks my little lad, and old Fatty
Lumpkin!
So he sang, running fast,
tossing up his hat and catching it, until he was hidden by a fold of the ground:
but for some time his
hey now! hoy now! came floating back down the wind,
which had shifted round towards the south.
The air was
growing very warm again. The hobbits ran about for a while on the grass, as he
told them. Then they lay basking in the sun with the delight of those that have
been wafted suddenly from bitter winter to a friendly clime, or of people that,
after being long ill and bedridden, wake one day to find that they are
unexpectedly well and the day is again full of promise.
By
the time that Tom returned they were feeling strong (and hungry). He reappeared,
hat first, over the brow of the hill, and behind him came in an obedient line
six ponies: their own five and one more. The last was plainly old Fatty
Lumpkin: he was larger, stronger, fatter (and older) than their own ponies.
Merry, to whom the others belonged, had not, in fact, given them any such names,
but they answered to the new names that Tom had given them for the rest of their
lives. Tom called them one by one and they climbed over the brow and stood in a
line. Then Tom bowed to the hobbits.
'Here are your ponies,
now!' he said. 'They've more sense (in some ways) than you wandering hobbits
have – more sense in their noses. For they sniff danger ahead which you walk
right into; and if they run to save themselves, then they run the right way. You
must forgive them all; for though their hearts are faithful, to face fear of
Barrow-wights is not what they were made for. See, here they come again,
bringing all their burdens!'
Merry, Sam, and Pippin now
clothed themselves in spare garments from their packs; and they soon felt too
hot, for they were obliged to put on some of the thicker and warmer things that
they had brought against the oncoming of winter.
'Where
does that other old animal, that Fatty Lumpkin, come from?' asked
Frodo.
'He's mine,' said Tom. 'My four-legged friend;
though I seldom ride him, and he wanders often far, free upon the hillsides.
When your ponies stayed with me, they got to know my Lumpkin; and they smelt him
in the night, and quickly ran to meet him. I thought he'd look for them and with
his words of wisdom take all their fear away. But now, my jolly Lumpkin, old
Tom's going to ride. Hey! he's coming with you, just to set you on the road; so
he needs a pony. For you cannot easily talk to hobbits that are riding, when
you're on your own legs trying to trot beside them.'
The
hobbits were delighted to hear this, and thanked Tom many times; but he laughed,
and said that they were so good at losing themselves that he would not feel
happy till he had seen them safe over the borders of his land. ‘I've got things
to do,' he said, 'my making and my singing, my talking and my walking, and my
watching of the country. Tom can't be always near to open doors and
willow-cracks. Tom has his house to mind, and Goldberry is
waiting.'
It was still fairly early by the sun, something
between nine and ten, and the hobbits turned their minds to food. Their last
meal had been lunch beside the standing stone the day before. They breakfasted
now off the remainder of Tom's provisions, meant for their supper, with
additions that Tom had brought with him. It was not a large meal (considering
hobbits and the circumstances), but they felt much better for it. While they
were eating Tom went up to the mound, and looked through the treasures. Most of
these he made into a pile that glistened and sparkled on the grass. He bade them
lie there 'free to all finders, birds, beasts. Elves or Men, and all kindly
creatures'; for so the spell of the mound should be broken and scattered and no
Wight ever come back to it. He chose for himself from the pile a brooch set with
blue stones, many-shaded like flax-flowers or the wings of blue butterflies. He
looked long at it, as if stirred by some memory, shaking his head, and saying at
last:
'Here is a pretty toy for Tom and for his lady! Fair
was she who long ago wore this on her shoulder. Goldberry shall wear it now, and
we will not forget her!'
For each of the hobbits he chose a
dagger, long, leaf-shaped, and keen, of marvellous workmanship, damasked with
serpent-forms in red and gold. They gleamed as he drew them from their black
sheaths, wrought of some strange metal, light and strong, and set with many
fiery stones. Whether by some virtue in these sheaths or because of the spell
that lay on the mound, the blades seemed untouched by time, unrusted, sharp,
glittering in the sun.
'Old knives are long enough as
swords for hobbit-people,' he said. 'Sharp blades are good to have, if
Shire-folk go walking, east, south, or far away into dark and danger.' Then he
told them that these blades were forged many long years ago by Men of
Westernesse: they were foes of the Dark Lord, but they were overcome by the evil
king of Carn Dum in the Land of Angmar.
'Few now remember
them,' Tom murmured, 'yet still some go wandering, sons of forgotten kings
walking in loneliness, guarding from evil things folk that are
heedless.'
The hobbits did not understand his words, but as
he spoke they had a vision as it were of a great expanse of years behind them,
like a vast shadowy plain over which there strode shapes of Men, tall and grim
with bright swords, and last came one with a star on his brow. Then the vision
faded, and they were back in the sunlit world. It was time to start again. They
made ready, packing their bags and lading their ponies. Their new weapons they
hung on their leather belts under their jackets, feeling them very awkward, and
wondering if they would be of any use. Fighting had not before occurred to any
of them as one of the adventures in which their flight would land
them.
At last they set off. They led their ponies down the
hill; and then mounting they trotted quickly along the valley. They looked back
and saw the top of the old mound on the hill, and from it the sunlight on the
gold went up like a yellow flame. Then they turned a shoulder of the Downs and
it was hidden from view.
Though Frodo looked about him on
every side he saw no sign of the great stones standing like a gate, and before
long they came to the northern gap and rode swiftly through, and the land fell
away before them. It was a merry journey with Tom Bombadil trotting gaily beside
them, or before them, on Fatty Lumpkin, who could move much faster than his
girth promised. Tom sang most of the time, but it was chiefly nonsense, or else
perhaps a strange language unknown to the hobbits, an ancient language whose
words were mainly those of wonder and delight.
They went
forward steadily, but they soon saw that the Road was further away than they had
imagined. Even without a fog, their sleep at mid-day would have prevented them
from reaching it until after nightfall on the day before. The dark line they had
seen was not a line of trees but a line of bushes growing on the edge of a deep
dike with a steep wall on the further side. Tom said that it had once been the
boundary of a kingdom, but a very long lime ago. He seemed to remember something
sad about it, and would not say much.
They climbed down and
out of the dike and through a gap in the wall, and then Tom turned due north,
for they had been bearing somewhat to the west. The land was now open and fairly
level, and they quickened their pace, but the sun was already sinking low when
at last they saw a line of tall trees ahead, and they knew that they had come
back to the Road after many unexpected adventures. They galloped their ponies
over the last furlongs, and halted under the long shadows of the trees. They
were on the top of a sloping bank, and the Road, now dim as evening drew on,
wound away below them. At this point it ran nearly from South-west to
North-east, and on their right it fell quickly down into a wide hollow. It was
rutted and bore many signs of the recent heavy rain; there were pools and
pot-holes full of water. They rode down the bank and looked up and down. There
was nothing to be seen.
'Well, here we are again at last!'
said Frodo. 'I suppose we haven't lost more than two days by my short cut
through the Forest! But perhaps the delay will prove useful – it may have put
them off our trail.'
The others looked at him. The shadow
of the fear of the Black Riders came suddenly over them again. Ever since they
had entered the Forest they had thought chiefly of getting back to the Road;
only now when it lay beneath their feet did they remember the danger which
pursued them, and was more than likely to be lying in wait for them upon the
Road itself. They looked anxiously back towards the setting sun, but the Road
was brown and empty.
'Do you think,' asked Pippin
hesitatingly, 'do you think we may be pursued,
tonight?'
'No, I hope not tonight,' answered Tom Bombadil;
'nor perhaps the next day. But do not trust my guess; for I cannot tell for
certain. Out east my knowledge fails. Tom is not master of Riders from the Black
Land far beyond his country.'
All the same the hobbits
wished he was coming with them. They felt that he would know how to deal with
Black Riders, if anyone did. They would soon now be going forward into lands
wholly strange to them, and beyond all but the most vague and distant legends of
the Shire, and in the gathering twilight they longed for home. A deep loneliness
and sense of loss was on them. They stood silent, reluctant to make the final
parting, and only slowly became aware that Tom was wishing them farewell, and
telling them to have good heart and to ride on till dark without
halting.
'Tom will give you good advice, till this day is
over (after that your own luck must go with you and guide you): four miles along
the Road you'll come upon a village, Bree under Bree-hill, with doors looking
westward. There you'll find an old inn that is called
The Prancing Pony.
Barliman Butterbur is the worthy keeper. There you can stay the night, and
afterwards the morning will speed you upon your way. Be bold, but wary! Keep up
your merry hearts, and ride to meet your fortune!'
They
begged him to come at least as far as the inn and drink once more with them; but
he laughed and refused, saying:
Tom's country ends here: he will not pass the borders.
Tom
has his house to mind, and Goldberry is
waiting!
Then he turned, tossed up
his hat, leaped on Lumpkin's back, and rode up over the bank and away singing
into the dusk.
The hobbits climbed up and watched him until
he was out of sight.
‘I am sorry to take leave of Master
Bombadil,' said Sam. 'He's a caution and no mistake. I reckon we may go a good
deal further and see naught better, nor queerer. But I won't deny I'll be glad
to see this
Prancing Pony he spoke of. I hope it'll be like
The Green
Dragon away back home! What sort of folk are they in
Bree?'
‘There are hobbits in Bree,' said Merry, 'as well as
Big Folk. I daresay it will be homelike enough.
The Pony is a good inn by
all accounts. My people ride out there now and again.'
‘It
may be all we could wish,' said Frodo; 'but it is outside the Shire all the
same. Don't make yourselves too much at home! Please remember -all of you – that
the name of Baggins must not be mentioned. I am Mr. Underhill, if any name must
be given.'
They now mounted their ponies and rode off
silently into the evening. Darkness came down quickly, as they plodded slowly
downhill and up again, until at last they saw lights twinkling some distance
ahead.
Before them rose Bree-hill barring the way, a dark
mass against misty stars; and under its western flank nestled a large village.
Towards it they now hurried desiring only to find a fire, and a door between
them and the night.
Chapter 9
At the Sign of The
Prancing Pony
Bree was the chief village of the Bree-land, a small
inhabited region, like an island in the empty lands round about. Besides Bree
itself, there was Staddle on the other side of the hill, Combe in a deep valley
a little further eastward, and Archet on the edge of the Chetwood. Lying round
Bree-hill and the villages was a small country of fields and tamed woodland only
a few miles broad.
The Men of Bree were brown-haired,
broad, and rather short, cheerful and independent: they belonged to nobody but
themselves; but they were more friendly and familiar with Hobbits, Dwarves,
Elves, and other inhabitants of the world about them than was (or is) usual with
Big People. According to their own tales they were the original inhabitants and
were the descendants of the first Men that ever wandered into the West of the
middle-world. Few had survived the turmoils of the Elder Days; but when the
Kings returned again over the Great Sea they had found the Bree-men still there,
and they were still there now, when the memory of the old Kings had faded into
the grass.
In those days no other Men had settled dwellings
so far west, or within a hundred leagues of the Shire. But in the wild lands
beyond Bree there were mysterious wanderers. The Bree-folk called them Rangers,
and knew nothing of their origin. They were taller and darker than the Men of
Bree and were believed to have strange powers of sight and hearing, and to
understand the languages of beasts and birds. They roamed at will southwards,
and eastwards even as far as the Misty Mountains; but they were now few and
rarely seen. When they appeared they brought news from afar, and told strange
forgotten tales which were eagerly listened to; but the Bree-folk did not make
friends of them.
There were also many families of hobbits
in the Bree-land and
they claimed to be the oldest settlement of Hobbits
in the world, one that was founded long before even the Brandywine was crossed
and the Shire colonized. They lived mostly in Staddle though there were some in
Bree itself, especially on the higher slopes of the hill, above the houses of
the Men. The Big Folk and the Little Folk (as they called one another) were on
friendly terms, minding their own affairs in their own ways, but both rightly
regarding themselves as necessary parts of the Bree-folk. Nowhere else in the
world was this peculiar (but excellent) arrangement to be
found.
The Bree-folk, Big and Little, did not themselves
travel much; and the affairs of the four villages were their chief concern.
Occasionally the Hobbits of Bree went as far as Buckland, or the Eastfarthing;
but though their link land was not much further than a day's riding east of the
Brandywine Bridge, the Hobbits of the Shire now seldom visited it. An occasional
Bucklander or adventurous Took would come out to the Inn for a night or two, but
even that was becoming less and less usual. The Shire-hobbits referred to those
of Bree, and to any others that lived beyond the borders, as Outsiders, and took
very little interest in them, considering them dull and uncouth. There were
probably many more Outsiders scattered about in the West of the World in those
days than the people of the Shire imagined. Some, doubtless, were no better than
tramps, ready to dig a hole in any bank and stay only as long as it suited them.
But in the Bree-land, at any rate, the hobbits were decent and prosperous, and
no more rustic than most of their distant relatives Inside. It was not yet
forgotten that there had been a time when there was much coming and going
between the Shire and Bree. There was Bree-blood in the Brandybucks by all
accounts.
The village of Bree had some hundred stone houses
of the Big Folk, mostly above the Road, nestling on the hillside with windows
looking west. On that side, running in more than half a circle from the hill and
back to it, there was a deep dike with a thick hedge on the inner side. Over
this the Road crossed by a causeway; but where it pierced the hedge it was
barred by a great gate. There was another gate in the southern comer where the
Road ran out of the village. The gates were closed at nightfall; but just inside
them were small lodges for the gatekeepers.
Down on the
Road, where it swept to the right to go round the foot of the hill, there was a
large inn. It had been built long ago when the traffic on the roads had been far
greater. For Bree stood at an old meeting of ways; another ancient road crossed
the East Road just outside the dike at the western end of the village, and in
former days Men and other folk of various sorts had travelled much on it.
Strange as News from Bree was still a saying in the Eastfarthing,
descending from those days, when news from North, South, and East could be heard
in the inn, and when the Shire-hobbits used to go more often to hear it. But the
Northern Lands had long been desolate, and the North Road was now seldom used:
it was grass-grown, and the Bree-folk called it the
Greenway.
The Inn of Bree was still there, however, and the
innkeeper was an important person. His house was a meeting place for the idle,
talkative, and inquisitive among the inhabitants, large and small, of the four
villages; and a resort of Rangers and other wanderers, and for such travellers
(mostly dwarves) as still journeyed on the East Road, to and from the
Mountains.
It was dark, and white stars were shining, when
Frodo and his companions came at last to the Greenway-crossing and drew near the
village. They came to the West-gate and found it shut, but at the door of the
lodge beyond it, there was a man sitting. He jumped up and fetched a lantern and
looked over the gate at them in surprise.
'What do you
want, and where do you come from?' he asked gruffly.
'We
are making for the inn here,' answered Frodo. 'We are journeying east and cannot
go further tonight.'
'Hobbits! Four hobbits! And what's
more, out of the Shire by their talk,' said the gatekeeper, softly as if
speaking to himself. He stared at them darkly for a moment, and then slowly
opened the gate and let them ride through.
'We don't often
see Shire-folk riding on the Road at night,' he went on, as they halted a moment
by his door. 'You'll pardon my wondering what business takes you away east of
Bree! What may your names be, might I ask?'
'Our names and
our business are our own, and this does not seem a good place to discuss them,'
said Frodo, not liking the look of the man or the tone of his
voice.
'Your business is your own, no doubt,' said the man;
'but it's my business to ask questions after
nightfall.'
'We are hobbits from Buckland, and we have a
fancy to travel and to stay at the inn here,' put in Merry. 'I am Mr.
Brandybuck. Is that enough for you? The Bree-folk used to be fair-spoken to
travellers, or so I had heard.'
'All right, all right!'
said the man. 'I meant no offence. But you'll find maybe that more folk than old
Harry at the gate will be asking you questions. There's queer folk about. If you
go on to
The Pony, you'll find you're not the only
guests.'
He wished them good night, and they said no more;
but Frodo could see in the lantern-light that the man was still eyeing them
curiously. He was glad to hear the gate clang to behind them, as they rode
forward. He wondered why the man was so suspicious, and whether any one had been
asking for
news of a party of hobbits. Could it have been Gandalf? He
might have arrived, while they were delayed in the Forest and the Downs. But
there was something in the look and the voice of the gatekeeper that made him
uneasy.
The man stared after the hobbits for a moment, and
then he went back to his house. As soon as his back was turned, a dark figure
climbed quickly in over the gate and melted into the shadows of the village
street.
The hobbits rode on up a gentle slope, passing a
few detached houses, and drew up outside the inn. The houses looked large and
strange to them. Sam stared up at the inn with its three storeys and many
windows, and felt his heart sink. He had imagined himself meeting giants taller
than trees, and other creatures even more terrifying, some time or other in the
course of his journey; but at the moment he was finding his first sight of Men
and their tall houses quite enough, indeed too much for the dark end of a tiring
day. He pictured black horses standing all saddled in the shadows of the
inn-yard, and Black Riders peering out of dark upper
windows.
'We surely aren't going to stay here for the
night, are we, sir?' he exclaimed. 'If there are hobbit-folk in these pans, why
don't we look for some that would be willing to take us in? It would be more
homelike.'
'What's wrong with the inn?' said Frodo. 'Tom
Bombadil recommended it. I expect it's homelike enough
inside.'
Even from the outside the inn looked a pleasant
house to familiar eyes. It had a front on the Road, and two wings running back
on land partly cut out of the lower slopes of the hill, so that at the rear the
second-floor windows were level with the ground. There was a wide arch leading
to a courtyard between the two wings, and on the left under the arch there was a
large doorway reached by a few broad steps. The door was open and light streamed
out of it. Above the arch there was a lamp, and beneath it swung a large
signboard: a fat white pony reared up on its hind legs. Over the door was
painted in white letters: THE PRANCING PONY by BARLIMAN BUTTERBUR.
Many of the lower windows showed lights behind thick
curtains.
As they hesitated outside in the gloom, someone
began singing a merry song inside, and many cheerful voices joined loudly in the
chorus. They listened to this encouraging sound for a moment and then got off
their ponies. The song ended and there was a burst of laughter and
clapping.
They led their ponies under the arch, and leaving
them standing in the yard they climbed up the steps. Frodo went forward and
nearly bumped into a short fat man with a bald head and a red face. He had a
white apron on, and was bustling out of one door and in through another,
carrying a tray laden with full mugs.
'Can we—' began
Frodo.
'Half a minute, if you please!' shouted the man over
his shoulder, and vanished into a babel of voices and a cloud of smoke. In a
moment he was out again, wiping his hands on his
apron.
'Good evening, little master!' he said, bending
down. 'What may you be wanting?'
'Beds for four, and
stabling for five ponies, if that can be managed. Are you Mr.
Butterbur?'
'That's right! Barliman is my name. Barliman
Butterbur at your service! You're from the Shire, eh?' he said, and then
suddenly he clapped his hand to his forehead, as if trying to remember
something. 'Hobbits!' he cried. 'Now what does that remind me of? Might I ask
your names, sir?'
'Mr. Took and Mr. Brandybuck,' said
Frodo; 'and this is Sam Gamgee. My name is
Underhill.'
'There now!' said Mr. Butterbur, snapping his
fingers. 'It's gone again! But it'll come back, when I have time to think. I'm
run off my feet; but I'll see what I can do for you. We don't often get a party
out of the Shire nowadays, and I should be sorry not to make you welcome. But
there is such a crowd already in the house tonight as there hasn't been for long
enough. It never rains but it pours, we say in Bree.
'Hi!
Nob!' he shouted. 'Where are you, you woolly-footed slow-coach?
Nob!'
'Coming, sir! Coming!' A cheery-looking hobbit bobbed
out of a door, and seeing the travellers, stopped short and stared at them with
great interest.
'Where's Bob?' asked the landlord. 'You
don't know? Well find him! Double sharp! I haven't got six legs, nor six eyes
neither! Tell Bob there's five ponies that have to be stabled. He must find room
somehow.' Nob trotted off with a grin and a wink.
'Well,
now, what was I going to say?' said Mr. Butterbur, tapping his forehead. 'One
thing drives out another, so to speak. I'm that busy tonight, my head is going
round. There's a party that came up the Greenway from down South last night –
and that was strange enough to begin with. Then there's a travelling company of
dwarves going West come in this evening. And now there's you. If you weren't
hobbits, I doubt if we could house you. But we've got a room or two in the north
wing that were made special for hobbits, when this place was built. On the
ground floor as they usually prefer; round windows and all as they like it. I
hope you'll be comfortable. You'll be wanting supper, I don't doubt. As soon as
may be. This way now!'
He led them a short way down a
passage, and opened a door. 'Here is a nice little parlour!' he said. 'I hope it
will suit. Excuse me now. I'm that busy. No time for talking. I must be
trotting. It's hard work for two legs, but I don't get thinner. I'll look in
again later. If you want anything, ring the hand-bell, and Nob will come. If he
don't come, ring and shout!'
Off he went at last, and left
them feeling rather breathless. He seemed capable of an endless stream of talk,
however busy he might be. They found themselves in a small and cosy room. There
was a bit of bright fire burning on the hearth, and in front of it were some low
and comfortable chairs. There was a round table, already spread with a white
cloth, and on it was a large hand-bell. But Nob, the hobbit servant, came
bustling in long before they thought of ringing. He brought candles and a tray
full of plates.
'Will you be wanting anything to drink,
masters?' he asked. 'And shall I show you the bedrooms, while your supper is got
ready?'
They were washed and in the middle of good deep
mugs of beer when Mr. Butterbur and Nob came in again. In a twinkling the table
was laid. There was hot soup, cold meats, a blackberry tart, new loaves, slabs
of butter, and half a ripe cheese: good plain food, as good as the Shire could
show, and homelike enough to dispel the last of Sam's misgivings (already much
relieved by the excellence of the beer).
The landlord
hovered round for a link, and then prepared to leave them. 'I don't know whether
you would care to join the company, when you have supped,' he said, standing at
the door. 'Perhaps you would rather go to your beds. Still the company would be
very pleased to welcome you, if you had a mind. We don't get Outsiders –
travellers from the Shire, I should say, begging your pardon – often; and we
like to hear a bit of news, or any story or song you may have in mind. But as
you please! Ring the bell, if you lack anything!'
So
refreshed and encouraged did they feel at the end of their supper (about three
quarters of an hour's steady going, not hindered by unnecessary talk) that
Frodo, Pippin, and Sam decided to join the company. Merry said it would be too
stuffy. 'I shall sit here quietly by the fire for a bit, and perhaps go out
later for a sniff of the air. Mind your Ps and Qs, and don't forget that you are
supposed to be escaping in secret, and are still
on the high-road and not
very far from the Shire!'
'All right!' said Pippin. 'Mind
yourself! Don't get lost, and don't forget that it is safer
indoors!'
The company was in the big common-room of the
inn. The gathering was large and mixed, as Frodo discovered, when his eyes got
used to the light. This came chiefly from a blazing log-fire, for the three
lamps hanging from the beams were dim, and half veiled in smoke. Barliman
Butterbur was standing near the fire, talking to a couple of dwarves and one or
two strange-looking men. On the benches were various folk: men of Bree, a
collection of local hobbits (sitting chattering together), a few more dwarves,
and other vague figures difficult to make out away in the shadows and
comers.
As soon as the Shire-hobbits entered, there was a
chorus of welcome from the Bree-landers. The strangers, especially those that
had come up the Greenway, stared at them curiously. The landlord introduced the
newcomers to the Bree-folk, so quickly that, though they caught many names, they
were seldom sure who the names belonged to. The Men of Bree seemed all to have
rather botanical (and to the Shire-folk rather odd) names, like Rushlight,
Goatleaf, Heathertoes, Appledore, Thistlewool and Ferny (not to mention
Butterbur). Some of the hobbits had similar names. The Mugworts, for instance,
seemed numerous. But most of them had natural names, such as Banks, Brockhouse,
Longholes, Sandheaver, and Tunnelly, many of which were used in the Shire. There
were several Underhills from Saddle, and as they could not imagine sharing a
name without being related, they took Frodo to their hearts as a long-lost
cousin.
The Bree-hobbits were, in fact, friendly and
inquisitive, and Frodo soon found that some explanation of what he was doing
would have to be given. He gave out that he was interested in history and
geography (at which there was much wagging of heads, although neither of these
words were much used in the Bree-dialect). He said he was thinking of writing a
book (at which there was silent astonishment),
and that he and his
friends wanted to collect information about hobbits living outside the Shire,
especially in the eastern lands.
At this a chorus of voices
broke out. If Frodo had really wanted to write a book, and had had many ears, he
would have learned enough for several chapters in a few minutes. And if that was
not enough, he was given a whole list of names, beginning with 'Old Barliman
here', to whom he could go for further information. But after a time, as Frodo
did not show any
sign of writing a book on the spot, the hobbits returned
to their questions about doings in the Shire. Frodo did not prove very
communicative, and he soon found himself sitting alone in a comer, listening and
looking around.
The Men and Dwarves were mostly talking of
distant events and telling flews of a kind that was becoming only too familiar.
There was trouble away in the South, and it seemed that the Men who had come up
the Greenway were on the move, looking for lands where they could find some
peace. The Bree-folk were sympathetic, but plainly not very ready to take a
large number of strangers into their little land. One of the travellers, a
squint-eyed ill-favoured fellow, was foretelling that more and more people would
be coming north in the near future. 'If room isn't found for them, they'll find
it for themselves. They've a right to live, same as other folk,' he said loudly.
The local inhabitants did not look pleased at the
prospect.
The hobbits did not pay much attention to all
this, and it did not at the moment seem to concern hobbits. Big Folk could
hardly beg for lodgings in hobbit-holes. They were more interested in Sam and
Pippin, who were now feeling quite at home, and were chatting gaily about events
in the Shire. Pippin roused a good deal of laughter with an account of the
collapse of the roof of the Town Hole in Michel Delving: Will Whitfoot, the
Mayor, and the fattest hobbit in the Westfarthing, had been buried in chalk, and
came out like a floured dumpling. But there were several questions asked that
made Frodo a little uneasy. One of the Bree-landers, who seemed to have been in
the Shire several times, wanted to know where the Underhills lived and who they
were related to.
Suddenly Frodo noticed that a
strange-looking weather-beaten man, sitting in the shadows near the wall, was
also listening intently to the hobbit-talk. He had a tall tankard in front of
him, and was smoking a long-stemmed pipe curiously carved. His legs were
stretched out before him, showing high boots of supple leather that fitted him
well, but had seen much wear and were now caked with mud. A travel-stained cloak
of heavy dark-green cloth was drawn close about him, and in spite of the heat of
the room he wore a hood that overshadowed his face; but the gleam of his eyes
could be seen as he watched the hobbits.
'Who is that?'
Frodo asked, when he got a chance to whisper to Mr. Butterbur. 'I don't think
you introduced him?'
'Him?' said the landlord in an
answering whisper, cocking an eye without turning his head. 'I don't rightly
know. He is one of the wandering folk – Rangers we call them. He seldom talks:
not but what he can tell a rare tale when he has the mind. He disappears for a
month, or a year, and then he pops up again. He was in and out pretty often last
spring; but I haven't seen him about lately. What his right name is I've never
heard: but he's known round here as Strider. Goes about at a great pace on his
long shanks; though he don't tell nobody what cause he has to hurry. But there's
no accounting for East and West, as we say in Bree, meaning the Rangers and the
Shire-folk, begging your pardon. Funny you should ask about him.' But at that
moment Mr. Butterbur was called away by a demand for more ale and his last
remark remained unexplained.
Frodo found that Strider was
now looking at him, as if he had heard or guessed all that had been said.
Presently, with a wave of his hand and a nod, he invited Frodo to come over and
sit by him. As Frodo drew near be threw back his hood, showing a shaggy head of
dark hair necked with grey, and in a pale stem face a pair of keen grey
eyes.
'I am called Strider,' he said in a low voice. 'I am
very pleased to meet you. Master – Underhill, if old Butterbur got your name
right.'
'He did,' said Frodo stiffly. He felt far from
comfortable under the stare of those keen eyes.
'Well,
Master Underhill,' said Strider, 'if I were you, I should stop your young
friends from talking too much. Drink, fire, and chance-meeting are pleasant
enough, but, well – this isn't the Shire. There are queer folk about. Though I
say it as shouldn't, you may think,' he added with a wry smile, seeing Frodo's
glance. 'And there have been even stranger travellers through Bree lately,' he
went on, watching Frodo's face.
Frodo returned his gaze but
said nothing; and Strider made no further sign. His attention seemed suddenly to
be fixed on Pippin. To his alarm Frodo became aware that the ridiculous young
Took, encouraged by his success with the fat Mayor of Michel Delving, was now
actually giving a comic account of Bilbo's farewell party. He was already giving
an imitation of the Speech, and was drawing near to the astonishing
Disappearance.
Frodo was annoyed. It was a harmless enough
tale for most of the local hobbits, no doubt: just a funny story about those
funny people away beyond the River; but some (old Butterbur, for instance) knew
a thing or two, and had probably heard rumours long ago about Bilbo's vanishing.
It would bring the name of Baggins to their minds, especially if there had been
inquiries in Bree after that name.
Frodo fidgeted,
wondering what to do. Pippin was evidently much enjoying the attention he was
getting, and had become quite forgetful of their danger. Frodo had a sudden fear
that in his present mood he might even mention the Ring; and that might well be
disastrous.
'You had better do something quick!' whispered
Strider in his ear.
Frodo jumped up and stood on a table,
and began to talk. The attention of Pippin's audience was disturbed. Some of the
hobbits looked at Frodo and laughed and clapped, thinking that Mr. Underhill had
taken as much ale as was good for him.
Frodo suddenly felt
very foolish, and found himself (as was his habit when making a speech)
fingering the things in his pocket. He felt the Ring on its chain, and quite
unaccountably the desire came over him to slip it on and vanish out of the silly
situation. It seemed to him, somehow, as if me suggestion came to him from
outside, from someone or something a the room. He resisted the temptation
firmly, and clasped the Ring in his hand, as if to keep a hold on it and prevent
it from escaping or doing
any mischief. At any rate it gave him no
inspiration. He spoke 'a few suitable words', as they would have said in the
Shire:
We are all very much gratified by the kindness of your reception, and
I venture to hope that my brief visit will help to renew the old ties of
friendship between the Shire and Bree; and then he hesitated and
coughed.
Everyone in the room was now looking at him. 'A
song!' shouted one of the hobbits. 'A song! A song!' shouted all the others.
'Come on now, master, sing us something that we haven't heard
before!'
For a moment Frodo stood gaping. Then in
desperation he began a ridiculous song that Bilbo had been rather fond of (and
indeed rather proud of, for he had made up the words himself). It was about an
inn; and that is probably why it came into Frodo's mind just then. Here it is in
full. Only a few words of it are now, as a rule, remembered.
There is an inn, a merry old inn
beneath an old grey
hill,
And there they brew a beer so brown
That the Man in the Moon
himself came down
one night to drink his fill.
The
ostler has a tipsy cat
that plays a five-stringed fiddle;
And up and
down he runs his bow,
Now squeaking high, now purring low,
now sawing in
the middle.
The landlord keeps a little dog
that is
mighty fond of jokes;
When there's good cheer among the guests,
He cocks
an ear at all the jests
and laughs until he
chokes.
They also keep a horned cow
as proud as any
queen;
But music turns her head like ale,
And makes her wave her tufted
tail
and dance upon the green.
And O! the rows of
silver dishes
and the store of silver spoons!
For Sunday5 there's
a special pair,
And these they polish up with care
on Saturday
afternoons.
The Man in the Moon was drinking
deep,
and the cat began to wail;
A dish and a spoon on the table
danced,
The cow in the garden madly pranced,
and the little dog chased
his tail.
The Man in the Moon took another mug,
and
then rolled beneath his chair;
And there he dozed and dreamed of
ale,
Till in the sky the stars were pale,
and dawn was in the
air.
Then the ostler said to his tipsy cat:
‘The
white horses of the Moon,
They neigh and champ their silver bits;
But
their master's been and drowned his wits,
and the Sun'll be rising
soon!’
So the cat on his fiddle played
hey-diddle-diddle,
a jig that would wake the dead:
He squeaked and sawed
and quickened the tune,
While the landlord shook the Man in the
Moon:
'It's after three!' he said.
They rolled the
Man slowly up the hill
and bundled him into the Moon,
While his horses
galloped up in rear,
And the cow came capering like a deer,
and a dish
ran up with the spoon.
Now quicker the fiddle went
deedle-dum-diddle;
the dog began to roar,
The cow and the horses stood
on their heads;
The guests all bounded from their beds
and danced upon
the floor.
With a ping and a pong the fiddle-strings
broke!
the cow jumped over the Moon,
And the little dog laughed to see
such fun,
And the Saturday dish went off at a run
with the silver Sunday
spoon.
The round Moon rolled behind the hill
as the
Sun raised up her head.
She6 hardly
believed her fiery eyes;
For though it was day, to her surprise
they all
went back to bed!
There was loud and
long applause. Frodo had a good voice, and the song tickled their fancy.
'Where's old Barley?' they cried. 'He ought to hear this. Bob ought to learn his
cat the fiddle, and then we'd have a dance.' They called for more ale, and began
to shout: 'Let's have it again, master! Come on now! Once
more!'
They made Frodo have another drink, and then begin
his song again, while many of them joined in; for the tune was well known, and
they were quick at picking up words. It was now Frodo's turn to feel pleased
with himself. He capered about on the table; and when he came a second time to
the cow jumped over the Moon, he leaped in the air. Much too vigorously;
for he came down, bang, into a tray full of mugs, and slipped, and rolled off
the table with a crash, clatter, and bump! The audience all opened their mouths
wide for laughter, and stopped short a gaping silence; for the singer
disappeared. He simply vanished, as if he had gone slap through the floor
without leaving a hole!

The local hobbits stared in
amazement, and then sprang to their feet and shouted for Barliman. All the
company drew away from Pippin and Sam, who found themselves left alone in a
corner, and eyed darkly and doubtfully from a distance. It was plain that many
people regarded them now as the companions of a travelling magician of unknown
powers and purpose. But there was one swarthy Bree-lander, who stood looking at
them with a knowing and half-mocking expression that made them feel very
uncomfortable. Presently he slipped out of the door, followed by the squint-eyed
southerner: the two had been whispering together a good deal during the evening.
Harry the gatekeeper also went out just behind them.
Frodo
felt a fool. Not knowing what else to do, he crawled away under the tables to
the dark comer by Strider, who sat unmoved, giving no sign of his thoughts.
Frodo leaned back against the wall and took off the Ring. How it came to be on
his finger he could not tell. He could only suppose that he had been handling it
in his pocket while he sang, and that somehow it had slipped on when he stuck
out his hand with a jerk to save his fall. For a moment he wondered if the Ring
itself had not played him a trick; perhaps it had tried to reveal itself in
response to some wish or command that was felt in the room. He did not like the
looks of the men that had gone out.
'Well?' said Strider,
when he reappeared. 'Why did you do that? Worse than anything your friends could
have said! You have put your foot in it! Or should I say your
finger?'
'I don't know what you mean,' said Frodo, annoyed
and alarmed.
'Oh yes, you do,' answered Strider; 'but we
had better wait until the uproar has died down. Then, if you please, Mr.
Baggins, I should like a quiet word with you.'
'What
about?' asked Frodo, ignoring the sudden use of his proper
name.
'A matter of some importance – to us both,' answered
Strider, looking Frodo in the eye. 'You may hear something to your
advantage.'
'Very well,' said Frodo, trying to appear
unconcerned. 'I'll talk to you later.'
Meanwhile an
argument was going on by the fireplace. Mr. Butterbur had come trotting in, and
he was now trying to listen to several conflicting accounts of the event at the
same time.
'I saw him, Mr. Butterbur,' said a hobbit; 'or
leastways I didn't see him, if you take my meaning. He just vanished into thin
air, in a manner of speaking.'
'You don't say, Mr.
Mugwort!' said the landlord, looking puzzled.
'Yes I do!'
replied Mugwort. 'And I mean what I say, what's
more.'
‘There's some mistake somewhere,' said Butterbur,
shaking his head. There was too much of that Mr. Underhill to go vanishing into
thin air; or into thick air, as is more likely in this
room.'
'Well, where is he now?' cried several
voices.
'How should I know? He's welcome to go where he
will, so long as he pays in the morning. There's Mr. Took, now: he's not
vanished.'
'Well, I saw what I saw, and I saw what I
didn't,' said Mugwort obstinately.
'And I say there's some
mistake,' repeated Butterbur, picking up the tray and gathering up the broken
crockery.
'Of course there's a mistake!' said Frodo. 'I
haven't vanished. Here I am! I've just been having a few words with Strider in
the comer.'
He came forward into the firelight; but most of
the company backed away, even more perturbed than before. They were not in the
least satisfied by his explanation that he had crawled away quickly under the
tables after he had fallen. Most of the Hobbits and the Men of Bree went off
then and there in a huff, having no fancy for further entertainment that
evening. One or two gave Frodo a black look and departed muttering among
themselves. The Dwarves and the two or three strange Men that still remained got
up and said good night to the landlord, but not to Frodo and his friends. Before
long no one was left but Strider, who sat on, unnoticed, by the
wall.
Mr. Butterbur did not seem much put out. He reckoned,
very probably, that his house would be full again on many future nights, until
the present mystery had been thoroughly discussed. 'Now what have you been
doing, Mr. Underhill?' he asked. 'Frightening my customers and breaking up my
crocks with your acrobatics!'
'I am very sorry to have
caused any trouble,' said Frodo. 'It was quite unintentional, I assure you. A
most unfortunate accident.'
'All right, Mr. Underhill! But
if you're going to do any more tumbling, or conjuring, or whatever it was, you'd
best warn folk beforehand – and warn
me. We're a bit suspicious round
here of anything out of the way – uncanny, if you understand me; and we don't
take to it all of a sudden.'
'I shan't be doing anything of
the sort again, Mr. Butterbur, I promise you. And now I think I'll be getting to
bed. We shall be making an early start. Will you see that our ponies are ready
by eight o'clock?'
'Very good! But before you go, I should
like a word with you in private, Mr. Underhill. Something has just come back to
my mind that I ought to tell you. I hope that you'll not take it amiss. When
I've seen to a thing or two, I'll come along to your room, if you're
willing.'
'Certainly!' said Frodo; but his heart sank. He
wondered how many private talks he would have before he got to bed, and what
they would reveal. Were these people all in league against him? He began to
suspect even old Butterbur's fat face of concealing dark designs.
Chapter 10
Strider
Frodo, Pippin, and Sam made their way back to the
parlour. There was no light. Merry was not there, and the fire had burned low.
It was not until they had puffed up the embers into a blaze and thrown on a
couple of faggots that they discovered Strider had come with them. There he was
calmly sitting in a chair by the door!
'Hallo!' said
Pippin. 'Who are you, and what do you want?'
'I am called
Strider,' he answered: 'and though he may have forgotten it, your friend
promised to have a quiet talk with me.'
'You said I might
hear something to my advantage, I believe,' said Frodo. 'What have you to
say?'
'Several things,' answered Strider. 'But, of course,
I have my price.'
'What do you mean?' asked Frodo
sharply.
'Don't be alarmed! I mean just this: I will tell
you what I know, and give you some good advice – but I shall want a
reward.'
'And what will that be, pray?' said Frodo. He
suspected now that he had fallen in with a rascal, and he thought uncomfortably
that he had brought only a little money with him. All of it would hardly satisfy
a rogue, and he could not spare any of it.
'No more than
you can afford,' answered Strider with a slow smile, as if he guessed Frodo's
thoughts. 'Just this: you must take me along with you, until I wish to leave
you.'
'Oh, indeed!' replied Frodo, surprised, but not much
relieved. 'Even if I wanted another companion, I should not agree to any such
thing, until I knew a good deal more about you, and your
business.'
'Excellent!' exclaimed Strider, crossing his
legs and sitting back comfortably. 'You seem to be coming to your senses again,
and that is all to the good. You have been much too careless so far. Very well!
I will tell you what I know, and leave the reward to you. You may be glad to
grant it, when you have heard me.'
'Go on then!' said
Frodo. 'What do you know?'
'Too much; too many dark
things,' said Strider grimly. 'But as for your business —' He got up and went to
the door, opened it quickly and looked out. Then he shut it quietly and sat down
again. 'I have quick ears,' he went on, lowering his voice, 'and though I cannot
disappear, I have hunted many wild and wary things and I can usually avoid being
seen, if I wish. Now, I was behind the hedge this evening on the Road west of
Bree, when four hobbits came out of the Downlands. I need not repeat all that
they said to old Bombadil or to one another, but one thing interested me.
Please remember, said one of them,
that the name Baggins must not be
mentioned. I am Mr. Underhill, if any name must be given. That interested me
so much that I followed them here. I slipped over the gate just behind them.
Maybe Mr. Baggins has an honest reason for leaving his name behind; but if so, I
should advise him and his friends to be more careful.'
'I
don't see what interest my name has for any one in Bree,' said Frodo angrily,
'and I have still to learn why it interests you. Mr. Strider may have an honest
reason for spying and eavesdropping; but if so, I should advise him to explain
it.'
'Well answered!' said Strider laughing. 'But the
explanation is simple: I was looking for a Hobbit called Frodo Baggins. I wanted
to find him quickly. I had learned that he was carrying out of the Shire, well,
a secret that concerned me and my friends.
'Now, don't
mistake me!' he cried, as Frodo rose from his seat, and Sam jumped up with a
scowl. 'I shall take more care of the secret than you do. And care is needed!'
He leaned forward and looked at them. 'Watch every shadow!' he said in a low
voice. 'Black horsemen have passed through Bree. On Monday one came down the
Greenway, they say; and another appeared later, coming up the Greenway from the
south.'
There was a silence. At last Frodo spoke to Pippin
and Sam: 'I ought to have guessed it from the way the gatekeeper greeted us,' he
said. 'And the landlord seems to have heard something. Why did he press us to
join the company? And why on earth did we behave so foolishly: we ought to have
stayed quiet in here.'
'It would have been better,' said
Strider. 'I would have stopped your going into the common-room, if I could; but
the innkeeper would not let me in to see you, or take a
message.'
'Do you think he–' began
Frodo.
'No, I don't think any harm of old Butterbur. Only
he does not altogether like mysterious vagabonds of my sort.' Frodo gave him a
puzzled look. 'Well, I have rather a rascally look, have I not?' said Strider
with a curl of his lip and a queer gleam in his eye. 'But I hope we shall get to
know one another better. When we do, I hope you will explain what happened at
the end of your song. For that little prank–'
'It was sheer
accident!' interrupted Frodo.
'I wonder,' said Strider.
'Accident, then. That accident has made your position
dangerous.'
'Hardly more than it was already,' said Frodo.
'I knew these horsemen were pursuing me; but now at any rate they seem to have
missed me and to have gone away.'
'You must not count on
that!' said Strider sharply. 'They will return. And more are coming. There are
others. I know their number. I know these Riders.' He paused, and his eyes were
cold and hard. 'And there are some folk in Bree who are not to be trusted,' he
went on. 'Bill Ferny, for instance. He has an evil name in the Bree-land, and
queer folk call at his house. You must have noticed him among the company: a
swarthy sneering fellow. He was very close with one of the Southern strangers,
and they slipped out together just after your "accident". Not all of those
Southerners mean well; and as for Ferny, he would sell anything to anybody; or
make mischief for amusement.'
'What will Ferny sell, and
what has my accident got to do with him?' said Frodo, still determined not to
understand Strider's hints.
'News of you, of course,'
answered Strider. 'An account of your performance would be very interesting to
certain people. After that they would hardly need to be told your real name. It
seems to me only too likely that they will hear of it before this night is over.
Is that enough? You can do as you like about my reward: take me as a guide or
not. But I may say that I know all the lands between the Shire and the Misty
Mountains, for I have wandered over them for many years. I am older than I look.
I might prove useful. You will have to leave the open road after tonight; for
the horsemen will watch it night and day. You may escape from Bree, and be
allowed to go forward while the Sun is up; but you won't go far. They will come
on you in the wild, in some dark place where there is no help. Do you wish them
to find you? They are terrible!'
The hobbits looked at him,
and saw with surprise that his face was drawn as if with pain, and his hands
clenched the arms of his chair. The room was very quiet and still, and the light
seemed to have grown dim. For a while he sat with unseeing eyes as if walking in
distant memory or listening to sounds in the Night far
away.
'There!' he cried after a moment, drawing his hand
across his brow. 'Perhaps I know more about these pursuers than you do. You fear
them, but you do not fear them enough, yet. Tomorrow you will have to escape, if
you can. Strider can take you by paths that are seldom trodden. Will you have
him?'
There was a heavy silence. Frodo made no answer, his
mind was confused with doubt and fear. Sam frowned, and looked at his master;
and at last he broke out:
'With your leave, Mr. Frodo, I'd
say no! This Strider here, he warns and he says take care; and I
say yes
to that, and let's begin with him. He comes out of the Wild, and I never heard
no good of such folk. He knows something, that's plain, and more than I like;
but it's no reason why we should let him go leading us out into some dark place
far from help, as he puts it.'
Pippin fidgeted and looked
uncomfortable. Strider did not reply to Sam, but turned his keen eyes on Frodo.
Frodo caught his glance and looked away. 'No,' he said slowly. 'I don't agree. I
think, I think you are not really as you choose to look. You began to talk to me
like the Bree-folk, but your voice has changed. Still Sam seems right in this: I
don't see why you should warn us to take care, and yet ask us to take you on
trust. Why the disguise? Who are you? What do you really know about – about my
business; and how do you know it?'
'The lesson in caution
has been well learned,' said Strider with a grim smile. 'But caution is one
thing and wavering is another. You will never get to Rivendell now on your own,
and to trust me is your only chance. You must make up your mind. I will answer
some of your questions, if that will help you to do so. But why should you
believe my story, if you do not trust me already? Still here it
is–'
At that moment there came a knock at the door. Mr.
Butterbur had arrived with candles, and behind him was Nob with cans of hot
water. Strider withdrew into a dark corner.
'I've come to
bid you good night,' said the landlord, putting the candles on the table. 'Nob!
Take the water to the rooms!' He came in and shut the
door.
'It's like this,' he began, hesitating and looking
troubled. 'If I've done any harm, I'm sorry indeed. But one thing drives out
another, as you'll admit; and I'm a busy man. But first one thing and then
another this week have jogged my memory, as the saying goes; and not too late I
hope. You see, I was asked to look out for hobbits of the Shire, and for one by
the name of Baggins in particular.'
'And what has that got
to do with me?' asked Frodo.
'Ah! you know best,' said the
landlord, knowingly. 'I won't give you away; but I was told that this Baggins
would be going by the name of Underhill, and I was given a description that fits
you well enough, if I may say so.'
'Indeed! Let's have it
then!' said Frodo, unwisely interrupting.
'A stout
little fellow with red cheeks,' said Mr. Butterbur solemnly. Pippin
chuckled, but Sam looked indignant.
'That won't help you much; it goes for
most hobbits, Barley, he says to me,' continued Mr. Butterbur with a glance
at Pippin.
'But this one is taller than some and fairer than most, and he has
a cleft in his chin: perky chap with a bright eye. Begging your pardon, but
he said it, not me.'
'He said it? And who was he?'
asked Frodo eagerly.
'Ah! That was Gandalf, if you know who
I mean. A wizard they say he is, but he's a good friend of mine, whether or no.
But now I don't know what he'll have to say to me, if I see him again: turn all
my ale sour or me into a block of wood, I shouldn't wonder. He's a bit hasty.
Still what's done can't be undone.'
'Well, what have you
done?' said Frodo, getting impatient with the slow unravelling of Butterbur's
thoughts.
'Where was I?' said the landlord, pausing and
snapping his fingers. 'Ah, yes! Old Gandalf. Three months back he walked right
into my room without a knock.
Barley, he says,
I'm off in the morning.
Will you do something for me? You've only to name it, I said.
I'm in a
hurry, said he,
and I've no time myself, but I want a message took to the
Shire. Have you anyone you can send, and trust to go? I can find someone, I
said,
tomorrow, maybe, or the day after. Make it tomorrow, he says, and
then he gave me a letter.
'It's addressed plain enough,'
said Mr. Butterbur, producing a letter from his pocket, and reading out the
address slowly and proudly (he valued his reputation as a lettered
man):
Mr FRODO BAGGINS, BAG END, HOBBITON in the
SHIRE.
'A letter for me from Gandalf!' cried
Frodo.
'Ah!' said Mr. Butterbur. 'Then your right name is
Baggins?'
'It is,' said Frodo, 'and you had better give me
that letter at once, and explain why you never sent it. That's what you came to
tell me, I suppose, though you've taken a long time to come to the
point.'
Poor Mr. Butterbur looked troubled. 'You're right,
master,' he said, 'and I beg your pardon. And I'm mortal afraid of what Gandalf
will say, if harm comes of it. But I didn't keep it back a-purpose. I put it by
safe. Then I couldn't find nobody willing to go to the Shire next day, nor the
day after, and none of my own folk were to spare; and then one thing after
another drove it out of my mind. I'm a busy man. I'll do what I can to set
matters right, and if there's any help I can give, you've only to name
it.
'Leaving the letter aside, I promised Gandalf no less.
Barley, he says to me,
this friend of mine from the Shire, he may be
coming out this way before long, him and another. He'll be calling himself
Underhill. Mind that! But you need ask no questions. And if I'm not with him, he
may be in trouble, and he may need help. Do whatever you can for him, and I'll
be grateful, he says. And here you are, and trouble is not far off,
seemingly.'
'What do you mean?' asked
Frodo.
'These black men,' said the landlord lowering his
voice. 'They're looking for
Baggins, and if they mean well, then I'm a
hobbit. It was on Monday, and all the dogs were yammering and the geese
screaming. Uncanny, I called it. Nob, he came and told me that two black men
were at the door asking for a hobbit called Baggins. Nob's hair was all stood on
end. I bid the black fellows be off, and slammed the door on them; but they've
been asking the same question all the way to Archet, I hear. And that Ranger,
Strider, he's been asking questions, too. Tried to get in here to see you,
before you'd had bite or sup, he did.'
'He did!' said
Strider suddenly, coming forward into the light. 'And much trouble would have
been saved, if you had let him in, Barliman.'
The landlord
jumped with surprise. 'You!' he cried. 'You're always popping up. What do you
want now?'
'He's here with my leave,' said Frodo. 'He came
to offer me his help.'
'Well, you know your own business,
maybe,' said Mr. Butterbur, looking suspiciously at Strider. 'But if I was in
your plight, I wouldn't take up with a Ranger.'
'Then who
would you take up with?' asked Strider. 'A fat innkeeper who only remembers his
own name because people shout it at him all day? They cannot stay in
The
Pony for ever, and they cannot go home. They have a long road before them.
Will you go with them and keep the black men off?'
'Me?
Leave Bree! I wouldn't do that for any money,' said Mr. Butterbur, looking
really scared. 'But why can't you stay here quiet for a bit, Mr. Underhill? What
are all these queer goings on? What are these black men after, and where do they
come from, I'd like to know?'
'I'm sorry I can't explain it
all,' answered Frodo. 'I am tired and very worried, and it's a long tale. But if
you mean to help me, I ought to warn you that you will be in danger as long as I
am in your house. These Black Riders: I am not sure, but I think, I fear they
come from–'
'They come from Mordor,' said Strider in a low
voice. 'From Mordor, Barliman, if that means anything to
you.'
'Save us!' cried Mr. Butterbur turning pale; the name
evidently was known to him. 'That is the worst news that has come to Bree in my
time.'
'It is,' said Frodo. 'Are you still willing to help
me?'
'I am,' said Mr. Butterbur. 'More than ever. Though I
don't know what the likes of me can do against, against–' he
faltered.
'Against the Shadow in the East,' said Strider
quietly. 'Not much, Barliman, but every little helps. You can let Mr. Underhill
stay here tonight, as Mr. Underhill, and you can forget the name of Baggins,
till he is far away.'
'I'll do that,' said Butterbur. 'But
they'll find out he's here without help from me, I'm afraid. It's a pity Mr.
Baggins drew attention to himself this evening, to say no more. The story of
that Mr. Bilbo's going off has been heard before tonight in Bree. Even our Nob
has been doing some guessing in his slow pate: and there are others in Bree
quicker in the uptake than he is.'
'Well, we can only hope
the Riders won't come back yet,' said Frodo.
'I hope not,
indeed,' said Butterbur. 'But spooks or no spooks, they won't get in
The
Pony so easy. Don't you worry till the morning. Nob'll say no word. No black
man shall pass my doors, while I can stand on my legs. Me and my folk'll keep
watch tonight; but you had best get some sleep, if you
can.'
'In any case we must be called at dawn,' said Frodo.
'We must get off as early as possible. Breakfast at six-thirty,
please.'
'Right! I'll see to the orders,' said the
landlord. 'Good night, Mr. Baggins – Underhill, I should say! Good night – now,
bless me! Where's your Mr. Brandybuck?'
'I don't know,'
said Frodo with sudden anxiety. They had forgotten all about Merry, and it was
getting late. 'I am afraid he is out. He said something about going for a breath
of air.'
'Well, you do want looking after and no mistake:
your party might be on a holiday!' said Butterbur. 'I must go and bar the doors
quick, but I'll see your friend is let in when he comes. I'd better send Nob to
look for him. Good night to you all!' At last Mr. Butterbur went out, with
another doubtful look at Strider and a shake of his head. His footsteps
retreated down the passage.
'Well?' said Strider. 'When are
you going to open that letter?' Frodo looked carefully at the seal before he
broke it. It seemed certainly to be Gandalf's. Inside, written in the wizard's
strong but graceful script, was the following
message:
THE PRANCING PONY, BREE. Midyear's Day, Shire
Year, 1418.
Dear
Frodo,
Bad news has reached me here. I must go off
at once. You had better leave Bag End soon, and get out of the Shire before the
end of July at latest. I will return as soon as I can; and I will follow you, if
I find that you are gone. Leave a message for me here, if you pass through Bree.
You can trust the landlord (Butterbur). You may meet a friend of mine on the
Road: a Man, lean, dark, tall, by some called Strider. He knows our business and
will help you. Make for Rivendell. There I hope we may meet again. If I
do not come, Elrond will advise you.
Yours in
haste GANDALF.
PS. Do NOT use It again, not far
any reason whatever! Do not travel by night!
PPS. Make sure that it is the real
Strider. There are many strange men on the roads. His true name is
Aragorn.
All that is gold does not glitter,
Not all those who wander
are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not
reached by the frost.
From the ashes a fire shall be woken,
A light from
the shadows shall spring;
Renewed shall be blade that was broken,
The
crownless again shall be
king.
PPPS. I hope Butterbur
sends this promptly. A worthy man, but his memory is like a lumber-roam:
thing wanted always buried. If he forgets, I shall roast
him.
Fare Well! Frodo read
the letter to himself, and then passed it to Pippin and Sam. 'Really old
Butterbur has made a mess of things!' he said. 'He deserves roasting. If I had
got this at once, we might all have been safe in Rivendell by now. But what can
have happened to Gandalf? He writes as if he was going into great
danger.'
'He has been doing that for many years,' said
Strider.
Frodo turned and looked at him thoughtfully,
wondering about Gandalf's second postscript. 'Why didn't you tell me that you
were Gandalf's friend at once?' he asked. 'It would have saved
time.'
'Would it? Would any of you have believed me till
now?' said Strider. 'I knew nothing of this letter. For all I knew I had to
persuade you to trust me without proofs, if I was to help you. In any case, I
did not intend to tell you all about myself at once. I had to study
you
first, and make sure of you. The Enemy has set traps for me before now. As soon
as I had made up my mind, I was ready to tell you whatever you asked. But I must
admit,' he added with a queer laugh, 'that I hoped you would take to me for my
own sake. A hunted man sometimes wearies of distrust and longs for friendship.
But there, I believe my looks are against me.'
'They are –
at first sight at any rate,' laughed Pippin with sudden relief after reading
Gandalf's letter. 'But handsome is as handsome does, as we say in the Shire; and
I daresay we shall all look much the same after lying for days in hedges and
ditches.'
'It would take more than a few days, or weeks, or
years, of wandering in the Wild to make you look like Strider,' he answered.
'And you would die first, unless you are made of sterner stuff than you look to
be.'
Pippin subsided; but Sam was not daunted, and he still
eyed Strider dubiously. 'How do we know you are the Strider that Gandalf speaks
about?' he demanded. 'You never mentioned Gandalf, till this letter came out.
You might be a play-acting spy, for all I can see, trying to get us to go with
you. You might have done in the real Strider and took his clothes. What have you
to say to that?'
'That you are a stout fellow,' answered
Strider; 'but I am afraid my only answer to you, Sam Gamgee, is this. If I had
killed the real Strider, I could kill you. And I should have killed you already
without so much talk. If I was after the Ring, I could have it –
NOW!'
He stood up, and seemed suddenly to grow taller. In
his eyes gleamed a light, keen and commanding. Throwing back his cloak, he laid
his hand on the hilt of a sword that had hung concealed by his side. They did
not dare to move. Sam sat wide-mouthed staring at him
dumbly.
'But I
am the real Strider, fortunately,' he
said, looking down at them with his face softened by a sudden smile. 'I am
Aragorn son of Arathorn; and if by life or death I can save you, I
will.'
There was a long silence. At last Frodo spoke with
hesitation. 'I believed that you were a friend before the letter came,' he said,
'or at least I wished to. You have frightened me several times tonight, but
never in the way that servants of the Enemy would, or so I imagine. I think one
of his spies would – well, seem fairer and feel fouler, if you
understand.'
'I see,' laughed Strider. 'I look foul and
feel fair. Is that it?
All that is gold does not glitter, not all those who
wanderare lost.' 'Did the verses apply to you
then?' asked Frodo. 'I could not make out what they were about. But how did you
know that they were in Gandalf's letter, if you have never seen
it?'
'I did not know,' he answered. 'But I am Aragorn, and
those verses go with that name.' He drew out his sword, and they saw that the
blade was indeed broken a foot below the hilt. 'Not much use is it, Sam?' said
Strider. 'But the time is near when it shall be forged
anew.'
Sam said nothing.
'Well,' said
Strider, 'with Sam's permission we will call that settled. Strider shall be your
guide. We shall have a rough road tomorrow. Even if we are allowed to leave Bree
unhindered, we can hardly hope now to leave it unnoticed. But I shall try to get
lost as soon as possible. I know one or two ways out of Bree-land other than the
main road. If once we shake off the pursuit, I shall make for
Weathertop.'
'Weathertop?' said Sam. 'What's
that?'
'It is a hill, just to the north of the Road, about
half way from here to Rivendell. It commands a wide view all round; and there we
shall have a chance to look about us. Gandalf will make for that point, if he
follows us. After Weathertop our journey will become more difficult, and we
shall have to choose between various dangers.'
'When did
you last see Gandalf?' asked Frodo. 'Do you know where he is, or what he is
doing?'
Strider looked grave. 'I do not know,' he said. 'I
came west with him in the spring. I have often kept watch on the borders of the
Shire in the last few years, when he was busy elsewhere. He seldom left it
unguarded. We last met on the first of May: at Sarn Ford down the Brandywine. He
told me that his business with you had gone well, and that you would be starting
for Rivendell in the last week of September. As I knew he was at your side, I
went away on a journey of my own. And that has proved ill; for plainly some news
reached him, and I was not at hand to help.
'I am troubled,
for the first time since I have known him. We should have had messages, even if
he could not come himself. When I returned, many days ago, I heard the ill news.
The tidings had gone far and wide that Gandalf was missing and the horsemen had
been seen. It was the Elven-folk of Gildor that told me this; and later they
told me that you had left your home; but there was no news of your leaving
Buckland. I have been watching the East Road
anxiously.'
'Do you think the Black Riders have anything to
do with it – with Gandalf's absence, I mean?' asked
Frodo.
'I do not know of anything else that could have
hindered him, except the Enemy himself,' said Strider. 'But do not give up hope!
Gandalf is greater than you Shire-folk know – as a rule you can only see his
jokes and toys. But this business of ours will be his greatest
task.'
Pippin yawned. 'I am sorry,' he said, 'but I am dead
tired. In spite of all the danger and worry I must go to bed, or sleep where I
sit. Where is that silly fellow, Merry? It would be the last straw, if we had to
go out in the dark to look for him.'
At that moment they
heard a door slam; then feet came running along the passage. Merry came in with
a rush followed by Nob. He shut the door hastily, and leaned against it. He was
out of breath. They stared at him in alarm for a moment before he gasped: 'I
have seen them, Frodo! I have seen them! Black
Riders!'
'Black Riders!' cried Frodo.
'Where?'
'Here. In the village. I stayed indoors for an
hour. Then as you did not come back, I went out for a stroll. I had come back
again and was standing just outside the light of the lamp looking at the stars.
Suddenly I shivered and felt that something horrible was creeping near: there
was a sort of deeper shade among the shadows across the road, just beyond the
edge of the lamplight. It slid away at once into the dark without a sound. There
was no horse.'
'Which way did it go?' asked Strider,
suddenly and sharply. Merry started, noticing the stranger for the first time.
'Go on!' said Frodo. 'This is a friend of Gandalf's. I will explain
later.'
'It seemed to make off up the Road, eastward,'
continued Merry. 'I tried to follow. Of course, it vanished almost at once; but
I went round the corner and on as far as the last house on the
Road.'
Strider looked at Merry with wonder. 'You have a
stout heart,' he said; 'but it was foolish.'
'I don't
know,' said Merry. 'Neither brave nor silly, I think. I could hardly help
myself. I seemed to be drawn somehow. Anyway, I went, and suddenly I heard
voices by the hedge. One was muttering; and the other was whispering, or
hissing. I couldn't hear a word that was said. I did not creep any closer,
because I began to tremble all over. Then I felt terrified, and I turned back,
and was just going to bolt home, when something came behind me and I... I fell
over.'
'I found him, sir,' put in Nob. 'Mr. Butterbur sent
me out with a lantern. I went down to West-gate, and then back up towards
South-gate. Just nigh Bill Ferny's house I thought I could see something in the
Road. I couldn't swear to it, but it looked to me as if two men was stooping
over something, lilting it. I gave a shout, but where I got up to the spot there
was no signs of them, and only Mr. Brandybuck lying by the roadside. He seemed
to be asleep. "I thought I had fallen into deep water," he says to me, when I
shook him. Very queer he was, and as soon as I had roused him, he got up and ran
back here like a hare.'
'I am afraid that's true,' said
Merry, 'though I don't know what I said. I had an ugly dream, which I can't
remember. I went to pieces. I don't know what came over
me.'
'I do,' said Strider. 'The Black Breath. The Riders
must have left their horses outside, and passed back through the South-gate in
secret. They will know all the news now, for they have visited Bill Ferny; and
probably that Southerner was a spy as well. Something may happen in the night,
before we leave Bree.'
'What will happen?' said Merry.
'Will they attack the inn?'
'No, I think not,' said
Strider. 'They are not all here yet. And in any case that is not their way. In
dark and loneliness they are strongest; they will not openly attack a house
where there are lights and many people – not until they are desperate, not while
all the long leagues of Eriador still lie before us. But their power is in
terror, and already some in Bree are in their clutch. They will drive these
wretches to some evil work: Ferny, and some of the strangers, and, maybe, the
gatekeeper too. They had words with Harry at West-gate on Monday. I was watching
them. He was white and shaking when they left him.'
'We
seem to have enemies all round,' said Frodo. 'What are we to
do?'
'Stay here, and do not go to your rooms! They are sure
to have found out which those are. The hobbit-rooms have windows looking north
and close to the ground. We will all remain together and bar this window and the
door. But first Nob and I will fetch your luggage.'
While
Strider was gone, Frodo gave Merry a rapid account of all that had happened
since supper. Merry was still reading and pondering Gandalf's letter when
Strider and Nob returned.
'Well Masters,' said Nob, 'I've
ruffled up the clothes and put in a bolster down the middle of each bed. And I
made a nice imitation of your head with a brown woollen mat, Mr. Bag –
Underhill, sir,' he added with a grin.
Pippin laughed.
'Very life-like!' he said. 'But what will happen when they have penetrated the
disguise?'
'We shall see,' said Strider. 'Let us hope to
hold the fort till morning.'
'Good night to you,' said Nob,
and went off to take his part in the watch on the
doors.
Their bags and gear they piled on the parlour-floor.
They pushed a low chair against the door and shut the window. Peering out, Frodo
saw that the night was still clear. The Sickle was swinging bright above the
shoulders of Bree-hill. He then closed and barred the heavy inside shutters and
drew the curtains together. Strider built up the fire and blew out all the
candles.
The hobbits lay down on their blankets with their
feet towards the hearth; but Strider settled himself in the chair against the
door. They talked for a little, for Merry still had several questions to
ask.
'Jumped over the Moon!' chuckled Merry as he rolled
himself in his blanket. 'Very ridiculous of you, Frodo! But I wish I had been
there to see. The worthies of Bree will be discussing it a hundred years
hence.'
'I hope so,' said Strider. Then they all fell
silent, and one by one the hobbits dropped off to sleep.
Chapter 11
A Knife in the
Dark
As they prepared for sleep in the inn at Bree, darkness
lay on Buckland; a mist strayed in the dells and along the river-bank. The house
at Crickhollow stood silent. Fatty Bolger opened the door cautiously and peered
out. A feeling of fear had been growing on him all day, and he was unable to
rest or go to bed: there was a brooding threat in the breathless night-air. As
he stared out into the gloom, a black shadow moved under the trees; the gate
seemed to open of its own accord and close again without a sound. Terror seized
him. He shrank back, and for a moment he stood trembling in the hall. Then he
shut and locked the door.

The night deepened. There came the
soft sound of horses led with stealth along the lane. Outside the gate they
stopped, and three black figures entered, like shades of night creeping across
the ground. One went to the door, one to the corner of the house on either side;
and there they stood, as still as the shadows of stones, while night went slowly
on. The house and the quiet trees seemed to be waiting
breathlessly.
There was a faint stir in the leaves, and a
cock crowed far away. The cold hour before dawn was passing. The figure by the
door moved. In the dark without moon or stars a drawn blade gleamed, as if a
chill light had been unsheathed. There was a blow, soft but heavy, and the door
shuddered.
'Open, in the name of Mordor!' said a voice thin
and menacing.
At a second blow the door yielded and fell
back, with timbers burst and lock broken. The black figures passed swiftly
in.
At that moment, among the trees nearby, a horn rang
out. It rent the night like fire on a hill-top.
AWAKE!
FEAR! FIRE! FOES! AWAKE!
Fatty Bolger had not been idle. As
soon as he saw the dark shapes creep from the garden, he knew that he must run
for it, or perish. And run he did, out of the back door, through the garden, and
over the fields. When he reached the nearest house, more than a mile away, he
collapsed on the doorstep. 'No, no, no!' he was crying. 'No, not me! I haven't
got it!' It was some time before anyone could make out what he was babbling
about. At last they got the idea that enemies were in Buckland, some strange
invasion from the Old Forest. And then they lost no more
time.
FEAR! FIRE! FOES!
The
Brandybucks were blowing the Horn-call of Buckland, that had not been sounded
for a hundred years, not since the white wolves came in the Fell Winter, when
the Brandywine was frozen over.
AWAKE!
AWAKE!
Far-away answering horns were heard. The alarm was
spreading. The black figures fled from the house. One of them let fall a
hobbit-cloak on the step, as he ran. In the lane the noise of hoofs broke out,
and gathering to a gallop, went hammering away into the darkness. All about
Crickhollow there was the sound of horns blowing, and voices crying and feet
running. But the Black Riders rode like a gale to the North-gate. Let the little
people blow! Sauron would deal with them later. Meanwhile they had another
errand: they knew now that the house was empty and the Ring had gone. They rode
down the guards at the gate and vanished from the Shire.
In
the early night Frodo woke from deep sleep, suddenly, as if some sound or
presence had disturbed him. He saw that Strider was sitting alert in his chair:
his eyes gleamed in the light of the fire, which had been tended and was burning
brightly; but he made no sign or movement.
Frodo soon went
to sleep again; but his dreams were again troubled with the noise of wind and of
galloping hoofs. The wind seemed to be curling round the house and shaking it;
and far off he heard a horn blowing wildly. He opened his eyes, and heard a cock
crowing lustily in the inn-yard. Strider had drawn the curtains and pushed back
the shutters with a clang. The first grey light of day was in the room, and a
cold air was coming through the open window.
As soon as
Strider had roused them all, he led the way to their bedrooms. When they saw
them they were glad that they had taken his advice: the windows had been forced
open and were swinging, and the curtains were flapping; the beds were tossed
about, and the bolsters slashed and flung upon the floor; the brown mat was torn
to pieces.
Strider immediately went to fetch the landlord.
Poor Mr. Butterbur looked sleepy and frightened. He had hardly closed his eyes
all night (so he said), but he had never heard a
sound.
'Never has such a thing happened in my time!' he
cried, raising his hands in horror. 'Guests unable to sleep in their beds, and
good bolsters ruined and all! What are we coming to?'
'Dark
times,' said Strider. 'But for the present you may be left in peace, when you
have got rid of us. We will leave at once. Never mind about breakfast: a drink
and a bite standing will have to do. We shall be packed in a few
minutes.'
Mr. Butterbur hurried off to see that their
ponies were got ready, and to fetch them a 'bite'. But very soon he came back in
dismay. The ponies had vanished! The stable-doors had all been opened in the
night, and they were gone: not only Merry's ponies, but every other horse and
beast in the place.
Frodo was crushed by the news. How
could they hope to reach Rivendell on foot, pursued by mounted enemies? They
might as well set out for the Moon. Strider sat silent for a while, looking at
the hobbits, as if he was weighing up their strength and
courage.
'Ponies would not help us to escape horsemen,' he
said at last, thoughtfully, as if he guessed what Frodo had in mind. 'We should
not go much slower on foot, not on the roads that I mean to take. I was going to
walk in any case. It is the food and stores that trouble me. We cannot count on
getting anything to eat between here and Rivendell, except what we take with us;
and we ought to take plenty to spare; for we may be delayed, or forced to go
round-about, far out of the direct way. How much are you prepared to carry on
your backs?'
'As much as we must,' said Pippin with a
sinking heart, but trying to show that he was tougher than he looked (or
felt).
'I can carry enough for two,' said Sam
defiantly.
'Can't anything be done, Mr. Butterbur?' asked
Frodo. 'Can't we get a couple of ponies in the village, or even one just for the
baggage? I don't suppose we could hire them, but we might be able to buy them,'
he added, doubtfully, wondering if he could afford it.
'I
doubt it,' said the landlord unhappily. 'The two or three riding-ponies that
there were in Bree were stabled in my yard, and they're gone. As for other
animals, horses or ponies for draught or what not, there are very few of them in
Bree, and they won't be for sale. But I'll do what I can. I'll rout out Bob and
send him round as soon as may be.'
'Yes,' said Strider
reluctantly, 'you had better do that. I am afraid we shall have to try to get
one pony at least. But so ends all hope of starting early, and slipping away
quietly! We might as well have blown a horn to announce our departure. That was
part of their plan, no doubt.'
'There is one crumb of
comfort,' said Merry, 'and more than a crumb, I hope: we can have breakfast
while we wait – and sit down to it. Let's get hold of
Nob!'
In the end there was more than three hours' delay.
Bob came back with the report that no horse or pony was to be got for love or
money in the neighbourhood – except one: Bill Ferny had one that he might
possibly sell. 'A poor old half-starved creature it is,' said Bob; 'but he won't
part with it for less than thrice its worth, seeing how you're placed, not if I
knows Bill Ferny.'
'Bill Ferny?' said Frodo. 'Isn't there
some trick? Wouldn't the beast bolt back to him with all our stuff, or help in
tracking us, or something?'
'I wonder,' said Strider. 'But
I cannot imagine any animal running home to him, once it got away. I fancy this
is only an afterthought of kind Master Ferny's: just a way of increasing his
profits from the affair. The chief danger is that the poor beast is probably at
death's door. But there does not seem any choice. What does he want for
it?'
Bill Ferny's price was twelve silver pennies; and that
was indeed at least three times the pony's value in those parts. It proved to be
a bony, underfed, and dispirited animal; but it did not look like dying just
yet. Mr. Butterbur paid for it himself, and offered Merry another eighteen pence
as some compensation for the lost animals. He was an honest man, and well-off as
things were reckoned in Bree; but thirty silver pennies was a sore blow to him,
and being cheated by Bill Ferny made it harder to bear.
As
a matter of fact he came out on the right side in the end. It turned out later
that only one horse had been actually stolen. The others had been driven off, or
had bolted in terror, and were found wandering in different corners of the
Bree-land. Merry's ponies had escaped altogether, and eventually (having a good
deal of sense) they made their way to the Downs in search of Fatty Lumpkin. So
they came under the care of Tom Bombadil for a while, and were well-off. But
when news of the events at Bree came to Tom's ears, he sent them to Mr.
Butterbur, who thus got five good beasts at a very fair price. They had to work
harder in Bree, but Bob treated them well; so on the whole they were lucky: they
missed a dark and dangerous journey. But they never came to
Rivendell.
However, in the meanwhile for all Mr. Butterbur
knew his money was gone for good, or for bad. And he had other troubles. For
there was a great commotion as soon as the remaining guests were astir and heard
news of the raid on the inn. The southern travellers had lost several horses and
blamed the innkeeper loudly, until it became known that one of their own number
had also disappeared in the night, none other than Bill Ferny's squint-eyed
companion. Suspicion fell on him at once.
'If you pick up
with a horse-thief, and bring him to my house,' said Butterbur angrily, 'you
ought to pay for all the damage yourselves and not come shouting at me. Go and
ask Ferny where your handsome friend is!' But it appeared that he was nobody's
friend, and nobody could recollect when he had joined their
party.
After their breakfast the hobbits had to re-pack,
and get together further supplies for the longer journey they were now
expecting. It was close on ten o'clock before they at last got off. By that time
the whole of Bree was buzzing with excitement. Frodo's vanishing trick; the
appearance of the black horsemen; the robbing of the stables; and not least the
news that Strider the Ranger had joined the mysterious hobbits, made such a tale
as would last for many uneventful years. Most of the inhabitants of Bree and
Staddle, and many even from Combe and Archet, were crowded in the road to see
the travellers start. The other guests in the inn were at the doors or hanging
out of the windows.
Strider had changed his mind, and he
decided to leave Bree by the main road. Any attempt to set off across country at
once would only make matters worse: half the inhabitants would follow them, to
see what they were up to, and to prevent them from
trespassing.
They said farewell to Nob and Bob, and took
leave of Mr. Butterbur with many thanks. 'I hope we shall meet again some day,
when things are merry once more,' said Frodo. 'I should like nothing better than
to stay in your house in peace for a while.'
They tramped
off, anxious and downhearted, under the eyes of the crowd. Not all the faces
were friendly, nor all the words that were shouted. But Strider seemed to be
held in awe by most of the Bree-landers, and those that he stared at shut their
mouths and drew away. He walked in front with Frodo; next came Merry and Pippin;
and last came Sam leading the pony, which was laden with as much of their
baggage as they had the heart to give it; but already it looked less dejected,
as if it approved of the change in its fortunes. Sam was chewing an apple
thoughtfully. He had a pocket full of them: a parting present from Nob and Bob.
'Apples for walking, and a pipe for sitting,' he said. 'But I reckon I'll miss
them both before long.'
The hobbits took no notice of the
inquisitive heads that peeped out of doors, or popped over walls and fences, as
they passed. But as they drew near to the further gate, Frodo saw a dark
ill-kept house behind a thick hedge: the last house in the village. In one of
the windows he caught a glimpse of a sallow face with sly, slanting eyes; but it
vanished at once.
'So that's where that southerner is
hiding!' he thought. 'He looks more than half like a
goblin.'
Over the hedge another man was staring boldly. He
had heavy black brows, and dark scornful eyes; his large mouth curled in a
sneer. He was smoking a short black pipe. As they approached he took it out of
his mouth and spat.
'Morning, Longshanks!' he said. 'Off
early? Found some friends at last?' Strider nodded, but did not answer.
'Morning, my little friends!' he said to the others. 'I suppose you know who
you've taken up with? That's Stick-at-naught Strider, that is! Though I've heard
other names not so pretty. Watch out tonight! And you, Sammie, don't go
ill-treating my poor old pony! Pah!' He spat again.
Sam
turned quickly. 'And you, Ferny,' he said, 'put your ugly face out of sight, or
it will get hurt.' With a sudden flick, quick as lightning, an apple left his
hand and hit Bill square on the nose. He ducked too late, and curses came from
behind the hedge. 'Waste of a good apple,' said Sam regretfully, and strode
on.
At last they left the village behind. The escort of
children and stragglers that had followed them got tired and turned back at the
South-gate. Passing through, they kept on along the Road for some miles. It bent
to the left, curving back into its eastward line as it rounded the feet of
Bree-hill, and then it began to run swiftly downwards into wooded country. To
their left they could see some of the houses and hobbit-holes of Staddle on the
gentler south-eastern slopes of the hill; down in a deep hollow away north of
the Road there were wisps of rising smoke that showed where Combe lay; Archet
was hidden in the trees beyond.
After the Road had run down
some way, and had left Bree-hill standing tall and brown behind, they came on a
narrow track that led off towards the North. 'This is where we leave the open
and take to cover,' said Strider.
'Not a "short cut", I
hope,' said Pippin. 'Our last short cut through woods nearly ended in
disaster.'
'Ah, but you had not got me with you then,'
laughed Strider. 'My cuts, short or long, don't go wrong.' He took a look up and
down the Road. No one was in sight; and he led the way quickly down towards the
wooded valley.
His plan, as far as they could understand it
without knowing the country, was to go towards Archet at first, but to bear
right and pass it on the east, and then to steer as straight as he could over
the wild lands to Weathertop Hill. In that way they would, if all went well, cut
off a great loop of the Road, which further on bent southwards to avoid the
Midgewater Marshes. But, of course, they would have to pass through the marshes
themselves, and Strider's description of them was not
encouraging.
However, in the meanwhile, walking was not
unpleasant. Indeed, if it had not been for the disturbing events of the night
before, they would have enjoyed this part of the journey better than any up to
that time. The sun was shining, clear but not too hot. The woods in the valley
were still leafy and full of colour, and seemed peaceful and wholesome. Strider
guided them confidently among the many crossing paths, although left to
themselves they would soon have been at a loss. He was taking a wandering course
with many turns and doublings, to put off any
pursuit.
'Bill Ferny will have watched where we left the
Road, for certain,' he said; 'though I don't think he will follow us himself. He
knows the land round here well enough, but he knows he is not a match for me in
a wood. It is what he may tell others that I am afraid of. I don't suppose they
are far away. If they think we have made for Archet, so much the
better.'
Whether because of Strider's skill or for some
other reason, they saw no sign and heard no sound of any other living thing all
that day: neither two-footed, except birds; nor four-footed, except one fox and
a few squirrels. The next day they began to steer a steady course eastwards; and
still all was quiet and peaceful. On the third day out from Bree they came out
of the Chetwood. The land had been falling steadily, ever since they turned
aside from the Road, and they now entered a wide flat expanse of country, much
more difficult to manage. They were far beyond the borders of the Bree-land, out
in the pathless wilderness, and drawing near to the Midge-water
Marshes.
The ground now became damp, and in places boggy
and here and there they came upon pools, and wide stretches of reeds and rushes
filled with the warbling of little hidden birds. They had to pick their way
carefully to keep both dry-footed and on their proper course. At first they made
fare progress, but as they went on, their passage became slower and more
dangerous. The marshes were bewildering and treacherous, and there was no
permanent trail even for Rangers to find through their shifting quagmires. The
flies began to torment them, and the air was full of clouds of tiny midges that
crept up their sleeves and breeches and into their hair.
'I
am being eaten alive!' cried Pippin. 'Midgewater! There are more midges than
water!'
'What do they live on when they can't get hobbit?'
asked Sam, scratching his neck.
They spent a miserable day
in this lonely and unpleasant country. Their camping-place was damp, cold, and
uncomfortable; and the biting insects would not let them sleep. There were also
abominable creatures haunting the reeds and tussocks that from the sound of them
were evil relatives of the cricket. There were thousands of them, and they
squeaked all round,
neek-breek, breek-neek, unceasingly all the night,
until the hobbits were nearly frantic.
The next day, the
fourth, was little better, and the night almost as comfortless. Though the
Neekerbreekers (as Sam called them) had been left behind, the midges still
pursued them.
As Frodo lay, tired but unable to close his
eyes, it seemed to him that far away there came a light in the eastern sky: it
flashed and faded many times. It was not the dawn, for that was still some hours
off.
‘What is the light?' he said to Strider, who had
risen, and was standing, gazing ahead into the night.
'I do
not know,' Strider answered. 'It is too distant to make out. It is like
lightning that leaps up from the hill-tops.'
Frodo lay down
again, but for a long while he could still see the white flashes, and against
them the tall dark figure of Strider, standing silent and watchful. At last he
passed into uneasy sleep.
They had not gone far on the
fifth day when they left the last straggling pools and reed-beds of the marshes
behind them. The land before them began steadily to rise again. Away in the
distance eastward they could now see a line of hills. The highest of them was at
the right of the line and a little separated from the others. It had a conical
top, slightly flattened at the summit.
'That is
Weathertop,' said Strider. 'The Old Road, which we have left far away on our
right, runs to the south of it and passes not far from its foot. We might reach
it by noon tomorrow, if we go straight towards it. I suppose we had better do
so.'
'What do you mean?' asked
Frodo.
'I mean: when we do get there, it is not certain
what we shall find. It is close to the Road.'
'But surely
we were hoping to find Gandalf there?'
'Yes; but the hope
is faint. If he comes this way at all, he may not pass through Bree, and so he
may not know what we are doing. And anyway, unless by luck we arrive almost
together, we shall miss one another; it will not be safe for him or for us to
wait there long. If the Riders fail to find us in the wilderness, they are
likely to make for Weathertop themselves. It commands a wide view all round.
Indeed, there are many birds and beasts in this country that could see us, as we
stand here, from that hill-top. Not all the birds are to be trusted, and there
are other spies more evil than they are.'
The hobbits
looked anxiously at the distant hills. Sam looked up into the pale sky, fearing
to see hawks or eagles hovering over them with bright unfriendly eyes. 'You do
make me feel uncomfortable and lonesome, Strider!' he
said.
'What do you advise us to do?' asked
Frodo.
'I think,' answered Strider slowly, as if he was not
quite sure, 'I think the best thing is to go as straight eastward from here as
we can, to make for the line of hills, not for Weathertop. There we can strike a
path I know that runs at their feet; it will bring us to Weathertop from the
north and less openly. Then we shall see what we shall
see.'
All that day they plodded along, until the cold and
early evening came down. The land became drier and more barren; but mists and
vapours lay behind them on the marshes. A few melancholy birds were piping and
wailing, until the round red sun sank slowly into the western shadows; then an
empty silence fell. The hobbits thought of the soft light of sunset glancing
through the cheerful windows of Bag End far away.
At the
day's end they came to a stream that wandered down from the hills to lose itself
in the stagnant marshland, and they went up along its banks while the light
lasted. It was already night when at last they halted and made their camp under
some stunted alder-trees by the shores of the stream. Ahead there loomed now
against the dusky sky the bleak and treeless backs of the hills. That night they
set a watch, and Strider, it seemed, did not sleep at all. The moon was waxing,
and in the early night-hours a cold grey light lay on the
land.
Next morning they set out again soon after sunrise.
There was a frost in the air, and the sky was a pale clear blue. The hobbits
felt refreshed, as if they had had a night of unbroken sleep. Already they were
getting used to much walking on short commons – shorter at any rate than what in
the Shire they would have thought barely enough to keep them on their legs.
Pippin declared that Frodo was looking twice the hobbit that he had
been.
'Very odd,' said Frodo, tightening his belt,
'considering that there is actually a good deal less of me. I hope the thinning
process will not go on indefinitely, or I shall become a
wraith.'
'Do not speak of such things!' said Strider
quickly, and with surprising earnestness.
The hills drew
nearer. They made an undulating ridge, often rising almost to a thousand feet,
and here and there falling again to low clefts or passes leading into the
eastern land beyond. Along the crest of the ridge the hobbits could see what
looked to be the remains of green-grown walls and dikes, and in the clefts there
still stood the ruins of old works of stone. By night they had reached the feet
of the westward slopes, and there they camped. It was the night of the fifth of
October, and they were six days out from Bree.
In the
morning they found, for the first time since they had left the Chetwood, a track
plain to see. They turned right and followed it southwards. It ran cunningly,
taking a line that seemed chosen so as to keep as much hidden as possible from
the view, both of the hill-tops above and of the flats to the west. It dived
into dells, and hugged steep banks; and where it passed over flatter and more
open ground on either side of it there were lines of large boulders and hewn
stones that screened the travellers almost like a hedge.
'I
wonder who made this path, and what for,' said Merry, as they walked along one
of these avenues, where the stones were unusually large and closely set. 'I am
not sure that I like it: it has a – well, rather a barrow-wightish look. Is
there any barrow on Weathertop?'
'No. There is no barrow on
Weathertop, nor on any of these hills,' answered Strider. 'The Men of the West
did not live here; though in their latter days they defended the hills for a
while against the evil that came out of Angmar. This path was made to serve the
forts along the walls. But long before, in the first days of the North Kingdom,
they built a great watch-tower on Weathertop, Amon Sul they called it. It was
burned and broken, and nothing remains of it now but a tumbled ring, like a
rough crown on the old hill's head. Yet once it was tall and fair. It is told
that Elendil stood there watching for the coming of Gil-galad out of the West,
in the days of the Last Alliance.'
The hobbits gazed at
Strider. It seemed that he was learned in old lore, as well as in the ways of
the wild. 'Who was Gil-galad?' asked Merry; but Strider did not answer, and
seemed to be lost in thought. Suddenly a low voice murmured:
Gil-galad was an Elven-king.
Of him the harpers sadly
sing:
the last whose realm was fair and free
between the Mountains and
the Sea.
His sword was long, his lance was keen,
his
shining helm afar was seen;
the countless stars of heaven's field
were
mirrored in his silver shield.
But long ago he rode
away,
and where he dwelleth none can say;
for into darkness fell his
star
in Mordor where the shadows
are.
The others turned in amazement,
for the voice was Sam's.
'Don't stop!' said
Merry.
'That's all I know,' stammered Sam, blushing. 'I
learned it from Mr. Bilbo when I was a lad. He used to tell me tales like that,
knowing how I was always one for hearing about Elves. It was Mr. Bilbo as taught
me my letters. He was mighty book-learned was dear old Mr. Bilbo. And he wrote
poetry. He wrote what I have just said.'
'He did not
make it up,' said Strider. 'It is part of the lay that is called
The Fall of
Gil-galad, which is in an ancient tongue. Bilbo must have translated it. I
never knew that.'
'There was a lot more,' said Sam, 'all
about Mordor. I didn't learn that part, it gave me the shivers I never thought I
should be going that way myself!'
'Going to Mordor!' cried
Pippin. 'I hope it won't come to that!'
'Do not speak that
name so loudly!' said Strider.
It was already mid-day when
they drew near the southern end of the path, and saw before them, in the pale
clear light of the October sun, a grey-green bank, leading up like a bridge on
to the northward slope of the hill They decided to make for the top at once,
while the daylight was broad Concealment was no longer possible, and they could
only hope that no enemy or spy was observing them. Nothing was to be seen moving
on the hill. If Gandalf was anywhere about, there was no sign of
him.
On the western flank of Weathertop they found a
sheltered hollow, at the bottom of which there was a bowl-shaped dell with
grassy sides. There they left Sam and Pippin with the pony and their packs and
luggage. The other three went on. After half an hour's plodding climb Strider
reached the crown of the hill; Frodo and Merry followed, tired and breathless.
The last slope had been steep and rocky.
On the top they
found, as Strider had said, a wide ring of ancient stonework, now crumbling or
covered with age-long grass. But in the centre a cairn of broken stones had been
piled. They were blackened as if with fire. About them the turf was burned to
the roots and all within the ring the grass was scorched and shrivelled, as if
flames had swept the hill-top; but there was no sign of any living
thing.
Standing upon the rim of the ruined circle, they saw
all round below them a wide prospect, for the most part of lands empty and
featureless, except for patches of woodland away to the south, beyond which they
caught here and there the glint of distant water. Beneath them on this southern
side there ran like a ribbon the Old Road, coming out of the West and winding up
and down, until it faded behind a ridge of dark land to the east. Nothing was
moving on it. Following its line eastward with their eyes they saw the
Mountains: the nearer foothills were brown and sombre; behind them stood taller
shapes of grey, and behind those again were high white peaks glimmering among
the clouds.
'Well, here we are!' said Merry. 'And very
cheerless and uninviting it looks! There is no water and no shelter. And no sign
of Gandalf. But I don't blame him for not waiting – if he ever came
here.'
'I wonder,' said Strider, looking round
thoughtfully. 'Even if he was a day or two behind us at Bree, he could have
arrived here first. He can ride very swiftly when need presses.' Suddenly he
stooped and looked at the stone on the top of the cairn; it was flatter than the
others, and whiter, as if it had escaped the fire. He picked it up and examined
it, turning it in his fingers. "This has been handled recently,' he said. 'What
do you think of these marks?'
On the flat under-side Frodo
saw some scratches:
'There seems to he a stroke, a dot, and three
more strokes,' he said.
'The stroke on the left might be a
G-rune with thin branches,' said Strider. 'It might be a sign left by Gandalf,
though one cannot be sure. The scratches are fine, and they certainly look
fresh. But the marks might mean something quite different, and have nothing to
do with us. Rangers use runes, and they come here
sometimes.'
'What could they mean, even if Gandalf made
them?' asked Merry
'I should say,' answered Strider, 'that
they stood for G3, and were a sign that Gandalf was here on October the third:
that is three days ago now. It would also show that he was in a hurry and danger
was at hand, so that he had no time or did not dare to write anything longer or
plainer. If that is so, we must be wary.'
'I wish we could
feel sure that he made the marks, whatever they may mean,' said Frodo 'It would
be a great comfort to know that he was on the way, in front of us or behind
us.'
'Perhaps,' said Strider. 'For myself, I believe that
he was here, and was in danger. There have been scorching flames here; and now
the light that we saw three nights ago in the eastern sky comes back to my mind.
I guess that he was attacked on this hill-top, but with what result I cannot
tell. He is here no longer, and we must now look after ourselves and make our
own way to Rivendell, as best we can.'
'How far is
Rivendell?' asked Merry, gazing round wearily. The world looked wild and wide
from Weathertop.
'I don't know if the Road has ever been
measured in miles beyond the
Forsaken Inn, a day's journey east of Bree,'
answered Strider. 'Some say it is so far, and some say otherwise. It is a
strange road, and folk are glad to reach their journey's end, whether the time
is long or short. But I know how long it would take me on my own feet, with fair
weather and no ill fortune twelve days from here to the Ford of Bruinen, where
the Road crosses the Loudwater that runs out of Rivendell. We have at least a
fortnight's journey before us, for I do not think we shall be able to use the
Road.'
'A fortnight!' said Frodo. 'A lot may happen in that
time.'
'It may,' said Strider.
They
stood for a while silent on the hill-top, near its southward edge. In that
lonely place Frodo for the first time fully realized his homelessness and
danger. He wished bitterly that his fortune had left him in the quiet and
beloved Shire. He stared down at the hateful Road, leading back westward – to
his home. Suddenly he was aware that two black specks were moving slowly along
it, going westward; and looking again he saw that three others were creeping
eastward to meet them. He gave a cry and clutched Strider's
arm.
'Look,' he said, pointing
downwards.
At once Strider flung himself on the ground
behind the ruined circle, pulling Frodo down beside him. Merry threw himself
alongside.
'What is it?' he
whispered.
'I do not know, but I fear the worst,' answered
Strider.
Slowly they crawled up to the edge of the ring
again, and peered through a cleft between two jagged stones. The light was no
longer bright, for the clear morning had faded, and clouds creeping out of the
East had now overtaken the sun, as it began to go down. They could all see the
black specks, but neither Frodo nor Merry could make out their shapes for
certain; yet something told them that there, far below, were Black Riders
assembling on the Road beyond the foot of the hill.
'Yes,'
said Strider, whose keener sight left him in no doubt. 'The enemy is
here!'
Hastily they crept away and slipped down the north
side of the hill to find their companions.
Sam and Peregrin
had not been idle. They had explored the small dell and the surrounding slopes.
Not far away they found a spring of clear water in the hillside, and near it
footprints not more than a day or two old. In the dell itself they found recent
traces of a fire, and other signs of a hasty camp. There were some fallen rocks
on the edge of the dell nearest to the hill. Behind them Sam came upon a small
store of firewood neatly stacked.
'I wonder if old Gandalf
has been here,' he said to Pippin. 'Whoever it was put this stuff here meant to
come back it seems.'
Strider was greatly interested in
these discoveries. 'I wish I had waited and explored the ground down here
myself,' he said, hurrying off to the spring to examine the
footprints.
'It is just as I feared,' he said, when he came
back. 'Sam and Pippin have trampled the soft ground, and the marks are spoilt or
confused. Rangers have been here lately. It is they who left the firewood
behind. But there are also several newer tracks that were not made by Rangers.
At least one set was made, only a day or two ago, by heavy boots. At least one.
I cannot now be certain, but I think there were many booted feet.' He paused and
stood in anxious thought.
Each of the hobbits saw in his
mind a vision of the cloaked and booted Riders. If the horsemen had already
found the dell, the sooner Strider led them somewhere else the better. Sam
viewed the hollow with great dislike, now that he had heard news of their
enemies on the Road, only a few miles away.
'Hadn't we
better clear out quick, Mr. Strider?' he asked impatiently. 'It is getting late,
and I don't like this hole: it makes my heart sink
somehow.'
'Yes, we certainly must decide what to do at
once,' answered Strider, looking up and considering the time and the weather.
'Well, Sam,' he said at last, 'I do not like this place either; but I cannot
think of anywhere better that we could reach before nightfall. At least we are
out of sight for the moment, and if we moved we should be much more likely to be
seen by spies. All we could do would be to go right out of our way back north on
this side of the line of hills, where the land is all much the same as it is
here. The Road is watched, but we should have to cross it, if we tried to take
cover in the thickets away to the south. On the north side of the Road beyond
the hills the country is bare and flat for miles.'
'Can the
Riders
see?' asked Merry. 'I mean, they seem usually to have used their
noses rather than their eyes, smelling for us, if smelling is the right word, at
least in the daylight. But you made us lie down flat when you saw them down
below; and now you talk of being seen, if we move.'
'I was
too careless on the hill-top,' answered Strider. 'I was very anxious to find
some sign of Gandalf; but it was a mistake for three of us to go up and stand
there so long. For the black horses can see, and the Riders can use men and
other creatures as spies, as we found at Bree. They themselves do not see the
world of light as we do, but our shapes cast shadows in their minds, which only
the noon sun destroys; and in the dark they perceive many signs and forms that
are hidden from us: then they are most to be feared. And at all times they smell
the blood of living things, desiring and hating it. Senses, too, there are other
than sight or smell. We can feel their presence – it troubled our hearts, as
soon as we came here, and before we saw them; they feel ours more keenly. Also,'
he added, and his voice sank to a whisper, 'the Ring draws
them.'
'Is there no escape then?' said Frodo, looking round
wildly. 'If I move I shall be seen and hunted! If I stay, I shall draw them to
me!'
Strider laid his hand on his shoulder. 'There is still
hope,' he said. 'You are not alone. Let us take this wood that is set ready for
the fire as a sign. There is little shelter or defence here, but fire shall
serve for both. Sauron can put fire to his evil uses, as he can all things, but
these Riders do not love it, and fear those who wield it. Fire is our friend in
the wilderness.'
'Maybe,' muttered Sam. 'It is also as good
a way of saying "here we are" as I can think of, bar
shouting.'
Down in the lowest and most sheltered corner of
the dell they lit a fire, and prepared a meal. The shades of evening began to
fall, and it grew cold. They were suddenly aware of great hunger, for they had
not eaten anything since breakfast; but they dared not make more than a frugal
supper. The lands ahead were empty of all save birds and beasts, unfriendly
places deserted by all the races of the world. Rangers passed at times beyond
the hills, but they were few and did not stay. Other wanderers were rare, and of
evil sort: trolls might stray down at times out of the northern valleys of the
Misty Mountains. Only on the Road would travellers be found, most often dwarves,
hurrying along on business of their own, and with no help and few words to spare
for strangers.
'I don't see how our food can be made to
last,' said Frodo. 'We have been careful enough in the last few days, and this
supper is no feast; but we have used more than we ought, if we have two weeks
still to go, and perhaps more.'
'There is food in the
wild,' said Strider; 'berry, root, and herb; and I have some skill as a hunter
at need. You need not be afraid of starving before winter comes. But gathering
and catching food is long and weary work, and we need haste. So tighten your
belts, and think with hope of the tables of Elrond's
house!'
The cold increased as darkness came on. Peering out
from the edge of the dell they could see nothing but a grey land now vanishing
quickly into shadow. The sky above had cleared again and was slowly filled with
twinkling stars. Frodo and his companions huddled round the fire, wrapped in
every garment and blanket they possessed; but Strider was content with a single
cloak, and sat a little apart, drawing thoughtfully at his
pipe.
As night fell and the light of the fire began to
shine out brightly he began to tell them tales to keep their minds from fear. He
knew many histories and legends of long ago, of Elves and Men and the good and
evil deeds of the Elder Days. They wondered how old he was, and where he had
learned all this lore.
'Tell us of Gil-galad,' said Merry
suddenly, when he paused at the end of a story of the Elf-Kingdoms. 'Do you know
any more of that old lay that you spoke of?'
'I do indeed,'
answered Strider. 'So also does Frodo, for it concerns us closely.' Merry and
Pippin looked at Frodo, who was staring into the fire.
'I
know only the little that Gandalf has told me,' said Frodo slowly. 'Gil-galad
was the last of the great Elf-kings of Middle-earth. Gil-galad is
Starlight in their tongue. With Elendil, the Elf-friend, he went to the
land of–'
'No!' said Strider interrupting, 'I do not think
that tale should be told now with the servants of the Enemy at hand. If we win
through to the house of Elrond, you may hear it there, told in
full.'
'Then tell us some other tale of the old days,'
begged Sam; 'a tale about the Elves before the fading time. I would dearly like
to hear more about Elves; the dark seems to press round so
close.'
'I will tell you the tale of Tinuviel,' said
Strider, 'in brief – for it is a long tale of which the end is not known; and
there are none now, except Elrond, that remember it aright as it was told of
old. It is a fair tale, though it is sad, as are all the tales of Middle-earth,
and yet it may lift up your hearts.' He was silent for some time, and then he
began not to speak but to chant softly:
The leaves were long, the grass was green,
The
hemlock-umbels tall and fair,
And in the glade a light was seen
Of stars
in shadow shimmering.
Tinuviel was dancing there
To music of a pipe
unseen,
And light of stars was in her hair,
And in her raiment
glimmering.
There Beren came from mountains
cold,
And lost he wandered under leaves,
And where the Elven-river
rolled
He walked alone and sorrowing.
He peered between the
hemlock-leaves
And saw in wander flowers of gold
Upon her mantle and her
sleeves,
And her hair like shadow
following.
Enchantment healed his weary feet
That
over hills were doomed to roam;
And forth he hastened, strong and
fleet,
And grasped at moonbeams glistening.
Through woven woods in
Elvenhome
She tightly fled on dancing feet,
And left him lonely still to
roam
In the silent forest listening.
He heard there
oft the flying sound
Of feet as light as linden-leaves,
Or music welling
underground,
In hidden hollows quavering.
Now withered lay the
hemlock-sheaves,
And one by one with sighing sound
Whispering fell the
beechen leaves
In the wintry woodland wavering.
He
sought her ever, wandering far
Where leaves of years were thickly
strewn,
By light of moon and ray of star
In frosty heavens
shivering.
Her mantle glinted in the moon,
As on a hill-top high and
far
She danced, and at her feet was strewn
A mist of silver
quivering.
When winter passed, she came again,
And
her song released the sudden spring,
Like rising lark, and falling
rain,
And melting water bubbling.
He saw the elven-flowers
spring
About her feet, and healed again
He longed by her to dance and
sing
Upon the grass untroubling.
Again she fled, but
swift he came.
Tinuviel! Tinuviel!
He called her by her elvish
name;
And there she halted listening.
One moment stood she, and a
spell
His voice laid on her: Beren came,
And doom fell on
Tinuviel
That in his arms lay glistening.
As Beren
looked into her eyes
Within the shadows of her hair,
The trembling
starlight of the skies
He saw there mirrored shimmering.
Tinuviel the
elven-fair,
Immortal maiden elven-wise,
About him cast her shadowy
hair
And arms like silver glimmering.
Long was the
way that fate them bore,
O'er stony mountains cold and grey,
Through
halls of iron and darkling door,
And woods of nightshade morrowless.
The
Sundering Seas between them lay,
And yet at last they met once more,
And
long ago they passed away
In the forest singing
sorrowless.

Strider sighed and paused before he spoke
again. ‘That is a song,' he said, 'in the mode that is called
ann-thennath among the Elves, but is hard to render in our Common Speech,
and this is but a rough echo of it. It tells of the meeting of Beren son of
Barahir and Luthien Tinuviel. Beren was a mortal man, but Luthien was the
daughter of Thingol, a King of Elves upon Middle-earth when the world was young;
and she was the fairest maiden that has ever been among all the children of this
world. As the stars above the mists of the Northern lands was her loveliness,
and in her face was a shining light. In those days the Great Enemy, of whom
Sauron of Mordor was but a servant, dwelt in Angband in the North, and the Elves
of the West coming back to Middle-earth made war upon him to regain the
Silmarils which he had stolen; and the fathers of Men aided the Elves. But the
Enemy was victorious and Barahir was slain, and Beren escaping through great
peril came over the Mountains of Terror into the hidden Kingdom of Thingol in
the forest of Neldoreth. There he beheld Luthien singing and dancing in a glade
beside the enchanted river Esgalduin; and he named her Tinuviel, that is
Nightingale in the language of old. Many sorrows befell them afterwards, and
they were parted long. Tinuviel rescued Beren from the dungeons of Sauron, and
together they passed through great dangers, and cast down even the Great Enemy
from his throne, and took from his iron crown one of the three Silmarils,
brightest of all jewels, to be the bride-price of Luthien to Thingol her father.
Yet at the last Beren was slain by the Wolf that came from the gates of Angband,
and he died in the arms of Tinuviel. But she chose mortality, and to die from
the world, so that she might follow him; and it is sung that they met again
beyond the Sundering Seas, and after a brief time walking alive once more in the
green woods, together they passed, long ago, beyond the confines of this world.
So it is that Luthien Tinuviel alone of the Elf-kindred has died indeed and left
the world, and they have lost her whom they most loved. But from her the lineage
of the Elf-lords of old descended among Men. There live still those of whom
Luthien was the foremother, and it is said that her line shall never fail.
Elrond of Rivendell is of that Kin. For of Beren and Luthien was born Dior
Thingol's heir; and of him Elwing the White whom Earendil wedded, he that sailed
his ship out of the mists of the world into the seas of heaven with the Silmaril
upon his brow. And of Earendil came the Kings of Numenor, that is
Westernesse.'
As Strider was speaking they watched his
strange eager face, dimly lit in the red glow of the wood-fire. His eyes shone,
and his voice was rich and deep. Above him was a black starry sky. Suddenly a
pale light appeared over the crown of Weathertop behind him. The waxing moon was
climbing slowly above the hill that overshadowed them, and the stars above the
hill-top faded.
The story ended. The hobbits moved and
stretched. 'Look!' said Merry. 'The Moon is rising: it must be getting
late.'
The others looked up. Even as they did so, they saw
on the top of the hill something small and dark against the glimmer of the
moonrise. It was perhaps only a large stone or jutting rock shown up by the pale
light.
Sam and Merry got up and walked away from the fire.
Frodo and Pippin remained seated in silence. Strider was watching the moonlight
on the hill intently. All seemed quiet and still, but Frodo felt a cold dread
creeping over his heart, now that Strider was no longer speaking. He huddled
closer to the fire. At that moment Sam came running back from the edge of the
dell.
'I don't know what it is,' he said, 'but I suddenly
felt afraid. I durstn't go outside this dell for any money; I felt that
something was creeping up the slope.'
'Did you
see
anything?' asked Frodo, springing to his feet.
'No, sir. I
saw nothing, but I didn't stop to look.'
'I saw something,'
said Merry; 'or I thought I did – away westwards where the moonlight was falling
on the flats beyond the shadow of the hill-tops, I
thought there were two
or three black shapes. They seemed to be moving this
way.'
'Keep close to the fire, with your faces outward!'
cried Strider. 'Get some of the longer sticks ready in your
hands!'
For a breathless time they sat there, silent and
alert, with their backs turned to the wood-fire, each gazing into the shadows
that encircled them. Nothing happened. There was no sound or movement in the
night. Frodo stirred, feeling that he must break the silence: he longed to shout
out aloud.
'Hush!' whispered Strider. 'What's that?' gasped
Pippin at the same moment.
Over the lip of the little dell,
on the side away from the hill, they felt, rather than saw, a shadow rise, one
shadow or more than one. They strained their eyes, and the shadows seemed to
grow. Soon there could be no doubt: three or four tall black figures were
standing there on the slope, looking down on them. So black were they that they
seemed like black holes in the deep shade behind them. Frodo thought that he
heard a faint hiss as of venomous breath and felt a thin piercing chill. Then
the shapes slowly advanced.
Terror overcame Pippin and
Merry, and they threw themselves flat on the ground. Sam shrank to Frodo's side.
Frodo was hardly less terrified than his companions; he was quaking as if he was
bitter cold, but his terror was swallowed up in a sudden temptation to put on
the Ring. The desire to do this laid hold of him, and he could think of nothing
else. He did not forget the Barrow, nor the message of Gandalf; but something
seemed to be compelling him to disregard all warnings, and he longed to yield.
Not with the hope of escape, or of doing anything, either good or bad: he simply
felt that he must take the Ring and put it on his finger. He could not speak. He
felt Sam looking at him, as if he knew that his master was in some great
trouble, but he could not turn towards him. He shut his eyes and struggled for a
while; but resistance became unbearable, and at last he slowly drew out the
chain, and slipped the Ring on the forefinger of his left
hand.
Immediately, though everything else remained as
before, dim and dark, the shapes became terribly clear. He was able to see
beneath their black wrappings. There were five tall figures: two standing on the
lip of the dell, three advancing. In their white faces burned keen and merciless
eyes; under their mantles were long grey robes; upon their grey hairs were helms
of silver; in their haggard hands were swords of steel. Their eyes fell on him
and pierced him, as they rushed towards him. Desperate, he drew his own sword,
and it seemed to him that it flickered red, as if it was a firebrand. Two of the
figures halted. The third was taller than the others: his hair was long and
gleaming and on his helm was a crown. In one hand he held a long sword, and in
the other a knife; both the knife and the hand that held it glowed with a pale
light. He sprang forward and bore down on Frodo.
At that
moment Frodo threw himself forward on the ground, and he heard himself crying
aloud: O
Elbereth! Gilthoniel! At the same time he struck at the feet of
his enemy. A shrill cry rang out in the night; and he felt a pain like a dart of
poisoned ice pierce his left shoulder. Even as he swooned he caught, as through
a swirling mist, a glimpse of Strider leaping out of the darkness with a flaming
brand of wood in either hand. With a last effort Frodo, dropping his sword,
slipped the Ring from his finger and closed his right hand tight upon
it.
Chapter 12
Flight to the
Ford
When Frodo came to himself he was still clutching the
Ring desperately. He was lying by the fire, which was now piled high and burning
brightly. His three companions were bending over him. 'What has happened? Where
is the pale king?' he asked wildly. They were too overjoyed to hear him speak to
answer for a while; nor did they understand his question. At length he gathered
from Sam that they had seen nothing but the vague shadowy shapes coming towards
them. Suddenly to his horror Sam found that his master had vanished; and at that
moment a black shadow rushed past him, and he fell. He heard Frodo's voice, but
it seemed to come from a great distance, or from under the earth, crying out
strange words. They saw nothing more, until they stumbled over the body of
Frodo, lying as if dead, face downwards on the grass with his sword beneath him.
Strider ordered them to pick him up and lay him near the fire, and then he
disappeared. That was now a good while ago.
Sam plainly was
beginning to have doubts again about Strider; but while they were talking he
returned, appearing suddenly out of the shadows. They started, and Sam drew his
sword and stood over Frodo; but Strider knelt down swiftly at his
side.
'I am not a Black Rider, Sam,' he said gently, 'nor
in league with them. I have been trying to discover something of their
movements; but I have found nothing. I cannot think why they have gone and do
not attack again. But there is no feeling of their presence anywhere at
hand.'
When he heard what Frodo had to tell, he became full
of concern, and shook his head and sighed. Then he ordered Pippin and Merry to
heat as much water as they could in their small kettles, and to bathe the wound
with it. 'Keep the fire going well, and keep Frodo warm!' he said. Then he got
up and walked away, and called Sam to him. 'I think I understand things better
now,' he said in a low voice. 'There seem only to have been five of the enemy.
Why they were not all here, I don't know; but I don't think they expected to be
resisted. They have drawn off for the time being. But not far, I fear. They will
come again another night, if we cannot escape. They are only waiting, because
they think that their purpose is almost accomplished, and that the Ring cannot
fly much further. I fear, Sam, that they believe your master has a deadly wound
that will subdue him to their will. We shall see!' Sam choked with tears. 'Don't
despair!' said Strider. 'You must trust me now. Your Frodo is made of sterner
stuff than I had guessed, though Gandalf hinted that it might prove so. He is
not slain, and I think he will resist the evil power of the wound longer than
his enemies expect. I will do all I can to help and heal him. Guard him well,
while I am away!' He hurried off and disappeared again into the
darkness.
Frodo dozed, though the pain of his wound was
slowly growing, and a deadly chill was spreading from his shoulder to his arm
and side. His friends watched over him, warming him, and bathing his wound. The
night passed slowly and wearily. Dawn was growing in the sky, and the dell was
filling with grey light, when Strider at last
returned.
'Look!' he cried; and stooping he lifted from the
ground a black cloak that had lain there hidden by the darkness. A foot above
the lower hem there was a slash. 'This was the stroke of Frodo's sword,' he
said. 'The only hurt that it did to his enemy, I fear; for it is unharmed, but
all blades perish that pierce that dreadful King. More deadly to him was the
name of Elbereth.'
'And more deadly to Frodo was this!' He
stooped again and lifted up a long thin knife. There was a cold gleam in it. As
Strider raised it they saw that near the end its edge was notched and the point
was broken off. But even as he held it up in the growing light, they gazed in
astonishment, for the blade seemed to melt, and vanished like a smoke in the
air, leaving only the hilt in Strider's hand. 'Alas!' he cried. 'It was this
accursed knife that gave the wound. Few now have the skill in healing to match
such evil weapons. But I will do what I can.'
He sat down
on the ground, and taking the dagger-hilt laid it on his knees, and he sang over
it a slow song in a strange tongue. Then setting it aside, he turned to Frodo
and in a soft tone spoke words the others could not catch. From the pouch at his
belt he drew out the long leaves of a plant.
'These
leaves,' he said, 'I have walked far to find; for this plant does not grow in
the bare hills; but in the thickets away south of the Road I found it in the
dark by the scent of its leaves.' He crushed a leaf in his fingers, and it gave
out a sweet and pungent fragrance. 'It is fortunate that I could find it, for it
is a healing plant that the Men of the West brought to Middle-earth.
Athelas they named it, and it grows now sparsely and only near places
where they dwelt or camped of old; and it is not known in the North, except to
some of those who wander in the Wild. It has great virtues, but over such a
wound as this its healing powers may be small.'
He threw
the leaves into boiling water and bathed Frodo's shoulder. The fragrance of the
steam was refreshing, and those that were unhurt felt their minds calmed and
cleared. The herb had also some power over the wound, for Frodo felt the pain
and also the sense of frozen cold lessen in his side; but the life did not
return to his arm, and he could not raise or use his hand. He bitterly regretted
his foolishness, and reproached himself for weakness of will; for he now
perceived that in putting on the Ring he obeyed not his own desire but the
commanding wish of his enemies. He wondered if he would remain maimed for life,
and how they would now manage to continue their journey. He fell too weak to
stand.
The others were discussing this very question. They
quickly decided to leave Weathertop as soon as possible. 'I think now,' said
Strider, 'that the enemy has been watching this place for some days. If Gandalf
ever came here, then he must have been forced to ride away, and he will not
return. In any case we are in great peril here after dark, since the attack of
last night, and we can hardly meet greater danger wherever we
go.'
As soon as the daylight was full, they had some
hurried food and packed. It was impossible for Frodo to walk, so they divided
the greater part of their baggage among the four of them, and put Frodo on the
pony. In the last few days the poor beast had improved wonderfully; it already
seemed fatter and stronger, and had begun to show an affection for its new
masters, especially for Sam. Bill Ferny's treatment must have been very hard for
the journey in the wild to seem so much better than its former
life.
They started off in a southerly direction. This would
mean crossing the Road, but it was the quickest way to more wooded country. And
they needed fuel; for Strider said that Frodo must be kept warm, especially at
night, while fire would be some protection for them all. It was also his plan to
shorten their journey by cutting across another great loop of the Road: east
beyond Weathertop it changed its course and took a wide bend
northwards.
They made their way slowly and cautiously round
the south-western slopes of the hill, and came in a little while to the edge of
the Road. There was no sign of the Riders. But even as they were hurrying across
they heard far away two cries: a cold voice calling and a cold voice answering.
Trembling they sprang forward, and made for the thickets that lay ahead. The
land before them sloped away southwards, but it was wild and pathless; bushes
and stunted trees grew in dense patches with wide barren spaces in between. The
grass was scanty, coarse, and grey; and the leaves in the thickets were faded
and falling. It was a cheerless land, and their journey was slow and gloomy.
They spoke little as they trudged along. Frodo's heart was grieved as he watched
them walking beside him with their heads down, and their backs bowed under their
burdens. Even Strider seemed tired and
heavy-hearted.
Before the first day's march was over
Frodo's pain began to grow again, but he did not speak of it for a long time.
Four days passed, without the ground or the scene changing much, except that
behind them Weathertop slowly sank, and before them the distant mountains loomed
a little nearer. Yet since that far cry they had seen and heard no sign that the
enemy had marked their flight or followed them. They dreaded the dark hours, and
kept watch in pairs by night, expecting at any time to see black shapes stalking
in the grey night, dimly lit by the cloud-veiled moon; but they saw nothing, and
heard no sound but the sigh of withered leaves and grass. Not once did they feel
the sense of present evil that had assailed them before the attack in the dell.
It seemed too much to hope that the Riders had already lost their trail again.
Perhaps they were waiting to make some ambush in a narrow
place?
At the end of the fifth day the ground began once
more to rise slowly out of the wide shallow valley into which they had
descended. Strider now turned their course again north-eastwards, and on the
sixth day they reached the top of a long slow-climbing slope, and saw far ahead
a huddle of wooded hills. Away below them they could see the Road sweeping round
the feet of the hills; and to their right a grey river gleamed pale in the thin
sunshine. In the distance they glimpsed yet another river in a stony valley
half-veiled in mist.
"I am afraid we must go back to the
Road here for a while,' said Strider. 'We have now come to the River Hoarwell,
that the Elves call Mitheithel. It flows down out of the Ettenmoors, the
troll-fells north of Rivendell, and joins the Loudwater away in the South. Some
call it the Greyflood after that. It is a great water before it finds the Sea.
There is no way over it below its sources in the Ettenmoors, except by the Last
Bridge on which the Road crosses.'
'What is that other
river we can see far away there?' asked Merry.
'That is
Loudwater, the Bruinen of Rivendell,' answered Strider. 'The Road runs along the
edge of the hills for many miles from the Bridge to the Ford of Bruinen. But I
have not yet thought how we shall cross that water. One river at a time! We
shall be fortunate indeed if we do not find the Last Bridge held against
us.'
Next day, early in the morning, they came down again
to the borders of the Road. Sam and Strider went forward, but they found no sign
of any travellers or riders. Here under the shadow of the hills there had been
some rain. Strider judged that it had fallen two days before, and had washed
away all footprints. No horseman had passed since then, as far as he could
see.
They hurried along with all the speed they could make,
and after a mile or two they saw the Last Bridge ahead, at the bottom of a short
steep slope. They dreaded to see black figures waiting there, but they saw none.
Strider made them take cover in a thicket at the side of the Road, while he went
forward to explore.
Before long he came hurrying back. 'I
can see no sign of the enemy,' he said, 'and I wonder very much what that means.
But I have found something very strange.'
He held out his
hand, and showed a single pale-green jewel. 'I found it in the mud in the middle
of the Bridge,' he said. 'It is a beryl, an elf-stone. Whether it was set there,
or let fall by chance, I cannot say; but it brings hope to me. I will take it as
a sign that we may pass the Bridge; but beyond that I dare not keep to the Road,
without some clearer token.'
At once they went on again.
They crossed the Bridge in safety, hearing no sound but the water swirling
against its three great arches. A mile further on they came to a narrow ravine
that led away northwards through the steep lands on the left of the Road. Here
Strider turned aside, and soon they were lost in a sombre country of dark trees
winding among the feet of sullen hills.
The hobbits were
glad to leave the cheerless lands and the perilous Road behind them; but this
new country seemed threatening and unfriendly. As they went forward the hills
about them steadily rose. Here and there upon heights and ridges they caught
glimpses of ancient walls of stone, and the ruins of towers: they had an ominous
look. Frodo, who was not walking, had time to gaze ahead and to think. He
recalled Bilbo's account of his journey and the threatening towers on the hills
north of the Road, in the country near the Troll's wood where his first serious
adventure had happened. Frodo guessed that they were now in the same region, and
wondered if by chance they would pass near the spot.
'Who
lives in this land?' he asked. 'And who built these towers? Is this
troll-country?'
'No!' said Strider. 'Trolls do not build.
No one lives in this land. Men once dwelt here, ages ago; but none remain now.
They became an evil people, as legends tell, for they fell under the shadow of
Angmar. But all were destroyed in the war that brought the North Kingdom to its
end. But that is now so long ago that the hills have forgotten them, though a
shadow still lies on the land.'
'Where did you learn such
tales, if all the land is empty and forgetful?' asked Peregrin. 'The birds and
beasts do not tell tales of that son.'
'The heirs of
Elendil do not forget all things past,' said Strider; 'and many more things than
I can tell are remembered in Rivendell.'
'Have you often
been to Rivendell?' said Frodo.
'I have,' said Strider. 'I
dwelt there once, and still I return when I may. There my heart is; but it is
not my fate to sit in peace, even in the fair house of
Elrond.'
The hills now began to shut them in. The Road
behind held on its way to the River Bruinen, but both were now hidden from view.
The travellers came into a long valley; narrow, deeply cloven, dark and silent.
Trees with old and twisted roots hung over cliffs, and piled up behind into
mounting slopes of pine-wood.
The hobbits grew very weary.
They advanced slowly, for they had to pick their way through a pathless country,
encumbered by fallen trees and tumbled rocks. As long as they could they avoided
climbing for Frodo's sake, and because it was in fact difficult to find any way
up out of the narrow dales. They had been two days in this country when the
weather turned wet. The wind began to blow steadily out of the West and pour the
water of the distant seas on the dark heads of the hills in fine drenching rain.
By nightfall they were all soaked, and their camp was cheerless, for they could
not get any fire to burn. The next day the hills rose still higher and steeper
before them, and they were forced to turn away northwards out of their course.
Strider seemed to be getting anxious: they were nearly ten days out from
Weathertop, and their stock of provisions was beginning to run low. It went on
raining.
That night they camped on a stony shelf with a
rock-wall behind them, in which there was a shallow cave, a mere scoop in the
cliff. Frodo was restless. The cold and wet had made his wound more painful than
ever, and the ache and sense of deadly chill took away all sleep. He lay tossing
and turning and listening fearfully to the stealthy night-noises: wind in chinks
of rock, water dripping, a crack, the sudden rattling fall of a loosened stone.
He felt that black shapes were advancing to smother him; but when he sat up he
saw nothing but the back of Strider sitting hunched up, smoking his pipe, and
watching. He lay down again and passed into an uneasy dream, in which he walked
on the grass in his garden in the Shire, but it seemed faint and dim, less clear
than the tall black shadows that stood looking over the
hedge.
In the morning he woke to find that the rain had
stopped. The clouds were still thick, but they were breaking, and pale strips of
blue appeared between them. The wind was shifting again. They did not start
early. Immediately after their cold and comfortless breakfast Strider went off
alone, telling the others to remain under the shelter of the cliff, until he
came back. He was going to climb up, if he could, and get a look at the lie of
the land.
When he returned he was not reassuring. 'We have
come too far to the north,' he said, 'and we must find some way to turn back
southwards again. If we keep on as we are going we shall get up into the
Ettendales far north of Rivendell. That is troll-country, and little known to
me. We could perhaps find our way through and come round to Rivendell from the
north; but it would take too long, for I do not know the way, and our food would
not last. So somehow or other we must find the Ford of
Bruinen.'
The rest of that day they spent scrambling over
rocky ground. They found a passage between two hills that led them into a valley
running south-east, the direction that they wished to take; but towards the end
of the day they found their road again barred by a ridge of high land; its dark
edge against the sky was broken into many bare points like teeth of a blunted
saw. They had a choice between going back or climbing over
it.
They decided to attempt the climb, but it proved very
difficult. Before long Frodo was obliged to dismount and struggle along on foot.
Even so they often despaired of getting their pony up, or indeed of finding a
path for themselves, burdened as they were. The light was nearly gone, and they
were all exhausted, when at last they reached the top. They had climbed on to a
narrow saddle between two higher points, and the land fell steeply away again,
only a short distance ahead. Frodo threw himself down, and lay on the ground
shivering. His left arm was lifeless, and his side and shoulder felt as if icy
claws were laid upon them. The trees and rocks about him seemed shadowy and
dim.
'We cannot go any further,' said Merry to Strider. 'I
am afraid this has been too much for Frodo. I am dreadfully anxious about him.
What are we to do? Do you think they will be able to cure him in Rivendell, if
we ever get there?'
'We shall see,' answered Strider.
'There is nothing more that I can do in the wilderness; and it is chiefly
because of his wound that I am so anxious to press on. But I agree that we can
go no further tonight.'
'What is the matter with my
master?' asked Sam in a low voice, looking appealingly at Strider. 'His wound
was small, and it is already closed. There's nothing to be seen but a cold white
mark on his shoulder.'
'Frodo has been touched by the
weapons of the Enemy,' said Strider, 'and there is some poison or evil at work
that is beyond my skill to drive out. But do not give up hope,
Sam!'
Night was cold up on the high ridge. They lit a small
fire down under the gnarled roots of an old pine, that hung over a shallow pit:
it looked as if stone had once been quarried there. They sat huddled together.
The wind blew chill through the pass, and they heard the tree-tops lower down
moaning and sighing. Frodo lay half in a dream, imagining that endless dark
wings were sweeping by above him, and that on the wings rode pursuers that
sought him in all the hollows of the hills.
The morning
dawned bright and fair; the air was clean, and the light pale and clear in a
rain-washed sky. Their hearts were encouraged, but they longed for the sun to
warm their cold stiff limbs. As soon as it was light, Strider took Merry with
him and went to survey the country from the height to the east of the pass. The
sun had risen and was shining brightly when he returned with more comforting
news. They were now going more or less in the right direction. If they went on,
down the further side of the ridge, they would have the Mountains on their left.
Some way ahead Strider had caught a glimpse of the Loudwater again, and he knew
that, though it was hidden from view, the Road to the Ford was not far from the
River and lay on the side nearest to them.
'We must make
for the Road again,' he said. 'We cannot hope to find a path through these
hills. Whatever danger may beset it, the Road is our only way to the
Ford.'
As soon as they had eaten they set out again. They
climbed slowly down the southern side of the ridge; but the way was much easier
than they had expected, for the slope was far less steep on this side, and
before long Frodo was able to ride again. Bill Ferny's poor old pony was
developing an unexpected talent for picking out a path, and for sparing its
rider as many jolts as possible. The spirits of the party rose again. Even Frodo
felt better in the morning light, but every now and again a mist seemed to
obscure his sight, and he passed his hands over his
eyes.
Pippin was a little ahead of the others. Suddenly he
turned round and called to them. 'There is a path here!' he
cried.
When they came up with him, they saw that he had
made no mistake: there were clearly the beginnings of a path, that climbed with
many windings out of the woods below and faded away on the hill-top behind. In
places it was now faint and overgrown, or choked with fallen stones and trees;
but at one time it seemed to have been much used. It was a path made by strong
arms and heavy feet. Here and there old trees had been cut or broken down, and
large rocks cloven or heaved aside to make a way.
They
followed the track for some while, for it offered much the easiest way down, but
they went cautiously, and their anxiety increased as they came into the dark
woods, and the path grew plainer and broader. Suddenly coming out of a belt of
fir-trees it ran steeply down a slope, and turned sharply to the left round the
comer of a rocky shoulder of the hill. When they came to the comer they looked
round and saw that the path ran on over a level strip under the face of a low
cliff overhung with trees. In the stony wall there was a door hanging crookedly
ajar upon one great hinge.
Outside the door they all
halted. There was a cave or rock-chamber behind, but in the gloom inside nothing
could be seen. Strider, Sam, and Merry pushing with all their strength managed
to open the door a little wider, and then Strider and Merry went in. They did
not go far, for on the floor lay many old bones, and nothing else was to be seen
near the entrance except some great empty jars and broken
pots.
'Surely this is a troll-hole, if ever there was one!'
said Pippin. 'Come out, you two, and let us get away. Now we know who made the
path – and we had better get off it quick.'
'There is no
need, I think,' said Strider, coining out. 'It is certainly a troll-hole, but it
seems to have been long forsaken. I don't think we need be afraid. But let us go
on down warily, and we shall see.'
The path went on again
from the door, and turning to the right again across the level space plunged
down a thick wooded slope. Pippin, not liking to show Strider that he was still
afraid, went on ahead with Merry. Sam and Strider came behind, one on each side
of Frodo's pony, for the path was now broad enough for four or five hobbits to
walk abreast. But they had not gone very far before Pippin came running back,
followed by Merry. They both looked terrified.
'There
are trolls!' Pippin panted. 'Down in a clearing in the woods not far
below. We got a sight of them through the tree-trunks. They are very
large!'
'We will come and look at them,' said Strider,
picking up a stick. Frodo said nothing, but Sam looked
scared.
The sun was now high, and it shone down through the
half-stripped branches of the trees, and lit the clearing with bright patches of
light. They halted suddenly on the edge, and peered through the tree-trunks,
holding their breath. There stood the trolls: three large trolls. One was
stooping, and the other two stood staring at him.
Strider
walked forward unconcernedly. 'Get up, old stone!' he said, and broke his stick
upon the stooping troll.
Nothing happened. There was a gasp
of astonishment from the hobbits, and then even Frodo laughed. 'Well!' he said.
'We are forgetting our family history! These must be the very three that were
caught by Gandalf, quarrelling over the right way to cook thirteen dwarves and
one hobbit.'
'I had no idea we were anywhere near the
place!' said Pippin. He knew the story well. Bilbo and Frodo had told it often;
but as a matter of fact he had never more than half believed it. Even now he
looked at the stone trolls with suspicion, wondering if some magic might not
suddenly bring them to life again.
'You are forgetting not
only your family history, but all you ever knew about trolls,' said Strider. 'It
is broad daylight with a bright sun, and yet you come back trying to scare me
with a tale of live trolls waiting for us in this glade! In any case you might
have noticed that one of them has an old bird's nest behind his ear. That would
be a most unusual ornament for a live troll!'
They all
laughed. Frodo felt his spirits reviving: the reminder of Bilbo's first
successful adventure was heartening. The sun, too, was warm and comforting, and
the mist before his eyes seemed to be lifting a little. They rested for some
time in the glade, and took their mid-day meal right under the shadow of the
trolls' large legs.
'Won't somebody give us a bit of a
song, while the sun is high?' said Merry, when they had finished. 'We haven't
had a song or a tale for days.'
'Not since Weathertop,'
said Frodo. The others looked at him. 'Don't worry about me!' he added. 'I feel
much better, but I don't think I could sing. Perhaps Sam could dig something out
of his memory.'
'Come on, Sam!' said Merry. 'There's more
stored in your head than you let on about.'
'I don't know
about that,' said Sam. 'But how would this suit? It ain't what I call proper
poetry, if you understand me: just a bit of nonsense. But these old images here
brought it to my mind.' Standing up, with his hands behind his back, as if he
was at school, he began to sing to an old tune.
Troll sat alone on his seat of stone,
And munched and
mumbled a bare old bone;
For many a year he had gnawed it near,
For meat
was hard to come by.
Done by! Gum by!
In a case in the hills he dwelt
alone,
And meat was hard to come by.
Up came Tom
with his big boots on.
Said he to Troll: 'Pray, what is yon?
For it
looks like the shin o' my nuncle Tim,
As should be a-lyin' in
graveyard.
Caveyard! Paveyard!
This many a year has Tim been
gone,
And I thought he were lyin' in graveyard.'
'My
lad,' said Troll, 'this bone I stole.
But what be bones that lie in a
hole?
Thy nuncle was dead as a lump o' lead,
Afore I found his
shinbone.
Tinbone! Thinbone!
He can spare a share for a poor old
troll,
For he don't need his shinbone.'
Said Tom: 'I
don't see why the likes o' thee
Without axin' leave should go makin'
free
With the shank or the shin o' my father's kin;
So hand the old bone
over!
Rover! Trover!
Though dead he be, it belongs to he;
So hand the
old bone over!'
'For a couple o' pins,' says Troll, and
grins,
'I'll eat thee too, and gnaw thy shins.
A bit o' fresh meal will
go down sweet!
I'll try my teeth on thee now.
Hee now! See now!
I'm
tired o' gnawing old bones and skins;
I've a mind to dine on thee
now.'
But just as he thought his dinner was
caught,
He found his hands had hold of naught.
Before he could mind, Tom
slipped behind
And gave him the boot to larn him.
Warn him! Darn
him!
A bump o' the boot on the seat, Tom thought,
Would be the way to
larn him.
But harder than stone is the flesh and
bone
Of a troll that sits in the hills alone.
As well set your boot to
the mountain's root,
For the seat of a troll don't feel it.
Peel it!
Heal it!
Old Troll laughed, when he heard Tom groan,
And he knew his
toes could feel it.
Tom's leg is game, since home he
came,
And his bootless foot is lasting lame;
But Troll don't care, and
he's still there
With the bone he boned from its owner.
Doner!
Boner!
Troll's old seat is still the same,
And the bone he boned from
its owner!
'Well, that's a warning
to us all!' laughed Merry. 'It is as well you used a stick, and not your hand,
Strider!'
‘Where did you come by that, Sam?' asked Pippin.
'I've never heard those words before.'
Sam muttered
something inaudible. 'It's out of his own head, of course,' said Frodo. 'I am
learning a lot about Sam Gamgee on this journey. First he was a conspirator, now
he's a jester. He'll end up by becoming a wizard – or a
warrior!'
'I hope not,' said Sam. 'I don't want to be
neither!'
In the afternoon they went on down the woods.
They were probably following the very track that Gandalf, Bilbo, and the dwarves
had used many years before. After a few miles they came out on the top of a high
bank above the Road. At this point the Road had left the Hoarwell far behind in
its narrow valley, and now clung close to the feet of the hills, rolling and
winding eastward among woods and heather-covered slopes towards the Ford and the
Mountains. Not far down the bank Strider pointed out a stone in the grass. On it
roughly cut and now much weathered could still be seen dwarf-runes and secret
marks.
'There!' said Merry. 'That must be the stone that
marked the place where the trolls' gold was hidden. How much is left of Bilbo's
share, I wonder, Frodo?'
Frodo looked at the stone, and
wished that Bilbo had brought home no treasure more perilous, nor less easy to
pan with. 'None at all,' he said. 'Bilbo gave it all away. He told me he did not
feel it was really his, as it came from robbers.'
The Road
lay quiet under the long shadows of early evening. There was no sign of any
other travellers to be seen. As there was now no other possible course for them
to take, they climbed down the bank, and turning left went off as fast as they
could. Soon a shoulder of the hills cut off the light of the fast westering sun.
A cold wind flowed down to meet them from the mountains
ahead.
They were beginning to look out for a place off the
Road, where they could camp for the night, when they heard a sound that brought
sudden fear back into their hearts: the noise of hoofs behind them. They looked
back, but they could not see far because of the many windings and rollings of
the Road. As quickly as they could they scrambled off the beaten way and up into
the deep heather and bilberry brushwood on the slopes above, until they came to
a small patch of thick-growing hazels. As they peered out from among the bushes,
they could see the Road, faint and grey in the failing light, some thirty feet
below them. The sound of hoofs drew nearer. They were going fast, with a light
clippety-clippety-clip. Then faintly, as if it was blown away from them
by the breeze, they seemed to catch a dim ringing, as of small bells
tinkling.
'That does not sound like a Black Rider's horse!'
said Frodo, listening intently. The other hobbits agreed hopefully that it did
not, but they all remained full of suspicion. They had been in fear of pursuit
for so long that any sound from behind seemed ominous and unfriendly. But
Strider was now leaning forward, stooped to the ground, with a hand to his ear,
and a look of joy on his face.
The light faded, and the
leaves on the bushes rustled softly. Clearer and nearer now the bells jingled,
and
clippety-clip came the quick trotting feet. Suddenly into view below
came a white horse, gleaming in the shadows, running swiftly. In the dusk its
headstall flickered and flashed, as if it were studded with gems like living
stars. The rider's cloak streamed behind him, and his hood was thrown back; his
golden hair flowed shimmering in the wind of his speed. To Frodo it appeared
that a white light was shining through the form and raiment of the rider, as if
through a thin veil.
Strider sprang from hiding and dashed
down towards the Road, leaping with a cry through the heather; but even before
he had moved or called, the rider had reined in his horse and halted, looking up
towards the thicket where they stood. When he saw Strider, he dismounted and ran
to meet him calling out:
Ai na vedui Dunadan! Mae govannen! His speech
and clear ringing voice left no doubt in their hearts: the rider was of the
Elven-folk. No others that dwelt in the wide world had voices so fair to hear.
But there seemed to be a note of haste or fear in his call, and they saw that he
was now speaking quickly and urgently to Strider.
Soon
Strider beckoned to them, and the hobbits left the bushes and hurried down to
the Road. 'This is Glorfindel, who dwells in the house of Elrond,' said
Strider.
'Hail, and well met at last!' said the Elf-lord to
Frodo. 'I was sent from Rivendell to look for you. We feared that you were in
danger upon the road.'
'Then Gandalf has reached
Rivendell?' cried Frodo joyfully.
'No. He had not when I
departed; but that was nine days ago,' answered Glorfindel. 'Elrond received
news that troubled him. Some of my kindred, journeying in your land beyond the
Baranduin,
7 learned
that things were amiss, and sent messages as swiftly as they could. They said
that the Nine were abroad, and that you were astray bearing a great burden
without guidance, for Gandalf had not returned. There are few even in Rivendell
that can ride openly against the Nine; but such as there were, Elrond sent out
north, west, and south. It was thought that you might turn far aside to avoid
pursuit, and become lost in the Wilderness.
'It was my lot
to take the Road, and I came to the Bridge of Mitheithel, and left a token
there, nigh on seven days ago. Three of the servants of Sauron were upon the
Bridge, but they withdrew and I pursued them westward. I came also upon two
others, but they turned away southward. Since then I have searched for your
trail. Two days ago I found it, and followed it over the Bridge; and today I
marked where you descended from the hills again. But come! There is no time for
further news. Since you are here we must risk the peril of the Road and go.
There are five behind us, and when they find your trail upon the Road they will
ride after us like the wind. And they are not all. Where the other four may be,
I do not know. I fear that we may find the Ford is already held against
us.'
While Glorfindel was speaking the shades of evening
deepened. Frodo felt a great weariness come over him. Ever since the sun began
to sink the mist before his eyes had darkened, and he felt that a shadow was
coming between him and the faces of his friends. Now pain assailed him, and he
felt cold. He swayed, clutching at Sam's arm.
'My master is
sick and wounded,' said Sam angrily. 'He can't go on riding after nightfall. He
needs rest.'
Glorfindel caught Frodo as he sank to the
ground, and taking him gently in his arms he looked in his face with grave
anxiety.
Briefly Strider told of the attack on their camp
under Weathertop, and of the deadly knife. He drew out the hilt, which he had
kept, and handed it to the Elf. Glorfindel shuddered as he took it, but he
looked intently at it.
'There are evil things written on
this hilt,' he said; 'though maybe your eyes cannot see them. Keep it, Aragorn,
till we reach the house of Elrond! But be wary, and handle it as little as you
may! Alas! the wounds of this weapon are beyond my skill to heal. I will do what
I can – but all the more do I urge you now to go on without
rest.'
He searched the wound on Frodo's shoulder with his
fingers, and his face grew graver, as if what he learned disquieted him. But
Frodo felt the chill lessen in his side and arm; a little warmth crept down from
his shoulder to his hand, and the pain grew easier. The dusk of evening seemed
to grow lighter about him, as if a cloud had been withdrawn. He saw his friends'
faces more clearly again, and a measure of new hope and strength
returned.
'You shall ride my horse,' said Glorfindel. 'I
will shorten the stirrups up to the saddle-skins, and you must sit as tight as
you can. But you need not fear: my horse will not let any rider fall that I
command him to bear. His pace is light and smooth; and if danger presses too
near, he will bear you away with a speed that even the black steeds of the enemy
cannot rival.'
'No, he will not!' said Frodo. 'I shall not
ride him, if I am to be carried off to Rivendell or anywhere else, leaving my
friends behind in danger.'
Glorfindel smiled. 'I doubt very
much,' he said, 'if your friends would be in danger if you were not with them!
The pursuit would follow you and leave us in peace, I think. It is you, Frodo,
and that which you bear that brings us all in peril.'
To
that Frodo had no answer, and he was persuaded to mount Glorfindel's white
horse. The pony was laden instead with a great part of the others' burdens, so
that they now marched lighter, and for a time made good speed; but the hobbits
began to find it hard to keep up with the swift tireless feet of the Elf. On he
led them, into the mouth of darkness, and still on under the deep clouded night.
There was neither star nor moon. Not until the grey of dawn did he allow them to
halt. Pippin, Merry, and Sam were by that time nearly asleep on their stumbling
legs; and even Strider seemed by the sag of his shoulders to be weary. Frodo sat
upon the horse in a dark dream.
They cast themselves down
in the heather a few yards from the road-side, and fell asleep immediately. They
seemed hardly to have closed their eyes when Glorfindel, who had set himself to
watch while they slept, awoke them again. The sun had now climbed far into the
morning, and the clouds and mists of the night were
gone.
'Drink this!' said Glorfindel to them, pouring for
each in turn a little liquor from his silver-studded flask of leather. It was
clear as spring water and had no taste, and it did not feel either cool or warm
in the mouth; but strength and vigour seemed to flow into all their limbs as
they drank it. Eaten after that draught the stale bread and dried fruit (which
was now all that they had left) seemed to satisfy their hunger better than many
a good breakfast in the Shire had done.
They had rested
rather less than five hours when they took to the Road again. Glorfindel still
urged them on, and only allowed two brief halts during the day's march. In this
way they covered almost twenty miles before nightfall, and came to a point where
the Road bent right and ran down towards the bottom of the valley, now making
straight for the Bruinen. So far there had been no sign or sound of pursuit that
the hobbits could see or hear; but often Glorfindel would halt and listen for a
moment, if they lagged behind, and a look of anxiety clouded his face. Once or
twice he spoke to Strider in the elf-tongue.
But however
anxious their guides might be, it was plain that the hobbits could go no further
that night. They were stumbling along dizzy with weariness, and unable to think
of anything but their feet and legs. Frodo's pain had redoubled, and during the
day things about him faded to shadows of ghostly grey. He almost welcomed the
coming of night, for then the world seemed less pale and
empty.
The hobbits were still weary, when they set out
again early next morning. There were many miles yet to go between them and the
Ford, and they hobbled forward at the best pace they could
manage.
'Our peril will be greatest just ere we reach the
river,' said Glorfindel; 'for my heart warns me that the pursuit is now swift
behind us, and other danger may be waiting by the
Ford.'
The Road was still running steadily downhill, and
there was now in places much grass at either side, in which the hobbits walked
when they could, to ease their tired feet. In the late afternoon they came to a
place where the Road went suddenly under the dark shadow of tall pine-trees, and
then plunged into a deep cutting with steep moist walls of red stone. Echoes ran
along as they hurried forward; and there seemed to be a sound of many footfalls
following their own. All at once, as if through a gate of light, the Road ran
out again from the end of the tunnel into the open. There at the bottom of a
sharp incline they saw before them a long flat mile, and beyond that the Ford of
Rivendell. On the further side was a steep brown bank, threaded by a winding
path; and behind that the tall mountains climbed, shoulder above shoulder, and
peak beyond peak, into the fading sky.
There was still an
echo as of following feet in the cutting behind them; a rushing noise as if a
wind were rising and pouring through the branches of the pines. One moment
Glorfindel turned and listened, then he sprang forward with a loud
cry.
'Fly!' he called. 'Fly! The enemy is upon
us!'
The white horse leaped forward. The hobbits ran down
the slope. Glorfindel and Strider followed as rear-guard. They were only half
way across the flat, when suddenly there was a noise of horses galloping. Out of
the gate in the trees that they had just left rode a Black Rider. He reined his
horse in, and halted, swaying in his saddle. Another followed him, and then
another; then again two more.
'Ride forward! Ride!' cried
Glorfindel to Frodo.
He did not obey at once, for a strange
reluctance seized him. Checking the horse to a walk, he turned and looked back.
The Riders seemed to sit upon their great steeds like threatening statues upon a
hill, dark and solid, while all the woods and land about them receded as if into
a mist. Suddenly he knew in his heart that they were silently commanding him to
wait. Then at once fear and hatred awoke in him. His hand left the bridle and
gripped the hilt of his sword, and with a red flash he drew
it.
'Ride on! Ride on!' cried Glorfindel, and then loud and
clear he called to the horse in the elf-tongue:
noro lim, noro lim,
Asfaloth! At once the white horse sprang away and sped
like the wind along the last lap of the Road. At the same moment the black
horses leaped down the hill in pursuit, and from the Riders came a terrible cry,
such as Frodo had heard filling the woods with horror in the Eastfarthing far
away. It was answered; and to the dismay of Frodo and his friends out from the
trees and rocks away on the left four other Riders came flying. Two rode towards
Frodo: two galloped madly towards the Ford to cut off his escape. They seemed to
him to run like the wind and to grow swiftly larger and darker, as their courses
converged with his.
Frodo looked back for a moment over his
shoulder. He could no longer see his friends. The Riders behind were falling
back: even their great steeds were no match in speed for the white elf-horse of
Glorfindel. He looked forward again, and hope faded. There seemed no chance of
reaching the Ford before he was cut off by the others that had lain in ambush.
He could see them clearly now: they appeared to have cast aside their hoods and
black cloaks, and they were robed in white and grey. Swords were naked in their
pale hands; helms were on their heads. Their cold eyes glittered, and they
called to him with fell voices.
Fear now filled all Frodo's
mind. He thought no longer of his sword. No cry came from him. He shut his eyes
and clung to the horse's mane. The wind whistled in his ears, and the bells upon
the harness rang wild and shrill. A breath of deadly cold pierced him like a
spear, as with a last spurt, like a flash of white fire, the elf-horse speeding
as if on wings, passed right before the face of the foremost
Rider.
Frodo heard the splash of water. It foamed about his
feet. He felt the quick heave and surge as the horse left the river and
struggled up the stony path. He was climbing the steep bank. He was across the
Ford.
But the pursuers were close behind. At the top of the
bank the horse halted and turned about neighing fiercely. There were Nine Riders
at the water's edge below, and Frodo's spirit quailed before the threat of their
uplifted faces. He knew of nothing that would prevent them from crossing as
easily as he had done; and he felt that it was useless to try to escape over the
long uncertain path from the Ford to the edge of Rivendell, if once the Riders
crossed. In any case he felt that he was commanded urgently to halt. Hatred
again stirred in him, but he had no longer the strength to
refuse.
Suddenly the foremost Rider spurred his horse
forward. It checked at the water and reared up. With a great effort Frodo sat
upright and brandished his sword.
'Go back!' he cried. 'Go
back to the Land of Mordor, and follow me no more!' His voice sounded thin and
shrill in his own ears. The Riders halted, but Frodo had not the power of
Bombadil. His enemies laughed at him with a harsh and chilling
laughter.
'Come back! Come back!' they called. 'To Mordor
we will take you!'
'Go back!' he
whispered.
'The Ring! The Ring!' they cried with deadly
voices; and immediately their leader urged his horse forward into the water,
followed closely by two others.
'By Elbereth and Luthien
the Fair,' said Frodo with a last effort, lifting up his sword, 'you shall have
neither the Ring nor me!'
Then the leader, who was now half
across the Ford, stood up menacing in his stirrups, and raised up his hand.
Frodo was stricken dumb. He felt his tongue cleave to his mouth, and his heart
labouring. His sword broke and fell out of his shaking hand. The elf-horse
reared and snorted. The foremost of the black horses had almost set foot upon
the shore.
At that moment there came a roaring and a
rushing: a noise of loud waters rolling many stones. Dimly Frodo saw the river
below him rise, and down along its course there came a plumed cavalry of waves.
White flames seemed to Frodo to flicker on their crests and he half fancied that
he saw amid the water white riders upon white horses with frothing manes. The
three Riders that were still in the midst of the Ford were overwhelmed: they
disappeared, buried suddenly under angry foam. Those that were behind drew back
in dismay.
With his last failing senses Frodo heard cries,
and it seemed to him that he saw, beyond the Riders that hesitated on the shore,
a shining figure of white light; and behind it ran small shadowy forms waving
flames, that flared red in the grey mist that was falling over the
world.
The black horses were filled with madness, and
leaping forward in terror they bore their riders into the rushing flood. Their
piercing cries were drowned in the roaring of the river as it carried them away.
Then Frodo felt himself falling, and the roaring and confusion seemed to rise
and engulf him together with his enemies. He heard and saw no
more.
Chapter 1
Many Meetings
Frodo woke and found himself lying in bed. At first he
thought that he had slept late, after a long unpleasant dream that still hovered
on the edge of memory. Or perhaps he had been ill? But the ceiling looked
strange; it was flat, and it had dark beams richly carved. He lay a little while
longer looking at patches of sunlight on the wall, and listening to the sound of
a waterfall.
'Where am I, and what is the time?' he said
aloud to the ceiling. 'In the House of Elrond, and it is ten o'clock in the
morning.' said a voice. 'It is the morning of October the twenty-fourth, if you
want to know.'
'Gandalf!' cried Frodo, sitting up. There
was the old wizard, sitting in a chair by the open
window.
'Yes,' he said, 'I am here. And you are lucky to be
here, too, after all the absurd things you have done since you left
home.'
Frodo lay down again. He felt too comfortable and
peaceful to argue, and in any case he did not think he would get the better of
an argument. He was fully awake now, and the memory of his journey was
returning: the disastrous 'short cut' through the Old Forest; the 'accident' at
The Prancing Pony; and his madness in putting on the Ring in the dell
under Weathertop. While he was thinking of all these things and trying in vain
to bring his memory down to his arriving in Rivendell, there was a long silence,
broken only by the soft puffs of Gandalf's pipe, as he blew white smoke-rings
out of the window.
'Where's Sam?' Frodo asked at length.
'And are the others all right?'
'Yes, they are all safe and
sound,' answered Gandalf. 'Sam was here until I sent him off to get some rest,
about half an hour ago.'
'What happened at the Ford?' said
Frodo. 'It all seemed so dim somehow; and it still
does.'
'Yes, it would. You were beginning to fade,'
answered Gandalf. 'The wound was overcoming you at last. A few more hours and
you would have been beyond our aid. But you have some strength in you, my dear
hobbit! As you showed in the Barrow. That was touch and go: perhaps the most
dangerous moment of all. I wish you could have held out at
Weathertop.'
'You seem to know a great deal already,' said
Frodo. 'I have not spoken to the others about the Barrow. At first it was too
horrible; and afterwards there were other things to think about. How do you know
about it?'
'You have talked long in your sleep, Frodo,'
said Gandalf gently, 'and it has not been hard for me to read your mind and
memory. Do not worry! Though I said "absurd" just now, I did not mean it. I
think well of you – and of the others. It is no small feat to have come so far,
and through such dangers, still bearing the Ring.'
'We
should never have done it without Strider,' said Frodo. 'But we needed you. I
did not know what to do without you.'
'I was delayed,' said
Gandalf, 'and that nearly proved our ruin. And yet I am not sure; it may have
been better so.'
'I wish you would tell me what
happened!'
'All in good time! You are not supposed to talk
or worry about anything today, by Elrond's orders.'
'But
talking would stop me thinking and wondering, which are quite as tiring,' said
Frodo. 'I am wide awake now, and I remember so many things that want explaining.
Why were you delayed? You ought to tell me that at
least.'
'You will soon hear all you wish to know,' said
Gandalf. 'We shall have a Council, as soon as you are well enough. At the moment
I will only say that I was held captive.'
'You?' cried
Frodo.
'Yes, I, Gandalf the Grey,' said the wizard
solemnly. 'There are many powers in the world, for good or for evil. Some are
greater than I am. Against some I have not yet been measured. But my time is
coming. The Morgul-lord and his Black Riders have come forth. War is
preparing!'
'Then you knew of the Riders already-before I
met them?'
'Yes, I knew of them. Indeed I spoke of them
once to you; for the Black Riders are the Ringwraiths, the Nine Servants of the
Lord of the Rings. But I did not know that they had arisen again or I should
have fled with you at once. I heard news of them only after I left you in June;
but that story must wait. For the moment we have been saved from disaster, by
Aragorn.'
'Yes,' said Frodo, 'it was Strider that saved us.
Yet I was afraid of him at first. Sam never quite trusted him. I think, not at
any rate until we met Glorfindel.'
Gandalf smiled. 'I have
heard all about Sam,' he said. 'He has no more doubts
now.'
'I am glad,' said Frodo. 'For I have become very fond
of Strider. Well,
fond is not the right word. I mean he is dear to me;
though he is strange, and grim at times. In fact, he reminds me often of you. I
didn't know that any of the Big People were like that. I thought, well, that
they were just big, and rather stupid: kind and stupid like Butterbur; or stupid
and wicked like Bill Ferny. But then we don't know much about Men in the Shire,
except perhaps the Breelanders.'
'You don't know much even
about them, if you think old Barliman is stupid,' said Gandalf. 'He is wise
enough on his own ground. He thinks less than he talks, and slower; yet he can
see through a brick wall in time (as they say in Bree). But there are few left
in Middle-earth like Aragorn son of Arathorn. The race of the Kings from over
the Sea is nearly at an end. It may be that this War of the Ring will be their
last adventure.'
'Do you really mean that Strider is one of
the people of the old Kings?' said Frodo in wonder. 'I thought they had all
vanished long ago. I thought he was only a Ranger.'
'Only a
Ranger!' cried Gandalf. 'My dear Frodo, that is just what the Rangers are: the
last remnant in the North of the great people, the Men of the West. They have
helped me before; and I shall need their help in the days to come; for we have
reached Rivendell, but the Ring is not yet at rest.'
'I
suppose not,' said Frodo. 'But so far my only thought has been to get here; and
I hope I shan't have to go any further. It is very pleasant just to rest. I have
had a month of exile and adventure, and I find that has been as much as I
want.'
He fell silent and shut his eyes. After a while he
spoke again. 'I have been reckoning,' he said, 'and I can't bring the total up
to October the twenty-fourth. It ought to be the twenty-first. We must have
reached the Ford by the twentieth.'
'You have talked and
reckoned more than is good for you,' said Gandalf. 'How do the side and shoulder
feel now?'
'I don't know.' Frodo answered. 'They don't feel
at all: which is an improvement, but'–he made an effort–'I can move my arm again
a little. Yes, it is coming back to life. It is not cold,' he added, touching
his left hand with his right.
'Good!' said Gandalf. 'It is
mending fast. You will soon be sound again. Elrond has cured you: he has tended
you for days, ever since you were brought in.'
'Days?' said
Frodo.
'Well, four nights and three days, to be exact. The
Elves brought you from this where you lost count. We have been terribly anxious,
and Sam has hardly left your side, day or night, except to run messages. Elrond
is a master of healing, but the weapons of our Enemy are deadly. To tell you the
truth, I had very little hope; for I suspected that there was some fragment of
the blade still in the closed wound. But it could not be found until last night.
Then Elrond removed a splinter. It was deeply buried and it was working
inwards.'
Frodo shuddered, remembering the cruel knife with
notched blade that had vanished in Strider's hands. 'Don't be alarmed!' said
Gandalf. 'It is gone now. It has been melted. And it seems that Hobbits fade
very reluctantly. I have known strong warriors of the Big People who would
quickly have been overcome by that splinter, which you bore for seventeen
days.'
'What would they have done to me?' asked Frodo.
'What were the Riders trying to do?'
'They tried to pierce
your heart with a Morgul-knife which remains in the wound. If they had
succeeded, you would have become like they are, only weaker and under their
command. You would have became a wraith under the dominion of the Dark Lord; and
he would have tormented you for trying to keep his Ring, if any greater torment
were possible than being robbed of it and seeing it on his
hand.'
'Thank goodness I did not realize the horrible
danger!' said Frodo faintly. I was mortally afraid, of course; but if I had
known more, I should not have dared even to move. It is a marvel that I
escaped!'
'Yes, fortune or fate have helped you,' said
Gandalf, 'not to mention courage. For your heart was not touched, and only your
shoulder was pierced; and that was because you resisted to the last. But it was
a terribly narrow shave, so to speak. You were in gravest peril while you wore
the Ring, for then you were half in the wraith-world yourself, and they might
have seized you. You could see them, and they could see
you.'
'I know,' said Frodo. 'They were terrible to behold!
But why could we all see their horses?'
'Because they are
real horses; just as the black robes are real robes that they wear to give shape
to their nothingness when they have dealings with the
living.'
'Then why do these black horses endure such
riders? All other animals are terrified when they draw near, even the elf-horse
of Glorfindel. The dogs howl and the geese scream at
them.'
'Because these horses are born and bred to the
service of the Dark Lord in Mordor. Not all his servants and chattels are
wraiths! There are orcs and trolls, there are wargs and werewolves; and there
have been and still are many Men, warriors and kings, that walk alive under the
Sun, and yet are under his sway. And their number is growing
daily.'
'What about Rivendell and the Elves? Is Rivendell
safe?'
'Yes, at present, until all else is conquered. The
Elves may fear the Dark Lord, and they may fly before him, but never again will
they listen to him or serve him. And here in Rivendell there live still some of
his chief foes: the Elven-wise, lords of the Eldar from beyond the furthest
seas. They do not fear the Ringwraiths, for those who have dwelt in the Blessed
Realm live at once in both worlds, and against both the Seen and the Unseen they
have great power.'
'I thought that I saw a white figure
that shone and did not grow dim like the others. Was that Glorfindel
then?'
'Yes, you saw him for a moment as he is upon the
other side: one of the mighty of the Firstborn. He is an Elf-lord of a house of
princes. Indeed there is a power in Rivendell to withstand the might of Mordor,
for a while: and elsewhere other powers still dwell. There is power, too, of
another kind in the Shire. But all such places will soon become islands under
siege, if things go on as they are going. The Dark Lord is putting forth all his
strength.
'Still,' he said, standing suddenly up and
sticking out his chin, while his beard went stiff and straight like bristling
wire, 'we must keep up our courage. You will soon be well, if I do not talk you
to death. You are in Rivendell, and you need not worry about anything for the
present.'
'I haven't any courage to keep up,' said Frodo,
'but I am not worried at the moment. Just give me news of my friends, and tell
me the end of the affair at the Ford, as I keep on asking, and I shall be
content for the present. After that I shall have another sleep, I think; but I
shan't be able to close my eyes until you have finished the story for
me.'
Gandalf moved his chair to the bedside, and took a
good look at Frodo. The colour had come back to his face, and his eyes were
clear, and fully awake and aware. He was smiling, and there seemed to be little
wrong with him. But to the wizard's eye there was a faint change just a hint as
it were of transparency, about him, and especially about the left hand that lay
outside upon the coverlet.
'Still that must be expected,'
said Gandalf to himself. 'He is not half through yet, and to what he will come
in the end not even Elrond can foretell. Not to evil, I think. He may become
like a glass filled with a clear light for eyes to see that
can.'
'You look splendid,' he said aloud. 'I will risk a
brief tale without consulting Elrond. But quite brief, mind you, and then you
must sleep again. This is what happened, as far as I can gather. The Riders made
straight for you, as soon as you fled. They did not need the guidance of their
horses any longer: you had become visible to them, being already on the
threshold of their world. And also the Ring drew them. Your friends sprang
aside, off the road, or they would have been ridden down. They knew that nothing
could save you, if the white horse could not. The Riders were too swift to
overtake, and too many to oppose. On foot even Glorfindel and Aragorn together
could not withstand all the Nine at once.
'When the
Ringwraiths swept by, your friends ran up behind. Close to the Ford there is a
small hollow beside the road masked by a few stunted trees. There they hastily
kindled fire; for Glorfindel knew that a flood would come down, if the Riders
tried to cross, and then he would have to deal with any that were left on his
side of the river. The moment the flood appeared, he rushed out, followed by
Aragorn and the others with flaming brands. Caught between fire and water, and
seeing an Elf-lord revealed in his wrath, they were dismayed, and their horses
were stricken with madness. Three were carried away by the first assault of the
flood; the others were now hurled into the water by their horses and
overwhelmed.'
'And is that the end of the Black Riders?'
asked Frodo.
'No,' said Gandalf. 'Their horses must have
perished, and without them they are crippled. But the Ringwraiths themselves
cannot be so easily destroyed. However, there is nothing more to fear from them
at present. Your friends crossed after the flood had passed; and they found you
lying on your face at the top of the bank, with a broken sword under you. The
horse was standing guard beside you. You were pale and cold, and they feared
that you were dead, or worse. Elrond's folk met them, carrying you slowly
towards Rivendell.'
'Who made the flood?' asked
Frodo.
'Elrond commanded it,' answered Gandalf. 'The river
of this valley is under his power, and it will rise in anger when he has great
need to bar the Ford. As soon as the captain of the Ringwraiths rode into the
water the flood was released. If I may say so, I added a few touches of my own:
you may not have noticed, but some of the waves took the form of great white
horses with shining white riders; and there were many rolling and grinding
boulders. For a moment I was afraid that we had let loose too fierce a wrath,
and the flood would get out of hand and wash you all away. There is great vigour
in the waters that come down from the snows of the Misty
Mountains.'
'Yes, it all comes back to me now,' said Frodo,
'the tremendous roaring. I thought I was drowning, with my friends and enemies
and all. But now we are safe!'
Gandalf looked quickly at
Frodo, but he had shut his eyes. 'Yes, you are all safe for the present. Soon
there will be feasting and merrymaking to celebrate the victory at the Ford of
Bruinen, and you will all be there in places of
honour.'
'Splendid!' said Frodo. 'It is wonderful that
Elrond, and Glorfindel and such great lords, not to mention Strider, should take
so much trouble and show me so much kindness.'
'Well, there
are many reasons why they should,' said Gandalf, smiling. 'I am one good reason.
The Ring is another: you are the Ring-bearer. And you are the heir of Bilbo, the
Ring-finder.'
'Dear Bilbo!' said Frodo sleepily. 'I wonder
where he is. I wish he was here and could hear all about it. It would have made
him laugh, The cow jumped over the Moon! And the poor old troll!' With that he
fell fast asleep.
Frodo was now safe in the Last Homely
House east of the Sea. That house was, as Bilbo had long ago reported, 'a
perfect house, whether you like food or sleep, or story-telling or singing, or
just sitting and thinking best, or a pleasant mixture of them all'. Merely to be
there was a cure for weariness, fear, and sadness.
As the
evening drew on, Frodo woke up again, and he found that he no longer felt in
need of rest or sleep, but had a mind for food and drink, and probably for
singing and story-telling afterwards. He got out of bed and discovered that his
arm was already nearly as useful again as it ever had been. He found laid ready
clean garments of green cloth that fitted him excellently. Looking in a mirror
he was startled to see a much thinner reflection of himself than he remembered:
it looked remarkably like the young nephew of Bilbo who used to go tramping with
his uncle in the Shire; but the eyes looked out at him
thoughtfully.
'Yes, you have seen a thing or two since you
last peeped out of a looking-glass,' he said to his reflection. 'But now for a
merry meeting!'
He stretched out his arms and whistled a
tune.
At that moment there was a knock on the door, and Sam
came in. He ran to Frodo and took his left hand, awkwardly and shyly. He stroked
it gently and then he blushed and turned hastily
away.
'Hullo, Sam!' said Frodo.
'It's
warm!' said Sam. 'Meaning your hand, Mr. Frodo. It has felt so cold through the
long nights. But glory and trumpets!' he cried, turning round again with shining
eyes and dancing on the floor. 'It's fine to see you up and yourself again, sir!
Gandalf asked me to come and see if you were ready to come down, and I thought
he was joking.'
'I am ready,' said Frodo. 'Let's go and
look for the rest of the party!'
'I can take you to them,
sir,' said Sam. 'It's a big house this, and very peculiar. Always a bit more to
discover, and no knowing what you'll find round a corner. And Elves, sir! Elves
here, and Elves there! Some like kings, terrible and splendid; and some as merry
as children. And the music and the singing – not that I have had the time or the
heart for much listening since we got here. But I'm getting to know some of the
ways of the place.'
'I know what you have been doing, Sam,'
said Frodo, taking his arm. 'But you shall be merry tonight, and listen to your
heart's content. Come on, guide me round the corners!'
Sam
led him along several passages and down many steps and out into a high garden
above the steep bank of the river. He found his friends sitting in a porch on
the side of the house looking east. Shadows had fallen in the valley below, but
there was still a light on the faces of the mountains far above. The air was
warm. The sound of running and falling water was loud, and the evening was
filled with a faint scent of trees and flowers, as if summer still lingered in
Elrond's gardens.
'Hurray!' cried Pippin, springing up.
'Here is our noble cousin! Make way for Frodo, Lord of the
Ring!'
'Hush!' said Gandalf from the shadows at the back of
the porch. 'Evil things do not come into this valley; but all the same we should
not name them. The Lord of the Ring is not Frodo, but the master of the Dark
Tower of Mordor, whose power is again stretching out over the world! We are
sitting in a fortress. Outside it is getting
dark.'
'Gandalf has been saying many cheerful things like
that,' said Pippin. 'He thinks I need keeping in order. But it seems impossible,
somehow, to feel gloomy or depressed in this place. I feel I could sing, if I
knew the right song for the occasion.'
'I feel like singing
myself,' laughed Frodo. 'Though at the moment I feel more like eating and
drinking!'
'That will soon be cured,' said Pippin. 'You
have shown your usual cunning in getting up just in time for a
meal.'
'More than meal! A feast!' said Merry. 'As soon as
Gandalf reported that you were recovered, the preparations began.' He had hardly
finished speaking when they were summoned to the hall by the ringing of many
bells.
The hall of Elrond's house was filled with folk:
Elves for the most part, though there were a few guests of other sorts. Elrond,
as was his custom, sat in a great chair at the end of the long table upon the
dais; and next to him on the one side sat Glorfindel, on the other side sat
Gandalf.
Frodo looked at them in wonder, for he had never
before seen Elrond, of whom so many tales spoke; and as they sat upon his right
hand and his left, Glorfindel, and even Gandalf, whom he thought he knew so
well, were revealed as lords of dignity and power. Gandalf was shorter in
stature than the other two; but his long white hair, his sweeping silver beard,
and his broad shoulders, made him look like some wise king of ancient legend. In
his aged face under great snowy brows his dark eyes were set like coals that
could leap suddenly into fire.
Glorfindel was tall and
straight; his hair was of shining gold, his face fair and young and fearless and
full of joy; his eyes were bright and keen, and his voice like music; on his
brow sat wisdom, and in his hand was strength.
The face of
Elrond was ageless, neither old nor young, though in it was written the memory
of many things both glad and sorrowful. His hair was dark as the shadows of
twilight, and upon it was set a circlet of silver; his eyes were grey as a clear
evening, and in them was a light like the light of stars. Venerable he seemed as
a king crowned with many winters, and yet hale as a tried warrior in the fulness
of his strength. He was the Lord of Rivendell and mighty among both Elves and
Men.
In the middle of the table, against the woven cloths
upon the wall, there was a chair under a canopy, and there sat a lady fair to
look upon, and so like was she in form of womanhood to Elrond that Frodo guessed
that she was one of his close kindred. Young she was and yet not so. The braids
of her dark hair were touched by no frost, her white arms and clear face were
flawless and smooth, and the light of stars was in her bright eyes, grey as a
cloudless night; yet queenly she looked, and thought and knowledge were in her
glance, as of one who has known many things that the years bring. Above her brow
her head was covered with a cap of silver lace netted with small gems,
glittering white; but her soft grey raiment had no ornament save a girdle of
leaves wrought in silver.
So it was that Frodo saw her whom
few mortals had yet seen; Arwen, daughter of Elrond, in whom it was said that
the likeness of Luthien had come on earth again; and she was called Undomiel,
for she was the Evenstar of her people. Long she had been in the land of her
mother's kin, in Lorien beyond the mountains, and was but lately returned to
Rivendell to her father's house. But her brothers, Elladan and Elrohir, were out
upon errantry: for they rode often far afield with the Rangers of the North,
forgetting never their mother's torment in the dens of the
orcs.
Such loveliness in living thing Frodo had never seen
before nor imagined in his mind; and he was both surprised and abashed to find
that he had a seat at Elrond's table among all these folk so high and fair.
Though he had a suitable chair, and was raised upon several cushions, he felt
very small, and rather out of place; but that feeling quickly passed. The feast
was merry and the food all that his hunger could desire. It was some time before
he looked about him again or even turned to his
neighbours.
He looked first for his friends. Sam had begged
to be allowed to wait on his master, but had been told that for this time he was
a guest of honour. Frodo could see him now, sitting with Pippin and Merry at the
upper end of one of the side-tables close to the dais. He could see no sign of
Strider.
Next to Frodo on his right sat a dwarf of
important appearance, richly dressed. His beard, very long and forked, was
white, nearly as white as the snow-white cloth of his garments. He wore a silver
belt, and round his neck hung a chain of silver and diamonds. Frodo stopped
eating to look at him.
'Welcome and well met!' said the
dwarf, turning towards him. Then he actually rose from his seat and bowed.
'Gloin at your service,' he said, and bowed still
lower.
'Frodo Baggins at your service and your family's,'
said Frodo correctly, rising in surprise and scattering his cushions. 'Am I
right in guessing that you are
the Gloin, one of the twelve companions of
the great Thorin Oakenshield?'
'Quite right,' answered the
dwarf, gathering up the cushions and courteously assisting Frodo back into his
seat. 'And I do not ask, for I have already been told that you are the kinsman
and adopted heir of our friend Bilbo the renowned. Allow me to congratulate you
on your recovery.'
'Thank you very much,' said
Frodo.
'You have had some very strange adventures, I hear,'
said Gloin. 'I wonder greatly what brings
four hobbits on so long a
journey. Nothing like it has happened since Bilbo came with us. But perhaps I
should not inquire too closely, since Elrond and Gandalf do not seem disposed to
talk of this?'
'I think we will not speak of it, at least
not yet,' said Frodo politely.
He guessed that even in
Elrond's house the matter of the Ring was not one for casual talk; and in any
case he wished to forget his troubles for a time. 'But I am equally curious,' he
added, 'to learn what brings so important a dwarf so far from the Lonely
Mountain.'
Gloin looked at him. 'If you have not heard, I
think we will not speak yet of that either. Master Elrond will summon us all ere
long, I believe, and then we shall all hear many things. But there is much else
that may be told.'
Throughout the rest of the meal they
talked together, but Frodo listened more than he spoke; for the news of the
Shire, apart from the Ring, seemed small and far-away and unimportant, while
Gloin had much to tell of events in the northern regions of Wilderland. Frodo
learned that Grimbeorn the Old, son of Beorn, was now the lord of many sturdy
men, and to their land between the Mountains and Mirkwood neither orc nor wolf
dared to go.
'Indeed,' said Gloin, 'if it were not for the
Beornings, the passage from Dale to Rivendell would long ago have become
impossible. They are valiant men and keep open the High Pass and the Ford of
Carrock. But their tolls are high,' he added with a shake of his head; 'and like
Beorn of old they are not over fond of dwarves. Still, they are trusty, and that
is much in these days. Nowhere are there any men so friendly to us as the Men of
Dale. They are good folk, the Bardings. The grandson of Bard the Bowman rules
them, Brand son of Bain son of Bard. He is a strong king, and his realm now
reaches far south and east of Esgaroth.'
'And what of your
own people?' asked Frodo.
'There is much to tell, good and
bad,' said Gloin; 'yet it is mostly good: we have so far been fortunate, though
we do not escape the shadow of these times. If you really wish to hear of us, I
will tell you tidings gladly. But stop me when you are weary! Dwarves' tongues
run on when speaking of their handiwork, they say.'
And
with that Gloin embarked on a long account of the doings of the Dwarf-kingdom.
He was delighted to have found so polite a listener; for Frodo showed no sign of
weariness and made no attempt to change the subject, though actually he soon got
rather lost among the strange names of people and places that he had never heard
of before. He was interested, however, to hear that Dain was still King under
the Mountain, and was now old (having passed his two hundred and fiftieth year),
venerable, and fabulously rich. Of the ten companions who had survived the
Battle of Five Armies seven were still with him: Dwalin, Gloin, Dori, Nori,
Bifur, Bofur, and Bombur. Bombur was now so fat that he could not move himself
from his couch to his chair at table, and it took six young dwarves to lift
him.
'And what has become of Balin and Ori and Oin?' asked
Frodo.
A shadow passed over Gloin's face. 'We do not know,'
he answered. 'It is largely on account of Balin that I have come to ask the
advice of those that dwell in Rivendell. But tonight let us speak of merrier
things!'
Gloin began then to talk of the works of his
people, telling Frodo about their great labours in Dale and under the Mountain.
'We have done well,' he said. 'But in metalwork we cannot rival our fathers,
many of whose secrets are lost. We make good armour and keen swords, but we
cannot again make mail or blade to match those that were made before the dragon
came. Only in mining and building have we surpassed the old days. You should see
the waterways of Dale, Frodo, and the fountains, and the pools! You should see
the stone-paved roads of many colours! And the halls and cavernous streets under
the earth with arches carved like trees; and the terraces and towers upon the
Mountain's sides! Then you would see that we have not been
idle.'
'I will come and see them, if ever I can,' said
Frodo. 'How surprised Bilbo would have been to see all the changes in the
Desolation of Smaug!'
Gloin looked at Frodo and smiled.
'You were very fond of Bilbo were you not?' he
asked.
'Yes,' answered Frodo. 'I would rather see him than
all the towers and palaces in the world.'
At length the
feast came to an end. Elrond and Arwen rose and went down the hall, and the
company followed them in due order. The doors were thrown open, and they went
across a wide passage and through other doors, and came into a further hall. In
it were no tables, but a bright fire was burning in a great hearth between the
carven pillars upon either side.
Frodo found himself
walking with Gandalf. 'This is the Hall of Fire' said the wizard. 'Here you will
hear many songs and tales-if you can keep awake. But except on high days it
usually stands empty and quiet, and people come here who wish for peace, and
thought. There is always a fire here, all the year round, but there is little
other light.'
As Elrond entered and went towards the seat
prepared for him, elvish minstrels began to make sweet music. Slowly the hall
filled, and Frodo looked with delight upon the many fair faces that were
gathered together; the golden firelight played upon them and shimmered in their
hair. Suddenly he noticed, not far from the further end of the fire, a small
dark figure seated on a stool with his back propped against a pillar. Beside him
on the ground was a drinking-cup and some bread. Frodo wondered whether he was
ill (if people were ever ill in Rivendell), and had been unable to come to the
feast. His head seemed sunk in sleep on his breast, and a fold of his dark cloak
was drawn over his face.
Elrond went forward and stood
beside the silent figure. 'Awake little master,' he said with a smile. Then,
turning to Frodo, he beckoned to him. 'Now at last the hour has come that you
have wished for, Frodo,' he said. 'Here is a friend that you have long
missed.'
The dark figure raised its head and uncovered its
face.
'Bilbo!' cried Frodo with sudden recognition, and he
sprang forward.
'Hullo, Frodo my lad!' said Bilbo. 'So you
have got here at last. I hoped you would manage it. Well, well! So all this
feasting is in your honour, I hear. I hope you enjoyed
yourself?'
'Why weren't you there?' cried Frodo. 'And why
haven't I been allowed to see you before?'
'Because you
were asleep. I have seen a good deal of you. I have sat by your side with Sam
each day. But as for the feast, I don't go in for such things much now. And I
had something else to do.'
'What were you
doing?'
'Why, sitting and thinking. I do a lot of that
nowadays, and this is the best place to do it in, as a rule. Wake up, indeed!'
he said, cocking an eye at Elrond. There was a bright twinkle in it and no sign
of sleepiness that Frodo could see. 'Wake up! I was not asleep, Master Elrond.
If you want to know, you have all come out from your feast too soon, and you
have disturbed me – in the middle of making up a song. I was stuck over a line
or two, and was thinking about them; but now I don't suppose I shall ever get
them right. There will be such a deal of singing that the ideas will be driven
clean out of my head. I shall have to get my friend the Dunadan to help me.
Where is he?'
Elrond laughed. 'He shall be found,' he said.
'Then you two shall go into a corner and finish your task, and we will hear it
and judge it before we end our merrymaking.' Messengers were sent to find
Bilbo's friend, though none knew where he was, or why he had not been present at
the feast.
In the meanwhile Frodo and Bilbo sat side by
side, and Sam came quickly and placed himself near them. They talked together in
soft voices, oblivious of the mirth and music in the hall about them. Bilbo had
not much to say of himself. When he had left Hobbiton he had wandered off
aimlessly, along the Road or in the country on either side; but somehow he had
steered all the time towards Rivendell. 'I got here without much adventure,' he
said, 'and after a rest I went on with the dwarves to Dale: my last journey. I
shan't travel again. Old Balin had gone away. Then I came back here, and here I
have been. I have done this and that. I have written some more of my book. And,
of course, I make up a few songs. They sing them occasionally: just to please
me, I think; for, of course, they aren't really good enough for Rivendell. And I
listen and I think. Time doesn't seem to pass here: it just is. A remarkable
place altogether.
'I hear all kinds of news, from over the
Mountains, and out of the South, but hardly anything from the Shire. I heard
about the Ring, of course. Gandalf has been here often. Not that he has told me
a great deal, he has become closer than ever these last few years. The Dunadan
has told me more. Fancy that ring of mine causing such a disturbance! It is a
pity that Gandalf did not find out more sooner. I could have brought the thing
here myself long ago without so much trouble. I have thought several times of
going back to Hobbiton for it; but I am getting old, and they would not let me:
Gandalf and Elrond, I mean. They seemed to think that the Enemy was looking high
and low for me, and would make mincemeat of me, if he caught me tottering about
in the Wild.
'And Gandalf said: "The Ring has passed on,
Bilbo. It would do no good to you or to others, if you tried to meddle with it
again." Odd sort of remark, just like Gandalf. But he said he was looking after
you, so I let things be. I am frightfully glad to see you safe and sound.' He
paused and looked at Frodo doubtfully.
'Have you got it
here?' he asked in a whisper. 'I can't help feeling curious, you know, after all
I've heard. I should very much like just to peep at it
again.'
'Yes, I've got it,' answered Frodo, feeling a
strange reluctance. 'It looks just the same as ever it
did.'
'Well, I should just like to see it for a moment,'
said Bilbo.
When he had dressed, Frodo found that while he
slept the Ring had been hung about his neck on a new chain, light but strong.
Slowly he drew it out. Bilbo put out his hand. But Frodo quickly drew back the
Ring. To his distress and amazement he found that he was no longer looking at
Bilbo; a shadow seemed to have fallen between them, and through it he found
himself eyeing a little wrinkled creature with a hungry face and bony groping
hands. He felt a desire to strike him.
The music and
singing round them seemed to falter and a silence fell. Bilbo looked quickly at
Frodo's face and passed his hand across his eyes. 'I understand now,' he said.
'Put it away! I am sorry; sorry you have come in for this burden; sorry about
everything. Don't adventures ever have an end? I suppose not. Someone else
always has to carry on the story. Well, it can't be helped. I wonder if it's any
good trying to finish my book? But don't let's worry about it now – let's have
some real News! Tell me all about the Shire!'
Frodo hid the
Ring away, and the shadow passed leaving hardly a shred of memory. The light and
music of Rivendell was about him again. Bilbo smiled and laughed happily. Every
item of news from the Shire that Frodo could tell – aided and corrected now and
again by Sam – was of the greatest interest to him, from the felling of the
least tree to the pranks of the smallest child in Hobbiton. They were so deep in
the doings of the Four Farthings that they did not notice the arrival of a man
clad in dark green cloth. For many minutes he stood looking down at them with a
smile.
Suddenly Bilbo looked up. 'Ah, there you are at
last, Dunadan!' he cried.
'Strider!' said Frodo. 'You seem
to have a lot of names.'
'Well,
Strider is one that
I haven't heard before, anyway,' said Bilbo. 'What do you call him that
for?'
'They call me that in Bree,' said Strider laughing,
'and that is how I was introduced to him.'
'And why do you
call him Dunadan?' asked Frodo.
'
The Dunadan,' said
Bilbo. 'He is often called that here. But I thought you knew enough Elvish at
least to know
dun-udan: Man of the West, Numenorean. But this is not the
time for lessons!' He turned to Strider.
'Where have you
been, my friend? Why weren't you at the feast? The Lady Arwen was
there.'
Strider looked down at Bilbo gravely. 'I know,' he
said. 'But often I must put mirth aside. Elladan and Elrohir have returned out
of the Wild unlooked-for, and they had tidings that I wished to hear at
once.'
'Well, my dear fellow,' said Bilbo, 'now you've
heard the news, can't you spare me a moment? I want your help in something
urgent. Elrond says this song of mine is to be finished before the end of the
evening, and I am stuck. Let's go off into a corner and polish it
up!'
Strider smiled. 'Come then!' he said. 'Let me hear
it!'
Frodo was left to himself for a while. for Sam had
fallen asleep. He was alone and felt rather forlorn, although all about him the
folk of Rivendell were gathered. But those near him were silent, intent upon the
music of the voices and the instruments. and they gave no heed to anything else.
Frodo began to listen.
At first the beauty of the melodies
and of the interwoven words in elven-tongues, even though he understood them
little, held him in a spell, as soon as he began to attend to them. Almost it
seemed that the words took shape, and visions of far lands and bright things
that he had never yet imagined opened out before him; and the firelit hall
became like a golden mist above seas of foam that sighed upon the margins of the
world. Then the enchantment became more and more dreamlike, until he felt that
an endless river of swelling gold and silver was flowing over him, too
multitudinous for its pattern to be comprehended; it became part of the
throbbing air about him, and it drenched and drowned him. Swiftly he sank under
its shining weight into a deep realm of sleep.
There he
wandered long in a dream of music that turned into running water, and then
suddenly into a voice. It seemed to be the voice of Bilbo chanting verses. Faint
at first and then clearer ran the words.
Earendil was a mariner
that tarried in Arvernien;
he
built a boat of timber felled
in Nimbrethil to journey in;
her sails he
wove of silver fair,
of silver were her lanterns made,
her prow was
fashioned like a swan,
and light upon her banners
laid.
In panoply of ancient kings,
in chained rings
he armoured him;
his shining shield was scored with runes
to ward all
wounds and harm from him;
his bow was made of dragon-horn,
his arrows
shorn of ebony,
of silver was his habergeon,
his scabbard of
chalcedony;
his sword of steel was valiant,
of adamant his helmet
tall,
an eagle-plume upon his crest,
upon his breast an
emerald.
Beneath the Moon and under star
he
wandered far from northern strands,
bewildered on enchanted ways
beyond
the days of mortal lands.
From gnashing of the Narrow Ice
where shadow
lies on frozen hills,
from nether heats and burning waste
he turned in
haste, and roving still
on starless waters far astray
at last he came to
Night of Naught,
and passed, and never sight he saw
of shining shore nor
light he sought.
The winds of wrath came driving
him,
and blindly in the foam he fled
from west to east and
errandless,
unheralded he homeward sped.
There
flying Elwing came to him,
and flame was in the darkness lit;
more
bright than light of diamond
the fire upon her carcanet.
The Silmaril
she bound on him
and crowned him with the living light
and dauntless
then with burning brow
he turned his prow; and in the night
from
Otherworld beyond the Sea
there strong and free a storm arose,
a wind of
power in Tarmenel;
by paths that seldom mortal goes
his boat it bore
with biting breath
as might of death across the grey
and long-forsaken
seas distressed:
from east to west he passed
away.
Through Evernight he back was borne
on
black and roaring waves that ran
o'er leagues unlit and foundered
shores
that drowned before the Days began,
until he heard on strands of
pearl
when ends the world the music long,
where ever foaming billows
roll
the yellow gold and jewels wan.
He saw the Mountain silent
rise
where twilight lies upon the knees
of Valinor, and
Eldamar
beheld afar beyond the seas.
A wanderer escaped from night
to
haven white he came at last,
to Elvenhome the green and fair
where keen
the air, where pale as glass
beneath the Hill of Ilmarin
a-glimmer in a
valley sheer
the lamplit towers of Tirion
are mirrored on the
Shadowmere.
He tarried there from
errantry,
and melodies they taught to him,
and sages old him marvels
told,
and harps of gold they brought to him.
They clothed him then in
elven-white,
and seven lights before him sent,
as through the
Calacirian
to hidden land forlorn he went.
He came unto the timeless
halls
where shining fall the countless years,
and endless reigns the
Elder King
in Ilmarin on Mountain sheer;
and words unheard were spoken
then
of folk of Men and Elven-kin,
beyond the world were visions
showed
forbid to those that dwell therein.
A
ship then new they built for him
of mithril and of elven-glass
with
shining prow; no shaven oar
nor sail she bore on silver mast:
the
Silmaril as lantern light
and banner bright with living flame
to gleam
thereon by Elbereth
herself was set, who thither came
and wings immortal
made for him,
and laid on him undying doom,
to sail the shoreless skies
and come
behind the Sun and light of
Moon.
From Evereven's lofty hills
where softly
silver fountains fall
his wings him bore, a wandering light,
beyond the
mighty Mountain Wall.
From World's End then he turned away
and yearned
again to find afar
his home through shadows journeying,
and burning as
an island star
on high above the mists he came,
a distant flame before
the Sun,
a wonder ere the waking dawn
where grey the Norland waters
run.
And over Middle-earth he passed
and heard
at last the weeping sore
of women and of elven-maids
in Elder Days, in
years of yore.
But on him mighty doom was laid,
till Moon should fade,
an orbed star
to pass, and tarry never more
on Hither Shores where
mortals are;
for ever still a herald on
an errand that should never
rest
to bear his shining lamp afar,
the Flammifer of
Westernesse.
The chanting ceased.
Frodo opened his eyes and saw that Bilbo was seated on his stool in a circle of
listeners, who were smiling and applauding.
'Now we had
better have it again,' said an Elf.
Bilbo got up and bowed.
'I am flattered, Lindir,' he said. 'But it would be too tiring to repeat it
all.'
'Not too tiring for you,' the Elves answered
laughing. 'You know you are never tired of reciting your own verses. But really
we cannot answer your question at one hearing!'
'What!'
cried Bilbo. 'You can't tell which parts were mine, and which were the
Dunadan's?'
'It is not easy for us to tell the difference
between two mortals' said the Elf.
'Nonsense, Lindir,'
snorted Bilbo. 'If you can't distinguish between a Man and a Hobbit, your
judgement is poorer than I imagined. They're as different as peas and
apples.'
'Maybe. To sheep other sheep no doubt appear
different,' laughed Lindir. 'Or to shepherds. But Mortals have not been our
study. We have other business.'
'I won't argue with you,'
said Bilbo. 'I am sleepy after so much music and singing. I'll leave you to
guess, if you want to.'
He got up and came towards Frodo.
'Well, that's over,' he said in a low voice. 'It went off better than I
expected. I don't often get asked for a second hearing. What did you think of
it?'
'I am not going to try and guess,' said Frodo
smiling.
'You needn't,' said Bilbo. 'As a matter of fact it
was all mine. Except that Aragorn insisted on my putting in a green stone. He
seemed to think it important. I don't know why. Otherwise he obviously thought
the whole thing rather above my head, and he said that if I had the cheek to
make verses about Earendil in the house of Elrond, it was my affair. I suppose
he was right.'
'I don't know,' said Frodo. 'It seemed to me
to fit somehow, though I can't explain. I was half asleep when you began, and it
seemed to follow on from something that I was dreaming about. I didn't
understand that it was really you speaking until near the
end.'
'It
is difficult to keep awake here, until you
get used to it,' said Bilbo. 'Not that hobbits would ever acquire quite the
elvish appetite for music and poetry and tales. They seem to like them as much
as food, or more. They will be going on for a long time yet. What do you say to
slipping off for some more quiet talk?'
'Can we?' said
Frodo.
'Of course. This is merrymaking not business. Come
and go as you like, as long as you don't make a
noise.'
They got up and withdrew quietly into the shadows,
and made for the doors. Sam they left behind, fast asleep still with a smile on
his face. In spite of his delight in Bilbo's company Frodo felt a tug of regret
as they passed out of the Hall of Fire. Even as they stepped over the threshold
a single clear voice rose in song.
A Elbereth Gilthoniel,
silivren penna miriel
o menel
aglar elenath!
Na-chaered palan-diriel
o galadhremmin
ennorath,
Fanuilos, le linnathon
nef aear, si nef
aearon!
Frodo halted for a moment,
looking back. Elrond was in his chair and the fire was on his face like
summer-light upon the trees. Near him sat the Lady Arwen. To his surprise Frodo
saw that Aragorn stood beside her; his dark cloak was thrown back, and he seemed
to be clad in elven-mail, and a star shone on his breast. They spoke together,
and then suddenly it seemed to Frodo that Arwen turned towards him, and the
light of her eyes fell on him from afar and pierced his
heart.
He stood still enchanted, while the sweet syllables
of the elvish song fell like clear jewels of blended word and melody. 'It is a
song to Elbereth,' said Bilbo. 'They will sing that, and other songs of the
Blessed Realm, many times tonight. Come on!'
He led Frodo
back to his own little room. It opened on to the gardens and looked south across
the ravine of the Bruinen. There they sat for some while, looking through the
window at the bright stars above the steep-climbing woods, and talking softly.
They spoke no more of the small news of the Shire far away, nor of the dark
shadows and perils that encompassed them, but of the fair things they had seen
in the world together, of the Elves, of the stars, of trees, and the gentle fall
of the bright year in the woods.
At last there came a knock
on the door. 'Begging your pardon,' said Sam, putting in his head, 'but I was
just wondering if you would be wanting anything.'
'And
begging yours, Sam Gamgee,' replied Bilbo. 'I guess you mean that it is time
your master went to bed.'
'Well, sir, there is a Council
early tomorrow, I hear and he only got up today for the first
time.'
'Quite right, Sam,' laughed Bilbo. 'You can trot off
and tell Gandalf that he has gone to bed. Good night, Frodo! Bless me, but it
has been good to see you again! There are no folk like hobbits after all for a
real good talk. I am getting very old, and I began to wonder if I should ever
live to see your chapters of our story. Good night! I'll take a walk, I think,
and look at the stars of Elbereth in the garden. Sleep well!'
Chapter 2
The Council of
Elrond
Next day Frodo woke early, feeling refreshed and well. He
walked along the terraces above the loud-flowing Bruinen and watched the pale,
cool sun rise above the far mountains, and shine down slanting through the thin
silver mist; the dew upon the yellow leaves was glimmering, and the woven nets
of gossamer twinkled on every bush. Sam walked beside him, saying nothing, but
sniffing the air, and looking every now and again with wonder in his eyes at the
great heights in the East. The snow was white upon their peaks.
On a seat cut in the stone beside a
turn in the path they came upon Gandalf and Bilbo deep in talk. 'Hullo! Good
morning!' said Bilbo. 'Feel ready for the great
council?'
'I feel ready for anything,' answered Frodo. 'But
most of all I should like to go walking today and explore the valley. I should
like to get into those pine-woods up there.' He pointed away far up the side of
Rivendell to the north.
'You may have a chance later,' said
Gandalf. 'But we cannot make any plans yet. There is much to hear and decide
today.'
Suddenly as they were talking a single clear bell
rang out. 'That is the warning bell for the Council of Elrond,' cried Gandalf.
'Come along now! Both you and Bilbo are wanted.'
Frodo and
Bilbo followed the wizard quickly along the winding path back to the house;
behind them, uninvited and for the moment forgotten, trotted
Sam.
Gandalf led them to the porch where Frodo had found
his friends the evening before. The light of the clear autumn morning was now
glowing in the valley. The noise of bubbling waters came up from the foaming
river-bed. Birds were singing, and a wholesome peace lay on the land. To Frodo
his dangerous flight, and the rumours of the darkness growing in the world
outside, already seemed only the memories of a troubled dream; but the faces
that were turned to meet them as they entered were
grave.
Elrond was there, and several others were seated in
silence about him. Frodo saw Glorfindel and Gloin; and in a corner alone Strider
was sitting, clad in his old travel-worn clothes again. Elrond drew Frodo to a
seat by his side, and presented him to the company,
saying:
'Here, my friends is the hobbit, Frodo son of
Drogo. Few have ever come hither through greater peril or on an errand more
urgent.'
He then pointed out and named those whom Frodo had
not met before. There was a younger dwarf at Gloin's side: his son Gimli. Beside
Glorfindel there were several other counsellors of Elrond's household, of whom
Erestor was the chief; and with him was Galdor, an Elf from the Grey Havens who
had come on an errand from Cirdan the Shipwright. There was also a strange Elf
clad in green and brown, Legolas, a messenger from his father, Thranduil, the
King of the Elves of Northern Mirkwood. And seated a little apart was a tall man
with a fair and noble face, dark-haired and grey-eyed, proud and stern of
glance.
He was cloaked and booted as if for a journey on
horseback; and indeed though his garments were rich, and his cloak was lined
with fur, they were stained with long travel. He had a collar of silver in which
a single white stone was set; his locks were shorn about his shoulders. On a
baldric he wore a great horn tipped with silver that now was laid upon his
knees. He gazed at Frodo and Bilbo with sudden
wonder.
'Here,' said Elrond, turning to Gandalf, 'is
Boromir, a man from the South. He arrived in the grey morning, and seeks for
counsel. I have bidden him to be present, for here his questions will be
answered.'
Not all that was spoken and debated in the
Council need now be told. Much was said of events in the world outside,
especially in the South, and in the wide lands east of the Mountains. Of these
things Frodo had already heard many rumours; but the tale of Gloin was new to
him, and when the dwarf spoke he listened attentively. It appeared that amid the
splendour of their works of hand the hearts of the Dwarves of the Lonely
Mountain were troubled.
'It is now many years ago,' said
Gloin, 'that a shadow of disquiet fell upon our people. Whence it came we did
not at first perceive. Words began to be whispered in secret: it was said that
we were hemmed in a narrow place, and that greater wealth and splendour would be
found in a wider world. Some spoke of Moria: the mighty works of our fathers
that are called in our own tongue Khazad-dum; and they declared that now at last
we had the power and numbers to return.'
Gloin sighed.
'Moria! Moria! Wonder of the Northern world! Too deep we delved there, and woke
the nameless fear. Long have its vast mansions lain empty since the children of
Durin fled. But now we spoke of it again with longing, and yet with dread; for
no dwarf has dared to pass the doors of Khazad-dum for many lives of kings, save
Thror only, and he perished. At last, however, Balin listened to the whispers,
and resolved to go; and though Dain did not give leave willingly, he took with
him Ori and Oin and many of our folk, and they went away
south.
"That was nigh on thirty years ago. For a while we
had news and it seemed good: messages reported that Moria had been entered and a
great work begun there. Then there was silence, and no word has ever come from
Moria since.
"Then about a year ago a messenger came to
Dain, but not from Moria – from Mordor: a horseman in the night, who called Dain
to his gate. The Lord Sauron the Great, so he said, wished for our friendship.
Rings he would give for it, such as he gave of old. And he asked urgently
concerning
hobbits, of what kind they were, and where they dwelt. "For
Sauron knows," said he, "that one of these was known to you on a
time."
'At this we were greatly troubled, and we gave no
answer. And then his fell voice was lowered, and he would have sweetened it if
he could. "As a small token only of your friendship Sauron asks this," he said:
"that you should find this thief," such was his word, "and get from him, willing
or no, a little ring, the least of rings, that once he stole. It is but a trifle
that Sauron fancies, and an earnest of your good will. Find it, and three rings
that the Dwarf sires possessed of old shall be returned to you, and the realm of
Moria shall be yours for ever. Find only news of the thief, whether he still
lives and where, and you shall have great reward and lasting friendship from the
Lord. Refuse, and things will not seem so well. Do you
refuse?"
'At that his breath came like the hiss of snakes,
and all who stood by shuddered, but Dain said: "I say neither yea nor nay. I
must consider this message and what it means under its fair
cloak."
'"Consider well, but not too long," said
he.
'"The time of my thought is my own to spend," answered
Dain.
'"For the present," said he, and rode into the
darkness.
'Heavy have the hearts of our chieftains been
since that night. We needed not the fell voice of the messenger to warn us that
his words held both menace and deceit; for we knew already that the power that
has re-entered Mordor has not changed, and ever it betrayed us of old. Twice the
messenger has returned, and has gone unanswered. The third and last time, so he
says, is soon to come, before the ending of the year.
'And
so I have been sent at last by Dain to warn Bilbo that he is sought by the
Enemy, and to learn, if may be, why he desires this ring, this least of rings.
Also we crave the advice of Elrond. For the Shadow grows and draws nearer. We
discover that messengers have come also to King Brand in Dale, and that he is
afraid. We fear that he may yield. Already war is gathering on his eastern
borders. If we make no answer, the Enemy may move Men of his rule to assail King
Brand, and Dain also.'
'You have done well to come,' said
Elrond. 'You will hear today all that you need in order to understand the
purposes of the Enemy. There is naught that you can do, other than to resist,
with hope or without it. But you do not stand alone. You will learn that your
trouble is but part of the trouble of all the western world. The Ring! What
shall we do with the Ring, the least of rings, the trifle that Sauron fancies?
That is the doom that we must deem.
'That is the purpose
for which you are called hither. Called, I say. though I have not called you to
me, strangers from distant lands. You have come and are here met, in this very
nick of time, by chance as it may seem. Yet it is not so. Believe rather that it
is so ordered that we, who sit here, and none others, must now find counsel for
the peril of the world.
'Now, therefore, things shall be
openly spoken that have been hidden from all but a few until this day. And
first, so that all may understand what is the peril, the Tale of the Ring shall
be told from the beginning even to this present. And I will begin that tale,
though others shall end it.'
Then all listened while Elrond
in his clear voice spoke of Sauron and the Rings of Power, and their forging in
the Second Age of the world long ago. A part of his tale was known to some
there, but the full tale to none, and many eyes were turned to Elrond in fear
and wonder as he told of the Elven-smiths of Eregion and their friendship with
Moria, and their eagerness for knowledge, by which Sauron ensnared them. For in
that time he was not yet evil to behold, and they received his aid and grew
mighty in craft, whereas he learned all their secrets, and betrayed them, and
forged secretly in the Mountain of Fire the One Ring to be their master. But
Celebrimbor was aware of him, and hid the Three which he had made; and there was
war, and the land was laid waste, and the gate of Moria was
shut.
Then through all the years that followed he traced
the Ring; but since that history is elsewhere recounted, even as Elrond himself
set it down in his books of lore, it is not here recalled. For it is a long
tale, full of deeds great and terrible, and briefly though Elrond spoke, the sun
rode up the sky, and the morning was passing ere he
ceased.
Of Numenor he spoke, its glory and its fall, and
the return of the Kings of Men to Middle-earth out of the deeps of the Sea,
borne upon the wings of storm. Then Elendil the Tall and his mighty sons,
Isildur and Anarion, became great lords; and the North-realm they made in Arnor,
and the South-realm in Gondor above the mouths of Anduin. But Sauron of Mordor
assailed them, and they made the Last Alliance of Elves and Men, and the hosts
of Gil-galad and Elendil were mustered in Arnor.
Thereupon
Elrond paused a while and sighed. 'I remember well the splendour of their
banners,' he said. 'It recalled to me the glory of the Elder Days and the hosts
of Beleriand, so many great princes and captains were assembled. And yet not so
many, nor so fair, as when Thangorodrim was broken, and the Elves deemed that
evil was ended for ever, and it was not so.'
'You
remember?' said Frodo, speaking his thought aloud in his astonishment. 'But I
thought,' he stammered as Elrond turned towards him, 'I thought that the fall of
Gil-galad was a long age ago.'
'So it was indeed,' answered
Elrond gravely. 'But my memory reaches back even to the Elder Days. Earendil was
my sire, who was born in Gondolin before its fall; and my mother was Elwing,
daughter of Dior, son of Luthien of Doriath. I have seen three ages in the West
of the world, and many defeats, and many fruitless
victories.
'I was the herald of Gil-galad and marched with
his host. I was at the Battle of Dagorlad before the Black Gate of Mordor, where
we had the mastery: for the Spear of Gil-galad and the Sword of Elendil, Aiglos
and Narsil, none could withstand. I beheld the last combat on the slopes of
Orodruin, where Gil-galad died, and Elendil fell, and Narsil broke beneath him;
but Sauron himself was overthrown, and Isildur cut the Ring from his hand with
the hilt-shard of his father's sword, and took it for his
own.'
At this the stranger, Boromir, broke in. 'So that is
what became of the Ring!' he cried. 'If ever such a tale was told in the South,
it has long been forgotten. I have heard of the Great Ring of him that we do not
name; but we believed that it perished from the world in the ruin of his first
realm. Isildur took it! That is tidings indeed.'
'Alas!
yes,' said Elrond. 'Isildur took it, as should not have been. It should have
been cast then into Orodruin's fire nigh at hand where it was made. But few
marked what Isildur did. He alone stood by his father in that last mortal
contest; and by Gil-galad only Cirdan stood, and I. But Isildur would not listen
to our counsel.
'"This I will have as weregild for my
father, and my brother," he said; and therefore whether we would or no, he took
it to treasure it. But soon he was betrayed by it to his death; and so it is
named in the North Isildur's Bane. Yet death maybe was better than what else
might have befallen him.
'Only to the North did these
tidings come, and only to a few. Small wonder it is that you have not heard
them, Boromir. From the ruin of the Gladden Fields, where Isildur perished,
three men only came ever back over the mountains after long wandering. One of
these was Ohtar, the esquire of Isildur, who bore the shards of the sword of
Elendil; and he brought them to Valandil, the heir of Isildur, who being but a
child had remained here in Rivendell. But Narsil was broken and its light
extinguished, and it has not yet been forged
again.
'Fruitless did I call the victory of the Last
Alliance? Not wholly so, yet it did not achieve its end. Sauron was diminished,
but not destroyed. His Ring was lost but not unmade. The Dark Tower was broken,
but its foundations were not removed; for they were made with the power of the
Ring, and while it remains they will endure. Many Elves and many mighty Men, and
many of their friends, had perished in the war. Anarion was slain, and Isildur
was slain; and Gil-galad and Elendil were no more. Never again shall there be
any such league of Elves and Men; for Men multiply and the Firstborn decrease,
and the two kindreds are estranged. And ever since that day the race of Numenor
has decayed, and the span of their years has lessened.
'In
the North after the war and the slaughter of the Gladden Fields the Men of
Westernesse were diminished, and their city of Annuminas beside Lake Evendim
fell into ruin; and the heirs of Valandil removed and dwelt at Fornost on the
high North Downs, and that now too is desolate. Men call it Deadmen's Dike, and
they fear to tread there. For the folk of Arnor dwindled, and their foes
devoured them, and their lordship passed, leaving only green mounds in the
grassy hills.
'In the South the realm of Gondor long
endured; and for a while its splendour grew, recalling somewhat of the might of
Numenor, ere it fell. High towers that people built, and strong places, and
havens of many ships; and the winged crown of the Kings of Men was held in awe
by folk of many tongues. Their chief city was Osgiliath, Citadel of the Stars,
through the midst of which the River flowed. And Minas Ithil they built, Tower
of the Rising Moon, eastward upon a shoulder of the Mountains of Shadow; and
westward at the feet of the White Mountains Minas Anor they made, Tower of the
Setting Sun. There in the courts of the King grew a white tree, from the seed of
that tree which Isildur brought over the deep waters, and the seed of that tree
before came from Eressea, and before that out of the Uttermost West in the Day
before days when the world was young.
'But in the wearing
of the swift years of Middle-earth the line of Meneldil son of Anarion failed,
and the Tree withered, and the blood of the Numenoreans became mingled with that
of lesser men. Then the watch upon the walls of Mordor slept, and dark things
crept back to Gorgoroth. And on a time evil things came forth, and they took
Minas Ithil and abode in it, and they made it into a place of dread; and it is
called Minas Morgul, the Tower of Sorcery. Then Minas Anor was named anew Minas
Tirith, the Tower of Guard; and these two cities were ever at war, but Osgiliath
which lay between was deserted and in its ruins shadows
walked.
'So it has been for many lives of men. But the
Lords of Minas Tirith still fight on, defying our enemies, keeping the passage
of the River from Argonath to the Sea. And now that part of the tale that I
shall tell is drawn to its close. For in the days of Isildur the Ruling Ring
passed out of all knowledge, and the Three were released from its dominion. But
now in this latter day they are in peril once more, for to our sorrow the One
has been found. Others shall speak of its finding, for in that I played small
part.'
He ceased, but at once Boromir stood up, tall and
proud, before them.
'Give me leave, Master Elrond,' said
he, 'first to say more of Gondor; for verily from the land of Gondor I am come.
And it would be well for all to know what passes there. For few, I deem, know of
our deeds, and therefore guess little of their peril, if we should fail at
last.
'Believe not that in the land of Gondor the blood of
Numenor is spent, nor all its pride and dignity forgotten. By our valour the
wild folk of the East are still restrained, and the terror of Morgul kept at
bay; and thus alone are peace and freedom maintained in the lands behind us,
bulwark of the West. But if the passages of the River should be won, what
then?
'Yet that hour, maybe, is not now far away. The
Nameless Enemy has arisen again. Smoke rises once more from Orodruin that we
call Mount Doom. The power of the Black Land grows and we are hard beset. When
the Enemy returned our folk were driven from Ithilien, our fair domain east of
the River, though we kept a foothold there and strength of arms. But this very
year, in the days of June, sudden war came upon us out of Mordor, and we were
swept away. We were outnumbered, for Mordor has allied itself with the
Easterlings and the cruel Haradrim; but it was not by numbers that we were
defeated. A power was there that we have not felt
before.
'Some said that it could be seen, like a great
black horseman, a dark shadow under the moon. Wherever he came a madness filled
our foes, but fear fell on our boldest, so that horse and man gave way and fled.
Only a remnant of our eastern force came back, destroying the last bridge that
still stood amid the ruins of Osgiliath.
'I was in the
company that held the bridge, until it was cast down behind us. Four only were
saved by swimming: my brother and myself and two others. But still we fight on,
holding all the west shores of Anduin; and those who shelter behind us give us
praise, if ever they hear our name: much praise but little help. Only from Rohan
now will any men ride to us when we call.
'In this evil
hour I have come on an errand over many dangerous leagues to Elrond: a hundred
and ten days I have journeyed all alone. But I do not seek allies in war. The
might of Elrond is in wisdom not in weapons, it is said. I come to ask for
counsel and the unravelling of hard words. For on the eve of the sudden assault
a dream came to my brother in a troubled sleep; and afterwards a like dream came
oft to him again, and once to me.
'In that dream I thought
the eastern sky grew dark and there was a growing thunder, but in the West a
pale light lingered, and out of it I heard a voice, remote but clear,
crying:
Seek for the Sword that was broken:
In Imladris it
dwells;
There shall be counsels taken
Stronger than
Morgul-spells.
There shall be shown a token
That Doom is near at
hand,
For Isildur's Bane shall waken,
And the Halfling forth shall
stand.
Of these words we could
understand little, and we spoke to our father, Denethor, Lord of Minas Tirith,
wise in the lore of Gondor. This only would he say, that Imladris was of old the
name among the Elves of a far northern dale, where Elrond the Halfelven dwelt,
greatest of lore-masters. Therefore my brother, seeing how desperate was our
need, was eager to heed the dream and seek for Imladris; but since the way was
full of doubt and danger, I took the journey upon myself. Loth was my father to
give me leave, and long have I wandered by roads forgotten, seeking the house of
Elrond, of which many had heard, but few knew where it
lay.'
'And here in the house of Elrond more shall be made
clear to you,' said Aragorn, standing up. He cast his sword upon the table that
stood before Elrond, and the blade was in two pieces. 'Here is the Sword that
was Broken!' he said.
'And who are you, and what have you
to do with Minas Tirith?' asked Boromir, looking in wonder at the lean face of
the Ranger and his weather-stained cloak.
'He is Aragorn
son of Arathorn,' said Elrond; 'and he is descended through many fathers from
Isildur Elendil's son of Minas Ithil. He is the Chief of the Dunedain in the
North, and few are now left of that folk.'
'Then it belongs
to you, and not to me at all!' cried Frodo in amazement, springing to his feet,
as if he expected the Ring to be demanded at once.
'It does
not belong to either of us,' said Aragorn; 'but it has been ordained that you
should hold it for a while.'
'Bring out the Ring, Frodo!'
said Gandalf solemnly. 'The time has come. Hold it up, and then Boromir will
understand the remainder of his riddle.'
There was a hush,
and all turned their eyes on Frodo. He was shaken by a sudden shame and fear;
and he felt a great reluctance to reveal the Ring, and a loathing of its touch.
He wished he was far away. The Ring gleamed and flickered as he held it up
before them in his trembling hand.
'Behold Isildur's Bane!'
said Elrond.
Boromir's eyes glinted as he gazed at the
golden thing. 'The Halfling!' he muttered. 'Is then the doom of Minas Tirith
come at last? But why then should we seek a broken
sword?'
'The words were not
the doom of Minas
Tirith,' said Aragorn. 'But doom and great deeds are indeed at hand. For the
Sword that was Broken is the Sword of Elendil that broke beneath him when he
fell. It has been treasured by his heirs when all other heirlooms were lost; for
it was spoken of old among us that it should be made again when the Ring,
Isildur's Bane, was found. Now you have seen the sword that you have sought,
what would you ask? Do you wish for the House of Elendil to return to the Land
of Gondor?'
'I was not sent to beg any boon, but to seek
only the meaning of a riddle,' answered Boromir proudly. 'Yet we are hard
pressed, and the Sword of Elendil would be a help beyond our hope – if such a
thing could indeed return out of the shadows of the past.' He looked again at
Aragorn, and doubt was in his eyes.
Frodo felt Bilbo stir
impatiently at his side. Evidently he was annoyed on his friend's behalf.
Standing suddenly up he burst out:
All that is gold does not glitter,
Not all those who wander
are lost;
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not
reached by the frost.
From the ashes a fire shall be
woken,
A light from the shadows shall spring;
Renewed shall be blade
that was broken:
The crownless again shall be
king.
'Not very good perhaps, but to
the point – if you need more beyond the word of Elrond. If that was worth a
journey of a hundred and ten days to hear, you had best listen to it.' He sat
down with a snort.
'I made that up myself,' he whispered to
Frodo, 'for the Dunadan, a long time ago when he first told me about himself. I
almost wish that my adventures were not over, and that I could go with him when
his day comes.'
Aragorn smiled at him; then he turned to
Boromir again. 'For my part I forgive your doubt,' he said. 'Little do I
resemble the figures of Elendil and Isildur as they stand carven in their
majesty in the halls of Denethor. I am but the heir of Isildur, not Isildur
himself. I have had a hard life and a long; and the leagues that lie between
here and Gondor are a small part in the count of my journeys. I have crossed
many mountains and many rivers, and trodden many plains, even into the far
countries of Rhun and Harad where the stars are
strange.
'But my home, such as I have, is in the North. For
here the heirs of Valandil have ever dwelt in long line unbroken from father
unto son for many generations. Our days have darkened, and we have dwindled; but
ever the Sword has passed to a new keeper. And this I will say to you, Boromir,
ere I end. Lonely men are we, Rangers of the wild, hunters – but hunters ever of
the servants of the Enemy; for they are found in many places, not in Mordor
only.
'If Gondor, Boromir, has been a stalwart tower, we
have played another part. Many evil things there are that your strong walls and
bright swords do not stay. You know little of the lands beyond your bounds.
Peace and freedom, do you say? The North would have known them little but for
us. Fear would have destroyed them. But when dark things come from the houseless
hills, or creep from sunless woods, they fly from us. What roads would any dare
to tread, what safety would there be in quiet lands, or in the homes of simple
men at night, if the Dunedain were asleep, or were all gone into the
grave?
'And yet less thanks have we than you. Travellers
scowl at us, and countrymen give us scornful names. "Strider" I am to one fat
man who lives within a day's march of foes that would freeze his heart or lay
his little town in ruin, if he were not guarded ceaselessly. Yet we would not
have it otherwise. If simple folk are free from care and fear, simple they will
be, and we must be secret to keep them so. That has been the task of my kindred,
while the years have lengthened and the grass has
grown.
'But now the world is changing once again. A new
hour comes. Isildur's Bane is found. Battle is at hand. The Sword shall be
reforged. I will come to Minas Tirith.'
'Isildur's Bane is
found, you say,' said Boromir. 'I have seen a bright ring in the Halfling's
hand; but Isildur perished ere this age of the world began, they say. How do the
Wise know that this ring is his? And how has it passed down the years, until it
is brought hither by so strange a messenger?'
'That shall
be told,' said Elrond.
'But not yet, I beg, Master!' said
Bilbo. 'Already the Sun is climbing to noon, and I feel the need of something to
strengthen me.'
'I had not named you,' said Elrond smiling.
'But I do so now. Come! Tell us your tale. And if you have not yet cast your
story into verse, you may tell it in plain words. The briefer, the sooner shall
you be refreshed.'
'Very well,' said Bilbo. 'I will do as
you bid. But I will now tell the true story, and if some here have heard me tell
it otherwise' – he looked sidelong at Gloin – 'I ask them to forget it and
forgive me. I only wished to claim the treasure as my very own in those days,
and to be rid of the name of thief that was put on me. But perhaps I understand
things a little better now. Anyway, this is what
happened.'
To some there Bilbo's tale was wholly new, and
they listened with amazement while the old hobbit, actually not at all
displeased, recounted his adventure with Gollum, at full length. He did not omit
a single riddle. He would have given also an account of his party and
disappearance from the Shire, if he had been allowed; but Elrond raised his
hand.
'Well told, my friend,' he said, 'but that is enough
at this time. For the moment it suffices to know that the Ring passed to Frodo,
your heir. Let him now speak!'
Then, less willingly than
Bilbo, Frodo told of all his dealings with the Ring from the day that it passed
into his keeping. Every step of his journey from Hobbiton to the Ford of Bruinen
was questioned and considered, and everything that he could recall concerning
the Black Riders was examined. At last he sat down
again.
'Not bad,' Bilbo said to him. 'You would have made a
good story of it, if they hadn't kept on interrupting. I tried to make a few
notes, but we shall have to go over it all again together some time, if I am to
write it up. There are whole chapters of stuff before you ever got
here!'
'Yes, it made quite a long tale,' answered Frodo.
'But the story still does not seem complete to me. I still want to know a good
deal, especially about Gandalf.'
Galdor of the Havens, who
sat near by, overheard him. 'You speak for me also,' he cried, and turning to
Elrond he said: 'The Wise may have good reason to believe that the halfling's
trove is indeed the Great Ring of long debate, unlikely though that may seem to
those who know less. But may we not hear the proofs? And I would ask this also.
What of Saruman? He is learned in the lore of the Rings, yet he is not among us.
What is his counsel-if he knows the things that we have
heard?'
'The questions that you ask, Galdor, are bound
together,' said Elrond. 'I had not overlooked them, and they shall be answered.
But these things it is the part of Gandalf to make clear; and I call upon him
last, for it is the place of honour, and in all this matter he has been the
chief.'
'Some, Galdor,' said Gandalf, 'would think the
tidings of Gloin, and the pursuit of Frodo, proof enough that the halfling's
trove is a thing of great worth to the Enemy. Yet it is a ring. What then? The
Nine the Nazgul keep. The Seven are taken or destroyed.' At this Gloin stirred,
but did not speak. 'The Three we know of. What then is this one that he desires
so much?
'There is indeed a wide waste of time between the
River and the Mountain, between the loss and the finding. But the gap in the
knowledge of the Wise has been filled at last. Yet too slowly. For the Enemy has
been close behind, closer even than I feared. And well is it that not until this
year, this very summer, as it seems, did he learn the full
truth.
'Some here will remember that many years ago I
myself dared to pass the doors of the Necromancer in Dol Guldur, and secretly
explored his ways, and found thus that our fears were true: he was none other
than Sauron, our Enemy of old, at length taking shape and power again. Some,
too, will remember also that Saruman dissuaded us from open deeds against him,
and for long we watched him only. Yet at last, as his shadow grew, Saruman
yielded, and the Council put forth its strength and drove the evil out of
Mirkwood and that was in the very year of the finding of this Ring: a strange
chance, if chance it was.
'But we were too late, as Elrond
foresaw. Sauron also had watched us, and had long prepared against our stroke,
governing Mordor from afar through Minas Morgul, where his Nine servants dwelt,
until all was ready. Then he gave way before us, but only feigned to flee, and
soon after came to the Dark Tower and openly declared himself. Then for the last
time the Council met; for now we learned that he was seeking ever more eagerly
for the One. We feared then that he had some news of it that we knew nothing of.
But Saruman said nay, and repeated what he had said to us before: that the One
would never again be found in Middle-earth.
'"At the
worst," said he, "our Enemy knows that we have it not and that it still is lost.
But what was lost may yet be found, he thinks. Fear not! His hope will cheat
him. Have I not earnestly studied this matter? Into Anduin the Great it fell;
and long ago, while Sauron slept, it was rolled down the River to the Sea. There
let it lie until the End."'
Gandalf fell silent, gazing
eastward from the porch to the far peaks of the Misty Mountains, at whose great
roots the peril of the world had so long lain hidden. He
sighed.
'There I was at fault,' he said. 'I was lulled by
the words of Saruman the Wise; but I should have sought for the truth sooner,
and our peril would now be less.'
'We were all at fault,'
said Elrond, 'and but for your vigilance the Darkness, maybe, would already be
upon us. But say on!'
'From the first my heart misgave me,
against all reason that I knew,' said Gandalf, 'and I desired to know how this
thing came to Gollum, and how long he had possessed it. So I set a watch for
him, guessing that he would ere long come forth from his darkness to seek for
his treasure. He came, but he escaped and was not found. And then alas! I let
the matter rest, watching and waiting only, as we have too often
done.
'Time passed with many cares, until my doubts were
awakened again to sudden fear. Whence came the hobbit's ring? What, if my fear
was true, should be done with it? Those things I must decide. But I spoke yet of
my dread to none, knowing the peril of an untimely whisper, if it went astray.
In all the long wars with the Dark Tower treason has ever been our greatest
foe.
'That was seventeen years ago. Soon I became aware
that spies of many sorts, even beasts and birds, were gathered round the Shire,
and my fear grew. I called for the help of the Dunedain, and their watch was
doubled; and I opened my heart to Aragorn, the heir of
Isildur.'
'And I,' said Aragorn, 'counselled that we should
hunt for Gollum, too late though it may seem. And since it seemed fit that
Isildur's heir should labour to repair Isildur's fault, I went with Gandalf on
the long and hopeless search.'
Then Gandalf told how they
had explored the whole length of Wilderland, down even to the Mountains of
Shadow and the fences of Mordor. 'There we had rumour of him, and we guess that
he dwelt there long in the dark hills; but we never found him, and at last I
despaired. And then in my despair I thought again of a test that might make the
finding of Gollum unneeded. The ring itself might tell if it were the One. The
memory of words at the Council came back to me: words of Saruman, half-heeded at
the time. I heard them now clearly in my heart.
'"The Nine,
the Seven, and the Three," he said, "had each their proper gem. Not so the One.
It was round and unadorned, as it were one of the lesser rings; but its maker
set marks upon it that the skilled, maybe, could still see and
read."
'What those marks were he had not said. Who now
would know? The maker. And Saruman? But great though his lore may be, it must
have a source. What hand save Sauron's ever held this thing, ere it was lost?
The hand of Isildur alone.
'With that thought, I forsook
the chase, and passed swiftly to Gondor. In former days the members of my order
had been well received there, but Saruman most of all. Often he had been for
long the guest of the Lords of the City. Less welcome did the Lord Denethor show
me then than of old, and grudgingly he permitted me to search among his hoarded
scrolls and books.
'"If indeed you look only, as you say,
for records of ancient days, and the beginnings of the City, read on!" he said.
"For to me what was is less dark than what is to come, and that is my care. But
unless you have more skill even than Saruman, who has studied here long, you
will find naught that is not well known to me, who am master of the lore of this
City."
'So said Denethor. And yet there lie in his hoards
many records that few now can read, even of the lore-masters, for their scripts
and tongues have become dark to later men. And Boromir, there lies in Minas
Tirith still, unread, I guess, by any save Saruman and myself since the kings
failed, a scroll that Isildur made himself. For Isildur did not march away
straight from the war in Mordor, as some have told the
tale.'
'Some in the North, maybe,' Boromir broke in. 'All
know in Gondor that he went first to Minas Anor and dwelt a while with his
nephew Meneldil, instructing him, before he committed to him the rule of the
South Kingdom. In that time he planted there the last sapling of the White Tree
in memory of his brother.'
'But in that time also he made
this scroll,' said Gandalf; 'and that is not remembered in Gondor, it would
seem. For this scroll concerns the Ring, and thus wrote Isildur
therein:
The Great Ring shall go now to be an heirloom
of the North Kingdom; but records of it shall be left in Gondor, where also
dwell the heirs of Elendil, lest a time come when the memory of these great
matters shall grow dim.
'And after these words Isildur
described the Ring, such as he found it.
It was hot when
I first took it, hot as a glede, and my hand was scorched, so that I doubt if
ever again I shall be free of the pain of it. Yet even as I write it is cooled,
and it seemeth to shrink, though it loseth neither its beauty nor its shape.
Already the writing upon it, which at first was as clear as red flame, fadeth
and is now only barely to be read. It is fashioned in an elven-script of
Eregion, for they have no letters in Mordor for such subtle work; but the
language is unknown to me. I deem it to be a tongue of the Black Land, since it
is foul and uncouth. What evil it saith I do not know; but I trace here a copy
of it, lest it fade beyond recall. The Ring misseth, maybe, the heat of Sauron's
hand, which was black and yet burned like fire, and so Gil-galad was destroyed;
and maybe were the gold made hot again, the writing would be refreshed. But for
my part I will risk no hurt to this thing: of all the works of Sauron the only
fair. It is precious to me, though I buy it with great
pain.
'When I read these words, my quest was ended. For
the traced writing was indeed as Isildur guessed, in the tongue of Mordor and
the servants of the Tower. And what was said therein was already known. For in
the day that Sauron first put on the One, Celebrimbor, maker of the Three, was
aware of him, and from afar he heard him speak these words, and so his evil
purposes were revealed.
'At once I took my leave of
Denethor, but even as I went northwards, messages came to me out of Lorien that
Aragorn had passed that way, and that he had found the creature called Gollum.
Therefore I went first to meet him and hear his tale. Into what deadly perils he
had gone alone I dared not guess.'
'There is little need to
tell of them,' said Aragorn. 'If a man must needs walk in sight of the Black
Gate, or tread the deadly flowers of Morgul Vale, then perils he will have. I,
too, despaired at last, and I began my homeward journey. And then, by fortune, I
came suddenly on what I sought: the marks of soft feet beside a muddy pool. But
now the trail was fresh and swift, and it led not to Mordor but away. Along the
skirts of the Dead Marshes I followed it, and then I had him. Lurking by a
stagnant mere, peering in the water as the dark eve fell, I caught him, Gollum.
He was covered with green slime. He will never love me, I fear; for he bit me,
and I was not gentle. Nothing more did I ever get from his mouth than the marks
of his teeth. I deemed it the worst part of all my journey, the road back,
watching him day and night, making him walk before me with a halter on his neck,
gagged, until he was tamed by lack of drink and food, driving him ever towards
Mirkwood. I brought him there at last and gave him to the Elves, for we had
agreed that this should be done; and I was glad to be rid of his company, for he
stank. For my part I hope never to look upon him again; but Gandalf came and
endured long speech with him.'
'Yes, long and weary,' said
Gandalf, 'but not without profit. For one thing, the tale he told of his loss
agreed with that which Bilbo has now told openly for the first time; but that
mattered little, since I had already guessed it. But I learned then first that
Gollum's ring came out of the Great River nigh to the Gladden Fields. And I
learned also that he had possessed it long. Many lives of his small kind. The
power of the ring had lengthened his years far beyond their span; but that power
only the Great Rings wield.
'And if that is not proof
enough, Galdor, there is the other test that I spoke of. Upon this very ring
which you have here seen held aloft, round and unadorned, the letters that
Isildur reported may still be read, if one has the strength of will to set the
golden thing in the fire a while. That I have done, and this I have
read:
Ash nazg durbatuluk, ash nazg gimbatul, ash nazg
thrakatuluk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul.'
The change in the
wizard's voice was astounding. Suddenly it became menacing, powerful, harsh as
stone. A shadow seemed to pass over the high sun, and the porch for a moment
grew dark. All trembled, and the Elves stopped their
ears.
'Never before has any voice dared to utter the words
of that tongue in Imladris, Gandalf the Grey,' said Elrond, as the shadow passed
and the company breathed once more.
'And let us hope that
none will ever speak it here again,' answered Gandalf. 'Nonetheless I do not ask
your pardon, Master Elrond. For if that tongue is not soon to be heard in every
corner of the West, then let all put doubt aside that this thing is indeed what
the Wise have declared: the treasure of the Enemy, fraught with all his malice;
and in it lies a great part of his strength of old. Out of the Black Years come
the words that the Smiths of Eregion heard, and knew that they had been
betrayed:
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,
One Ring to bring them all and in the Darkness bind
them.
'Know also, my friends, that I learned more yet from
Gollum. He was loth to speak and his tale was unclear, but it is beyond all
doubt that he went to Mordor, and there all that he knew was forced from him.
Thus the Enemy knows now that the One is found, that it was long in the Shire;
and since his servants have pursued it almost to our door, he soon will know,
already he may know, even as I speak, that we have it
here.'
All sat silent for a while, until at length Boromir
spoke. 'He is a small thing, you say, this Gollum? Small, but great in mischief.
What became of him? To what doom did you put him?'
'He is
in prison, but no worse,' said Aragorn. 'He had suffered much. There is no doubt
that he was tormented, and the fear of Sauron lies black on his heart. Still I
for one am glad that he is safely kept by the watchful Elves of Mirkwood. His
malice is great and gives him a strength hardly to be believed in one so lean
and withered. He could work much mischief still, if he were free. And I do not
doubt that he was allowed to leave Mordor on some evil
errand.'
'Alas! alas!' cried Legolas, and in his fair
elvish face there was great distress. 'The tidings that I was sent to bring must
now be told. They are not good, but only here have I learned how evil they may
seem to this company. Smeagol, who is now called Gollum, has
escaped.'
'Escaped?' cried Aragorn. 'That is ill news
indeed. We shall all rue it bitterly, I fear. How came the folk of Thranduil to
fail in their trust?'
'Not through lack of watchfulness,'
said Legolas; 'but perhaps through over-kindliness. And we fear that the
prisoner had aid from others, and that more is known of our doings than we could
wish. We guarded this creature day and night, at Gandalf's bidding, much though
we wearied of the task. But Gandalf bade us hope still for his cure, and we had
not the heart to keep him ever in dungeons under the earth, where he would fall
back into his old black thoughts.'
'You were less tender to
me,' said Gloin with a flash of his eyes as old memories were stirred of his
imprisonment in the deep places of the Elven-king's
halls.
'Now come!' said Gandalf. 'Pray do not interrupt, my
good Gloin. That was a regrettable misunderstanding, long set right. If all the
grievances that stand between Elves and Dwarves are to be brought up here, we
may as well abandon this Council.'
Gloin rose and bowed,
and Legolas continued. 'In the days of fair weather we led Gollum through the
woods; and there was a high tree standing alone far from the others which he
liked to climb. Often we let him mount up to the highest branches, until he felt
the free wind; but we set a guard at the tree's foot. One day he refused to come
down, and the guards had no mind to climb after him: he had learned the trick of
clinging to boughs with his feet as well as with his hands; so they sat by the
tree far into the night.
'It was that very night of summer,
yet moonless and starless, that Orcs came on us at unawares. We drove them off
after some time; they were many and fierce, but they came from over the
mountains, and were unused to the woods. When the battle was over, we found that
Gollum was gone, and his guards were slain or taken. It then seemed plain to us
that the attack had been made for his rescue, and that he knew of it beforehand.
How that was contrived we cannot guess; but Gollum is cunning, and the spies of
the Enemy are many. The dark things that were driven out in the year of the
Dragon's fall have returned in greater numbers, and Mirkwood is again an evil
place, save where our realm is maintained.
'We have failed
to recapture Gollum. We came on his trail among those of many Orcs, and it
plunged deep into the Forest, going south. But ere long it escaped our skill,
and we dared not continue the hunt; for we were drawing nigh to Dol Guldur, and
that is still a very evil place; we do not go that
way.'
'Well, well, he is gone,' said Gandalf. 'We have no
time to seek for him again. He must do what he will. But he may play a part yet
that neither he nor Sauron have foreseen.
'And now I will
answer Galdor's other questions. What of Saruman? What are his counsels to us in
this need? This tale I must tell in full, for only Elrond has heard it yet, and
that in brief, but it will bear on all that we must resolve. It is the last
chapter in the Tale of the Ring, so far as it has yet
gone.
'At the end of June I was in the Shire, but a cloud
of anxiety was on my mind, and I rode to the southern borders of the little
land; for I had a foreboding of some danger, still hidden from me but drawing
near. There messages reached me telling me of war and defeat in Gondor, and when
I heard of the Black Shadow a chill smote my heart. But I found nothing save a
few fugitives from the South; yet it seemed to me that on them sat a fear of
which they would not speak. I turned then east and north and journeyed along the
Greenway; and not far from Bree I came upon a traveller sitting on a bank beside
the road with his grazing horse beside him. It was Radagast the Brown, who at
one time dwelt at Rhosgobel, near the borders of Mirkwood. He is one of my
order, but I had not seen him for many a year.
'"Gandalf!"
he cried. "I was seeking you. But I am a stranger in these parts. All I knew was
that you might be found in a wild region with the uncouth name of
Shire."
'"Your information was correct," I said. "But do
not put it that way, if you meet any of the inhabitants. You are near the
borders of the Shire now. And what do you want with me? It must be pressing. You
were never a traveller, unless driven by great need."
'"I
have an urgent errand," he said. "My news is evil." Then he looked about him, as
if the hedges might have ears. "Nazgul," he whispered. "The Nine are abroad
again. They have crossed the River secretly and are moving westward. They have
taken the guise of riders in black."
'I knew then what I
had dreaded without knowing it.
'"The enemy must have some
great need or purpose," said Radagast; "but what it is that makes him look to
these distant and desolate parts, I cannot guess."
'"What
do you mean?" said I.
'"I have been told that wherever they
go the Riders ask for news of a land called
Shire."
'"
The Shire," I said; but my heart sank. For
even the Wise might fear to withstand the Nine, when they are gathered together
under their fell chieftain. A great king and sorcerer he was of old, and now he
wields a deadly fear. "Who told you, and who sent you?" I
asked.
'"Saruman the White," answered Radagast. "And he
told me to say that if you feel the need, he will help; but you must seek his
aid at once, or it will be too late."
'And that message
brought me hope. For Saruman the White is the greatest of my order. Radagast is,
of course, a worthy Wizard, a master of shapes and changes of hue; and he has
much lore of herbs and beasts, and birds are especially his friends. But Saruman
has long studied the arts of the Enemy himself, and thus we have often been able
to forestall him. It was by the devices of Saruman that we drove him from Dol
Guldur. It might be that he had found some weapons that would drive back the
Nine.
'"I will go to Saruman," I
said.
'"Then you must go
now," said Radagast; "for I
have wasted time in looking for you, and the days are running short. I was told
to find you before Midsummer, and that is now here. Even if you set out from
this spot, you will hardly reach him before the Nine discover the land that they
seek. I myself shall turn back at once." And with that he mounted and would have
ridden straight off.
'"Stay a moment!" I said. "We shall
need your help, and the help of all things that will give it. Send out messages
to all the beasts and birds that are your friends. Tell them to bring news of
anything that bears on this matter to Saruman and Gandalf. Let messages be sent
to Orthanc."
'"I will do that," he said, and rode off as if
the Nine were after him.
'I could not follow him then and
there. I had ridden very far already that day, and I was as weary as my horse;
and I needed to consider matters. I stayed the night in Bree, and decided that I
had no time to return to the Shire. Never did I make a greater
mistake!
'However, I wrote a message to Frodo, and trusted
to my friend the innkeeper to send it to him. I rode away at dawn; and I came at
long last to the dwelling of Saruman. That is far south in Isengard, in the end
of the Misty Mountains, not far from the Gap of Rohan. And Boromir will tell you
that that is a great open vale that lies between the Misty Mountains and the
northmost foothills of Ered Nimrais, the White Mountains of his home. But
Isengard is a circle of sheer rocks that enclose a valley as with a wall, and in
the midst of that valley is a tower of stone called Orthanc. It was not made by
Saruman, but by the Men of Numenor long ago; and it is very tall and has many
secrets; yet it looks not to be a work of craft. It cannot be reached save by
passing the circle of Isengard; and in that circle there is only one
gate.
'Late one evening I came to the gate, like a great
arch in the wall of rock; and it was strongly guarded. But the keepers of the
gate were on the watch for me and told me that Saruman awaited me. I rode under
the arch, and the gate closed silently behind me, and suddenly I was afraid,
though I knew no reason for it.
'But I rode to the foot of
Orthanc, and came to the stair of Saruman and there he met me and led me up to
his high chamber. He wore a ring on his finger.
'"So you
have come, Gandalf," he said to me gravely; but in his eyes there seemed to be a
white light, as if a cold laughter was in his heart.
'"Yes,
I have come," I said. "I have come for your aid, Saruman the White." And that
title seemed to anger him.
'"Have you indeed, Gandalf the
Grey!" he scoffed. "For aid? It has seldom been heard of that Gandalf the
Grey sought for aid, one so cunning and so wise, wandering about the lands, and
concerning himself in every business, whether it belongs to him or
not."
'I looked at him and wondered. "But if I am not
deceived," said I, "things are now moving which will require the union of all
our strength."
'"That may be so," he said, "but the thought
is late in coming to you. How long. I wonder, have you concealed from me, the
head of the Council, a matter of greatest import? What brings you now from your
lurking-place in the Shire?"
'"The Nine have come forth
again," I answered. "They have crossed the River. So Radagast said to
me."
'"Radagast the Brown!" laughed Saruman, and he no
longer concealed his scorn. "Radagast the Bird-tamer! Radagast the Simple!
Radagast the Fool! Yet he had just the wit to play the part that I set him. For
you have come, and that was all the purpose of my message. And here you will
stay, Gandalf the Grey, and rest from journeys. For I am Saruman the Wise,
Saruman Ring-maker, Saruman of Many Colours!"
'I looked
then and saw that his robes, which had seemed white, were not so, but were woven
of all colours. and if he moved they shimmered and changed hue so that the eye
was bewildered.
'"I liked white better," I
said.
'"White!" he sneered. "It serves as a beginning.
White cloth may be dyed. The white page can be overwritten; and the white light
can be broken."
'"In which case it is no longer white,"
said I. "And he that breaks a thing to find out what it is has left the path of
wisdom."
'"You need not speak to me as to one of the fools
that you take for friends," said he. "I have not brought you hither to be
instructed by you, but to give you a choice."
'He drew
himself up then and began to declaim, as if he were making a speech long
rehearsed. "The Elder Days are gone. The Middle Days are passing. The Younger
Days are beginning. The time of the Elves is over, but our time is at hand: the
world of Men, which we must rule. But we must have power, power to order all
things as we will, for that good which only the Wise can
see.
'"And listen, Gandalf, my old friend and helper!" he
said, coming near and speaking now in a softer voice. "I said we, for we it may
be, if you will join with me. A new Power is rising. Against it the old allies
and policies will not avail us at all. There is no hope left in Elves or dying
Numenor. This then is one choice before you, before us. We may join with that
Power. It would be wise, Gandalf. There is hope that way. Its victory is at
hand; and there will be rich reward for those that aided it. As the Power grows,
its proved friends will also grow; and the Wise, such as you and I, may with
patience come at last to direct its courses, to control it. We can bide our
time, we can keep our thoughts in our hearts, deploring maybe evils done by the
way, but approving the high and ultimate purpose: Knowledge, Rule, Order; all
the things that we have so far striven in vain to accomplish, hindered rather
than helped by our weak or idle friends. There need not be, there would not be,
any real change in our designs, only in our
means."
'"Saruman," I said, "I have heard speeches of this
kind before, but only in the mouths of emissaries sent from Mordor to deceive
the ignorant. I cannot think that you brought me so far only to weary my
ears."
'He looked at me sidelong, and paused a while
considering. "Well, I see that this wise course does not commend itself to you,"
he said. "Not yet? Not if some better way can be
contrived?"
'He came and laid his long hand on my arm. "And
why not, Gandalf?" he whispered. "Why not? The Ruling Ring? If we could command
that, then the Power would pass to us. That is in truth why I brought you here.
For I have many eyes in my service, and I believe that you know where this
precious thing now lies. Is it not so? Or why do the Nine ask for the Shire, and
what is your business there?" As he said this a lust which he could not conceal
shone suddenly in his eyes.
'"Saruman," I said, standing
away from him, "only one hand at a time can wield the One, and you know that
well, so do not trouble to say
we! But I would not give it, nay, I would
not give even news of it to you, now that I learn your mind. You were head of
the Council, but you have unmasked yourself at last. Well, the choices are, it
seems, to submit to Sauron, or to yourself. I will take neither. Have you others
to offer?"
'He was cold now and perilous. "Yes," he said.
"I did not expect you to show wisdom, even in your own behalf; but I gave you
the chance of aiding me willingly, and so saving yourself much trouble and pain.
The third choice is to stay here, until the end."
'"Until
what end?"
'"Until you reveal to me where the One may be
found. I may find means to persuade you. Or until it is found in your despite,
and the Ruler has time to turn to lighter matters: to devise, say, a fitting
reward for the hindrance and insolence of Gandalf the
Grey."
'"That may not prove to be one of the lighter
matters," said I. He laughed at me, for my words were empty, and he knew
it.
'They took me and they set me alone on the pinnacle of
Orthanc, in the place where Saruman was accustomed to watch the stars. There is
no descent save by a narrow stair of many thousand steps, and the valley below
seems far away. I looked on it and saw that, whereas it had once been green and
fair, it was now filled with pits and forges. Wolves and orcs were housed in
Isengard, for Saruman was mustering a great force on his own account, in rivalry
of Sauron and not in his service yet. Over all his works a dark smoke hung and
wrapped itself about the sides of Orthanc. I stood alone on an island in the
clouds; and I had no chance of escape, and my days were bitter. I was pierced
with cold, and I had but little room in which to pace to and fro, brooding on
the coming of the Riders to the North.
'That the Nine had
indeed arisen I felt assured, apart from the words of Saruman which might be
lies. Long ere I came to Isengard I had heard tidings by the way that could not
be mistaken. Fear was ever in my heart for my friends in the Shire; but still I
had some hope. I hoped that Frodo had set forth at once, as my letter had urged,
and that he had reached Rivendell before the deadly pursuit began. And both my
fear and my hope proved ill-founded. For my hope was founded on a fat man in
Bree; and my fear was founded on the cunning of Sauron. But fat men who sell ale
have many calls to answer; and the power of Sauron is still less than fear makes
it. But in the circle of Isengard, trapped and alone, it was not easy to think
that the hunters before whom all have fled or fallen would falter in the Shire
far away.'
'I saw you!' cried Frodo. 'You were walking
backwards and forwards. The moon shone in your
hair.'
Gandalf paused astonished and looked at him. 'It was
only a dream' said Frodo, 'but it suddenly came back to me. I had quite
forgotten it. It came some time ago; after I left the Shire, I
think.'
'Then it was late in coming,' said Gandalf, 'as you
will see. I was in an evil plight. And those who know me will agree that I have
seldom been in such need, and do not bear such misfortune well. Gandalf the Grey
caught like a fly in a spider's treacherous web! Yet even the most subtle
spiders may leave a weak thread.
'At first I feared, as
Saruman no doubt intended, that Radagast had also fallen. Yet I had caught no
hint of anything wrong in his voice or in his eye at our meeting. If I had, I
should never have gone to Isengard, or I should have gone more warily. So
Saruman guessed, and he had concealed his mind and deceived his messenger. It
would have been useless in any case to try and win over the honest Radagast to
treachery. He sought me in good faith, and so persuaded
me.
'That was the undoing of Saruman's plot. For Radagast
knew no reason why he should not do as I asked; and he rode away towards
Mirkwood where he had many friends of old. And the Eagles of the Mountains went
far and wide, and they saw many things: the gathering of wolves and the
mustering of Orcs; and the Nine Riders going hither and thither in the lands;
and they heard news of the escape of Gollum. And they sent a messenger to bring
these tidings to me.
'So it was that when summer waned,
there came a night of moon, and Gwaihir the Windlord, swiftest of the Great
Eagles, came unlooked-for to Orthanc; and he found me standing on the pinnacle.
Then I spoke to him and he bore me away, before Saruman was aware. I was far
from Isengard, ere the wolves and orcs issued from the gate to pursue
me.
'"How far can you bear me?" I said to
Gwaihir.
'"Many leagues," said he, "but not to the ends of
the earth. I was sent to bear tidings not burdens."
'"Then
I must have a steed on land," I said, "and a steed surpassingly swift, for I
have never had such need of haste before."
'"Then I will
bear you to Edoras, where the Lord of Rohan sits in his halls," he said; "for
that is not very far off." And I was glad, for in the Riddermark of Rohan the
Rohirrim, the Horse-lords, dwell, and there are no horses like those that are
bred in that great vale between the Misty Mountains and the
White.
'"Are the Men of Rohan still to be trusted, do you
think? " I said to Gwaihir, for the treason of Saruman had shaken my
faith.
'"They pay a tribute of horses," he answered, "and
send many yearly to Mordor, or so it is said; but they are not yet under the
yoke. But if Saruman has become evil, as you say, then their doom cannot be long
delayed."
'He set me down in the land of Rohan ere dawn;
and now I have lengthened my tale over long. The rest must be more brief. In
Rohan I found evil already at work: the lies of Saruman; and the king of the
land would not listen to my warnings. He bade me take a horse and be gone; and I
chose one much to my liking, but little to his. I took the best horse in his
land, and I have never seen the like of him.'
'Then he must
be a noble beast indeed,' said Aragorn; 'and it grieves me more than many
tidings that might seem worse to learn that Sauron levies such tribute. It was
not so when last I was in that land.'
'Nor is it now, I
will swear,' said Boromir. 'It is a lie that comes from the Enemy. I know the
Men of Rohan; true and valiant, our allies, dwelling still in the lands that we
gave them long ago.'
'The shadow of Mordor lies on distant
lands,' answered Aragorn. 'Saruman has fallen under it. Rohan is beset. Who
knows what you will find there, if ever you return?'
'Not
this at least,' said Boromir, 'that they will buy their lives with horses. They
love their horses next to their kin. And not without reason, for the horses of
the Riddermark come from the fields of the North, far from the Shadow; and their
race, as that of their masters, is descended from the free days of
old.'
'True indeed!' said Gandalf. 'And there is one among
them that might have been foaled in the morning of the world. The horses of the
Nine cannot vie with him; tireless, swift as the flowing wind. Shadowfax they
called him. By day his coat glistens like silver; and by night it is like a
shade, and he passes unseen. Light is his footfall! Never before had any man
mounted him, but I took him and I tamed him, and so speedily he bore me that I
reached the Shire when Frodo was on the Barrow-downs, though I set out from
Rohan only when he set out from Hobbiton.
'But fear grew in
me as I rode. Ever as I came north I heard tidings of the Riders, and though I
gained on them day by day, they were ever before me. They had divided their
forces, I learned: some remained on the eastern borders, not far from the
Greenway, and some invaded the Shire from the south. I came to Hobbiton and
Frodo had gone; but I had words with old Gamgee. Many words and few to the
point. He had much to say about the shortcomings of the new owners of Bag
End.
'"I can't abide changes," said he, "not at my time of
life, and least of all changes for the worst." "Changes for the worst," he
repeated many times.
'"Worst is a bad word," I said to him,
"and I hope you do not live to see it." But amidst his talk I gathered at last
that Frodo had left Hobbiton less than a week before, and that a black horseman
had come to the Hill the same evening. Then I rode on in fear. I came to
Buckland and found it in uproar, as busy as a hive of ants that has been stirred
with a stick. I came to the house at Crickhollow, and it was broken open and
empty; but on the threshold there lay a cloak that had been Frodo's. Then for a
while hope left me, and I did not wait to gather news, or I might have been
comforted; but I rode on the trail of the Riders. It was hard to follow, for it
went many ways, and I was at a loss. But it seemed to me that one or two had
ridden towards Bree; and that way I went, for I thought of words that might be
said to the innkeeper.
'"Butterbur they call him," thought
I. "If this delay was his fault, I will melt all the butter in him. I will roast
the old fool over a slow fire." He expected no less, and when he saw my face he
fell down flat and began to melt on the spot.'
'What did
you do to him?' cried Frodo in alarm. 'He was really very kind to us and did all
that he could.'
Gandalf laughed. 'Don't be afraid!' he
said. 'I did not bite, and I barked very little. So overjoyed was I by the news
that I got out of him, when he stopped quaking, that I embraced the old fellow.
How it happened I could not then guess, but I learned that you had been in Bree
the night before, and had gone off that morning with
Strider.
'"Strider!" I cried, shouting for
joy.
'"Yes, sir, I am afraid so, sir," said Butterbur,
mistaking me. "He got at them, in spite of all that I could do, and they took up
with him. They behaved very queer all the time they were here: wilful, you might
say."
'"Ass! Fool! Thrice worthy and beloved Barliman!"
said I. "It's the best news I have had since midsummer: it's worth a gold piece
at the least. May your beer be laid under an enchantment of surpassing
excellence for seven years!" said I. "Now I can take a night's rest, the first
since I have forgotten when."
'So I stayed there that
night, wondering much what had become of the Riders; for only of two had there
yet been any news in Bree, it seemed. But in the night we heard more. Five at
least came from the west, and they threw down the gates and passed through Bree
like a howling wind; and the Bree-folk are still shivering and expecting the end
of the world. I got up before dawn and went after them.
'I
do not know, but it seems clear to me that this is what happened. Their Captain
remained in secret away south of Bree, while two rode ahead through the village,
and four more invaded the Shire. But when these were foiled in Bree and at
Crickhollow, they returned to their Captain with tidings, and so left the Road
unguarded for a while, except by their spies. The Captain then sent some
eastward straight across country, and he himself with the rest rode along the
Road in great wrath.
'I galloped to Weathertop like a gale,
and I reached it before sundown on my second day from Bree – and they were there
before me. They drew away from me, for they felt the coming of my anger and they
dared not face it while the Sun was in the sky. But they closed round at night,
and I was besieged on the hill-top, in the old ring of Amon Sul. I was hard put
to it indeed: such light and flame cannot have been seen on Weathertop since the
war-beacons of old.
'At sunrise I escaped and fled towards
the north. I could not hope to do more. It was impossible to find you, Frodo, in
the wilderness, and it would have been folly to try with all the Nine at my
heels. So I had to trust to Aragorn. But I hoped to draw some of them off, and
yet reach Rivendell ahead of you and send out help. Four Riders did indeed
follow me, but they turned back after a while and made for the Ford, it seems.
That helped a little, for there were only five, not nine, when your camp was
attacked.
'I reached here at last by a long hard road, up
the Hoarwell and through the Ettenmoors, and down from the north. It took me
nearly fourteen days from Weathertop, for I could not ride among the rocks of
the troll-fells, and Shadowfax departed. I sent him back to his master; but a
great friendship has grown between us, and if I have need he will come at my
call. But so it was that I came to Rivendell only three days before the Ring,
and news of its peril had already been brought here – which proved well
indeed.
'And that, Frodo, is the end of my account. May
Elrond and the others forgive the length of it. But such a thing has not
happened before, that Gandalf broke tryst and did not come when he promised. An
account to the Ring-bearer of so strange an event was required, I
think.
'Well, the Tale is now told, from first to last.
Here we all are, and here is the Ring. But we have not yet come any nearer to
our purpose. What shall we do with it?'
There was silence.
At last Elrond spoke again.
'This is grievous news
concerning Saruman,' he said; 'for we trusted him and he is deep in all our
counsels. It is perilous to study too deeply the arts of the Enemy, for good or
for ill. But such falls and betrayals, alas, have happened before. Of the tales
that we have heard this day the tale of Frodo was most strange to me. I have
known few hobbits, save Bilbo here; and it seems to me that he is perhaps not so
alone and singular as I had thought him. The world has changed much since I last
was on the westward roads.
'The Barrow-wights we know by
many names; and of the Old Forest many tales have been told: all that now
remains is but an outlier of its northern march. Time was when a squirrel could
go from tree to tree from what is now the Shire to Dunland west of Isengard. In
those lands I journeyed once, and many things wild and strange I knew. But I had
forgotten Bombadil, if indeed this is still the same that walked the woods and
hills long ago, and even then was older than the old. That was not then his
name. Iarwain Ben-adar we called him, oldest and fatherless. But many another
name he has since been given by other folk: Forn by the Dwarves, Orald by
Northern Men, and other names beside. He is a strange creature, but maybe I
should have summoned him to our Council.'
'He would not
have come,' said Gandalf.
'Could we not still send messages
to him and obtain his help?' asked Erestor. 'It seems that he has a power even
over the Ring.'
'No, I should not put it so,' said Gandalf.
'Say rather that the Ring has no power over him. He is his own master. But he
cannot alter the Ring itself, nor break its power over others. And now he is
withdrawn into a little land, within bounds that he has set, though none can see
them, waiting perhaps for a change of days, and he will not step beyond
them.'
'But within those bounds nothing seems to dismay
him,' said Erestor. 'Would he not take the Ring and keep it there, for ever
harmless?'
'No,' said Gandalf, 'not willingly. He might do
so, if all the free folk of the world begged him, but he would not understand
the need. And if he were given the Ring, he would soon forget it, or most likely
throw it away. Such things have no hold on his mind. He would be a most unsafe
guardian; and that alone is answer enough.'
'But in any
case,' said Glorfindel, 'to send the Ring to him would only postpone the day of
evil. He is far away. We could not now take it back to him, unguessed, unmarked
by any spy. And even if we could, soon or late the Lord of the Rings would learn
of its hiding place and would bend all his power towards it. Could that power be
defied by Bombadil alone? I think not. I think that in the end, if all else is
conquered, Bombadil will fall, Last as he was First; and then Night will
come.'
'I know little of Iarwain save the name,' said
Galdor; 'but Glorfindel, I think, is right. Power to defy our Enemy is not in
him, unless such power is in the earth itself. And yet we see that Sauron can
torture and destroy the very hills. What power still remains lies with us, here
in Imladris, or with Cirdan at the Havens, or in Lorien. But have they the
strength, have we here the strength to withstand the Enemy, the coming of Sauron
at the last, when all else is overthrown?'
'I have not the
strength,' said Elrond; 'neither have they.'
'Then if the
Ring cannot be kept from him for ever by strength' said Glorfindel, 'two things
only remain for us to attempt: to send it over the Sea, or to destroy
it.'
'But Gandalf has revealed to us that we cannot destroy
it by any craft that we here possess,' said Elrond. 'And they who dwell beyond
the Sea would not receive it: for good or ill it belongs to Middle-earth; it is
for us who still dwell here to deal with it.'
'Then, said
Glorfindel, 'let us cast it into the deeps, and so make the lies of Saruman come
true. For it is clear now that even at the Council his feet were already on a
crooked path. He knew that the Ring was not lost for ever, but wished us to
think so; for he began to lust for it for himself. Yet oft in lies truth is
hidden: in the Sea it would be safe.'
'Not safe for ever,'
said Gandalf. 'There are many things in the deep waters; and seas and lands may
change. And it is not our part here to take thought only for a season, or for a
few lives of Men, or for a passing age of the world. We should seek a final end
of this menace, even if we do not hope to make one.'
'And
that we shall not find on the roads to the Sea,' said Galdor. 'If the return to
Iarwain be thought too dangerous, then flight to the Sea is now fraught with
gravest peril. My heart tells me that Sauron will expect us to take the western
way, when he learns what has befallen. He soon will. The Nine have been unhorsed
indeed but that is but a respite, ere they find new steeds and swifter. Only the
waning might of Gondor stands now between him and a march in power along the
coasts into the North; and if he comes, assailing the White Towers and the
Havens, hereafter the Elves may have no escape from the lengthening shadows of
Middle-earth.'
'Long yet will that march be delayed,' said
Boromir. 'Gondor wanes, you say. But Gondor stands, and even the end of its
strength is still very strong.'
'And yet its vigilance can
no longer keep back the Nine,' said Galdor. 'And other roads he may find that
Gondor does not guard.'
'Then,' said Erestor, 'there are
but two courses, as Glorfindel already has declared: to hide the Ring for ever;
or to unmake it. But both are beyond our power. Who will read this riddle for
us?'
'None here can do so,' said Elrond gravely. 'At least
none can foretell what will come to pass, if we take this road or that. But it
seems to me now clear which is the road that we must take. The westward road
seems easiest. Therefore it must be shunned. It will be watched. Too often the
Elves have fled that way. Now at this last we must take a hard road, a road
unforeseen. There lies our hope, if hope it be. To walk into peril – to Mordor.
We must send the Ring to the Fire.'
Silence fell again.
Frodo, even in that fair house, looking out upon a sunlit valley filled with the
noise of clear waters, felt a dead darkness in his heart. Boromir stirred, and
Frodo looked at him. He was fingering his great horn and frowning. At length he
spoke.
'I do not understand all this,' he said. 'Saruman is
a traitor, but did he not have a glimpse of wisdom? Why do you speak ever of
hiding and destroying? Why should we not think that the Great Ring has come into
our hands to serve us in the very hour of need? Wielding it the Free Lords of
the Free may surely defeat the Enemy. That is what he most fears, I
deem.
'The Men of Gondor are valiant, and they will never
submit; but they may be beaten down. Valour needs first strength, and then a
weapon. Let the Ring be your weapon, if it has such power as you say. Take it
and go forth to victory!'
'Alas, no,' said Elrond. 'We
cannot use the Ruling Ring. That we now know too well. It belongs to Sauron and
was made by him alone, and is altogether evil. Its strength, Boromir, is too
great for anyone to wield at will, save only those who have already a great
power of their own. But for them it holds an even deadlier peril. The very
desire of it corrupts the heart. Consider Saruman. If any of the Wise should
with this Ring overthrow the Lord of Mordor, using his own arts, he would then
set himself on Sauron's throne, and yet another Dark Lord would appear. And that
is another reason why the Ring should be destroyed: as long as it is in the
world it will be a danger even to the Wise. For nothing is evil in the
beginning. Even Sauron was not so. I fear to take the Ring to hide it. I will
not take the Ring to wield it.'
'Nor I,' said
Gandalf.
Boromir looked at them doubtfully, but he bowed
his head. 'So be it,' he said. 'Then in Gondor we must trust to such weapons as
we have. And at the least, while the Wise ones guard this Ring, we will fight
on. Mayhap the Sword-that-was-Broken may still stem the tide – if the hand that
wields it has inherited not an heirloom only, but the sinews of the Kings of
Men.'
'Who can tell?' said Aragorn. 'But we will put it to
the test one day.'
'May the day not be too long delayed,'
said Boromir. 'For though I do not ask for aid, we need it. It would comfort us
to know that others fought also with all the means that they
have.'
'Then be comforted,' said Elrond. 'For there are
other powers and realms that you know not, and they are hidden from you. Anduin
the Great flows past many shores, ere it comes to Argonath and the Gates of
Gondor.'
'Still it might be well for all,' said Gloin the
Dwarf, 'if all these strengths were joined, and the powers of each were used in
league. Other rings there may be, less treacherous, that might be used in our
need. The Seven are lost to us – if Balin has not found the ring of Thror which
was the last; naught has been heard of it since Thror perished in Moria. Indeed
I may now reveal that it was partly in hope to find that ring that Balin went
away.'
'Balin will find no ring in Moria,' said Gandalf.
'Thror gave it to Thrain his son, but not Thrain to Thorin. It was taken with
torment from Thrain in the dungeons of Dol Guldur. I came too
late.'
'Ah, alas!' cried Gloin. 'When will the day come of
our revenge? But still there are the Three. What of the Three Rings of the
Elves? Very mighty Rings, it is said. Do not the Elf-lords keep them? Yet they
too were made by the Dark Lord long ago. Are they idle? I see Elf-lords here.
Will they not say?'
The Elves returned no answer. 'Did you
not hear me, Gloin?' said Elrond. 'The Three were not made by Sauron, nor did he
ever touch them. But of them it is not permitted to speak. So much only in this
hour of doubt I may now say. They are not idle. But they were not made as
weapons of war or conquest: that is not their power. Those who made them did not
desire strength or domination or hoarded wealth, but understanding, making, and
healing, to preserve all things unstained. These things the Elves of
Middle-earth have in some measure gained, though with sorrow. But all that has
been wrought by those who wield the Three will turn to their undoing, and their
minds and hearts will become revealed to Sauron, if he regains the One. It would
be better if the Three had never been. That is his
purpose.'
'But what then would happen, if the Ruling Ring
were destroyed as you counsel?' asked Gloin.
'We know not
for certain,' answered Elrond sadly. 'Some hope that the Three Rings, which
Sauron has never touched, would then become free, and their rulers might heal
the hurts of the world that he has wrought. But maybe when the One has gone, the
Three will fail, and many fair things will fade and be forgotten. That is my
belief.'
'Yet all the Elves are willing to endure this
chance,' said Glorfindel, 'if by it the power of Sauron may be broken, and the
fear of his dominion be taken away for ever.'
'Thus we
return once more to the destroying of the Ring,' said Erestor, 'and yet we come
no nearer. What strength have we for the finding of the Fire in which it was
made? That is the path of despair. Of folly I would say, if the long wisdom of
Elrond did not forbid me.'
'Despair, or folly?' said
Gandalf. 'It is not despair, for despair is only for those who see the end
beyond all doubt. We do not. It is wisdom to recognize necessity, when all other
courses have been weighed, though as folly it may appear to those who cling to
false hope. Well, let folly be our cloak, a veil before the eyes of the Enemy!
For he is very wise, and weighs all things to a nicety in the scales of his
malice. But the only measure that he knows is desire, desire for power; and so
he judges all hearts. Into his heart the thought will not enter that any will
refuse it, that having the Ring we may seek to destroy it. If we seek this, we
shall put him out of reckoning.'
'At least for a while,'
said Elrond. 'The road must be trod, but it will be very hard. And neither
strength nor wisdom will carry us far upon it. This quest may be attempted by
the weak with as much hope as the strong. Yet such is oft the course of deeds
that move the wheels of the world: small hands do them because they must, while
the eyes of the great are elsewhere.'
'Very well, very
well, Master Elrond!' said Bilbo suddenly. 'Say no more! It is plain enough what
you are pointing at. Bilbo the silly hobbit started this affair, and Bilbo had
better finish it, or himself. I was very comfortable here, and getting on with
my book. If you want to know, I am just writing an ending for it. I had thought
of putting:
and he lived happily ever afterwards to the end of his days.
It is a good ending, and none the worse for having been used before. Now I shall
have to alter that: it does not look like coming true; and anyway there will
evidently have to be several more chapters, if I live to write them. It is a
frightful nuisance. When ought I to start?'
Boromir looked
in surprise at Bilbo, but the laughter died on his lips when he saw that all the
others regarded the old hobbit with grave respect. Only Gloin smiled, but his
smile came from old memories.
'Of course, my dear Bilbo,'
said Gandalf. 'If you had really started this affair, you might be expected to
finish it. But you know well enough now that
starting is too great a
claim for any, and that only a small part is played in great deeds by any hero.
You need not bow! Though the word was meant, and we do not doubt that under jest
you are making a valiant offer. But one beyond your strength, Bilbo. You cannot
take this thing back. It has passed on. If you need my advice any longer, I
should say that your part is ended, unless as a recorder. Finish your book, and
leave the ending unaltered! There is still hope for it. But get ready to write a
sequel, when they come back.'
Bilbo laughed. 'I have never
known you give me pleasant advice before.' he said. 'As all your unpleasant
advice has been good, I wonder if this advice is not bad. Still, I don't suppose
I have the strength or luck left to deal with the Ring. It has grown, and I have
not. But tell me: what do you mean by
they ?'
'The
messengers who are sent with the Ring.'
'Exactly! And who
are they to be? That seems to me what this Council has to decide, and all that
it has to decide. Elves may thrive on speech alone, and Dwarves endure great
weariness; but I am only an old hobbit, and I miss my meal at noon. Can't you
think of some names now? Or put it off till after
dinner?'
No one answered. The noon-bell rang. Still no one
spoke. Frodo glanced at all the faces, but they were not turned to him. All the
Council sat with downcast eyes, as if in deep thought. A great dread fell on
him, as if he was awaiting the pronouncement of some doom that he had long
foreseen and vainly hoped might after all never be spoken. An overwhelming
longing to rest and remain at peace by Bilbo's side in Rivendell filled all his
heart. At last with an effort he spoke, and wondered to hear his own words, as
if some other will was using his small voice.
'I will take
the Ring,' he said, 'though I do not know the way.'
Elrond
raised his eyes and looked at him, and Frodo felt his heart pierced by the
sudden keenness of the glance. 'If I understand aright all that I have heard,'
he said, 'I think that this task is appointed for you, Frodo; and that if you do
not find a way, no one will. This is the hour of the Shire-folk, when they arise
from their quiet fields to shake the towers and counsels of the Great. Who of
all the Wise could have foreseen it? Or, if they are wise, why should they
expect to know it, until the hour has struck?
'But it is a
heavy burden. So heavy that none could lay it on another. I do not lay it on
you. But if you take it freely, I will say that your choice is right; and though
all the mighty elf-friends of old, Hador, and Hurin, and Turin, and Beren
himself were assembled together your seat should be among
them.'
'But you won't send him off alone surely, Master?'
cried Sam, unable to contain himself any longer, and jumping up from the corner
where he had been quietly sitting on the floor.
'No
indeed!' said Elrond, turning towards him with a smile. 'You at least shall go
with him. It is hardly possible to separate you from him, even when he is
summoned to a secret council and you are not.'
Sam sat
down, blushing and muttering. 'A nice pickle we have landed ourselves in, Mr.
Frodo!' he said, shaking his head.
Chapter 3
The Ring Goes
South
Later that day the hobbits held a meeting of their own in
Bilbo's room. Merry and Pippin were indignant when they heard that Sam had crept
into the Council, and had been chosen as Frodo's
companion.
'It's most unfair,' said Pippin. 'Instead of
throwing him out, and clapping him in chains, Elrond goes and rewards him for
his cheek!'
'Rewards!' said Frodo. 'I can't imagine a more
severe punishment. You are not thinking what you are saying: condemned to go on
this hopeless journey, a reward? Yesterday I dreamed that my task was done, and
I could rest here, a long while, perhaps for good.'
'I
don't wonder,' said Merry, 'and I wish you could. But we are envying Sam, not
you. If you have to go, then it will be a punishment for any of us to be left
behind, even in Rivendell. We have come a long way with you and been through
some stiff times. We want to go on.'
'That's what I meant,'
said Pippin. 'We hobbits ought to stick together, and we will. I shall go,
unless they chain me up. There must be someone with intelligence in the
party.'
'Then you certainly will not be chosen, Peregrin
Took!' said Gandalf, looking in through the window, which was near the ground.
'But you are all worrying yourselves unnecessarily. Nothing is decided
yet.'
'Nothing decided!' cried Pippin. 'Then what were you
all doing? You were shut up for hours.'
"Talking,' said
Bilbo. 'There was a deal of talk, and everyone had an eye-opener. Even old
Gandalf. I think Legolas's bit of news about Gollum caught even him on the hop,
though he passed it off.'
'You were wrong,' said Gandalf.
'You were inattentive. I had already heard of it from Gwaihir. If you want to
know, the only real eye-openers, as you put it, were you and Frodo; and I was
the only one that was not surprised.'
'Well, anyway,' said
Bilbo, 'nothing was decided beyond choosing poor Frodo and Sam. I was afraid all
the time that it might come to that, if I was let off. But if you ask me, Elrond
will send out a fair number, when the reports come in. Have they started yet,
Gandalf?'
'Yes,' said the wizard. 'Some of the scouts have
been sent out already. More will go tomorrow. Elrond is sending Elves, and they
will get in touch with the Rangers, and maybe with Thranduil's folk in Mirkwood.
And Aragorn has gone with Elrond's sons. We shall have to scour the lands all
round for many long leagues before any move is made. So cheer up, Frodo! You
will probably make quite a long stay here.'
'Ah!' said Sam
gloomily. 'We'll just wait long enough for winter to
come.'
'That can't be helped,' said Bilbo. 'It's your fault
partly, Frodo my lad: insisting on waiting for my birthday. A funny way of
honouring it, I can't help thinking. Not the day I should have chosen for
letting the S.-B.s into Bag End. But there it is: you can't wait now till
spring; and you can't go till the reports come back.
When winter first begins to bite
and stones crack in the
frosty night,
when pools are black and trees are bare,
'tis evil in the
Wild to fare.
But that I am afraid
will be just your luck.'
'I am afraid it will,' said
Gandalf. 'We can't start until we have found out about the
Riders.'
'I thought they were all destroyed in the flood,'
said Merry.
'You cannot destroy Ringwraiths like that,'
said Gandalf. 'The power of their master is in them, and they stand or fall by
him. We hope that they were all unhorsed and unmasked, and so made for a while
less dangerous; but we must find out for certain. In the meantime you should try
and forget your troubles, Frodo. I do not know if I can do anything to help you;
but I will whisper this in your ears. Someone said that intelligence would be
needed in the party. He was right. I think I shall come with
you.'
So great was Frodo's delight at this announcement
that Gandalf left the window-sill, where he had been sitting, and took off his
hat and bowed. 'I only said
I think I shall come. Do not count on
anything yet. In this matter Elrond will have much to say, and your friend the
Strider. Which reminds me, I want to see Elrond. I must be
off.'
'How long do you think I shall have here?' said Frodo
to Bilbo when Gandalf had gone.
'Oh, I don't know. I can't
count days in Rivendell,' said Bilbo. 'But quite long, I should think. We can
have many a good talk. What about helping me with my book, and making a start on
the next? Have you thought of an ending?'
'Yes, several,
and all are dark and unpleasant,' said Frodo.
'Oh, that
won't do!' said Bilbo. 'Books ought to have good endings. How would this do:
and they all settled down and lived together happily ever after
?'
'It will do well, if it ever comes to that,' said
Frodo.
'Ah!' said Sam. 'And where will they live? That's
what I often wonder.'
For a while the hobbits continued to
talk and think of the past journey and of the perils that lay ahead; but such
was the virtue of the land of Rivendell that soon all fear and anxiety was
lifted from their minds. The future, good or ill, was not forgotten, but ceased
to have any power over the present. Health and hope grew strong in them, and
they were content with each good day as it came, taking pleasure in every meal,
and in every word and song.
So the days slipped away, as
each morning dawned bright and fair, and each evening followed cool and clear.
But autumn was waning fast; slowly the golden light faded to pale silver, and
the lingering leaves fell from the naked trees. A wind began to blow chill from
the Misty Mountains to the east. The Hunter's Moon waxed round in the night sky,
and put to flight all the lesser stars. But low in the South one star shone red.
Every night, as the Moon waned again, it shone brighter and brighter. Frodo
could see it from his window, deep in the heavens burning like a watchful eye
that glared above the trees on the brink of the valley.
The
hobbits had been nearly two months in the House of Elrond, and November had gone
by with the last shreds of autumn, and December was passing, when the scouts
began to return. Some had gone north beyond the springs of the Hoarwell into the
Ettenmoors; and others had gone west, and with the help of Aragorn and the
Rangers had searched the lands far down the Greyflood, as far as Tharbad, where
the old North Road crossed the river by a ruined town. Many had gone east and
south; and some of these had crossed the Mountains and entered Mirkwood, while
others had climbed the pass at the source of the Gladden River, and had come
down into Wilderland and over the Gladden Fields and so at length had reached
the old home of Radagast at Rhosgobel. Radagast was not there; and they had
returned over the high pass that was called the Dimrill Stair. The sons of
Elrond, Elladan and Elrohir, were the last to return; they had made a great
journey, passing down the Silverlode into a strange country, but of their errand
they would not speak to any save to Elrond.
In no region
had the messengers discovered any signs or tidings of the Riders or other
servants of the Enemy. Even from the Eagles of the Misty Mountains they had
learned no fresh news. Nothing had been seen or heard of Gollum; but the wild
wolves were still gathering, and were hunting again far up the Great River.
Three of the black horses had been found at once drowned in the flooded Ford. On
the rocks of the rapids below it searchers discovered the bodies of five more,
and also a long black cloak, slashed and tattered. Of the Black Riders no other
trace was to be seen, and nowhere was their presence to be felt. It seemed that
they had vanished from the North.
'Eight out of the Nine
are accounted for at least,' said Gandalf. 'It is rash to be too sure, yet I
think that we may hope now that the Ringwraiths were scattered, and have been
obliged to return as best they could to their Master in Mordor, empty and
shapeless.
'If that is so, it will be some time before they
can begin the hunt again. Of course the Enemy has other servants, but they will
have to journey all the way to the borders of Rivendell before they can pick up
our trail. And if we are careful that will be hard to find. But we must delay no
longer.'
Elrond summoned the hobbits to him. He looked
gravely at Frodo. 'The time has come,' he said. 'If the Ring is to set out, it
must go soon. But those who go with it must not count on their errand being
aided by war or force. They must pass into the domain of the Enemy far from aid.
Do you still hold to your word, Frodo, that you will be the
Ring-bearer?'
'I do,' said Frodo. 'I will go with
Sam.'
'Then I cannot help you much, not even with counsel,'
said Elrond. 'I can foresee very little of your road; and how your task is to be
achieved I do not know. The Shadow has crept now to the feet of the Mountains,
and draws nigh even to the borders of Greyflood; and under the Shadow all is
dark to me. You will meet many foes, some open, and some disguised; and you may
find friends upon your way when you least look for it. I will send out messages,
such as I can contrive, to those whom I know in the wide world; but so perilous
are the lands now become that some may well miscarry, or come no quicker than
you yourself.
'And I will choose you companions to go with
you, as far as they will or fortune allows. The number must be few, since your
hope is in speed and secrecy. Had I a host of Elves in armour of the Elder Days,
it would avail little, save to arouse the power of
Mordor.
'The Company of the Ring shall be Nine; and the
Nine Walkers shall be set against the Nine Riders that are evil. With you and
your faithful servant, Gandalf will go; for this shall be his great task, and
maybe the end of his labours.
'For the rest, they shall
represent the other Free Peoples of the World: Elves, Dwarves, and Men. Legolas
shall be for the Elves; and Gimli son of Gloin for the Dwarves. They are willing
to go at least to the passes of the Mountains, and maybe beyond. For men you
shall have Aragorn son of Arathorn, for the Ring of Isildur concerns him
closely.'
'Strider!' said
Frodo.
'Yes,' he said with a smile. 'I ask leave once again
to be your companion, Frodo.'
'I would have begged you to
come,' said Frodo, 'only I thought you were going to Minas Tirith with
Boromir.'
'I am,' said Aragorn. 'And the
Sword-that-was-Broken shall be reforged ere I set out to war. But your road and
our road lie together for many hundreds of miles. Therefore Boromir will also be
in the Company. He is a valiant man.'
'There remain two
more to be found,' said Elrond. "These I will consider. Of my household I may
find some that it seems good to me to send.'
'But that will
leave no place for us!' cried Pippin in dismay. 'We don't want to be left
behind. We want to go with Frodo.'
'That is because you do
not understand and cannot imagine what lies ahead,' said
Elrond.
'Neither does Frodo,' said Gandalf, unexpectedly
supporting Pippin. 'Nor do any of us see clearly. It is true that if these
hobbits understood the danger, they would not dare to go. But they would still
wish to go, or wish that they dared, and be shamed and unhappy. I think, Elrond,
that in this matter it would be well to trust rather to their friendship than to
great wisdom. Even if you chose for us an elf-lord, such as Glorfindel, he could
not storm the Dark Tower, nor open the road to the Fire by the power that is in
him.'
'You speak gravely,' said Elrond, 'but I am in doubt.
The Shire, I forebode, is not free now from peril; and these two I had thought
to send back there as messengers, to do what they could, according to the
fashion of their country, to warn the people of their danger. In any case, I
judge that the younger of these two, Peregrin Took, should remain. My heart is
against his going.'
'Then, Master Elrond, you will have to
lock me in prison, or send me home tied in a sack,' said Pippin. 'For otherwise
I shall follow the Company.'
'Let it be so then. You shall
go,' said Elrond, and he sighed. 'Now the tale of Nine is filled. In seven days
the Company must depart.'
The Sword of Elendil was forged
anew by Elvish smiths, and on its blade was traced a device of seven stars set
between the crescent Moon and the rayed Sun, and about them was written many
runes; for Aragorn son of Arathorn was going to war upon the marches of Mordor.
Very bright was that sword when it was made whole again; the light of the sun
shone redly in it, and the light of the moon shone cold, and its edge was hard
and keen. And Aragorn gave it a new name and called it Anduril, Flame of the
West.
Aragorn and Gandalf walked together or sat speaking
of their road and the perils they would meet; and they pondered the storied and
figured maps and books of lore that were in the house of Elrond. Sometimes Frodo
was with them; but he was content to lean on their guidance, and he spent as
much time as he could with Bilbo.
In those last days the
hobbits sat together in the evening in the Hall of Fire, and there among many
tales they heard told in full the lay of Beren and Luthien and the winning of
the Great Jewel; but in the day, while Merry and Pippin were out and about,
Frodo and Sam were to be found with Bilbo in his own small room. Then Bilbo
would read passages from his book (which still seemed very incomplete). or
scraps of his verses, or would take notes of Frodo's
adventures.
On the morning of the last day Frodo was alone
with Bilbo, and the old hobbit pulled out from under his bed a wooden box. He
lifted the lid and fumbled inside.
'Here is your sword,' he
said. 'But it was broken, you know. I took it to keep it safe but I've forgotten
to ask if the smiths could mend it. No time now.. So I thought, perhaps, you
would care to have this, don't you know?'
He took from the
box a small sword in an old shabby leathern scabbard. Then he drew it, and its
polished and well-tended blade glittered suddenly, cold and bright. 'This is
Sting,' he said, and thrust it with little effort deep into a wooden beam. 'Take
it, if you like. I shan't want it again, I expect.'
Frodo
accepted it gratefully.
'Also there is this!' said Bilbo,
bringing out a parcel which seemed to be rather heavy for its size. He unwound
several folds of old cloth, and held up a small shirt of mail. It was
close-woven of many rings, as supple almost as linen, cold as ice, and harder
than steel. It shone like moonlit silver, and was studded with white gems. With
it was a belt of pearl and crystal.
'It's a pretty thing,
isn't it?' said Bilbo, moving it in the light. 'And useful. It is my dwarf-mail
that Thorin gave me. I got it back from Michel Delving before I started, and
packed it with my luggage: I brought all the mementoes of my Journey away with
me, except the Ring. But I did not expect to use this, and I don't need it now,
except to look at sometimes. You hardly feel any weight when you put it
on.'
'I should look – well, I don't think I should look
right in it,' said Frodo.
'Just what I said myself,' said
Bilbo. 'But never mind about looks. You can wear it under your outer clothes.
Come on! You must share this secret with me. Don't tell anybody else! But I
should feel happier if I knew you were wearing it. I have a fancy it would turn
even the knives of the Black Riders,' he ended in a low
voice.
'Very well, I will take it,' said Frodo. Bilbo put
it on him, and fastened Sting upon the glittering belt; and then Frodo put over
the top his old weather-stained breeches, tunic, and
jacket.
'Just a plain hobbit you look,' said Bilbo. 'But
there is more about you now than appears on the surface. Good luck to you!' He
turned away and looked out of the window, trying to hum a
tune.
'I cannot thank you as I should, Bilbo, for this, and
for all our past kindnesses,' said Frodo.
'Don't try!' said
the old hobbit, turning round and slapping him on the back. 'Ow!' he cried. 'You
are too hard now to slap! But there you are: Hobbits must stick together, and
especially Bagginses. All I ask in return is: take as much care of yourself as
you can, and bring back all the news you can, and any old songs and tales you
can come by. I'll do my best to finish my book before you return. I should like
to write the second book, if I am spared.' He broke off and turned to the window
again, singing softly.
I sit beside the fire and think
of all that I have
seen,
of meadow-flowers and butterflies
in summers that have
been;
Of yellow leaves and gossamer
in autumns that
there were,
with morning mist and silver sun
and wind upon my
hair.
I sit beside the fire and think
of how the
world will be
when winter comes without a spring
that I shall ever
see.
For still there are so many things
that I have
never seen:
in every wood in every spring
there is a different
green.
I sit beside the fire and think
of people
long ago,
and people who will see a world
that I shall never
know.
But all the while I sit and think
of times
there were before,
I listen for returning feet
and voices at the
door.
It was a cold grey day near
the end of December. The East Wind was streaming through the bare branches of
the trees, and seething in the dark pines on the hills. Ragged clouds were
hurrying overhead, dark and low. As the cheerless shadows of the early evening
began to fall the Company made ready to set out. They were to start at dusk, for
Elrond counselled them to journey under cover of night as often as they could,
until they were far from Rivendell.
'You should fear the
many eyes of the servants of Sauron,' he said. 'I do not doubt that news of the
discomfiture of the Riders has already reached him, and he will be filled with
wrath. Soon now his spies on foot and wing will be abroad in the northern lands.
Even of the sky above you must beware as you go on your
way.'
The Company took little gear of war, for their hope
was in secrecy not in battle. Aragorn had Anduril but no other weapon, and he
went forth clad only in rusty green and brown. as a Ranger of the wilderness.
Boromir had a long sword, in fashion like Anduril but of less lineage and he
bore also a shield and his war-horn.
'Loud and clear it
sounds in the valleys of the hills,' he said, 'and then let all the foes of
Gondor flee!' Putting it to his lips he blew a blast, and the echoes leapt from
rock to rock, and all that heard that voice in Rivendell sprang to their
feet.
'Slow should you be to wind that horn again,
Boromir,' said Elrond. 'until you stand once more on the borders of your land,
and dire need is on you.'
'Maybe,' said Boromir. 'But
always I have let my horn cry at setting forth, and though thereafter we may
walk in the shadows, I will not go forth as a thief in the
night.'
Gimli the dwarf alone wore openly a short shirt of
steel-rings, for dwarves make light of burdens; and in his belt was a
broad-bladed axe. Legolas had a bow and a quiver, and at his belt a long white
knife. The younger hobbits wore the swords that they had taken from the barrow;
but Frodo took only Sting; and his mail-coat, as Bilbo wished, remained hidden.
Gandalf bore his staff, but girt at his side was the elven-sword Glamdring, the
mate of Orcrist that lay now upon the breast of Thorin under the Lonely
Mountain.
All were well furnished by Elrond with thick warm
clothes, and they had jackets and cloaks lined with fur. Spare food and clothes
and blankets and other needs were laden on a pony, none other than the poor
beast that they had brought from Bree.
The stay in
Rivendell had worked a great wonder of change on him: he was glossy and seemed
to have the vigour of youth. It was Sam who had insisted on choosing him,
declaring that Bill (as he called him) would pine, if he did not
come.
'That animal can nearly talk,' he said, 'and would
talk, if he stayed here much longer. He gave me a look as plain as Mr. Pippin
could speak it: if you don't let me go with you, Sam, I'll follow on my own.' So
Bill was going as the beast of burden, yet he was the only member of the Company
that did not seem depressed.
Their farewells had been said
in the great hall by the fire, and they were only waiting now for Gandalf, who
had not yet come out of the house. A gleam of firelight came from the open
doors, and soft lights were glowing in many windows. Bilbo huddled in a cloak
stood silent on the doorstep beside Frodo. Aragorn sat with his head bowed to
his knees; only Elrond knew fully what this hour meant to him. The others could
be seen as grey shapes in the darkness.
Sam was standing by
the pony, sucking his teeth, and staring moodily into the gloom where the river
roared stonily below; his desire for adventure was at its lowest
ebb.
'Bill, my lad,' he said, 'you oughtn't to have took up
with us. You could have stayed here and et the best hay till the new grass
comes.' Bill swished his tail and said nothing.
Sam eased
the pack on his shoulders, and went over anxiously in his mind all the things
that he had stowed in it, wondering if he had forgotten anything: his chief
treasure, his cooking gear; and the little box of salt that he always carried
and refilled when he could; a good supply of pipe-weed (but not near enough,
I'll warrant); flint and tinder; woollen hose; linen; various small belongings
of his master's that Frodo had forgotten and Sam had stowed to bring them out in
triumph when they were called for. He went through them
all.
'Rope!' he muttered. 'No rope! And only last night you
said to yourself: "Sam, what about a bit of rope? You'll want it, if you haven't
got it." Well, I'll want it. I can't get it now.'
At that
moment Elrond came out with Gandalf, and he called the Company to him. 'This is
my last word,' he said in a low voice. 'The Ring-bearer is setting out on the
Quest of Mount Doom. On him alone is any charge laid: neither to cast away the
Ring, nor to deliver it to any servant of the Enemy nor indeed to let any handle
it, save members of the Company and the Council, and only then in gravest need.
The others go with him as free companions, to help him on his way. You may
tarry, or come back, or turn aside into other paths, as chance allows. The
further you go, the less easy will it be to withdraw; yet no oath or bond is
laid on you to go further than you will. For you do not yet know the strength of
your hearts, and you cannot foresee what each may meet upon the
road.'
'Faithless is he that says farewell when the road
darkens,' said Gimli.
'Maybe,' said Elrond, 'but let him
not vow to walk in the dark, who has not seen the
nightfall.'
'Yet sworn word may strengthen quaking heart,'
said Gimli.
'Or break it,' said Elrond. 'Look not too far
ahead! But go now with good hearts! Farewell, and may the blessing of Elves and
Men and all Free Folk go with you. May the stars shine upon your
faces!'
'Good... good luck!' cried Bilbo, stuttering with
the cold. 'I don't suppose you will be able to keep a diary, Frodo my lad, but I
shall expect a full account when you get back. And don't be too long!
Farewell!'
Many others of Elrond's household stood in the
shadows and watched them go, bidding them farewell with soft voices. There was
no laughter, and no song or music. At last they turned away and faded silently
into the dusk.
They crossed the bridge and wound slowly up
the long steep paths that led out of the cloven vale of Rivendell; and they came
at length to the high moor where the wind hissed through the heather. Then with
one glance at the Last Homely House twinkling below them they strode away far
into the night.
At the Ford of Bruinen they left the Road
and turning southwards went on by narrow paths among the folded lands. Their
purpose was to hold this course west of the Mountains for many miles and days.
The country was much rougher and more barren than in the green vale of the Great
River in Wilderland on the other side of the range, and their going would be
slow; but they hoped in this way to escape the notice of unfriendly eyes. The
spies of Sauron had hitherto seldom been seen in this empty country, and the
paths were little known except to the people of
Rivendell.
Gandalf walked in front, and with him went
Aragorn, who knew this land even in the dark. The others were in file behind,
and Legolas whose eyes were keen was the rearguard. The first part of their
journey was hard and dreary, and Frodo remembered little of it, save the wind.
For many sunless days an icy blast came from the Mountains in the east, and no
garment seemed able to keep out its searching fingers. Though the Company was
well clad, they seldom felt warm, either moving or at rest. They slept uneasily
during the middle of the day, in some hollow of the land, or hidden under the
tangled thorn-bushes that grew in thickets in many places. In the late afternoon
they were roused by the watch, and took their chief meal: cold and cheerless as
a rule, for they could seldom risk the lighting of a fire. In the evening they
went on again, always as nearly southward as they could find a
way.
At first it seemed to the hobbits that although they
walked and stumbled until they were weary, they were creeping forward like
snails, and getting nowhere. Each day the land looked much the same as it had
the day before. Yet steadily the mountains were drawing nearer. South of
Rivendell they rose ever higher, and bent westwards; and about the feet of the
main range there was tumbled an ever wider land of bleak hills, and deep valleys
filled with turbulent waters. Paths were few and winding, and led them often
only to the edge of some sheer fall, or down into treacherous
swamps.
They had been a fortnight on the way when the
weather changed. The wind suddenly fell and then veered round to the south. The
swift-flowing clouds lifted and melted away, and the sun came out, pale and
bright. There came a cold clear dawn at the end of a long stumbling night-march.
The travellers reached a low ridge crowned with ancient holly-trees whose
grey-green trunks seemed to have been built out of the very stone of the hills.
Their dark leaves shone and their berries glowed red in the light of the rising
sun.
Away in the south Frodo could see the dim shapes of
lofty mountains that seemed now to stand across the path that the Company was
taking. At the left of this high range rose three peaks; the tallest and nearest
stood up like a tooth tipped with snow; its great, bare, northern precipice was
still largely in the shadow, but where the sunlight slanted upon it, it glowed
red.
Gandalf stood at Frodo's side and looked out under his
hand. 'We have done well,' he said. 'We have reached the borders of the country
that Men call Hollin; many Elves lived here in happier days, when Eregion was
its name. Five-and-forty leagues as the crow flies we have come, though many
long miles further our feet have walked. The land and the weather will be milder
now, but perhaps all the more dangerous.'
'Dangerous or
not, a real sunrise is mighty welcome,' said Frodo, throwing back his hood and
letting the morning light fall on his face.
'But the
mountains are ahead of us,' said Pippin. 'We must have turned eastwards in the
night.'
'No,' said Gandalf. 'But you see further ahead in
the clear light. Beyond those peaks the range bends round south-west. There are
many maps in Elrond's house, but I suppose you never thought to look at
them?'
'Yes I did, sometimes,' said Pippin, 'but I don't
remember them. Frodo has a better head for that sort of
thing.'
'I need no map,' said Gimli, who had come up with
Legolas, and was gazing out before him with a strange light in his deep eyes.
'There is the land where our fathers worked of old, and we have wrought the
image of those mountains into many works of metal and of stone, and into many
songs and tales. They stand tall in our dreams: Baraz, Zirak,
Shathur.
'Only once before have I seen them from afar in
waking life, but I know them and their names, for under them lies Khazad-dum,
the Dwarrowdelf, that is now called the Black Pit, Moria in the Elvish tongue.
Yonder stands Barazinbar, the Redhorn, cruel Caradhras; and beyond him are
Silvertine and Cloudyhead: Celebdil the White, and Fanuidhol the Grey, that we
call Zirak-zigil and Bundushathur.
'There the Misty
Mountains divide, and between their arms lies the deep-shadowed valley which we
cannot forget: Azanulbizar, the Dimrill Dale, which the Elves call
Nanduhirion.'
'It is for the Dimrill Dale that we are
making,' said Gandalf. 'If we climb the pass that is called the Redhorn Gate,
under the far side of Caradhras, we shall come down by the Dimrill Stair into
the deep vale of the Dwarves. There lies the Mirrormere, and there the River
Silverlode rises in its icy springs.'
'Dark is the water of
Kheled-zaram,' said Gimli, 'and cold are the springs of Kibil-nala. My heart
trembles at the thought that I may see them soon.'
'May you
have joy of the sight, my good dwarf!' said Gandalf. 'But whatever you may do,
we at least cannot stay in that valley. We must go down the Silverlode into the
secret woods, and so to the Great River, and then –'
He
paused.
'Yes, and where then?' asked
Merry.
'To the end of the journey – in the end,' said
Gandalf. 'We cannot look too far ahead. Let us be glad that the first stage is
safely over. I think we will rest here, not only today but tonight as well.
There is a wholesome air about Hollin. Much evil must befall a country before it
wholly forgets the Elves, if once they dwelt there.'
'That
is true,' said Legolas. 'But the Elves of this land were of a race strange to us
of the silvan folk, and the trees and the grass do not now remember them; only I
hear the stones lament them:
deep they delved us, fair they wrought us, high
they builded us; but they are gone. They are gone. They sought the Havens
long ago.'
That morning they lit a fire in a deep hollow
shrouded by great bushes of holly, and their supper-breakfast was merrier than
it had been since they set out. They did not hurry to bed afterwards, for they
expected to have all the night to sleep in, and they did not mean to go on again
until the evening of the next day. Only Aragorn was silent and restless. After a
while he left the Company and wandered on to the ridge; there he stood in the
shadow of a tree, looking out southwards and westwards, with his head posed as
if he was listening. Then he returned to the brink of the dell and looked down
at the others laughing and talking.
'What is the matter,
Strider?' Merry called up. 'What are you looking for? Do you miss the East
Wind?'
'No indeed,' he answered. 'But I miss something. I
have been in the country of Hollin in many seasons. No folk dwell here now, but
many other creatures live here at all times, especially birds. Yet now all
things but you are silent. I can feel it. There is no sound for miles about us,
and your voices seem to make the ground echo. I do not understand
it.'
Gandalf looked up with sudden interest. 'But what do
you guess is the reason?' he asked. 'Is there more in it than surprise at seeing
four hobbits, not to mention the rest of us, where people are so seldom seen or
heard?'
'I hope that is it,' answered Aragorn. 'But I have
a sense of watchfulness, and of fear, that I have never had here
before.'
"Then we must be more careful,' said Gandalf. 'If
you bring a Ranger with you, it is well to pay attention to him, especially if
the Ranger is Aragorn. We must stop talking aloud, rest quietly, and set the
watch.'
It was Sam's turn that day to take the first watch,
but Aragorn joined him. The others fell asleep. Then the silence grew until even
Sam felt it. The breathing of the sleepers could be plainly heard. The swish of
the pony's tail and the occasional movements of his feet became loud noises. Sam
could hear his own joints creaking, if he stirred. Dead silence was around him,
and over all hung a clear blue sky, as the Sun rode up from the East. Away in
the South a dark patch appeared, and grew, and drove north like flying smoke in
the wind.
'What's that, Strider? It don't look like a
cloud,' said Sam in a whisper to Aragorn. He made no answer, he was gazing
intently at the sky; but before long Sam could see for himself what was
approaching. Flocks of birds, flying at great speed, were wheeling and circling,
and traversing all the land as if they were searching for something; and they
were steadily drawing nearer.
'Lie flat and still!' hissed
Aragorn, pulling Sam down into the shade of a holly-bush; for a whole regiment
of birds had broken away suddenly from the main host, and came, flying low,
straight towards the ridge. Sam thought they were a kind of crow of large size.
As they passed overhead, in so dense a throng that their shadow followed them
darkly over the ground below, one harsh croak was
heard.
Not until they had dwindled into the distance, north
and west, and the sky was again clear would Aragorn rise. Then he sprang up and
went and wakened Gandalf.
'Regiments of black crows are
flying over all the land between the Mountains and the Greyflood,' he said, 'and
they have passed over Hollin. They are not natives here; they are
crebain
out of Fangorn and Dunland. I do not know what they are about: possibly there is
some trouble away south from which they are fleeing; but I think they are spying
out the land. I have also glimpsed many hawks flying high up in the sky. I think
we ought to move again this evening. Hollin is no longer wholesome for us: it is
being watched.'
'And in that case so is the Redhorn Gate,'
said Gandalf; 'and how we can get over that without being seen, I cannot
imagine. But we will think of that when we must. As for moving as soon as it is
dark, I am afraid that you are right.'
'Luckily our fire
made little smoke, and had burned low before the
crebain came,' said
Aragorn. 'It must be put out and not lit again.'
'Well if
that isn't a plague and a nuisance!' said Pippin. The news: no fire, and a move
again by night, had been broken to him, as soon as he woke in the late
afternoon. 'All because of a pack of crows! I had looked forward to a real good
meal tonight: something hot.'
'Well, you can go on looking
forward,' said Gandalf. 'There may be many unexpected feasts ahead for you. For
myself I should like a pipe to smoke in comfort, and warmer feet. However, we
are certain of one thing at any rate: it will get warmer as we get
south.'
'Too warm, I shouldn't wonder,' muttered Sam to
Frodo. 'But I'm beginning to think it's time we got a sight of that Fiery
Mountain and saw the end of the Road, so to speak. I thought at first that this
here Redhorn, or whatever its name is, might be it, till Gimli spoke his piece.
A fair jaw-cracker dwarf-language must be!' Maps conveyed nothing to Sam's mind,
and all distances in these strange lands seemed so vast that he was quite out of
his reckoning.
All that day the Company remained in hiding.
The dark birds passed over now and again; but as the westering Sun grew red they
disappeared southwards. At dusk the Company set out, and turning now half east
they steered their course towards Caradhras, which far away still glowed faintly
red in the last light of the vanished Sun. One by one white stars sprang forth
as the sky faded.
Guided by Aragorn they struck a good
path. It looked to Frodo like the remains of an ancient road, that had once been
broad and well planned, from Hollin to the mountain-pass. The Moon, now at the
full, rose over the mountains, and cast a pale light in which the shadows of
stones were black. Many of them looked to have been worked by hands, though now
they lay tumbled and ruinous in a bleak, barren land.
It
was the cold chill hour before the first stir of dawn, and the moon was low.
Frodo looked up at the sky. Suddenly he saw or felt a shadow pass over the high
stars, as if for a moment they faded and then flashed out again. He
shivered.
'Did you see anything pass over?' he whispered to
Gandalf, who was just ahead.
'No, but I felt it, whatever
it was,' he answered. 'It may be nothing, only a wisp of thin
cloud.'
'It was moving fast then,' muttered Aragorn, 'and
not with the wind.'
Nothing further happened that night.
The next morning dawned even brighter than before. But the air was chill again;
already the wind was turning back towards the east. For two more nights they
marched on, climbing steadily but ever more slowly as their road wound up into
the hills, and the mountains towered up, nearer and nearer. On the third morning
Caradhras rose before them, a mighty peak, tipped with snow like silver, but
with sheer naked sides, dull red as if stained with
blood.
There was a black look in the sky, and the sun was
wan. The wind had gone now round to the north-east. Gandalf snuffed the air and
looked back.
'Winter deepens behind us,' he said quietly to
Aragorn. 'The heights away north are whiter than they were; snow is lying far
down their shoulders. Tonight we shall be on our way high up towards the Redhorn
Gate. We may well be seen by watchers on that narrow path, and waylaid by some
evil; but the weather may prove a more deadly enemy than any. What do you think
of your course now, Aragorn?'
Frodo overheard these words,
and understood that Gandalf and Aragorn were continuing some debate that had
begun long before. He listened anxiously.
'I think no good
of our course from beginning to end, as you know well, Gandalf,' answered
Aragorn. 'And perils known and unknown will grow as we go on. But we must go on;
and it is no good our delaying the passage of the mountains. Further south there
are no passes, till one comes to the Gap of Rohan. I do not trust that way since
your news of Saruman. Who knows which side now the marshals of the Horse-lords
serve?'
'Who knows indeed!' said Gandalf. 'But there is
another way, and not by the pass of Caradhras: the dark and secret way that we
have spoken of.'
'But let us not speak of it again! Not
yet. Say nothing to the others I beg, not until it is plain that there is no
other way.'
'We must decide before we go further,' answered
Gandalf.
'Then let us weigh the matter in our minds, while
the others rest and sleep,' said Aragorn.
In the late
afternoon, while the others were finishing their breakfast, Gandalf and Aragorn
went aside together and stood looking at Caradhras. Its sides were now dark and
sullen, and its head was in grey cloud. Frodo watched them, wondering which way
the debate would go. When they returned to the Company Gandalf spoke, and then
he knew that it had been decided to face the weather and the high pass. He was
relieved. He could not guess what was the other dark and secret way, but the
very mention of it had seemed to fill Aragorn with dismay, and Frodo was glad
that it had been abandoned.
'From signs that we have seen
lately,' said Gandalf, 'I fear that the Redhorn Gate may be watched; and also I
have doubts of the weather that is coming up behind. Snow may come. We must go
with all the speed that we can. Even so it will take us more than two marches
before we reach the top of the pass. Dark will come early this evening. We must
leave as soon as you can get ready.'
'I will add a word of
advice, if I may,' said Boromir. 'I was born under the shadow of the White
Mountains and know something of journeys in the high places. We shall meet
bitter cold, if no worse, before we come down on the other side. It will not
help us to keep so secret that we are frozen to death. When we leave here, where
there are still a few trees and bushes, each of us should carry a faggot of
wood, as large as he can bear.'
'And Bill could take a bit
more, couldn't you lad?' said Sam. The pony looked at him
mournfully.
'Very well,' said Gandalf. 'But we must not use
the wood – not unless it is a choice between fire and
death.'
The Company set out again with good speed at first;
but soon their way became steep and difficult. The twisting and climbing road
had in many places almost disappeared, and was blocked with many fallen stones.
The night grew deadly dark under great clouds. A bitter wind swirled among the
rocks. By midnight they had climbed to the knees of the great mountains. The
narrow path now wound under a sheer wall of cliffs to the left, above which the
grim flanks of Caradhras towered up invisible in the gloom; on the right was a
gulf of darkness where the land fell suddenly into a deep ravine.
Laboriously they climbed a sharp slope and
halted for a moment at the top. Frodo felt a soft touch on his face. He put out
his arm and saw the dim white flakes of snow settling on his
sleeve.
They went on. But before long the snow was falling
fast, filling all the air, and swirling into Frodo's eyes. The dark bent shapes
of Gandalf and Aragorn only a pace or two ahead could hardly be
seen.
'I don't like this at all,' panted Sam just behind.
'Snow's all right on a fine morning, but I like to be in bed while it's falling.
I wish this lot would go off to Hobbiton! Folk might welcome it there.' Except
on the high moors of the Northfarthing a heavy fall was rare in the Shire, and
was regarded as a pleasant event and a chance for fun. No living hobbit (save
Bilbo) could remember the Fell Winter of 1311, when the white wolves invaded the
Shire over the frozen Brandywine.
Gandalf halted. Snow was
thick on his hood and shoulders; it was already ankle-deep about his
boots.
"This is what I feared,' he said. 'What do you say
now, Aragorn?'
'That I feared it too,' Aragorn answered,
'but less than other things. I knew the risk of snow, though it seldom falls
heavily so far south, save high up in the mountains. But we are not high yet; we
are still far down, where the paths are usually open all the
winter.'
'I wonder if this is a contrivance of the Enemy,'
said Boromir. "They say in my land that he can govern the storms in the
Mountains of Shadow that stand upon the borders of Mordor. He has strange powers
and many allies.'
'His arm has grown long indeed,' said
Gimli, 'if he can draw snow down from the North to trouble us here three hundred
leagues away.'
'His arm has grown long,' said
Gandalf.
While they were halted, the wind died down, and
the snow slackened until it almost ceased. They tramped on again. But they had
not gone more than a furlong when the storm returned with fresh fury. The wind
whistled and the snow became a blinding blizzard. Soon even Boromir found it
hard to keep going. The hobbits, bent nearly double, toiled along behind the
taller folk, but it was plain that they could not go much further, if the snow
continued. Frodo's feet felt like lead. Pippin was dragging behind. Even Gimli,
as stout as any dwarf could be, was grumbling as he
trudged.
The Company halted suddenly, as if they had come
to an agreement without any words being spoken. They heard eerie noises in the
darkness round them. It may have been only a trick of the wind in the cracks and
gullies of the rocky wall, but the sounds were those of shrill cries, and wild
howls of laughter. Stones began to fall from the mountain-side, whistling over
their heads, or crashing on the path beside them. Every now and again they heard
a dull rumble, as a great boulder rolled down from hidden heights
above.
'We cannot go further tonight,' said Boromir. 'Let
those call it the wind who will; there are fell voices on the air; and these
stones are aimed at us.'
'I do call it the wind,' said
Aragorn. 'But that does not make what you say untrue. There are many evil and
unfriendly things in the world that have little love for those that go on two
legs, and yet are not in league with Sauron, but have purposes of their own.
Some have been in this world longer than he.'
'Caradhras
was called the Cruel, and had an ill name, said Gimli, 'long years ago, when
rumour of Sauron had not been heard in these lands.'
'It
matters little who is the enemy, if we cannot beat off his attack,' said
Gandalf.
'But what can we do?' cried Pippin miserably. He
was leaning on Merry and Frodo, and he was
shivering.
'Either stop where we are, or go back,' said
Gandalf. 'It is no good going on. Only a little higher, if I remember rightly,
this path leaves the cliff and runs into a wide shallow trough at the bottom of
a long hard slope. We should have no shelter there from snow, or stones – or
anything else.'
'And it is no good going back while the
storm holds,' said Aragorn. 'We have passed no place on the way up that offered
more shelter than this cliff-wall we are under
now.'
'Shelter!' muttered Sam. 'If this is shelter, then
one wall and no roof make a house.'
The Company now
gathered together as close to the cliff as they could. It faced southwards, and
near the bottom it leaned out a little, so that they hoped it would give them
some protection from the northerly wind and from the falling stones. But eddying
blasts swirled round them from every side, and the snow flowed down in ever
denser clouds.
They huddled together with their backs to
the wall. Bill the pony stood patiently but dejectedly in front of the hobbits,
and screened them a little; but before long the drifting snow was above his
hocks, and it went on mounting. If they had had no larger companions the hobbits
would soon have been entirely buried.
A great sleepiness
came over Frodo; he felt himself sinking fast into a warm and hazy dream. He
thought a fire was heating his toes, and out of the shadows on the other side of
the hearth he heard Bilbo's voice speaking
. I don't think much of your
diary, he said.
Snowstorms on January the twelfth: there was no need to
come back to report that! But I wanted rest and
sleep, Bilbo, Frodo answered with an effort, when he felt himself shaken,
and he came back painfully to wakefulness. Boromir had lifted him off the ground
out of a nest of snow.
'This will be the death of the
halflings, Gandalf,' said Boromir. 'It is useless to sit here until the snow
goes over our heads. We must do something to save
ourselves.'
'Give them this,' said Gandalf, searching in
his pack and drawing out a leathern flask. 'Just a mouthful each – for all of
us. It is very precious. It is
miruvor, the cordial of Imladris. Elrond
gave it to me at our parting. Pass it round!'
As soon as
Frodo had swallowed a little of the warm and fragrant liquor he felt a new
strength of heart, and the heavy drowsiness left his limbs. The others also
revived and found fresh hope and vigour. But the snow did not relent. It whirled
about them thicker than ever, and the wind blew
louder.
'What do you say to fire?' asked Boromir suddenly.
'The choice seems near now between fire and death, Gandalf. Doubtless we shall
be hidden from all unfriendly eyes when the snow has covered us, but that will
not help us.'
'You may make a fire, if you can,' answered
Gandalf. 'If there are any watchers that can endure this storm, then they can
see us, fire or no.' But though they had brought wood and kindlings by the
advice of Boromir, it passed the skill of Elf or even Dwarf to strike a flame
that would hold amid the swirling wind or catch in the wet fuel. At last
reluctantly Gandalf himself took a hand. Picking up a faggot he held it aloft
for a moment, and then with a word of command
, naur an edraith ammen! he
thrust the end of his staff into the midst of it. At once a great spout of green
and blue flame sprang out, and the wood flared and
sputtered.
'If there are any to see, then I at least am
revealed to them,' he said. 'I have written
Gandalf is here in signs that
all can read from Rivendell to the mouths of Anduin.'
But
the Company cared no longer for watchers or unfriendly eyes. Their hearts were
rejoiced to see the light of the fire. The wood burned merrily; and though all
round it the snow hissed, and pools of slush crept under their feet, they warmed
their hands gladly at the blaze. There they stood, stooping in a circle round
the little dancing and blowing flames. A red light was on their tired and
anxious faces; behind them the night was like a black
wall.
But the wood was burning fast, and the snow still
fell. The fire burned low, and the last faggot was thrown
on.
'The night is getting old,' said Aragorn. 'The dawn is
not far off.'
'If any dawn can pierce these clouds,' said
Gimli.
Boromir stepped out of the circle and stared up into
the blackness. 'The snow is growing less,' he said, 'and the wind is
quieter.'
Frodo gazed wearily at the flakes still falling
out of the dark to be revealed white for a moment in the light of the dying
fire; but for a long time he could see no sign of their slackening. Then
suddenly, as sleep was beginning to creep over him again, he was aware that the
wind had indeed fallen, and the flakes were becoming larger and fewer. Very
slowly a dim light began to grow. At last the snow stopped
altogether.
As the light grew stronger it showed a silent
shrouded world. Below their refuge were white humps and domes and shapeless
deeps beneath which the path that they had trodden was altogether lost; but the
heights above were hidden in great clouds still heavy with the threat of
snow.
Gimli looked up and shook his head. 'Caradhras has
not forgiven us.' he said. 'He has more snow yet to fling at us, if we go on.
The sooner we go back and down the better.'
To this all
agreed, but their retreat was now difficult. It might well prove impossible.
Only a few paces from the ashes of their fire the snow lay many feet deep,
higher than the heads of the hobbits; in places it had been scooped and piled by
the wind into great drifts against the cliff.
'If Gandalf
would go before us with a bright flame, he might melt a path for you,' said
Legolas. The storm had troubled him little, and he alone of the Company remained
still light of heart.
'If Elves could fly over mountains,
they might fetch the Sun to save us,' answered Gandalf. 'But I must have
something to work on. I cannot burn snow.'
'Well,' said
Boromir, 'when heads are at a loss bodies must serve, as we say in my country.
The strongest of us must seek a way. See! Though all is now snow-clad, our path,
as we came up, turned about that shoulder of rock down yonder. It was there that
the snow first began to burden us. If we could reach that point, maybe it would
prove easier beyond. It is no more than a furlong off, I
guess.'
'Then let us force a path thither, you and I!' said
Aragorn.
Aragorn was the tallest of the Company, but
Boromir, little less in height, was broader and heavier in build. He led the
way, and Aragorn followed him. Slowly they moved off, and were soon toiling
heavily. In places the snow was breast-high, and often Boromir seemed to be
swimming or burrowing with his great arms rather than
walking.
Legolas watched them for a while with a smile upon
his lips, and then he turned to the others. 'The strongest must seek a way, say
you? But I say: let a ploughman plough, but choose an otter for swimming, and
for running light over grass and leaf or over snow – an
Elf.'
With that he sprang forth nimbly, and then Frodo
noticed as if for the first time, though he had long known it, that the Elf had
no boots, but wore only light shoes, as he always did, and his feet made little
imprint in the snow.
'Farewell!' he said to Gandalf. 'I go
to find the Sun!' Then swift as a runner over firm sand he shot away, and
quickly overtaking the toiling men, with a wave of his hand he passed them, and
sped into the distance, and vanished round the rocky
turn.
The others waited huddled together, watching until
Boromir and Aragorn dwindled into black specks in the whiteness. At length they
too passed from sight. The time dragged on. The clouds lowered, and now a few
flakes of snow came curling down again.
An hour, maybe,
went by, though it seemed far longer, and then at last they saw Legolas coming
back. At the same time Boromir and Aragorn reappeared round the bend far behind
him and came labouring up the slope.
'Well,' cried Legolas
as he ran up, 'I have not brought the Sun. She is walking in the blue fields of
the South, and a little wreath of snow on this Redhorn hillock troubles her not
at all. But I have brought back a gleam of good hope for those who are doomed to
go on feet. There is the greatest wind-drift of all just beyond the turn, and
there our Strong Men were almost buried. They despaired, until I returned and
told them that the drift was little wider than a wall. And on the other side the
snow suddenly grows less, while further down it is no more than a white coverlet
to cool a hobbit's toes.'
'Ah, it is as I said,' growled
Gimli. 'It was no ordinary storm. It is the ill will of Caradhras. He does not
love Elves and Dwarves, and that drift was laid to cut off our
escape.'
'But happily your Caradhras has forgotten that you
have Men with you,' said Boromir, who came up at that moment. 'And doughty Men
too, if I may say it; though lesser men with spades might have served you
better. Still, we have thrust a lane through the drift; and for that all here
may be grateful who cannot run as light as Elves.'
'But how
are we to get down there, even if you have cut through the drift?' said Pippin,
voicing the thought of all the hobbits.
'Have hope!' said
Boromir. 'I am weary, but I still have some strength left, and Aragorn too. We
will bear the little folk. The others no doubt will make shift to tread the path
behind us. Come, Master Peregrin! I will begin with
you.'
He lifted up the hobbit. 'Cling to my back! I shall
need my arms,' he said and strode forward. Aragorn with Merry came behind.
Pippin marvelled at his strength, seeing the passage that he had already forced
with no other tool than his great limbs. Even now, burdened as he was, he was
widening the track for those who followed, thrusting the snow aside as he
went.
They came at length to the great drift. It was flung
across the mountain-path like a sheer and sudden wall, and its crest, sharp as
if shaped with knives, reared up more than twice the height of Boromir; but
through the middle a passage had been beaten, rising and falling like a bridge.
On the far side Merry and Pippin were set down, and there they waited with
Legolas for the rest of the Company to arrive.
After a
while Boromir returned carrying Sam. Behind in the narrow but now well-trodden
track came Gandalf, leading Bill with Gimli perched among the baggage. Last came
Aragorn carrying Frodo. They passed through the lane; but hardly had Frodo
touched the ground when with a deep rumble there rolled down a fall of stones
and slithering snow. The spray of it half blinded the Company as they crouched
against the cliff, and when the air cleared again they saw that the path was
blocked behind them.
'Enough, enough!' cried Gimli. 'We are
departing as quickly as we may!' And indeed with that last stroke the malice of
the mountain seemed to be expended, as if Caradhras was satisfied that the
invaders had been beaten off and would not dare to return. The threat of snow
lifted; the clouds began to break and the light grew
broader.
As Legolas had reported, they found that the snow
became steadily more shallow as they went down, so that even the hobbits could
trudge along. Soon they all stood once more on the flat shelf at the head of the
steep slope where they had felt the first flakes of snow the night
before.
The morning was now far advanced. From the high
place they looked back westwards over the lower lands. Far away in the tumble of
country that lay at the foot of the mountain was the dell from which they had
started to climb the pass.
Frodo's legs ached. He was
chilled to the bone and hungry; and his head was dizzy as he thought of the long
and painful march downhill. Black specks swam before his eyes. He rubbed them,
but the black specks remained. In the distance below him, but still high above
the lower foothills, dark dots were circling in the
air.
'The birds again!' said Aragorn, pointing
down.
'That cannot be helped now,' said Gandalf. 'Whether
they are good or evil, or have nothing to do with us at all, we must go down at
once. Not even on the knees of Caradhras will we wait for another
night-fall!'
A cold wind flowed down behind them, as they
turned their backs on the Redhorn Gate, and stumbled wearily down the slope.
Caradhras had defeated them.
Chapter 4
A Journey in the
Dark
It was evening, and the grey light was again waning fast,
when they halted for the night. They were very weary. The mountains were veiled
in deepening dusk, and the wind was cold. Gandalf spared them one more mouthful
each of the
miruvor of Rivendell. When they had eaten some food he called
a council.
'We cannot, of course, go on again tonight,' he
said. 'The attack on the Redhorn Gate has tired us out, and we must rest here
for a while.'
'And then where are we to go?' asked
Frodo.
'We still have our journey and our errand before
us,' answered Gandalf. 'We have no choice but to go on, or to return to
Rivendell.'
Pippin's face brightened visibly at the mere
mention of return to Rivendell; Merry and Sam looked up hopefully. But Aragorn
and Boromir made no sign. Frodo looked troubled.
'I wish I
was back there,' he said. 'But how can I return without shame – unless there is
indeed no other way, and we are already defeated?'
'You are
right, Frodo,' said Gandalf, 'to go back is to admit defeat and face worse
defeat to come. If we go back now, then the Ring must remain there: we shall not
be able to set out again. Then sooner or later Rivendell will be besieged, and
after a brief and bitter time it will be destroyed. The Ringwraiths are deadly
enemies, but they are only shadows yet of the power and terror they would
possess if the Ruling Ring was on their master's hand
again.'
'Then we must go on, if there is a way,' said Frodo
with a sigh. Sam sank back into gloom.
'There is a way that
we may attempt,' said Gandalf. 'I thought from the beginning, when first I
considered this journey, that we should try it. But it is not a pleasant way,
and I have not spoken of it to the Company before. Aragorn was against it, until
the pass over the mountains had at least been tried.'
'If
it is a worse road than the Redhorn Gate, then it must be evil indeed,' said
Merry. 'But you had better tell us about it, and let us know the worst at
once.'
'The road that I speak of leads to the Mines of
Moria,' said Gandalf. Only Gimli lifted up his head; a smouldering fire was in
his eyes. On all the others a dread fell at the mention of that name. Even to
the hobbits it was a legend of vague fear:
'The road may
lead to Moria, but how can we hope that it will lead through Moria?' said
Aragorn darkly.
'It is a name of ill omen,' said Boromir.
'Nor do I see the need to go there. If we cannot cross the mountains, let us
journey southwards, until we come to the Gap of Rohan, where men are friendly to
my people, taking the road that I followed on my way hither. Or we might pass by
and cross the Isen into Langstrand and Lebennin, and so come to Gondor from the
regions nigh to the sea.'
'Things have changed since you
came north, Boromir,' answered Gandalf. 'Did you not hear what I told you of
Saruman? With him I may have business of my own ere all is over. But the Ring
must not come near Isengard, if that can by any means be prevented. The Gap of
Rohan is closed to us while we go with the Bearer.
'As for
the longer road: we cannot afford the time. We might spend a year in such a
journey, and we should pass through many lands that are empty and harbourless.
Yet they would not be safe. The watchful eyes both of Saruman and of the Enemy
are on them. When you came north, Boromir, you were in the Enemy's eyes only one
stray wanderer from the South and a matter of small concern to him: his mind was
busy with the pursuit of the Ring. But you return now as a member of the Ring's
Company, and you are in peril as long as you remain with us. The danger will
increase with every league that we go south under the naked
sky.
'Since our open attempt on the mountain-pass our
plight has become more desperate, I fear. I see now little hope, if we do not
soon vanish from sight for a while, and cover our trail. Therefore I advise that
we should go neither over the mountains, nor round them, but under them. That is
a road at any rate that the Enemy will least expect us to
take.'
'We do not know what he expects,' said Boromir. 'He
may watch all roads, likely and unlikely. In that case to enter Moria would be
to walk into a trap, hardly better than knocking at the gates of the Dark Tower
itself. The name of Moria is black.'
'You speak of what you
do not know, when you liken Moria to the stronghold of Sauron,' answered
Gandalf. 'I alone of you have ever been in the dungeons of the Dark Lord, and
only in his older and lesser dwelling in Dol Guldur. Those who pass the gates of
Barad-dur do not return. But I would not lead you into Moria if there were no
hope of coming out again. If there are Orcs there, it may prove ill for us, that
is true. But most of the Orcs of the Misty Mountains were scattered or destroyed
in the Battle of Five Armies. The Eagles report that Orcs are gathering again
from afar; but there is a hope that Moria is still
free.
'There is even a chance that Dwarves are there, and
that in some deep hall of his fathers, Balin son of Fundin may be found. However
it may prove, one must tread the path that need
chooses!'
'I will tread the path with you, Gandalf!' said
Gimli. 'I will go and look on the halls of Durin, whatever may wait there – if
you can find the doors that are shut.'
'Good, Gimli!' said
Gandalf. 'You encourage me. We will seek the hidden doors together. And we will
come through. In the ruins of the Dwarves, a dwarf's head will be less easy to
bewilder than Elves or Men or Hobbits. Yet it will not be the first time that I
have been to Moria. I sought there long for Thrain son of Thror after he was
lost. I passed through, and I came out again alive!'
'I too
once passed the Dimrill Gate,' said Aragorn quietly; 'but though I also came out
again, the memory is very evil. I do not wish to enter Moria a second
time.'
'And I don't wish to enter it even once,' said
Pippin.
'Nor me,' muttered Sam.
'Of
course not!' said Gandalf. 'Who would? But the question is: who will follow me,
if I lead you there?'
'I will,' said Gimli
eagerly.
'I will,' said Aragorn heavily. 'You followed my
lead almost to disaster in the snow, and have said no word of blame. I will
follow your lead now – if this last warning does not move you. It is not of the
Ring, nor of us others that I am thinking now, but of you, Gandalf. And I say to
you: if you pass the doors of Moria, beware!'
'I will
not go,' said Boromir; 'not unless the vote of the whole company is
against me. What do Legolas and the little folk say? The Ring-bearer's voice
surely should be heard?'
'I do not wish to go to Moria,'
said Legolas.
The hobbits said nothing. Sam looked at
Frodo. At last Frodo spoke. 'I do not wish to go,' he said; 'but neither do I
wish to refuse the advice of Gandalf. I beg that there should be no vote, until
we have slept on it. Gandalf will get votes easier in the light of the morning
than in this cold gloom. How the wind howls!'
At these
words all fell into silent thought. They heard the wind hissing among the rocks
and trees, and there was a howling and wailing round them in the empty spaces of
the night.
Suddenly Aragorn leapt to his feet. 'How the
wind howls!' he cried. 'It is howling with wolf-voices. The Wargs have come west
of the Mountains!'
'Need we wait until morning then?' said
Gandalf. 'It is as I said. The hunt is up! Even if we live to see the dawn, who
now will wish to journey south by night with the wild wolves on his
trail?'
'How far is Moria?' asked
Boromir.
'There was a door south-west of Caradhras, some
fifteen miles as the crow flies, and maybe twenty as the wolf runs,' answered
Gandalf grimly.
'Then let us start as soon as it is light
tomorrow, if we can,' said Boromir. 'The wolf that one hears is worse than the
orc that one fears.'
'True!' said Aragorn, loosening his
sword in its sheath. 'But where the warg howls, there also the orc
prowls.'
'I wish I had taken Elrond's advice,' muttered
Pippin to Sam. 'I am no good after all. There is not enough of the breed of
Bandobras the Bullroarer in me: these howls freeze my blood. I don't ever
remember feeling so wretched.'
'My heart's right down in my
toes, Mr. Pippin,' said Sam. 'But we aren't etten yet, and there are some stout
folk here with us. Whatever may be in store for old Gandalf, I'll wager it isn't
a wolf's belly.'
For their defence in the night the Company
climbed to the top of the small hill under which they had been sheltering. it
was crowned with a knot of old and twisted trees, about which lay a broken
circle of boulder stones. In the midst of this they lit a fire, for there was no
hope that darkness and silence would keep their trail from discovery by the
hunting packs.
Round the fire they sat, and those that were
not on guard dozed uneasily. Poor Bill the pony trembled and sweated where he
stood. The howling of the wolves was now all round them, sometimes nearer and
sometimes further off. In the dead of the night many shining eyes were seen
peering over the brow of the hill. Some advanced almost to the ring of stones.
At a gap in the circle a great dark wolf-shape could be seen halted, gazing at
them. A shuddering howl broke from him, as if he were a captain summoning his
pack to the assault.
Gandalf stood up and strode forward,
holding his staff aloft. 'Listen, Hound of Sauron!' he cried. 'Gandalf is here.
Fly, if you value your foul skin! I will shrivel you from tail to snout, if you
come within this ring.'
The wolf snarled and sprang towards
them with a great leap. At that moment there was a sharp twang. Legolas had
loosed his bow. There was a hideous yell, and the leaping shape thudded to the
ground; the elvish arrow had pierced its throat. The watching eyes were suddenly
extinguished. Gandalf and Aragorn strode forward, but the hill was deserted; the
hunting packs had fled. All about them the darkness grew silent, and no cry came
on the sighing wind.
The night was old, and westward the
waning moon was setting, gleaming fitfully through the breaking clouds. Suddenly
Frodo started from sleep. Without warning a storm of howls broke out fierce and
wild all about the camp. A great host of Wargs had gathered silently and was now
attacking them from every side at once.
'Fling fuel on the
fire!' cried Gandalf to the hobbits. 'Draw your blades, and stand back to
back!'
In the leaping light, as the fresh wood blazed up,
Frodo saw many grey shapes spring over the ring of stones. More and more
followed. Through the throat of one huge leader Aragorn passed his sword with a
thrust; with a great sweep Boromir hewed the head off another. Beside them Gimli
stood with his stout legs apart, wielding his dwarf-axe. The bow of Legolas was
singing.
In the wavering firelight Gandalf seemed suddenly
to grow: he rose up, a great menacing shape like the monument of some ancient
king of stone set upon a hill. Stooping like a cloud, he lifted a burning branch
and strode to meet the wolves. They gave back before him. High in the air he
tossed the blazing brand. It flared with a sudden white radiance like lightning;
and his voice rolled like thunder.
'
Naur an edraith
ammen! Naur dan i ngaurhoth!' he cried.
There was a
roar and a crackle, and the tree above him burst into a leaf and bloom of
blinding flame. The fire leapt from tree-top to tree-top. The whole hill was
crowned with dazzling light. The swords and knives of the defenders shone and
flickered. The last arrow of Legolas kindled in the air as it flew, and plunged
burning into the heart of a great wolf-chieftain. All the others
fled.
Slowly the fire died till nothing was left but
falling ash and sparks; a bitter smoke curled above the burned tree-stumps, and
blew darkly from the hill, as the first light of dawn came dimly in the sky.
Their enemies were routed and did not return.
'What did I
tell you, Mr. Pippin?' said Sam, sheathing his sword. 'Wolves won't get him.
That was an eye-opener, and no mistake! Nearly singed the hair off my
head!'
When the full light of the morning came no signs of
the wolves were to be found, and they looked in vain for the bodies of the dead.
No trace of the fight remained but the charred trees and the arrows of Legolas
lying on the hill-top. All were undamaged save one of which only the point was
left.
'It is as I feared,' said Gandalf. 'These were no
ordinary wolves hunting for food in the wilderness. Let us eat quickly and
go!'
That day the weather changed again, almost as if it
was at the command of some power that had no longer any use for snow, since they
had retreated from the pass, a power that wished now to have a clear light in
which things that moved in the wild could be seen from far away. The wind had
been turning through north to north-west during the night, and now it failed.
The clouds vanished southwards and the sky was opened, high and blue. As they
stood upon the hill-side, ready to depart, a pale sunlight gleamed over the
mountain-tops.
'We must reach the doors before sunset,'
said Gandalf, 'or I fear we shall not reach them at all. It is not far, but our
path may be winding, for here Aragorn cannot guide us; he has seldom walked in
this country, and only once have I been under the west wall of Moria, and that
was long ago.
'There it lies,' he said, pointing away
south-eastwards to where the mountains' sides fell sheer into the shadows at
their feet. In the distance could be dimly seen a line of bare cliffs, and in
their midst, taller than the rest, one great grey wall. 'When we left the pass I
led you southwards, and not back to our starting point, as some of you may have
noticed. It is well that I did so, for now we have several miles less to cross,
and haste is needed. Let us go!'
'I do not know which to
hope,' said Boromir grimly: 'that Gandalf will find what he seeks, or that
coming to the cliff we shall find the gates lost for ever. All choices seem ill,
and to be caught between wolves and the wall the likeliest chance. Lead
on!'
Gimli now walked ahead by the wizard's side, so eager
was he to come to Moria. Together they led the Company back towards the
mountains. The only road of old to Moria from the west had lain along the course
of a stream, the Sirannon, that ran out from the feet of the cliffs near where
the doors had stood. But either Gandalf was astray, or else the land had changed
in recent years; for he did not strike the stream where he looked to find it,
only a few miles southwards from their start.
The morning
was passing towards noon, and still the Company wandered and scrambled in a
barren country of red stones. Nowhere could they see any gleam of water or hear
any sound of it. All was bleak and dry. Their hearts sank. They saw no living
thing, and not a bird was in the sky; but what the night would bring, if it
caught them in that lost land, none of them cared to
think.
Suddenly Gimli, who had pressed on ahead, called
back to them. He was standing on a knoll and pointing to the right. Hurrying up
they saw below them a deep and narrow channel. It was empty and silent, and
hardly a trickle of water flowed among the brown and red-stained stones of its
bed; but on the near side there was a path, much broken and decayed, that wound
its way among the ruined walls and paving-stones of an ancient
highroad.
'Ah! Here it is at last!' said Gandalf. 'This is
where the stream ran: Sirannon, the Gate-stream, they used to call it. But what
has happened to the water, I cannot guess; it used to be swift and noisy. Come!
We must hurry on. We are late.'
The Company were footsore
and tired; but they trudged doggedly along the rough and winding track for many
miles. The sun turned from the noon and began to go west. After a brief halt and
a hasty meal they went on again. Before them the mountains frowned, but their
path lay in a deep trough of land and they could see only the higher shoulders
and the far eastward peaks.
At length they came to a sharp
bend. There the road, which had been veering southwards between the brink of the
channel and a steep fall of the land to the left, turned and went due east
again. Rounding the corner they saw before them a low cliff, some five fathoms
high, with a broken and jagged top. Over it a trickling water dripped, through a
wide cleft that seemed to have been carved out by a fall that had once been
strong and full.
'Indeed things have changed!' said
Gandalf. 'But there is no mistaking the place. There is all that remains of the
Stair Falls. If I remember right, there was a flight of steps cut in the rock at
their side, but the main road wound away left and climbed with several loops up
to the level ground at the top. There used to be a shallow valley beyond the
falls right up to the Walls of Moria, and the Sirannon flowed through it with
the road beside it. Let us go and see what things are like
now!'
They found the stone steps without difficulty, and
Gimli sprang swiftly up them, followed by Gandalf and Frodo. When they reached
the top they saw that they could go no further that way, and the reason for the
drying up of the Gate-stream was revealed. Behind them the sinking Sun filled
the cool western sky with glimmering gold. Before them stretched a dark still
lake. Neither sky nor sunset was reflected on its sullen surface. The Sirannon
had been dammed and had filled all the valley. Beyond the ominous water were
reared vast cliffs, their stern faces pallid in the fading light: final and
impassable. No sign of gate or entrance, not a fissure or crack could Frodo see
in the frowning stone.
'There are the Walls of Moria,' said
Gandalf, pointing across the water. 'And there the Gate stood once upon a time,
the Elven Door at the end of the road from Hollin by which we have come. But
this way is blocked. None of the Company, I guess, will wish to swim this gloomy
water at the end of the day. It has an unwholesome
look.'
'We must find a way round the northern edge,' said
Gimli. 'The first thing for the Company to do is to climb up by the main path
and see where that will lead us. Even if there were no lake, we could not get
our baggage-pony up this stair.'
'But in any case we cannot
take the poor beast into the Mines,' said Gandalf. 'The road under the mountains
is a dark road, and there are places narrow and steep which he cannot tread,
even if we can.'
'Poor old Bill!' said Frodo. 'I had not
thought of that. And poor Sam! I wonder what he will
say?'
'I am sorry,' said Gandalf. 'Poor Bill has been a
useful companion and it goes to my heart to turn him adrift now. I would have
travelled lighter and brought no animal, least of all this one that Sam is fond
of, if I had had my way. I feared all along that we should be obliged to take
this road.'
The day was drawing to its end, and cold stars
were glinting in the sky high above the sunset, when the Company, with all the
speed they could, climbed up the slopes and reached the side of the lake. In
breadth it looked to be no more than two or three furlongs at the widest point.
How far it stretched away southward they could not see in the failing light; but
its northern end was no more than half a mile from where they stood, and between
the stony ridges that enclosed the valley and the water's edge there was a rim
of open ground. They hurried forward, for they had still a mile or two to go
before they could reach the point on the far shore that Gandalf was making for;
and then he had still to find the doors.
When they came to
the northernmost corner of the lake they found a narrow creek that barred their
way. It was green and stagnant, thrust out like a slimy arm towards the
enclosing hills. Gimli strode forward undeterred, and found that the water was
shallow, no more than ankle-deep at the edge. Behind him they walked in file,
threading their way with care, for under the weedy pools were sliding and greasy
stones, and footing was treacherous. Frodo shuddered with disgust at the touch
of the dark unclean water on his feet.
As Sam, the last of
the Company, led Bill up on to the dry ground on the far side, there came a soft
sound: a swish, followed by a plop, as if a fish had disturbed the still surface
of the water. Turning quickly they saw ripples, black-edged with shadow in the
waning light: great rings were widening outwards from a point far out in the
lake. There was a bubbling noise, and then silence. The dusk deepened, and the
last gleams of the sunset were veiled in cloud.
Gandalf now
pressed on at a great pace, and the others followed as quickly as they could.
They reached the strip of dry land between the lake and the cliffs: it was
narrow, often hardly a dozen yards across, and encumbered with fallen rock and
stones; but they found a way, hugging the cliff, and keeping as far from the
dark water as they might. A mile southwards along the shore they came upon holly
trees. Stumps and dead boughs were rotting in the shallows, the remains it
seemed of old thickets, or of a hedge that had once lined the road across the
drowned valley. But close under the cliff there stood, still strong and living,
two tall trees, larger than any trees of holly that Frodo had ever seen or
imagined. Their great roots spread from the wall to the water. Under the looming
cliffs they had looked like mere bushes, when seen far off from the top of the
Stair; but now they towered overhead, stiff, dark, and silent, throwing deep
night-shadows about their feet, standing like sentinel pillars at the end of the
road.
'Well, here we are at last!' said Gandalf. 'Here the
Elven-way from Hollin ended. Holly was the token of the people of that land, and
they planted it here to mark the end of their domain; for the West-door was made
chiefly for their use in their traffic with the Lords of Moria. Those were
happier days, when there was still close friendship at times between folk of
different race, even between Dwarves and Elves.'
'It was
not the fault of the Dwarves that the friendship waned,' said
Gimli.
'I have not heard that it was the fault of the
Elves,' said Legolas.
'I have heard both,' said Gandalf;
'and I will not give judgement now. But I beg you two, Legolas and Gimli, at
least to be friends, and to help me. I need you both. The doors are shut and
hidden, and the sooner we find them the better. Night is at
hand!'
Turning to the others he said: 'While I am
searching, will you each make ready to enter the Mines? For here I fear we must
say farewell to our good beast of burden. You must lay aside much of the stuff
that we brought against bitter weather: you will not need it inside, nor, I
hope, when we come through and journey on down into the South. Instead each of
us must take a share of what the pony carried, especially the food and the
water-skins.'
'But you can't leave poor old Bill behind in
this forsaken place, Mr. Gandalf!' cried Sam, angry and distressed. 'I won't
have it, and that's flat. After he has come so far and
all!'
'I am sorry, Sam,' said the wizard. 'But when the
Door opens I do not think you will be able to drag your Bill inside, into the
long dark of Moria. You will have to choose between Bill and your
master.'
'He'd follow Mr. Frodo into a dragon's den, if I
led him,' protested Sam. 'It'd be nothing short of murder to turn him loose with
all these wolves about.'
'It will be short of murder, I
hope,' said Gandalf. He laid his hand on the pony's head, and spoke in a low
voice. 'Go with words of guard and guiding on you,' he said. 'You are a wise
beast, and have learned much in Rivendell. Make your ways to places where you
can find grass, and so come in time to Elrond's house, or wherever you wish to
go.
'There, Sam! He will have quite as much chance of
escaping wolves and getting home as we have.'
Sam stood
sullenly by the pony and returned no answer. Bill, seeming to understand well
what was going on, nuzzled up to him, putting his nose to Sam's ear. Sam burst
into tears, and fumbled with the straps, unlading all the pony's packs and
throwing them on the ground. The others sorted out the goods, making a pile of
all that could be left behind, and dividing up the
rest.
When this was done they turned to watch Gandalf. He
appeared to have done nothing. He was standing between the two trees gazing at
the blank wall of the cliff, as if he would bore a hole into it with his eyes.
Gimli was wandering about, tapping the stone here and there with his axe.
Legolas was pressed against the rock, as if
listening.
'Well, here we are and all ready,' said Merry,
'but where are the Doors? I can't see any sign of
them.'
'Dwarf-doors are not made to be seen when shut,'
said Gimli. 'They are invisible, and their own masters cannot find them or open
them, if their secret is forgotten.'
'But this Door was not
made to be a secret known only to Dwarves,' said Gandalf, coming suddenly to
life and turning round. 'Unless things are altogether changed, eyes that know
what to look for may discover the signs.'
He walked forward
to the wall. Right between the shadow of the trees there was a smooth space, and
over this he passed his hands to and fro, muttering words under his breath. Then
he stepped back.
'Look!' he said. 'Can you see anything
now?'
The Moon now shone upon the grey face of the rock;
but they could see nothing else for a while. Then slowly on the surface, where
the wizard's hands had passed, faint lines appeared, like slender veins of
silver running in the stone. At first they were no more than pale
gossamer-threads, so fine that they only twinkled fitfully where the Moon caught
them, but steadily they grew broader and clearer, until their design could be
guessed.
At the top, as high as Gandalf could
reach, was an arch of interlacing letters in an Elvish character. Below, though
the threads were in places blurred or broken, the outline could be seen of an
anvil and a hammer surmounted by a crown with seven stars. Beneath these again
were two trees, each bearing crescent moons. More clearly than all else there
shone forth in the middle of the door a single star with many
rays.
'There are the emblems of Durin!' cried
Gimli.
'And there is the Tree of the High Elves!' said
Legolas.
'And the Star of the House of Feanor,' said
Gandalf. 'They are wrought of
ithildin that mirrors only starlight and
moonlight, and sleeps until it is touched by one who speaks words now long
forgotten in Middle-earth. It is long since I heard them, and I thought deeply
before I could recall them to my mind.'
'What does the
writing say?' asked Frodo, who was trying to decipher the inscription on the
arch. 'I thought I knew the elf-letters but I cannot read
these.'
'The words are in the elven-tongue of the West of
Middle-earth in the Elder Days,' answered Gandalf. 'But they do not say anything
of importance to us. They say only:
The Doors of Durin, Lord of Moria. Speak,
friend, and enter. And underneath small and faint is written:
I, Narvi,
made them. Celebrimbor of Hollin drew these signs.
'
'What does it mean by
speak, friend, and enter?'
asked Merry.
'That is plain enough,' said Gimli. 'If you
are a friend, speak the password, and the doors will open, and you can
enter.'
'Yes,' said Gandalf, 'these doors are probably
governed by words. Some dwarf-gates will open only at special times, or for
particular persons; and some have locks and keys that are still needed when all
necessary times and words are known. These doors have no key. In the days of
Durin they were not secret. They usually stood open and doorwards sat here. But
if they were shut, any who knew the opening word could speak it and pass in. At
least so it is recorded, is it not, Gimli?'
'It is,' said
the dwarf. 'But what the word was is not remembered. Narvi and his craft and all
his kindred have vanished from the earth.'
'But do not
you know the word, Gandalf?' asked Boromir in
surprise.
'No!' said the wizard.
The
others looked dismayed; only Aragorn, who knew Gandalf well, remained silent and
unmoved.
'Then what was the use of bringing us to this
accursed spot?' cried Boromir, glancing back with a shudder at the dark water.
'You told us that you had once passed through the Mines. How could that be, if
you did not know how to enter?'
'The answer to your first
question, Boromir,' said the wizard, 'is that I do not know the word – yet. But
we shall soon see. And,' he added, with a glint in his eyes under their
bristling brows, 'you may ask what is the use of my deeds when they are proved
useless. As for your other question: do you doubt my tale? Or have you no wits
left? I did not enter this way. I came from the East.
'If
you wish to know, I will tell you that these doors open outwards. From the
inside you may thrust them open with your hands. From the outside nothing will
move them save the spell of command. They cannot be forced
inwards.'
'What are you going to do then?' asked Pippin,
undaunted by the wizard's bristling brows.
'Knock on the
doors with your head, Peregrin Took,' said Gandalf. 'But if that does not
shatter them, and I am allowed a little peace from foolish questions, I will
seek for the opening words.
'I once knew every spell in all
the tongues of Elves or Men or Orcs that was ever used for such a purpose. I can
still remember ten score of them without searching in my mind. But only a few
trials, I think, will be needed; and I shall not have to call on Gimli for words
of the secret dwarf-tongue that they teach to none. The opening words were
Elvish, like the writing on the arch: that seems
certain.'
He stepped up to the rock again, and lightly
touched with his staff the silver star in the middle beneath the sign of the
anvil.
Annon edhellen, edro hi ammen!
Fennas nogothrim, lasto beth
lammen!
he said in a commanding
voice. The silver lines faded, but the blank grey stone did not
stir.
Many times he repeated these words in different
order, or varied them. Then he tried other spells. one after another, speaking
now faster and louder, now soft and slow. Then he spoke many single words of
Elvish speech. Nothing happened. The cliff towered into the night, the countless
stars were kindled, the wind blew cold, and the doors stood
fast.
Again Gandalf approached the wall, and lifting up his
arms he spoke in tones of command and rising wrath.
Edro, edro! he cried,
and struck the rock with his staff.
Open, open! he shouted, and followed
it with the same command in every language that had ever been spoken in the West
of Middle-earth. Then he threw his staff on the ground, and sat down in
silence.
At that moment from far off the wind bore to their
listening ears the howling of wolves. Bill the pony started in fear, and Sam
sprang to his side and whispered softly to him.
'Do not let
him run away!' said Boromir. 'It seems that we shall need him still, if the
wolves do not find us. How I hate this foul pool!' He stooped and picking up a
large stone he cast it far into the dark water.
The stone
vanished with a soft slap; but at the same instant there was a swish and a
bubble. Great rippling rings formed on the surface out beyond where the stone
had fallen, and they moved slowly towards the foot of the
cliff.
'Why did you do that, Boromir?' said Frodo. 'I hate
this place, too, and I am afraid. I don't know of what: not of wolves, or the
dark behind the doors, but of something else. I am afraid of the pool. Don't
disturb it!'
'l wish we could get away!' said
Merry.
'Why doesn't Gandalf do something quick?' said
Pippin.
Gandalf took no notice of them. He sat with his
head bowed, either in despair or in anxious thought. The mournful howling of the
wolves was heard again. The ripples on the water grew and came closer; some were
already lapping on the shore.
With a suddenness that
startled them all the wizard sprang to his feet. He was laughing! 'I have it!'
he cried. 'Of course, of course! Absurdly simple, like most riddles when you see
the answer.'
Picking up his staff he stood before the rock
and said in a clear voice:
Mellon! The star shone
out briefly and faded again. Then silently a great doorway was outlined, though
not a crack or joint had been visible before. Slowly it divided in the middle
and swung outwards inch by inch, until both doors lay back against the wall.
Through the opening a shadowy stair could be seen climbing steeply up; but
beyond the lower steps the darkness was deeper than the night. The Company
stared in wonder.
'I was wrong after all,' said
Gandalf, 'and Gimli too. Merry, of all people, was on the right track. The
opening word was inscribed on the archway all the time! The translation should
have been:
Say "Friend" and enter. I had only to speak the Elvish word
for
friend and the doors opened. Quite simple. Too simple for a learned
lore-master in these suspicious days. Those were happier times. Now let us
go!'
He strode forward and set his foot on the lowest step.
But at that moment several things happened. Frodo felt something seize him by
the ankle, and he fell with a cry. Bill the pony gave a wild neigh of fear, and
turned tail and dashed away along the lakeside into the darkness. Sam leaped
after him, and then hearing Frodo's cry he ran back again, weeping and cursing.
The others swung round and saw the waters of the lake seething, as if a host of
snakes were swimming up from the southern end.
Out from the
water a long sinuous tentacle had crawled; it was pale-green and luminous and
wet. Its fingered end had hold of Frodo's foot and was dragging him into the
water. Sam on his knees was now slashing at it with a
knife.
The arm let go of Frodo, and Sam pulled him away,
crying out for help. Twenty others arms came rippling out. The dark water
boiled, and there was a hideous stench.
'Into the gateway!
Up the stairs! Quick!' shouted Gandalf leaping back. Rousing them from the
horror that seemed to have rooted all but Sam to the ground where they stood, he
drove them forward.
They were just in time. Sam and Frodo
were only a few steps up, and Gandalf had just begun to climb, when the groping
tentacles writhed across the narrow shore and fingered the cliff-wall and the
doors. One came wriggling over the threshold, glistening in the starlight.
Gandalf turned and paused. If he was considering what word would close the gate
again from within, there was no need. Many coiling arms seized the doors on
either side, and with horrible strength, swung them round. With a shattering
echo they slammed, and all light was lost. A noise of rending and crashing came
dully through the ponderous stone.
Sam, clinging to Frodo's
arm, collapsed on a step in the black darkness. 'Poor old Bill!' he said in a
choking voice. 'Poor old Bill! Wolves and snakes! But the snakes were too much
for him. I had to choose, Mr. Frodo. I had to come with
you.'
They heard Gandalf go back down the steps and thrust
his staff against the doors. There was a quiver in the stone and the stairs
trembled, but the doors did not open. 'Well, well!' said the wizard. 'The
passage is blocked behind us now and there is only one way out – on the other
side of the mountains. I fear from the sounds that boulders have been piled up,
and the trees uprooted and thrown across the gate. I am sorry; for the trees
were beautiful, and had stood so long.'
'I felt that
something horrible was near from the moment that my foot first touched the
water,' said Frodo. 'What was the thing, or were there many of
them?'
'I do not know,' answered Gandalf, 'but the arms
were all guided by one purpose. Something has crept, or has been driven out of
dark waters under the mountains. There are older and fouler things than Orcs in
the deep places of the world.' He did not speak aloud his thought that whatever
it was that dwelt in the lake, it had seized on Frodo first among all the
Company.
Boromir muttered under his breath, but the echoing
stone magnified the sound to a hoarse whisper that all could hear: 'In the deep
places of the world! And thither we are going against my wish. Who will lead us
now in this deadly dark?'
'I will,' said Gandalf, 'and
Gimli shall walk with me. Follow my staff!'
As the wizard
passed on ahead up the great steps, he held his staff aloft, and from its tip
there came a faint radiance. The wide stairway was sound and undamaged. Two
hundred steps they counted, broad and shallow; and at the top they found an
arched passage with a level floor leading on into the
dark.
'Let us sit and rest and have something to eat, here
on the landing, since we can't find a dining-room!' said Frodo. He had begun to
shake off the terror of the clutching arm, and suddenly he felt extremely
hungry.
The proposal was welcomed by all; and they sat down
on the upper steps, dim figures in the gloom. After they had eaten, Gandalf gave
them each a third sip of the miruvor of Rivendell.
'It will
not last much longer, I am afraid,' he said; 'but I think we need it after that
horror at the gate. And unless we have great luck, we shall need all that is
left before we see the other side! Go carefully with the water, too! There are
many streams and wells in the Mines, but they should not be touched. We may not
have a chance of filling our skins and bottles till we come down into Dimrill
Dale.'
'How long is that going to take us?' asked
Frodo.
'I cannot say,' answered Gandalf. 'It depends on
many chances. But going straight, without mishap or losing our way, we shall
take three or four marches, I expect. It cannot be less than forty miles from
West-door to East-gate in a direct line, and the road may wind
much.'
After only a brief rest they started on their way
again. All were eager to get the journey over as quickly as possible, and were
willing, tired as they were, to go on marching still for several hours. Gandalf
walked in front as before. In his left hand he held up his glimmering staff, the
light of which just showed the ground before his feet; in his right he held his
sword Glamdring. Behind him came Gimli, his eyes glinting in the dim light as he
turned his head from side to side. Behind the dwarf walked Frodo, and he had
drawn the short sword, Sting. No gleam came from the blades of Sting or of
Glamdring; and that was some comfort, for being the work of Elvish smiths in the
Elder Days these swords shone with a cold light, if any Orcs were near at hand.
Behind Frodo went Sam, and after him Legolas, and the young hobbits, and
Boromir. In the dark at the rear, grim and silent, walked
Aragorn.
The passage twisted round a few turns, and then
began to descend. It went steadily down for a long while before it became level
once again. The air grew hot and stifling, but it was not foul, and at times
they felt currents of cooler air upon their faces, issuing from half-guessed
openings in the walls. There were many of these. In the pale ray of the wizard's
staff, Frodo caught glimpses of stairs and arches and of other passages and
tunnels, sloping up, or running steeply down, or opening blankly dark on either
side. It was bewildering beyond hope of remembering.
Gimli
aided Gandalf very little, except by his stout courage. At least he was not, as
were most of the others, troubled by the mere darkness in itself. Often the
wizard consulted him at points where the choice of way was doubtful; but it was
always Gandalf who had the final word. The Mines of Moria were vast and
intricate beyond the imagination of Gimli, Gloin's son, dwarf of the
mountain-race though he was. To Gandalf the far-off memories of a journey long
before were now of little help, but even in the gloom and despite all windings
of the road he knew whither he wished to go, and he did not falter, as long as
there was a path that led towards his goal.
'Do not be
afraid!' said Aragorn. There was a pause longer than usual, and Gandalf and
Gimli were whispering together; the others were crowded behind, waiting
anxiously. 'Do not be afraid! I have been with him on many a journey, if never
on one so dark; and there are tales of Rivendell of greater deeds of his than
any that I have seen. He will not go astray – if there is any path to find. He
has led us in here against our fears, but he will lead us out again, at whatever
cost to himself. He is surer of finding the way home in a blind night than the
cats of Queen Beruthiel.'
It was well for the Company that
they had such a guide. They had no fuel nor any means of making torches; in the
desperate scramble at the doors many things had been left behind. But without
any light they would soon have come to grief. There were not only many roads to
choose from, there were also in many places holes and pitfalls, and dark wells
beside the path in which their passing feet echoed. There were fissures and
chasms in the walls and floor, and every now and then a crack would open right
before their feet. The widest was more than seven feet across, and it was long
before Pippin could summon enough courage to leap over the dreadful gap. The
noise of churning water came up from far below, as if some great mill-wheel was
turning in the depths.
'Rope!' muttered Sam. 'I knew I'd
want it, if I hadn't got it!'
As these dangers became more
frequent their march became slower. Already they seemed to have been tramping
on, on, endlessly to the mountains' roots. They were more than weary, and yet
there seemed no comfort in the thought of halting anywhere. Frodo's spirits had
risen for a while after his escape, and after food and a draught of the cordial;
but now a deep uneasiness, growing to dread, crept over him again. Though he had
been healed in Rivendell of the knife-stroke, that grim wound had not been
without effect. His senses were sharper and more aware of things that could not
be seen. One sign of change that he soon had noticed was that he could see more
in the dark than any of his companions, save perhaps Gandalf. And he was in any
case the bearer of the Ring: it hung upon its chain against his breast, and at
whiles it seemed a heavy weight. He felt the certainty of evil ahead and of evil
following; but he said nothing. He gripped tighter on the hilt of his sword and
went on doggedly.
The Company behind him spoke seldom, and
then only in hurried whispers. There was no sound but the sound of their own
feet; the dull stump of Gimli's dwarf-boots; the heavy tread of Boromir; the
light step of Legolas; the soft, scarce-heard patter of hobbit-feet; and in the
rear the slow firm footfalls of Aragorn with his long stride. When they halted
for a moment they heard nothing at all, unless it were occasionally a faint
trickle and drip of unseen water. Yet Frodo began to hear, or to imagine that he
heard, something else: like the faint fall of soft bare feet. It was never loud
enough, or near enough, for him to feel certain that he heard it; but once it
had started it never stopped, while the Company was moving. But it was not an
echo, for when they halted it pattered on for a little all by itself, and then
grew still.
It was after nightfall when they had entered
the Mines. They had been going for several hours with only brief halts, when
Gandalf came to his first serious check. Before him stood a wide dark arch
opening into three passages: all led in the same general direction, eastwards;
but the left-hand passage plunged down, while the right-hand climbed up, and the
middle way seemed to run on, smooth and level but very
narrow.
'I have no memory of this place at all!' said
Gandalf, standing uncertainly under the arch. He held up his staff in the hope
of finding some marks or inscription that might help his choice; but nothing of
the kind was to be seen. 'I am too weary to decide,' he said, shaking his head.
'And I expect that you are all as weary as I am, or wearier. We had better halt
here for what is left of the night. You know what I mean! In here it is ever
dark; but outside the late Moon is riding westward and the middle-night has
passed.'
'Poor old Bill!' said Sam. 'I wonder where he is.
I hope those wolves haven't got him yet.'
To the left of
the great arch they found a stone door: it was half closed, but swung back
easily to a gentle thrust. Beyond there seemed to lie a wide chamber cut in the
rock.
'Steady! Steady!' cried Gandalf as Merry and Pippin
pushed forward, glad to find a place where they could rest with at least more
feeling of shelter than in the open passage. 'Steady! You do not know what is
inside yet. I will go first.'
He went in cautiously, and
the others filed behind. 'There!' he said, pointing with his staff to the middle
of the floor. Before his feet they saw a large round hole like the mouth of a
well. Broken and rusty chains lay at the edge and trailed down into the black
pit. Fragments of stone lay near.
'One of you might have
fallen in and still be wondering when you were going to strike the bottom,' said
Aragorn to Merry. 'Let the guide go first while you have
one.'
'This seems to have been a guardroom, made for the
watching of the three passages,' said Gimli. 'That hole was plainly a well for
the guards' use, covered with a stone lid. But the lid is broken, and we must
all take care in the dark.'
Pippin felt curiously attracted
by the well. While the others were unrolling blankets and making beds against
the walls of the chamber, as far as possible from the hole in the floor, he
crept to the edge and peered over. A chill air seemed to strike his face, rising
from invisible depths. Moved by a sudden impulse he groped for a loose stone,
and let it drop. He felt his heart beat many times before there was any sound.
Then far below, as if the stone had fallen into deep water in some cavernous
place, there came a
plunk, very distant, but magnified and repeated in
the hollow shaft.
'What's that?' cried Gandalf. He was
relieved when Pippin confessed what he had done; but he was angry, and Pippin
could see his eye glinting. 'Fool of a Took!' he growled. 'This is a serious
journey, not a hobbit walking-party. Throw yourself in next time, and then you
will be no further nuisance. Now be quiet!'
Nothing more
was heard for several minutes; but then there came out of the depths faint
knocks:
tom-tap, tap-tom. They stopped, and when the echoes had died
away, they were repeated:
tap-tom, tom-tap, tap-tap, tom. They sounded
disquietingly like signals of some sort; but after a while the knocking died
away and was not heard again.
'That was the sound of a
hammer, or I have never heard one,' said Gimli.
'Yes,' said
Gandalf, 'and I do not like it. It may have nothing to do with Peregrin's
foolish stone; but probably something has been disturbed that would have been
better left quiet. Pray, do nothing of the kind again! Let us hope we shall get
some rest without further trouble. You, Pippin, can go on the first watch, as a
reward,' he growled, as he rolled himself in a
blanket.
Pippin sat miserably by the door in the pitch
dark; but he kept on turning round, fearing that some unknown thing would crawl
up out of the well. He wished he could cover the hole, if only with a blanket,
but he dared not move or go near it, even though Gandalf seemed to be
asleep.
Actually Gandalf was awake, though lying still and
silent. He was deep in thought, trying to recall every memory of his former
journey in the Mines, and considering anxiously the next course that he should
take; a false turn now might be disastrous. After an hour he rose up and came
over to Pippin.
'Get into a corner and have a sleep, my
lad,' he said in a kindly tone. 'You want to sleep, I expect. I cannot get a
wink, so I may as well do the watching.'
'I know what is
the matter with me,' he muttered, as he sat down by the door. 'I need smoke! I
have not tasted it since the morning before the
snowstorm.'
The last thing that Pippin saw, as sleep took
him, was a dark glimpse of the old wizard huddled on the floor, shielding a
glowing chip in his gnarled hands between his knees. The flicker for a moment
showed his sharp nose. and the puff of smoke.
It was
Gandalf who roused them all from sleep. He had sat and watched all alone for
about six hours, and had let the others rest. 'And in the watches I have made up
my mind,' he said. 'I do not like the feel of the middle way; and I do not like
the smell of the left-hand way: there is foul air down there, or I am no guide.
I shall take the right-hand passage. It is time we began to climb up
again.'
For eight dark hours, not counting two brief halts,
they marched on; and they met no danger, and heard nothing, and saw nothing but
the faint gleam of the wizard's light, bobbing like a will-o'-the-wisp in front
of them. The passage they had chosen wound steadily upwards. As far as they
could judge it went in great mounting curves, and as it rose it grew loftier and
wider. There were now no openings to other galleries or tunnels on either side,
and the floor was level and sound, without pits or cracks. Evidently they had
struck what once had been an important road; and they went forward quicker than
they had done on their first march.
In this way they
advanced some fifteen miles, measured in a direct line east, though they must
have actually walked twenty miles or more. As the road climbed upwards' Frodo's
spirits rose a little; but he still felt oppressed, and still at times he heard,
or thought he heard, away behind the Company and beyond the fall and patter of
their feet, a following footstep that was not an echo.
They
had marched as far as the hobbits could endure without a rest, and all were
thinking of a place where they could sleep, when suddenly the walls to right and
left vanished. They seemed to have passed through some arched doorway into a
black and empty space. There was a great draught of warmer air behind them, and
before them the darkness was cold on their faces. They halted and crowded
anxiously together.
Gandalf seemed pleased. 'I chose the
right way,' he said. 'At last we are coming to the habitable parts, and I guess
that we are not far now from the eastern side. But we are high up, a good deal
higher than the Dimrill Gate, unless I am mistaken. From the feeling of the air
we must be in a wide hall. I will now risk a little real
light.'
He raised his staff, and for a brief instant there
was blaze like a flash of lightning. Great shadows sprang up and fled, and for a
second they saw a vast roof far above their heads upheld by many mighty pillars
hewn of stone. Before them and on either side stretched a huge empty hall; its
black walls, polished and smooth as glass, flashed and glittered. Three other
entrances they saw, dark black arches: one straight before them eastwards, and
one on either side. Then the light went out.
'That is all
that I shall venture on for the present,' said Gandalf. 'There used to be great
windows on the mountain-side, and shafts leading out to the light in the upper
reaches of the Mines. I think we have reached them now, but it is night outside
again, and we cannot tell until morning. If I am right, tomorrow we may actually
see the morning peeping in. But in the meanwhile we had better go no further.
Let us rest, if we can. Things have gone well so far, and the greater part of
the dark road is over. But we are not through yet, and it is a long way down to
the Gates that open on the world.'
The Company spent that
night in the great cavernous hall, huddled close together in a corner to escape
the draught: there seemed to be a steady inflow of chill air through the eastern
archway. All about them as they lay hung the darkness, hollow and immense, and
they were oppressed by the loneliness and vastness of the dolven halls and
endlessly branching stairs and passages. The wildest imaginings that dark rumour
had ever suggested to the hobbits fell altogether short of the actual dread and
wonder of Moria.
'There must have been a mighty crowd of
dwarves here at one time' said Sam; 'and every one of them busier than badgers
for five hundred years to make all this, and most in hard rock too! What did
they do it all for? They didn't live in these darksome holes
surely?'
'These are not holes,' said Gimli. 'This is the
great realm and city of the Dwarrowdelf. And of old it was not darksome, but
full of light and splendour, as is still remembered in our
songs.'
He rose and standing in the dark he began to chant
in a deep voice, while the echoes ran away into the roof.
The world was young, the mountains green,
No stain yet on
the Moon was seen,
No words were laid on stream or stone
When Durin woke
and walked alone.
He named the nameless hills and dells;
He drank from
yet untasted wells;
He stooped and looked in Mirrormere,
And saw a crown
of stars appear,
As gems upon a silver thread,
Above the shadow of his
head.
The world was fair, the mountains
tall,
In Elder Days before the fall
Of mighty kings in
Nargothrond
And Gondolin, who now beyond
The Western Seas have passed
away:
The world was fair in Durin's Day.
A
king he was on carven throne
In many-pillared halls of stone
With golden
roof and silver floor,
And runes of power upon the door.
The light of
sun and star and moon
In shining lamps of crystal hewn
Undimmed by cloud
or shade of night
There shone for ever fair and
bright.
There hammer on the anvil smote,
There
chisel clove, and graver wrote;
There forged was blade, and bound was
hilt;
The delver mined, the mason built.
There beryl, pearl, and opal
pale,
And metal wrought like fishes' mail,
Buckler and corslet, axe and
sword,
And shining spears were laid in
hoard.
Unwearied then were Durin's
folk
Beneath the mountains music woke:
The harpers harped, the minstrels
sang,
And at the gates the trumpets rang.
The
world is grey, the mountains old,
The forge's fire is ashen-cold
No harp
is wrung, no hammer falls:
The darkness dwells in Durin's halls
The
shadow lies upon his tomb
In Moria, in Khazad-dum.
But still the sunken
stars appear
In dark and windless Mirrormere;
There lies his crown in
water deep,
Till Durin wakes again from
sleep.
'I like that!' said Sam. 'I
should like to learn it.
In Moria, in Khazad-dum! But it makes the
darkness seem heavier, thinking of all those lamps. Are there piles of jewels
and gold lying about here still?'
Gimli was silent. Having
sung his song he would say no more.
'Piles of jewels?' said
Gandalf. 'No. The Orcs have often plundered Moria; there is nothing left in the
upper halls. And since the dwarves fled, no one dares to seek the shafts and
treasuries down in the deep places: they are drowned in water – or in a shadow
of fear.'
'Then what do the dwarves want to come back for?'
asked Sam.
'For
mithril,' answered Gandalf. 'The
wealth of Moria was not in gold and jewels, the toys of the Dwarves; nor in
iron, their servant. Such things they found here, it is true, especially iron;
but they did not need to delve for them: all things that they desired they could
obtain in traffic. For here alone in the world was found Moria-silver, or
true-silver as some have called it:
mithril is the Elvish name. The
Dwarves have a name which they do not tell. Its worth was ten times that of
gold, and now it is beyond price; for little is left above ground, and even the
Orcs dare not delve here for it. The lodes lead away north towards Caradhras,
and down to darkness. The Dwarves tell no tale; but even as
mithril was
the foundation of their wealth, so also it was their destruction: they delved
too greedily and too deep, and disturbed that from which they fled, Durin's
Bane. Of what they brought to light the Orcs have gathered nearly all, and given
it in tribute to Sauron, who covets it.
'
Mithril!
All folk desired it. It could be beaten like copper, and polished like glass;
and the Dwarves could make of it a metal, light and yet harder than tempered
steel. Its beauty was like to that of common silver, but the beauty of
mithril did not tarnish or grow dim. The Elves dearly loved it, and among
many uses they made of it
ithildin, starmoon, which you saw upon the
doors. Bilbo had a corslet of mithril-rings that Thorin gave him. I wonder what
has become of it? Gathering dust still in Michel Delving Mathom-house, I
suppose.'
'What?' cried Gimli, startled out of his silence.
'A corslet of Moria-silver? That was a kingly gift!'
'Yes,'
said Gandalf. 'I never told him, but its worth was greater than the value of the
whole Shire and everything in it.'
Frodo said nothing, but
he put his hand under his tunic and touched the rings of his mail-shirt. He felt
staggered to think that he had been walking about with the price of the Shire
under his jacket. Had Bilbo known? He felt no doubt that Bilbo knew quite well.
It was indeed a kingly gift. But now his thoughts had been carried away from the
dark Mines, to Rivendell, to Bilbo, and to Bag End in the days while Bilbo was
still there. He wished with all his heart that he was back there, and in those
days, mowing the lawn, or pottering among the flowers, and that he had never
heard of Moria, or
mithril – or the Ring.
A deep
silence fell. One by one the others fell asleep. Frodo was on guard. As if it
were a breath that came in through unseen doors out of deep places, dread came
over him. His hands were cold and his brow damp. He listened. All his mind was
given to listening and nothing else for two slow hours; but he heard no sound,
not even the imagined echo of a footfall.
His watch was
nearly over, when, far off where he guessed that the western archway stood, he
fancied that he could see two pale points of light, almost like luminous eyes.
He started. His head had nodded. 'I must have nearly fallen asleep on guard,' he
thought. 'I was on the edge of a dream.' He stood up and rubbed his eyes, and
remained standing, peering into the dark, until he was relieved by
Legolas.
When he lay down he quickly went to sleep, but it
seemed to him that the dream went on: he heard whispers, and saw the two pale
points of light approaching, slowly. He woke and found that the others were
speaking softly near him, and that a dim light was falling on his face. High up
above the eastern archway through a shaft near the roof came a long pale gleam;
and across the hall through the northern arch light also glimmered faint and
distantly.
Frodo sat up. 'Good morning!' said Gandalf: 'For
morning it is again at last. I was right, you see. We are high up on the east
side of Moria. Before today is over we ought to find the Great Gates and see the
waters of Mirrormere lying in the Dimrill Dale before
us.'
'I shall be glad,' said Gimli. 'I have looked on
Moria, and it is very great, but it has become dark and dreadful; and we have
found no sign of my kindred. I doubt now that Balin ever came
here.'
After they had breakfasted Gandalf decided to go on
again at once. 'We are tired, but we shall rest better when we are outside,' he
said. 'I think that none of us will wish to spend another night in
Moria.'
'No indeed!' said Boromir. 'Which way shall we
take? Yonder eastward arch?'
'Maybe,' said Gandalf. 'But I
do not know yet exactly where we are. Unless I am quite astray, I guess that we
are above and to the north of the Great Gates; and it may not be easy to find
the right road down to them. The eastern arch will probably prove to be the way
that we must take; but before we make up our minds we ought to look about us.
Let us go towards that light in the north door. If we could find a window it
would help, but I fear that the light comes only down deep
shafts.'
Following his lead the Company passed under the
northern arch. They found themselves in a wide corridor. As they went along it
the glimmer grew stronger, and they saw that it came through a doorway on their
right. It was high and flat-topped, and the stone door was still upon its
hinges, standing half open. Beyond it was a large square chamber. It was dimly
lit, but to their eyes, after so long a time in the dark, it seemed dazzlingly
bright, and they blinked as they entered.
Their feet disturbed a deep dust upon the
floor, and stumbled among things lying in the doorway whose shapes they could
not at first make out. The chamber was lit by a wide shaft high in the further
eastern wall; it slanted upwards and, far above, a small square patch of blue
sky could be seen. The light of the shaft fell directly on a table in the middle
of the room: a single oblong block, about two feet high, upon which was laid a
great slab of white stone.
'It looks like a tomb,' muttered
Frodo, and bent forwards with a curious sense of foreboding, to look more
closely at it. Gandalf came quickly to his side. On the slab runes were deeply
graven:
'These are Daeron's Runes, such as were used of
old in Moria,' said Gandalf. 'Here is written in the tongues of Men and
Dwarves:
'BALIN SON OF FUNDIN LORD OF
MORIA.'
'He is dead then,' said Frodo. 'I feared it was
so.' Gimli cast his hood over his face.
Chapter 5
The Bridge of
Khazad-dum
The Company of the Ring stood silent beside the tomb of
Balin. Frodo thought of Bilbo and his long friendship with the dwarf, and of
Balin's visit to the Shire long ago. In that dusty chamber in the mountains it
seemed a thousand years ago and on the other side of the
world.
At length they stirred and looked up, and began to
search for anything that would give them tidings of Balin's fate, or show what
had become of his folk. There was another smaller door on the other side of the
chamber, under the shaft. By both the doors they could now see that many bones
were lying, and among them were broken swords and axe-heads, and cloven shields
and helms. Some of the swords were crooked: orc-scimitars with blackened
blades.
There were many recesses cut in the rock of the
walls, and in them were large iron-bound chests of wood. All had been broken and
plundered; but beside the shattered lid of one there lay the remains of a book.
It had been slashed and stabbed and partly burned, and it was so stained with
black and other dark marks like old blood that little of it could be read.
Gandalf lifted it carefully, but the leaves crackled and broke as he laid it on
the slab. He pored over it for some time without speaking. Frodo and Gimli
standing at his side could see, as he gingerly turned the leaves, that they were
written by many different hands, in runes, both of Moria and of Dale, and here
and there in Elvish script.
At last Gandalf looked up. 'It
seems to be a record of the fortunes of Balin's folk,' he said. 'I guess that it
began with their coming to Dimrill Dale nigh on thirty years ago: the pages seem
to have numbers referring to the years after their arrival. The top page is
marked one – three, so at least two are missing from the beginning.
Listen to this!
'We drove out orcs from the great gate
and guard – I think; the next word is blurred and burned; probably
room – we slew many in the bright – I think – sun in the dale.
Floi was killed by an arrow. He slew the great. Then there is a blur
followed by Floi under grass near Mirrormere. The next line or two I
cannot read. Then comes We have taken the twentyfirst hall of North end to
dwell in. There is I cannot read what. A shaft is mentioned. Then
Balin has set up his seat in the Chamber of
Mazarbul.'
'The Chamber of Records,' said Gimli. 'I
guess that is where we now stand.'
'Well, I can read no
more for a long way,' said Gandalf, 'except the word gold, and Durin's
Axe and something helm. Then Balin is now lord of Moria. That
seems to end a chapter. After some stars another hand begins, and I can see
we found truesilver, and later the word wellforged and then
something, I have it! mithril; and the last two lines Oin to seek for
the upper armouries of Third Deep, something go westwards, a blur,
to Hollin gate.'
Gandalf paused and set a few leaves
aside. 'There are several pages of the same sort, rather hastily written and
much damaged, he said; 'but I can make little of them in this light. Now there
must be a number of leaves missing, because they begin to be numbered
five, the fifth year of the colony, I suppose. Let me see! No, they are
too cut and stained; I cannot read them. We might do better in the sunlight.
Wait! Here is something: a large bold hand using an Elvish
script.'
'That would be Ori's hand,' said Gimli, looking
over the wizard's arm. 'He could write well and speedily, and often used the
Elvish characters.'
'I fear he had ill tidings to record in
a fair hand,' said Gandalf. 'The first clear word is sorrow, but the rest
of the line is lost, unless it ends in estre. Yes, it must be
yestre followed by day being the tenth of novembre Balin lord of Moria
fell in Dimrill Dale. He went alone to look in Mirrormere. An orc shot him from
behind a stone. We slew the orc, but many more... up from east up the
Silverlode. The remainder of the page is so blurred that I can hardly make
anything out, but I think I can read we have barred the gates, and then
can hold them long if, and then perhaps horrible and
suffer. Poor Balin! He seems to have kept the title that he took for less
than five years. I wonder what happened afterwards; but there is no time to
puzzle out the last few pages. Here is the last page of all.' He paused and
sighed.
'It is grim reading,' he said. 'I fear their end
was cruel. Listen! We cannot get out. We cannot get out. They have taken the
Bridge and second hall. Frar and Loni and Nali fell there. Then there are
four lines smeared so that I can only read went 5 days ago. The last
lines run the pool is up to the wall at Westgate. The Watcher in the Water
took Oin. We cannot get out. The end comes, and then drums, drums in the
deep. I wonder what that means. The last thing written is in a trailing
scrawl of elf-letters: they are coming. There is nothing more.' Gandalf
paused and stood in silent thought.
A sudden dread and a
horror of the chamber fell on the Company. 'We cannot get out,' muttered
Gimli. 'It was well for us that the pool had sunk a little, and that the Watcher
was sleeping down at the southern end.'
Gandalf raised his
head and looked round. 'They seem to have made a last stand by both doors,' he
said; 'but there were not many left by that time. So ended the attempt to retake
Moria! It was valiant but foolish. The time is not come yet. Now, I fear, we
must say farewell to Balin son of Fundin. Here he must lie in the halls of his
fathers. We will take this book, the Book of Mazarbul, and look at it more
closely later. You had better keep it, Gimli, and take it back to Dain, if you
get a chance. It will interest him, though it will grieve him deeply. Come, let
us go! The morning is passing.'
'Which way shall we go?'
asked Boromir.
'Back to the hall,' answered Gandalf. 'But
our visit to this room has not been in vain. I now know where we are. This must
be, as Gimli says, the Chamber of Mazarbul; and the hall must be the
twenty-first of the North-end. Therefore we should leave by the eastern arch of
the hall, and bear right and south, and go downwards. The Twenty-first Hall
should be on the Seventh Level, that is six above the level of the Gates. Come
now! Back to the hall!'
Gandalf had hardly spoken these
words, when there came a great noise: a rolling Boom that seemed to come
from depths far below, and to tremble in the stone at their feet. They sprang
towards the door in alarm. Doom, doom it rolled again, as if huge hands
were turning the very caverns of Moria into a vast drum. Then there came an
echoing blast: a great horn was blown in the hall, and answering horns and harsh
cries were heard further off. There was a hurrying sound of many
feet.
'They are coming!' cried
Legolas.
'We cannot get out,' said
Gimli.
'Trapped!' cried Gandalf. 'Why did I delay? Here we
are, caught, just as they were before. But I was not here then. We will see what
-'
Doom, doom came the drum-beat and the walls
shook.
'Slam the doors and wedge them!' shouted Aragorn.
'And keep your packs on as long as you can: we may get a chance to cut our way
out yet.'
'No!' said Gandalf. 'We must not get shut in.
Keep the east door ajar! We will go that way, if we get a
chance.'
Another harsh horn-call and shrill cries rang out.
Feet were coming down the corridor. There was a ring and clatter as the Company
drew their swords. Glamdring shone with a pale light, and Sting glinted at the
edges. Boromir set his shoulder against the western
door.
'Wait a moment! Do not close it yet!' said Gandalf.
He sprang forward to Boromir's side and drew himself up to his full
height.
'Who comes hither to disturb the rest of Balin Lord
of Moria?' he cried in a loud voice.
There was a rush of
hoarse laughter, like the fall of sliding stones into a pit; amid the clamour a
deep voice was raised in command. Doom, boom, doom went the drums in the
deep.
With a quick movement Gandalf stepped before the
narrow opening of the door and thrust forward his staff. There was a dazzling
flash that lit the chamber and the passage outside. For an instant the wizard
looked out. Arrows whined and whistled down the corridor as he sprang
back.
'There are Orcs, very many of them,' he said. 'And
some are large and evil: black Uruks of Mordor. For the moment they are hanging
back, but there is something else there. A great cave-troll, I think, or more
than one. There is no hope of escape that way.'
'And no
hope at all, if they come at the other door as well,' said
Boromir.
'There is no sound outside here yet,' said
Aragorn, who was standing by the eastern door listening. 'The passage on this
side plunges straight down a stair: it plainly does not lead back towards the
hall. But it is no good flying blindly this way with the pursuit just behind. We
cannot block the door. Its key is gone and the lock is broken, and it opens
inwards. We must do something to delay the enemy first. We will make them fear
the Chamber of Mazarbul!' he said grimly feeling the edge of his sword,
Anduril.
Heavy feet were heard in the corridor. Boromir
flung himself against the door and heaved it to; then he wedged it with broken
sword-blades and splinters of wood. The Company retreated to the other side of
the chamber. But they had no chance to fly yet. There was a blow on the door
that made it quiver; and then it began to grind slowly open, driving back the
wedges. A huge arm and shoulder, with a dark skin of greenish scales, was thrust
through the widening gap. Then a great, flat, toeless foot was forced through
below. There was a dead silence outside.
Boromir leaped
forward and hewed at the arm with all his might; but his sword rang, glanced
aside, and fell from his shaken hand. The blade was
notched.
Suddenly, and to his own surprise, Frodo felt a
hot wrath blaze up in his heart. 'The Shire!' he cried, and springing beside
Boromir, he stooped, and stabbed with Sting at the hideous foot. There was a
bellow, and the foot jerked back, nearly wrenching Sting from Frodo's arm. Black
drops dripped from the blade and smoked on the floor. Boromir hurled himself
against the door and slammed it again.
'One for the Shire!'
cried Aragorn. 'The hobbit's bite is deep! You have a good blade, Frodo son of
Drogo!'
There was a crash on the door, followed by crash
after crash. Rams and hammers were beating against it. It cracked and staggered
back, and the opening grew suddenly wide. Arrows came whistling in, but struck
the northern wall, and fell harmlessly to the floor. There was a horn-blast and
a rush of feet, and orcs one after another leaped into the
chamber.
How many there were the Company could not count.
The affray was sharp, but the orcs were dismayed by the fierceness of the
defence. Legolas shot two through the throat. Gimli hewed the legs from under
another that had sprung up on Balin's tomb. Boromir and Aragorn slew many. When
thirteen had fallen the rest fled shrieking, leaving the defenders unharmed,
except for Sam who had a scratch along the scalp. A quick duck had saved him;
and he had felled his orc: a sturdy thrust with his Barrow-blade. A fire was
smouldering in his brown eyes that would have made Ted Sandyman step backwards,
if he had seen it.
'Now is the time!' cried Gandalf. 'Let
us go, before the troll returns!'
But even as they
retreated, and before Pippin and Merry had reached the stair outside, a huge
orc-chieftain, almost man-high, clad in black mail from head to foot, leaped
into the chamber; behind him his followers clustered in the doorway. His broad
flat face was swart, his eyes were like coals, and his tongue was red; he
wielded a great spear. With a thrust of his huge hide shield he turned Boromir's
sword and bore him backwards, throwing him to the ground. Diving under Aragorn's
blow with the speed of a striking snake he charged into the Company and thrust
with his spear straight at Frodo. The blow caught him on the right side, and
Frodo was hurled against the wall and pinned. Sam, with a cry, hacked at the
spear-shaft, and it broke. But even as the orc flung down the truncheon and
swept out his scimitar, Anduril came down upon his helm. There was a flash like
flame and the helm burst asunder. The orc fell with cloven head. His followers
fled howling, as Boromir and Aragorn sprang at
them.
Doom, doom went the drums in the deep. The
great voice rolled out again.
'Now!' shouted Gandalf. 'Now
is the last chance. Run for it!'
Aragorn picked up Frodo
where he lay by the wall and made for the stair, pushing Merry and Pippin in
front of him. The others followed; but Gimli had to be dragged away by Legolas:
in spite of the peril he lingered by Balin's tomb with his head bowed. Boromir
hauled the eastern door to, grinding upon its hinges: it had great iron rings on
either side, but could not be fastened.
'I am all right,'
gasped Frodo. 'I can walk. Put me down!'
Aragorn nearly
dropped him in his amazement. 'I thought you were dead!' he
cried.
'Not yet!' said Gandalf. 'But there is time for
wonder. Off you go, all of you, down the stairs! Wait a few minutes for me at
the bottom, but if I do not come soon, go on! Go quickly and choose paths
leading right and downwards.'
'We cannot leave you to hold
the door alone!' said Aragorn.
'Do as I say!' said Gandalf
fiercely. 'Swords are no more use here. Go!'
The passage
was lit by no shaft and was utterly dark. They groped their way down a long
flight of steps, and then looked back; but they could see nothing, except high
above them the faint glimmer of the wizard's staff. He seemed to be still
standing on guard by the closed door. Frodo breathed heavily and leaned against
Sam, who put his arms about him. They stood peering up the stairs into the
darkness. Frodo thought he could hear the voice of Gandalf above, muttering
words that ran down the sloping roof with a sighing echo. He could not catch
what was said. The walls seemed to be trembling. Every now and again the
drum-beats throbbed and rolled: doom, doom.
Suddenly
at the top of the stair there was a stab of white light. Then there was a dull
rumble and a heavy thud. The drum-beats broke out wildly: doom-boom,
doom-boom, and then stopped. Gandalf came flying down the steps and fell to
the ground in the midst of the Company.
'Well, well! That's
over!' said the wizard struggling to his feet. 'I have done all that I could.
But I have met my match, and have nearly been destroyed. But don't stand here!
Go on! You will have to do without light for a while: I am rather shaken. Go on!
Go on! Where are you, Gimli? Come ahead with me! Keep close behind, all of
you!'
They stumbled after him wondering what had happened.
Doom, doom went the drum-beats again: they now sounded muffled and far
away, but they were following. There was no other sound of pursuit, neither
tramp of feet, nor any voice. Gandalf took no turns, right or left, for the
passage seemed to be going in the direction that he desired. Every now and again
it descended a flight of steps, fifty or more, to a lower level. At the moment
that was their chief danger; for in the dark they could not see a descent, until
they came on it, and put their feet out into emptiness. Gandalf felt the ground
with his staff like a blind man.
At the end of an hour they
had gone a mile, or maybe a little more, and had descended many flights of
stairs. There was still no sound of pursuit. Almost they began to hope that they
would escape. At the bottom of the seventh flight Gandalf
halted.
'It is getting hot!' he gasped. 'We ought to be
down at least to the level of the Gates now. Soon I think we should look for a
left-hand turn to take us east. I hope it is not far. I am very weary. I must
rest here a moment, even if all the orcs ever spawned are after
us.'
Gimli took his arm and helped him down to a seat on
the step. 'What happened away up there at the door?' he asked. 'Did you meet the
beater of the drums?'
'I do not know,' answered Gandalf.
'But I found myself suddenly faced by something that I have not met before. I
could think of nothing to do but to try and put a shutting-spell on the door. I
know many; but to do things of that kind rightly requires time, and even then
the door can be broken by strength.
'As I stood there I
could hear orc-voices on the other side: at any moment I thought they would
burst it open. I could not hear what was said; they seemed to be talking in
their own hideous language. All I caught was ghash; that is "fire". Then
something came into the chamber – I felt it through the door, and the orcs
themselves were afraid and fell silent. It laid hold of the iron ring, and then
it perceived me and my spell.
'What it was I cannot guess,
but I have never felt such a challenge. The counter-spell was terrible. It
nearly broke me. For an instant the door left my control and began to open! I
had to speak a word of Command. That proved too great a strain. The door burst
in pieces. Something dark as a cloud was blocking out all the light inside, and
I was thrown backwards down the stairs. All the wall gave way, and the roof of
the chamber as well, I think.
'I am afraid Balin is buried
deep, and maybe something else is buried there too. I cannot say. But at least
the passage behind us was completely blocked. Ah! I have never felt so spent,
but it is passing. And now what about you, Frodo? There was not time to say so,
but I have never been more delighted in my life than when you spoke. I feared
that it was a brave but dead hobbit that Aragorn was
carrying.'
'What about me?' said Frodo. 'I am alive, and
whole I think. I am bruised and in pain, but it is not too
bad.'
'Well,' said Aragorn, 'I can only say that hobbits
are made of a stuff so tough that I have never met the like of it. Had I known,
I would have spoken softer in the Inn at Bree! That spear-thrust would have
skewered a wild boar!'
'Well, it did not skewer me, I am
glad to say,' said Frodo; 'though I feel as if I had been caught between a
hammer and an anvil.' He said no more. He found breathing
painful.
'You take after Bilbo,' said Gandalf. 'There is
more about you than meets the eye, as I said of him long ago.' Frodo wondered if
the remark meant more than it said.
They now went on again.
Before long Gimli spoke. He had keen eyes in the dark. 'I think,' he said, 'that
there is a light ahead. But it is not daylight. It is red. What can it
be?'
'Ghash!' muttered Gandalf. 'I wonder if that is
what they meant: that the lower levels are on fire? Still, we can only go
on.'
Soon the light became unmistakable, and could be seen
by all. It was flickering and glowing on the walls away down the passage before
them. They could now see their way: in front the road sloped down swiftly, and
some way ahead there stood a low archway; through it the glowing light came. The
air became very hot.
When they came to the arch Gandalf
went through, signing to them to wait. As he stood just beyond the opening they
saw his face lit by a red glow. Quickly he stepped
back.
'There is some new devilry here,' he said, 'devised
for our welcome no doubt. But I know now where we are: we have reached the First
Deep, the level immediately below the Gates. This is the Second Hall of Old
Moria; and the Gates are near: away beyond the eastern end, on the left, not
more than a quarter of a mile. Across the Bridge, up a broad stair, along a wide
road through the First Hall, and out! But come and
look!'
They peered out. Before them was another cavernous
hall. It was loftier and far longer than the one in which they had slept. They
were near its eastern end; westward it ran away into darkness. Down the centre
stalked a double line of towering pillars. They were carved like boles of mighty
trees whose boughs upheld the roof with a branching tracery of stone. Their
stems were smooth and black, but a red glow was darkly mirrored in their sides.
Right across the floor, close to the feet of two huge pillars a great fissure
had opened. Out of it a fierce red light came, and now and again flames licked
at the brink and curled about the bases of the columns. Wisps of dark smoke
wavered in the hot air.
'If we had come by the main road
down from the upper halls, we should have been trapped here,' said Gandalf. 'Let
us hope that the fire now lies between us and pursuit. Come! There is no time to
lose.'
Even as he spoke they heard again the pursuing
drum-beat: Doom, doom, doom. Away beyond the shadows at the western end
of the hall there came cries and horn-calls. Doom, doom; the pillars
seemed to tremble and the flames to quiver.
'Now for the
last race!' said Gandalf. 'If the sun is shining outside we may still escape.
After me!'
He turned left and sped across the smooth floor
of the hall. The distance was greater than it had looked. As they ran they heard
the beat and echo of many hurrying feet behind. A shrill yell went up: they had
been seen. There was a ring and clash of steel. An arrow whistled over Frodo's
head.
Boromir laughed. 'They did not expect this,' he said.
'The fire has cut them off. We are on the wrong
side!'
'Look ahead!' called Gandalf. 'The Bridge is near.
It is dangerous and narrow.'
Suddenly Frodo saw before him
a black chasm. At the end of the hall the floor vanished and fell to an unknown
depth. The outer door could only be reached by a slender bridge of stone,
without kerb or rail, that spanned the chasm with one curving spring of fifty
feet. It was an ancient defence of the Dwarves against any enemy that might
capture the First Hall and the outer passages. They could only pass across it in
single file. At the brink Gandalf halted and the others came up in a pack
behind.
'Lead the way, Gimli!' he said. 'Pippin and Merry
next. Straight on and up the stair beyond the door!'
Arrows
fell among them. One struck Frodo and sprang back. Another pierced Gandalf's hat
and stuck there like a black feather. Frodo looked behind. Beyond the fire he
saw swarming black figures: there seemed to be hundreds of orcs. They brandished
spears and scimitars which shone red as blood in the firelight. Doom,
doom rolled the drum-beats, growing louder and louder, doom,
doom.
Legolas turned and set an arrow to the string,
though it was a long shot for his small bow. He drew, but his hand fell, and the
arrow slipped to the ground. He gave a cry of dismay and fear. Two great trolls
appeared; they bore great slabs of stone, and flung them down to serve as
gangways over the fire. But it was not the trolls that had filled the Elf with
terror. The ranks of the orcs had opened, and they crowded away, as if they
themselves were afraid. Something was coming up behind them. What it was could
not be seen: it was like a great shadow, in the middle of which was a dark form,
of man-shape maybe, yet greater; and a power and terror seemed to be in it and
to go before it.
It came to the edge of the fire and the
light faded as if a cloud had bent over it. Then with a rush it leaped across
the fissure. The flames roared up to greet it, and wreathed about it; and a
black smoke swirled in the air. Its streaming mane kindled, and blazed behind
it. In its right hand was a blade like a stabbing tongue of fire; in its left it
held a whip of many thongs.
'Ai! ai!' wailed Legolas. 'A
Balrog! A Balrog is come!'
Gimli stared with wide eyes.
'Durin's Bane!' he cried, and letting his axe fall he covered his
face.
'A Balrog,' muttered Gandalf. 'Now I understand.' He
faltered and leaned heavily on his staff. 'What an evil fortune! And I am
already weary.'
The dark figure streaming with fire raced
towards them. The orcs yelled and poured over the stone gangways. Then Boromir
raised his horn and blew. Loud the challenge rang and bellowed, like the shout
of many throats under the cavernous roof. For a moment the orcs quailed and the
fiery shadow halted. Then the echoes died as suddenly as a flame blown out by a
dark wind, and the enemy advanced again.
'Over the bridge!'
cried Gandalf, recalling his strength. 'Fly! This is a foe beyond any of you. I
must hold the narrow way. Fly!' Aragorn and Boromir did not heed the command,
but still held their ground, side by side, behind Gandalf at the far end of the
bridge. The others halted just within the doorway at the hall's end, and turned,
unable to leave their leader to face the enemy alone.
The
Balrog reached the bridge. Gandalf stood in the middle of the span, leaning on
the staff in his left hand, but in his other hand Glamdring gleamed, cold and
white. His enemy halted again, facing him, and the shadow about it reached out
like two vast wings. It raised the whip, and the thongs whined and cracked. Fire
came from its nostrils. But Gandalf stood firm.
'You cannot
pass,' he said. The orcs stood still, and a dead silence fell. 'I am a servant
of the Secret Fire, wielder of the flame of Anor. You cannot pass. The dark fire
will not avail you, flame of Udun. Go back to the Shadow! You cannot
pass.'
The Balrog made no answer. The fire in it seemed to
die, but the darkness grew. It stepped forward slowly on to the bridge, and
suddenly it drew itself up to a great height, and its wings were spread from
wall to wall; but still Gandalf could be seen, glimmering in the gloom; he
seemed small, and altogether alone: grey and bent, like a wizened tree before
the onset of a storm.
From out of the shadow a red sword
leaped flaming.
Glamdring glittered white in
answer.
There was a ringing clash and a stab of white fire.
The Balrog fell back and its sword flew up in molten fragments. The wizard
swayed on the bridge, stepped back a pace, and then again stood
still.
'You cannot pass!' he
said.
With a bound the Balrog leaped full upon the bridge.
Its whip whirled and hissed.
'He cannot stand alone!' cried
Aragorn suddenly and ran back along the bridge. 'Elendil!' he shouted. 'I
am with you, Gandalf!'
'Gondor!' cried Boromir and leaped
after him.
At that moment Gandalf lifted his staff, and
crying aloud he smote the bridge before him. The staff broke asunder and fell
from his hand. A blinding sheet of white flame sprang up. The bridge cracked.
Right at the Balrog's feet it broke, and the stone upon which it stood crashed
into the gulf, while the rest remained, poised, quivering like a tongue of rock
thrust out into emptiness.
With a terrible cry the Balrog
fell forward, and its shadow plunged down and vanished. But even as it fell it
swung its whip, and the thongs lashed and curled about the wizard's knees,
dragging him to the brink. He staggered and fell, grasped vainly at the stone,
and slid into the abyss. 'Fly, you fools!' he cried, and was
gone.
The fires went out, and blank darkness fell. The
Company stood rooted with horror staring into the pit. Even as Aragorn and
Boromir came flying back, the rest of the bridge cracked and fell. With a cry
Aragorn roused them.
'Come! I will lead you now!' he
called. 'We must obey his last command. Follow me!'
They
stumbled wildly up the great stairs beyond the door. Aragorn leading, Boromir at
the rear. At the top was a wide echoing passage. Along this they fled. Frodo
heard Sam at his side weeping, and then he found that he himself was weeping as
he ran. Doom, doom, doom the drum-beats rolled behind, mournful now and
slow; doom!
They ran on. The light grew before them;
great shafts pierced the roof. They ran swifter. They passed into a hall, bright
with daylight from its high windows in the east. They fled across it. Through
its huge broken doors they passed, and suddenly before them the Great Gates
opened, an arch of blazing light.
There was a guard of orcs
crouching in the shadows behind the great door posts towering on either side,
but the gates were shattered and cast down. Aragorn smote to the ground the
captain that stood in his path, and the rest fled in terror of his wrath. The
Company swept past them and took no heed of them. Out of the Gates they ran and
sprang down the huge and age-worn steps, the threshold of
Moria.
Thus, at last, they came beyond hope under the sky
and felt the wind on their faces.
They did not halt until
they were out of bowshot from the walls. Dimrill Dale lay about them. The shadow
of the Misty Mountains lay upon it, but eastwards there was a golden light on
the land. It was but one hour after noon. The sun was shining; the clouds were
white and high.
They looked back. Dark yawned the archway
of the Gates under the mountain-shadow. Faint and far beneath the earth rolled
the slow drum-beats: doom. A thin black smoke trailed out. Nothing else
was to be seen; the dale all around was empty. Doom. Grief at last wholly
overcame them, and they wept long: some standing and silent, some cast upon the
ground. Doom, doom. The drum-beats faded.
Chapter 6
Lothlorien
'Alas! I fear we cannot stay here longer,' said Aragorn.
He looked towards the mountains and held up his sword. 'Farewell, Gandalf!' he
cried. 'Did I not say to you:
if you pass the doors of Moria, beware?
Alas that I spoke true! What hope have we without you?'
He
turned to the Company. 'We must do without hope,' he said. 'At least we may yet
be avenged. Let us gird ourselves and weep no more! Come! We have a long road,
and much to do.'
They rose and looked about them. Northward
the dale ran up into a glen of shadows between two great arms of the mountains,
above which three white peaks were shining: Celebdil, Fanuidhol, Caradhras, the
Mountains of Moria. At the head of the glen a torrent flowed like a white lace
over an endless ladder of short falls, and a mist of foam hung in the air about
the mountains' feet.
'Yonder is the Dimrill Stair,' said
Aragorn, pointing to the falls. 'Down the deep-cloven way that climbs beside the
torrent we should have come, if fortune had been
kinder.'
'Or Caradhras less cruel,' said Gimli. 'There he
stands smiling in the sun!' He shook his fist at the furthest of the snow-capped
peaks and turned away.
To the east the outflung arm of the
mountains marched to a sudden end, and far lands could be descried beyond them,
wide and vague. To the south the Misty Mountains receded endlessly as far as
sight could reach. Less than a mile away, and a little below them, for they
still stood high up on the west side of the dale, there lay a mere. It was long
and oval, shaped like a great spear-head thrust deep into the northern glen; but
its southern end was beyond the shadows under the sunlit sky. Yet its waters
were dark: a deep blue like clear evening sky seen from a lamp-lit room. Its
face was still and unruffled. About it lay a smooth sward, shelving down on all
sides to its bare unbroken rim.
'There lies the Mirrormere, deep
Kheled-zaram!' said Gimli sadly. 'I remember that he said: "May you have joy of
the sight! But we cannot linger there." Now long shall I journey ere I have joy
again. It is I that must hasten away, and he that must
remain.'
The Company now went down the road from the Gates.
It was rough and broken, fading to a winding track between heather and whin that
thrust amid the cracking stones. But still it could be seen that once long ago a
great paved way had wound upwards from the lowlands of the Dwarf-kingdom. In
places there were ruined works of stone beside the path, and mounds of green
topped with slender birches, or fir-trees sighing in the wind. An eastward bend
led them hard by the sward of Mirrormere, and there not far from the roadside
stood a single column broken at the top.
'That is Durin's
Stone!' cried Gimli. 'I cannot pass without turning aside for a moment to look
at the wonder of the dale!'
'Be swift then!' said Aragorn,
looking back towards the Gates. 'The Sun sinks early. The Orcs will not, maybe,
come out till after dusk, but we must be far away before nightfall. The Moon is
almost spent, and it will be dark tonight.'
'Come with me,
Frodo!' cried the dwarf, springing from the road. 'I would not have you go
without seeing Kheled-zaram.' He ran down the long green slope. Frodo followed
slowly, drawn by the still blue water in spite of hurt and weariness; Sam came
up behind.
Beside the standing stone Gimli halted and
looked up. It was cracked and weather-worn, and the faint runes upon its side
could not be read. 'This pillar marks the spot where Durin first looked in the
Mirrormere,' said the dwarf. 'Let us look ourselves once, ere we
go!'
They stooped over the dark water. At first they could
see nothing. Then slowly they saw the forms of the encircling mountains mirrored
in a profound blue, and the peaks were like plumes of white flame above them;
beyond there was a space of sky. There like jewels sunk in the deep shone
glinting stars, though sunlight was in the sky above. Of their own stooping
forms no shadow could be seen.
'O Kheled-zaram fair and
wonderful!' said Gimli. 'There lies the Crown of Durin till he wakes. Farewell!'
He bowed, and turned away, and hastened back up the green-sward to the road
again.
'What did you see?' said Pippin to Sam, but Sam was
too deep in thought to answer.
The road now turned south
and went quickly downwards, running out from between the arms of the dale. Some
way below the mere they came on a deep well of water, clear as crystal, from
which a freshet fell over a stone lip and ran glistening and gurgling down a
steep rocky channel.
'Here is the spring from which the
Silverlode rises.' said Gimli. 'Do not drink of it! It is icy
cold.'
'Soon it becomes a swift river, and it gathers water
from many other mountain-streams,' said Aragorn. 'Our road leads beside it for
many miles. For I shall take you by the road that Gandalf chose, and first I
hope to come to the woods where the Silverlode flows into the Great River-out
yonder.' They looked as he pointed, and before them they could see the stream
leaping down to the trough of the valley, and then running on and away into the
lower lands, until it was lost in a golden haze.
'There lie
the woods of Lothlorien!' said Legolas. 'That is the fairest of all the
dwellings of my people. There are no trees like the trees of that land. For in
the autumn their leaves fall not, but turn to gold. Not till the spring comes
and the new green opens do they fall, and then the boughs are laden with yellow
flowers; and the floor of the wood is golden, and golden is the roof, and its
pillars are of silver, for the bark of the trees is smooth and grey. So still
our songs in Mirkwood say. My heart would be glad if I were beneath the eaves of
that wood, and it were springtime!'
'My heart will be glad,
even in the winter,' said Aragorn. 'But it lies many miles away. Let us
hasten!'
For some time Frodo and Sam managed to keep up
with the others; but Aragorn was leading them at a great pace, and after a while
they lagged behind. They had eaten nothing since the early morning. Sam's cut
was burning like fire, and his head felt light. In spite of the shining sun the
wind seemed chill after the warm darkness of Moria. He shivered. Frodo felt
every step more painful and he gasped for breath.
At last
Legolas turned, and seeing them now far behind, he spoke to Aragorn. The others
halted, and Aragorn ran back, calling to Boromir to come with
him.
'I am sorry, Frodo!' he cried, full of concern. 'So
much has happened this day and we have such need of haste, that I have forgotten
that you were hurt; and Sam too. You should have spoken. We have done nothing to
ease you, as we ought, though all the orcs of Moria were after us. Come now! A
little further on there is a place where we can rest for a little. There I will
do what I can for you. Come, Boromir! We will carry
them.'
Soon afterwards they came upon another stream that
ran down from the west, and joined its bubbling water with the hurrying
Silverlode. Together they plunged over a fall of green-hued stone, and foamed
down into a dell. About it stood fir-trees, short and bent, and its sides were
steep and clothed with harts-tongue and shrubs of whortle-berry. At the bottom
there was a level space through which the stream flowed noisily over shining
pebbles. Here they rested. It was now nearly three hours after noon, and they
had come only a few miles from the Gates. Already the sun was
westering.
While Gimli and the two younger hobbits kindled
a fire of brush– and fir-wood, and drew water, Aragorn tended Sam and Frodo.
Sam's wound was not deep, but it looked ugly, and Aragorn's face was grave as he
examined it. After a moment he looked up with relief.
'Good
luck, Sam!' he said. 'Many have received worse than this in payment for the
slaying of their first orc. The cut is not poisoned, as the wounds of orc-blades
too often are. It should heal well when I have tended it. Bathe it when Gimli
has heated water.'
He opened his pouch and drew out some
withered leaves. 'They are dry and some of their virtue has one, he said, but
here I have still some of the leaves of
athelas that I gathered near
Weathertop. Crush one in the water, and wash the wound clean, and I will bind
it. Now it is your turn, Frodo!'
'I am all right,' said
Frodo, reluctant to have his garments touched. 'All I needed was some food and a
little rest.'
'No!' said Aragorn. 'We must have a look and
see what the hammer and the anvil have done to you. I still marvel that you are
alive at all.' Gently he stripped off Frodo's old jacket and worn tunic, and
gave a gasp of wonder. Then he laughed. The silver corslet shimmered before his
eyes like the light upon a rippling sea. Carefully he took it off and held it
up, and the gems on it glittered like stars, and the sound of the shaken rings
was like the tinkle of rain in a pool.
'Look, my friends!'
he called. 'Here's a pretty hobbit-skin to wrap an elven-princeling in! If it
were known that hobbits had such hides, all the hunters of Middle-earth would be
riding to the Shire.'
'And all the arrows of all the
hunters in the world would be in vain,' said Gimli, gazing at the mail in
wonder. 'It is a mithril-coat. Mithril! I have never seen or heard tell of one
so fair. Is this the coat that Gandalf spoke of? Then he undervalued it. But it
was well given!'
'I have often wondered what you and Bilbo
were doing, so close in his little room,' said Merry. 'Bless the old hobbit! I
love him more than ever. I hope we get a chance of telling him about
it!'
There was a dark and blackened bruise on Frodo's right
side and breast. Under the mail there was a shirt of soft leather, but at one
point the rings had been driven through it into the flesh. Frodo's left side
also was scored and bruised where he had been hurled against the wall. While the
others set the food ready. Aragorn bathed the hurts with water in which athelas
was steeped. The pungent fragrance filled the dell, and all those who stooped
over the steaming water felt refreshed and strengthened. Soon Frodo felt the
pain leave him, and his breath grew easy: though he was stiff and sore to the
touch for many days. Aragorn bound some soft pads of cloth at his
side.
'The mail is marvellously light,' he said. 'Put it on
again, if you can bear it. My heart is glad to know that you have such a coat.
Do not lay it aside, even in sleep, unless fortune brings you where you are safe
for a while; and that will seldom chance while your quest
lasts.'
When they had eaten, the Company got ready to go
on. They put out the fire and hid all traces of it. Then climbing out of the
dell they took to the road again. They had not gone far before the sun sank
behind the westward heights and great shadows crept down the mountain-sides.
Dusk veiled their feet, and mist rose in the hollows. Away in the east the
evening light lay pale upon the dim lands of distant plain and wood. Sam and
Frodo now feeling eased and greatly refreshed were able to go at a fair pace,
and with only one brief halt Aragorn led the Company on for nearly three more
hours.
It was dark. Deep night had fallen. There were many
clear stars, but the fast-waning moon would not be seen till late. Gimli and
Frodo were at the rear, walking softly and not speaking, listening for any sound
upon the road behind. At length Gimli broke the
silence.
'Not a sound but the wind,' he said. 'There are no
goblins near, or my ears are made of wood. It is to be hoped that the Orcs will
be content with driving us from Moria. And maybe that was all their purpose, and
they had nothing else to do with us – with the Ring. Though Orcs will often
pursue foes for many leagues into the plain, if they have a fallen captain to
avenge.'
Frodo did not answer. He looked at Sting, and the
blade was dull. Yet he had heard something, or thought he had. As soon as the
shadows had fallen about them and the road behind was dim, he had heard again
the quick patter of feet. Even now he heard it. He turned swiftly. There were
two tiny gleams of light behind, or for a moment he thought he saw them, but at
once they slipped aside and vanished.
'What is it?' said
the dwarf.
'I don't know,' answered Frodo. 'I thought I
heard feet, and I thought I saw a light-like eyes. I have thought so often,
since we first entered Moria.'
Gimli halted and stooped to
the ground. 'I hear nothing but the night-speech of plant and stone,' he said.
'Come! Let us hurry! The others are out of sight.'
The
night-wind blew chill up the valley to meet them. Before them a wide grey shadow
loomed, and they heard an endless rustle of leaves like poplars in the
breeze.
'Lothlorien!' cried Legolas. 'Lothlorien! We have
come to the eaves of the Golden Wood. Alas that it is
winter!'
Under the night the trees stood tall before them,
arched over the road and stream that ran suddenly beneath their spreading
boughs. In the dim light of the stars their stems were grey, and their quivering
leaves a hint of fallow gold.
'Lothlorien!' said Aragorn.
'Glad I am to hear again the wind in the trees! We are still little more than
five leagues from the Gates, but we can go no further. Here let us hope that the
virtue of the Elves will keep us tonight from the peril that comes
behind.'
'If Elves indeed still dwell here in the darkening
world,' said Gimli.
'It is long since any of my own folk
journeyed hither back to the land whence we wandered in ages long ago,' said
Legolas, 'but we hear that Lorien is not yet deserted, for there is a secret
power here that holds evil from the land. Nevertheless its folk are seldom seen,
and maybe they dwell now deep in the woods and far from the northern
border.'
'Indeed deep in the wood they dwell,' said
Aragorn, and sighed as if some memory stirred in him. 'We must fend for
ourselves tonight. We will go forward a short way, until the trees are all about
us, and then we will turn aside from the path and seek a place to rest
in.'
He stepped forward; but Boromir stood irresolute and
did not follow. 'Is there no other way?' he said.
'What
other fairer way would you desire?' said Aragorn.
'A plain
road, though it led through a hedge of swords,' said Boromir. 'By strange paths
has this Company been led, and so far to evil fortune. Against my will we passed
under the shades of Moria, to our loss. And now we must enter the Golden Wood,
you say. But of that perilous land we have heard in Gondor, and it is said that
few come out who once go in; and of that few none have escaped
unscathed.'
'Say not
unscathed, but if you say
unchanged, then maybe you will speak the truth,' said Aragorn. 'But lore
wanes in Gondor, Boromir, if in the city of those who once were wise they now
speak evil of Lothlorien. Believe what you will, there is no other way for us –
unless you would go back to Moria-gate, or scale the pathless mountains, or swim
the Great River all alone.'
'Then lead on!' said Boromir.
'But it is perilous.'
'Perilous indeed,' said Aragorn,
'fair and perilous; but only evil need fear it, or those who bring some evil
with them. Follow me!'
They had gone little more than a
mile into the forest when they came upon another stream flowing down swiftly
from the tree-clad slopes that climbed back westward towards the mountains. They
heard it splashing over a fall away among the shadows on their right. Its dark
hurrying waters ran across the path before them, and joined the Silverlode in a
swirl of dim pools among the roots of trees.
'Here is
Nimrodel!' said Legolas. 'Of this stream the Silvan Elves made many songs long
ago, and still we sing them in the North, remembering the rainbow on its falls,
and the golden flowers that floated in its foam. All is dark now and the Bridge
of Nimrodel is broken down. I will bathe my feet, for it is said that the water
is healing to the weary.' He went forward and climbed down the deep-cloven bank
and stepped into the stream.
'Follow me!' he cried. 'The
water is not deep. Let us wade across! On the further bank we can rest, and the
sound of the falling water may bring us sleep and forgetfulness of
grief.'
One by one they climbed down and followed Legolas.
For a moment Frodo stood near the brink and let the water flow over his tired
feet. It was cold but its touch was clean, and as he went on and it mounted to
his knees, he felt that the stain of travel and all weariness was washed from
his limbs.
When all the Company had crossed, they sat and
rested and ate a little food; and Legolas told them tales of Lothlorien that the
Elves of Mirkwood still kept in their hearts, of sunlight and starlight upon the
meadows by the Great River before the world was grey.
At
length a silence fell, and they heard the music of the waterfall running sweetly
in the shadows. Almost Frodo fancied that he could hear a voice singing, mingled
with the sound of the water.
'Do you hear the voice of
Nimrodel?' asked Legolas. 'I will sing you a song of the maiden Nimrodel, who
bore the same name as the stream beside which she lived long ago. It is a fair
song in our woodland tongue; but this is how it runs in the Westron Speech, as
some in Rivendell now sing it.' In a soft voice hardly to be heard amid the
rustle of the leaves above them he began:
An Elven-maid there was of old,
A shining star by
day:
Her mantle white was hemmed with gold,
Her shoes of
silver-grey.
A star was bound upon her brows,
A
light was on her hair
As sun upon the golden boughs
In Lorien the
fair.
Her hair was long, her limbs were white,
And
fair she was and free;
And in the wind she went as light
As leaf of
linden-tree.
Beside the falls of Nimrodel,
By water
clear and cool,
Her voice as falling silver fell
Into the shining
pool.
Where now she wanders none can tell,
In
sunlight or in shade;
For lost of yore was Nimrodel
And in the mountains
strayed.
The elven-ship in haven grey
Beneath the
mountain-lee
Awaited her for many a day
Beside the roaring
sea.
A wind by night in Northern lands
Arose, and
loud it cried,
And drove the ship from elven-strands
Across the
streaming tide.
When dawn came dim the land was
lost,
The mountains sinking grey
Beyond the heaving waves that
tossed
Their plumes of blinding spray.
Amroth beheld
the fading shore
Now low beyond the swell,
And cursed the faithless ship
that bore
Him far from Nimrodel.
Of old he was an
Elven-king,
A lord of tree and glen,
When golden were the boughs in
spring
In fair Lothlorien.
From helm to sea they saw
him leap,
As arrow from the string,
And dive into the water deep,
As
mew upon the wing.
The wind was in his flowing
hair,
The foam about him shone;
Afar they saw him strong and fair
Go
riding like a swan.
But from the West has come no
word,
And on the Hither Shore
No tidings Elven-folk have heard
Of
Amroth evermore.
The voice of
Legolas faltered, and the song ceased. 'I cannot sing any more,' he said. 'That
is but a part, for I have forgotten much. It is long and sad, for it tells how
sorrow came upon Lothlorien, Lorien of the Blossom, when the Dwarves awakened
evil in the mountains.'
'But the Dwarves did not make the
evil,' said Gimli.
'I said not so; yet evil came,' answered
Legolas sadly. 'Then many of the Elves of Nimrodel's kindred left their
dwellings and departed and she was lost far in the South, in the passes of the
White Mountains; and she came not to the ship where Amroth her lover waited for
her. But in the spring when the wind is in the new leaves the echo of her voice
may still be heard by the falls that bear her name. And when the wind is in the
South the voice of Amroth comes up from the sea; for Nimrodel flows into
Silverlode, that Elves call Celebrant, and Celebrant into Anduin the Great, and
Anduin flows into the Bay of Belfalas whence the Elves of Lorien set sail. But
neither Nimrodel nor Amroth ever came back.
'It is told
that she had a house built in the branches of a tree that grew near the falls;
for that was the custom of the Elves of Lorien, to dwell in the trees, and maybe
it is so still. Therefore they were called the Galadhrim, the Tree-people. Deep
in their forest the trees are very great. The people of the woods did not delve
in the ground like Dwarves, nor build strong places of stone before the Shadow
came.'
'And even in these latter days dwelling in the trees
might be thought safer than sitting on the ground,' said Gimli. He looked across
the stream to the road that led back to Dimrill Dale, and then up into the roof
of dark boughs above.
'Your words bring good counsel,
Gimli,' said Aragorn. 'We cannot build a house, but tonight we will do as the
Galadhrim and seek refuge in the tree-tops, if we can. We have sat here beside
the road already longer than was wise.'
The Company now
turned aside from the path, and went into the shadow of the deeper woods,
westward along the mountain-stream away from Silverlode. Not far from the falls
of Nimrodel they found a cluster of trees, some of which overhung the stream.
Their great grey trunks were of mighty girth, but their height could not be
guessed.
'I will climb up,' said Legolas. 'I am at home
among trees, by root or bough, though these trees are of a kind strange to me,
save as a name in song.
Mellyrn they are called, and are those that bear
the yellow blossom, but I have never climbed in one. I will see now what is
their shape and way of growth.'
'Whatever it may be,' said
Pippin, 'they will be marvellous trees indeed if they can offer any rest at
night, except to birds. I cannot sleep on a perch!'
'Then
dig a hole in the ground,' said Legolas, 'if that is more after the fashion of
your kind. But you must dig swift and deep, if you wish to hide from Orcs.' He
sprang lightly up from the ground and caught a branch that grew from the trunk
high above his head. But even as he swung there for a moment, a voice spoke
suddenly from the tree-shadows above him.
'
Daro!' it
said in commanding tone, and Legolas dropped back to earth in surprise and fear.
He shrank against the bole of the tree.
'Stand still!' he
whispered to the others. 'Do not move or speak!'
There was
a sound of soft laughter over their heads, and then another clear voice spoke in
an elven-tongue. Frodo could understand little of what was said, for the speech
that the Silvan folk east of the mountains used among themselves was unlike that
of the West. Legolas looked up and answered in the same language.
8 'Who
are they, and what do they say?' asked Merry.
'They're
Elves,' said Sam. 'Can't you hear their voices?'
'Yes, they
are Elves,' said Legolas, 'and they say that you breathe so loud that they could
shoot you in the dark.' Sam hastily put his hand over his mouth. 'But they say
also that you need have no fear. They have been aware of us for a long while.
They heard my voice across the Nimrodel, and knew that I was one of their
Northern kindred, and therefore they did not hinder our crossing; and afterwards
they heard my song. Now they bid me climb up with Frodo; for they seem to have
had some tidings of him and of our journey. The others they ask to wait a little
and to keep watch at the foot of the tree, until they have decided what is to be
done.'
Out of the shadows a ladder was let down: it was
made of rope, silver-grey and glimmering in the dark, and though it looked
slender it proved strong enough to bear many men. Legolas ran lightly up, and
Frodo followed slowly; behind came Sam trying not to breathe loudly. The
branches of the mallorn-tree grew out nearly straight from the trunk, and then
swept upward; but near the top the main stem divided into a crown of many
boughs, and among these they found that there had been built a wooden platform,
or
flet as such things were called in those days: the Elves called it a
talan. It was reached by a round hole in the centre through which the
ladder passed.
When Frodo came at last up on to the flet he
found Legolas seated with three other Elves. They were clad in shadowy-grey, and
could not be seen among the tree-stems, unless they moved suddenly. They stood
up, and one of them uncovered a small lamp that gave out a slender silver beam.
He held it up, looking at Frodo's face, and Sam's. Then he shut off the light
again, and spoke words of welcome in his elven-tongue. Frodo spoke haltingly in
return.
'Welcome!' the Elf then said again in the Common
Language, speaking slowly. 'We seldom use any tongue but our own; for we dwell
now in the heart of the forest, and do not willingly have dealings with any
other folk. Even our own kindred in the North are sundered from us. But there
are some of us still who go abroad for the gathering of news and the watching of
our enemies, and they speak the languages of other lands. I am one. Haldir is my
name. My brothers, Rumil and Orophin, speak little of your
tongue.
'But we have heard rumours of your coming, for the
messengers of Elrond passed by Lorien on their way home up the Dimrill Stair. We
had not heard of hobbits, or halflings, for many a long year, and did not know
that any yet dwelt in Middle-earth. You do not look evil! And since you come
with an Elf of our kindred, we are willing to befriend you, as Elrond asked;
though it is not our custom to lead strangers through our land. But you must
stay here tonight. How many are you?'
'Eight,' said
Legolas. 'Myself, four hobbits; and two men, one of whom, Aragorn, is an
Elf-friend of the folk of Westernesse.'
'The name of
Aragorn son of Arathorn is known in Lorien,' said Haldir, 'and he has the favour
of the Lady. All then is well. But you have yet spoken only of
seven.'
'The eighth is a dwarf,' said
Legolas.
'A dwarf!' said Haldir. 'That is not well. We have
not had dealings with the Dwarves since the Dark Days. They are not permitted in
our land. I cannot allow him to pass.'
'But he is from the
Lonely Mountain, one of Dain's trusty people, and friendly to Elrond,' said
Frodo. 'Elrond himself chose him to be one of our companions, and he has been
brave and faithful.'
The Elves spoke together in soft
voices, and questioned Legolas in their own tongue. 'Very good,' said Haldir at
last. 'We will do this, though it is against our liking. If Aragorn and Legolas
will guard him, and answer for him, he shall pass; but he must go blindfold
through Lothlorien.
'But now we must debate no longer. Your
folk must not remain on the ground. We have been keeping watch on the rivers,
ever since we saw a great troop of Orcs going north toward Moria, along the
skirts of the mountains, many days ago. Wolves are howling on the wood's
borders. If you have indeed come from Moria, the peril cannot be far behind.
Tomorrow early you must go on.
'The four hobbits shall
climb up here and stay with us-we do not fear them! There is another
talan in the next tree. There the others must take refuge. You, Legolas,
must answer to us for them. Call us, if anything is amiss! And have an eye on
that dwarf!'
Legolas at once went down the ladder to take
Haldir's message; and soon afterwards Merry and Pippin clambered up on to the
high flet. They were out of breath and seemed rather
scared.
'There!' said Merry panting. 'We have lugged up
your blankets as well as our own. Strider has hidden all the rest of the baggage
in a deep drift of leaves.'
'You had no need of your
burdens,' said Haldir. 'It is cold in the tree-tops in winter, though the wind
tonight is in the South; but we have food and drink to give you that will drive
away the night-chill, and we have skins and cloaks to
spare.'
The hobbits accepted this second (and far better)
supper very gladly. Then they wrapped themselves warmly, not only in the
fur-cloaks of the Elves, but in their own blankets as well, and tried to go to
sleep. But weary as they were only Sam found that easy to do. Hobbits do not
like heights, and do not sleep upstairs, even when they have any stairs. The
flet was not at all to their liking as a bedroom. It had no walls, not even a
rail; only on one side was there a light plaited screen, which could be moved
and fixed in different places according to the wind.
Pippin
went on talking for a while. 'I hope, if I do go to sleep in this bed-loft, that
I shan't roll off,' he said.
'Once I do get to sleep,' said
Sam, 'i shall go on sleeping, whether I roll off or no. And the less said, the
sooner I'll drop off, if you take my meaning.'
Frodo lay
for some time awake, and looked up at the stars glinting through the pale roof
of quivering leaves. Sam was snoring at his side long before he himself closed
his eyes. He could dimly see the grey forms of two elves sitting motionless with
their arms about their knees, speaking in whispers. The other had gone down to
take up his watch on one of the lower branches. At last lulled by the wind in
the boughs above, and the sweet murmur of the falls of Nimrodel below, Frodo
fell asleep with the song of Legolas running in his
mind.
Late in the night he awoke. The other hobbits were
asleep. The Elves were gone. The sickle Moon was gleaming dimly among the
leaves. The wind was still. A little way off he heard a harsh laugh and the
tread of many feet on the ground below. There was a ring of metal. The sounds
died slowly away, and seemed to go southward, on into the
wood.
A head appeared suddenly through the hole in the
flet. Frodo sat up in alarm and saw that it was a grey-hooded Elf. He looked
towards the hobbits.
'What is it?' said
Frodo.
'
Yrch!' said the Elf in a hissing whisper,
and cast on to the flet the rope-ladder rolled up.
'Orcs!'
said Frodo. 'What are they doing?' But the Elf had
gone.
There were no more sounds. Even the leaves were
silent, and the very falls seemed to be hushed. Frodo sat and shivered in his
wraps. He was thankful that they had not been caught on the ground; but he felt
that the trees offered little protection, except concealment. Orcs were as keen
as hounds on a scent, it was said, but they could also climb. He drew out Sting:
it flashed and glittered like a blue flame and then slowly faded again and grew
dull. In spite of the fading of his sword the feeling of immediate danger did
not leave Frodo, rather it grew stronger. He got up and crawled to the opening
and peered down. He was almost certain that he could hear stealthy movements at
the tree's foot far below.
Not Elves; for the woodland folk
were altogether noiseless in their movements. Then he heard faintly a sound like
sniffing: and something seemed to be scrabbling on the bark of the tree-trunk.
He stared down into the dark, holding his breath.
Something
was now climbing slowly, and its breath came like a soft hissing through closed
teeth. Then coming up, close to the stem, Frodo saw two pale eyes. They stopped
and gazed upward unwinking. Suddenly they turned away, and a shadowy figure
slipped round the trunk of the tree and
vanished.
Immediately afterwards Haldir came climbing
swiftly up through the branches. 'There was something in this tree that I have
never seen before,' he said. 'It was not an orc. It fled as soon as I touched
the tree-stem. It seemed to be wary, and to have some skill in trees, or I might
have thought that it was one of you hobbits.
'I did not
shoot, for I dared not arouse any cries: we cannot risk battle. A strong company
of Orcs has passed. They crossed the Nimrodel – curse their foul feet in its
clean water! – and went on down the old road beside the river. They seemed to
pick up some scent, and they searched the ground for a while near the place
where you halted. The three of us could not challenge a hundred, so we went
ahead and spoke with feigned voices, leading them on into the
wood.
'Orophin has now gone in haste back to our dwellings
to warn our people. None of the Orcs will ever return out of Lorien. And there
will be many Elves hidden on the northern border before another night falls. But
you must take the road south as soon as it is fully
light.'
Day came pale from the East. As the light grew it
filtered through the yellow leaves of the mallorn, and it seemed to the hobbits
that the early sun of a cool summer's morning was shining. Pale-blue sky peeped
among the moving branches. Looking through an opening on the south side of the
flet Frodo saw all the valley of the Silverlode lying like a sea of fallow gold
tossing gently in the breeze.
The morning was still young
and cold when the Company set out again, guided now by Haldir and his brother
Rumil. 'Farewell, sweet Nimrodel!' cried Legolas. Frodo looked back and caught a
gleam of white foam among the grey tree-stems. 'Farewell,' he said. It seemed to
him that he would never hear again a running water so beautiful, for ever
blending its innumerable notes in an endless changeful
music.
They went back to the path that still went on along
the west side of the Silverlode, and for some way they followed it southward.
There were the prints of orc-feet in the earth. But soon Haldir turned aside
into the trees and halted on the bank of the river under their
shadows.
'There is one of my people yonder across the
stream,' he said, 'though you may not see him.' He gave a call like the low
whistle of a bird, and out of a thicket of young trees an Elf stepped, clad in
grey, but with his hood thrown back; his hair glinted like gold in the morning
sun. Haldir skilfully cast over the stream a coil of grey rope, and he caught it
and bound the end about a tree near the bank.
'Celebrant is
already a strong stream here, as you see,' said Haldir, 'and it runs both swift
and deep, and is very cold. We do not set foot in it so far north, unless we
must. But in these days of watchfulness we do not make bridges. This is how we
cross! Follow me!' He made his end of the rope fast about another tree, and then
ran lightly along it, over the river and back again, as if he were on a
road.
'I can walk this path,' said Legolas; 'but the others
have not this skill. Must they swim?'
'No!' said Haldir.
'We have two more ropes. We will fasten them above the other, one shoulder-high,
and another half-high, and holding these the strangers should be able to cross
with care.'
When this slender bridge had been made, the
Company passed over, some cautiously and slowly, others more easily. Of the
hobbits Pippin proved the best for he was sure-footed, and he walked over
quickly, holding only with one hand; but he kept his eyes on the bank ahead and
did not look down. Sam shuffled along, clutching hard, and looking down into the
pale eddying water as if it was a chasm in the
mountains.
He breathed with relief when he was safely
across. 'Live and learn! as my gaffer used to say. Though he was thinking of
gardening, not of roosting like a bird, nor of trying to walk like a spider. Not
even my uncle Andy ever did a trick like that!'
When at
length all the Company was gathered on the east bank of the Silverlode, the
Elves untied the ropes and coiled two of them. Rumil, who had remained on the
other side, drew back the last one, slung it on his shoulder, and with a wave of
his hand went away, back to Nimrodel to keep watch.
'Now,
friends,' said Haldir, 'you have entered the Naith of Lorien or the Gore, as you
would say, for it is the land that lies like a spear-head between the arms of
Silverlode and Anduin the Great. We allow no strangers to spy out the secrets of
the Naith. Few indeed are permitted even to set foot
there.
'As was agreed, I shall here blindfold the eyes of
Gimli the Dwarf. The other may walk free for a while, until we come nearer to
our dwellings, down in Egladil, in the Angle between the
waters.'
This was not at all to the liking of Gimli. 'The
agreement was made without my consent,' he said. 'I will not walk blindfold,
like a beggar or a prisoner. And I am no spy. My folk have never had dealings
with any of the servants of the Enemy. Neither have we done harm to the Elves. I
am no more likely to betray you than Legolas, or any other of my
companions.'
'I do not doubt you,' said Haldir. 'Yet this
is our law. I am not the master of the law, and cannot set it aside. I have done
much in letting you set foot over Celebrant.'
Gimli was
obstinate. He planted his feet firmly apart, and laid his hand upon the haft of
his axe. 'I will go forward free,' he said, 'or I will go back and seek my own
land, where I am known to be true of word, though I perish alone in the
wilderness.'
'You cannot go back,' said Haldir sternly.
'Now you have come thus far, you must be brought before the Lord and the Lady.
They shall judge you, to hold you or to give you leave, as they will. You cannot
cross the rivers again, and behind you there are now secret sentinels that you
cannot pass. You would be slain before you saw them.'
Gimli
drew his axe from his belt. Haldir and his companion bent their bows. 'A plague
on Dwarves and their stiff necks!' said Legolas.
'Come!'
said Aragorn. 'If I am still to lead this Company, you must do as I bid. It is
hard upon the Dwarf to be thus singled out. We will all be blindfold, even
Legolas. That will be best, though it will make the journey slow and
dull.'
Gimli laughed suddenly. 'A merry troop of fools we
shall look! Will Haldir lead us all on a string, like many blind beggars with
one dog? But I will be content, if only Legolas here shares my
blindness.'
'I am an Elf and a kinsman here,' said Legolas,
becoming angry in his turn.
'Now let us cry: "a plague on
the stiff necks of Elves!"' said Aragorn. 'But the Company shall all fare alike.
Come, bind our eyes Haldir!'
'I shall claim full amends for
every fall and stubbed toe, if you do not lead us well,' said Gimli as they
bound a cloth about his eyes.
'You will have no claim,'
said Haldir. 'I shall lead you well, and the paths are smooth and
straight.'
'Alas for the folly of these days!' said
Legolas. 'Here all are enemies of the one Enemy, and yet I must walk blind,
while the sun is merry in the woodland under leaves of
gold!'
'Folly it may seem,' said Haldir. 'Indeed in nothing
is the power of the Dark Lord more clearly shown than in the estrangement that
divides all those who still oppose him. Yet so little faith and trust do we find
now in the world beyond Lothlorien, unless maybe in Rivendell, that we dare not
by our own trust endanger our land. We live now upon an island amid many perils,
and our hands are more often upon the bowstring than upon the
harp.
'The rivers long defended us, but they are a sure
guard no more for the Shadow has crept northward all about us. Some speak of
departing, yet for that it already seems too late. The mountains to the west are
growing evil; to the east the lands are waste, and full of Sauron's creatures;
and it is rumoured that we cannot now safely pass southward through Rohan, and
the mouths of the Great River are watched by the Enemy. Even if we could come to
the shores of the Sea, we should find no longer any shelter there. It is said
that there are still havens of the High Elves, but they are far north and west,
beyond the land of the Halflings. But where that may be, though the Lord and
Lady may know, I do not.'
'You ought at least to guess,
since you have seen us,' said Merry. 'There are Elf-havens west of my land, the
Shire where Hobbits live.'
'Happy folk are Hobbits to dwell
near the shores of the sea!' said Haldir. 'It is long indeed since any of my
folk have looked on it, yet still we remember it in song. Tell me of these
havens as we walk.'
'I cannot,' said Merry. 'I have never
seen them. I have never been out of my own land before. And if I had known what
the world outside was like. I don't think I should have had the heart to leave
it.'
'Not even to see fair Lothlorien?' said Haldir. 'The
world is indeed full of peril, and in it there are many dark places; but still
there is much that is fair, and though in all lands love is now mingled with
grief, it grows perhaps the greater.
'Some there are among
us who sing that the Shadow will draw back and peace shall come again. Yet I do
not believe that the world about us will ever again be as it was of old, or the
light of the Sun as it was aforetime. For the Elves, I fear, it will prove at
best a truce, in which they may pass to the Sea unhindered and leave the
Middle-earth for ever. Alas for Lothlorien that I love! It would be a poor life
in a land where no mallorn grew. But if there are mallorn-trees beyond the Great
Sea, none have reported it.'
As they spoke thus, the
Company filed slowly along the paths in the wood, led by Haldir, while the other
Elf walked behind. They felt the ground beneath their feet smooth and soft, and
after a while they walked more freely, without fear of hurt or fall. Being
deprived of sight, Frodo found his hearing and other senses sharpened. He could
smell the trees and the trodden grass. He could hear many different notes in the
rustle of the leaves overhead, the river murmuring away on his right, and the
thin clear voices of birds in the sky. He felt the sun upon his face and hands
when they passed through an open glade.
As soon as he set
foot upon the far bank of Silverlode a strange feeling had come upon him, and it
deepened as he walked on into the Naith: it seemed to him that he had stepped
over a bridge of time into a corner of the Elder Days, and was now walking in a
world that was no more. In Rivendell there was memory of ancient things; in
Lorien the ancient things still lived on in the waking world. Evil had been seen
and heard there, sorrow had been known; the Elves feared and distrusted the
world outside; wolves were howling on the wood's borders; but on the land of
Lorien no shadow lay.
All that day the Company marched on,
until they felt the cool evening come and heard the early night-wind whispering
among many leaves. Then they rested and slept without fear upon the ground; for
their guides would not permit them to unbind their eyes, and they could not
climb. In the morning they went on again, walking without haste. At noon they
halted, and Frodo was aware that they had passed out under the shining Sun.
Suddenly he heard the sound of many voices all around
him.
A marching host of Elves had come up silently: they
were hastening toward the northern borders to guard against any attack from
Moria; and they brought news, some of which Haldir reported. The marauding orcs
had been waylaid and almost all destroyed; the remnant had fled westward towards
the mountains, and were being pursued. A strange creature also had been seen,
running with bent back and with hands near the ground, like a beast and yet not
of beast-shape. It had eluded capture, and they had not shot it, not knowing
whether it was good or ill, and it had vanished down the Silverlode
southward.
'Also,' said Haldir, 'they bring me a message
from the Lord and Lady of the Galadhrim. You are all to walk free, even the
dwarf Gimli. It seems that the Lady knows who and what is each member of your
Company. New messages have come from Rivendell perhaps.'
He
removed the bandage first from Gimli's eyes. 'Your pardon!' he said, bowing low.
'Look on us now with friendly eyes! Look and be glad, for you are the first
dwarf to behold the trees of the Naith of Lorien since Durin's
Day!'
When his eyes were in turn uncovered, Frodo looked up
and caught his breath. They were standing in an open space. To the left stood a
great mound, covered with a sward of grass as green as Spring-time in the Elder
Days. Upon it, as a double crown, grew two circles of trees: the outer had bark
of snowy white, and were leafless but beautiful in their shapely nakedness; the
inner were mallorn-trees of great height, still arrayed in pale gold. High amid
the branches of a towering tree that stood in the centre of all there gleamed a
white flet. At the feet of the trees, and all about the green hillsides the
grass was studded with small golden flowers shaped like stars. Among them,
nodding on slender stalks, were other flowers, white and palest green: they
glimmered as a mist amid the rich hue of the grass. Over all the sky was blue,
and the sun of afternoon glowed upon the hill and cast long green shadows
beneath the trees.

'Behold! You are come to Cerin
Amroth,' said Haldir. 'For this is the heart of the ancient realm as it was long
ago, and here is the mound of Amroth, where in happier days his high house was
built. Here ever bloom the winter flowers in the unfading grass: the yellow
elanor, and the pale
niphredil. Here we will stay awhile, and come
to the city of the Galadhrim at dusk.'
The others cast
themselves down upon the fragrant grass, but Frodo stood awhile still lost in
wonder. It seemed to him that he had stepped through a high window that looked
on a vanished world. A light was upon it for which his language had no name. All
that he saw was shapely, but the shapes seemed at once clear cut, as if they had
been first conceived and drawn at the uncovering of his eyes, and ancient as if
they had endured for ever. He saw no colour but those he knew, gold and white
and blue and green, but they were fresh and poignant, as if he had at that
moment first perceived them and made for them names new and wonderful. In winter
here no heart could mourn for summer or for spring. No blemish or sickness or
deformity could be seen in anything that grew upon the earth. On the land of
Lorien there was no stain.
He turned and saw that Sam was
now standing beside him, looking round with a puzzled expression, and rubbing
his eyes as if he was not sure that he was awake. 'It's sunlight and bright day,
right enough,' he said. 'I thought that Elves were all for moon and stars: but
this is more elvish than anything I ever heard tell of. I feel as if I was
inside a song, if you take my meaning.'
Haldir
looked at them, and he seemed indeed to take the meaning of both thought and
word. He smiled. 'You feel the power of the Lady of the Galadhrim,' he said.
'Would it please you to climb with me up Cerin
Amroth?'
They followed him as he stepped lightly up the
grass-clad slopes. Though he walked and breathed, and about him living leaves
and flowers were stirred by the same cool wind as fanned his face, Frodo felt
that he was in a timeless land that did not fade or change or fall into
forgetfulness. When he had gone and passed again into the outer world, still
Frodo the wanderer from the Shire would walk there, upon the grass among
elanor and
niphredil in fair Lothlorien.
They
entered the circle of white trees. As they did so the South Wind blew upon Cerin
Amroth and sighed among the branches. Frodo stood still, hearing far off great
seas upon beaches that had long ago been washed away, and sea-birds crying whose
race had perished from the earth.
Haldir had gone on and
was now climbing to the high flet. As Frodo prepared to follow him, he laid his
hand upon the tree beside the ladder: never before had he been so suddenly and
so keenly aware of the feel and texture of a tree's skin and of the life within
it. He felt a delight in wood and the touch of it, neither as forester nor as
carpenter; it was the delight of the living tree itself.
As
he stepped out at last upon the lofty platform, Haldir took his hand and turned
him toward the South. 'Look this way first!' he said.
Frodo
looked and saw, still at some distance, a hill of many mighty trees, or a city
of green towers: which it was he could not tell. Out of it, it seemed to him
that the power and light came that held all the land in sway. He longed suddenly
to fly like a bird to rest in the green city. Then he looked eastward and saw
all the land of Lorien running down to the pale gleam of Anduin, the Great
River. He lifted his eyes across the river and all the light went out, and he
was back again in the world he knew. Beyond the river the land appeared flat and
empty, formless and vague, until far away it rose again like a wall, dark and
drear. The sun that lay on Lothlorien had no power to enlighten the shadow of
that distant height.
'There lies the fastness of Southern
Mirkwood,' said Haldir. 'It is clad in a forest of dark fir, where the trees
strive one against another and their branches rot and wither. In the midst upon
a stony height stands Dol Guldur, where long the hidden Enemy had his dwelling.
We fear that now it is inhabited again, and with power sevenfold. A black cloud
lies often over it of late. In this high place you may see the two powers that
are opposed one to another; and ever they strive now in thought, but whereas the
light perceives the very heart of the darkness, its own secret has not been
discovered. Not yet.' He turned and climbed swiftly down, and they followed
him.
At the hill's foot Frodo found Aragorn, standing still
and silent as a tree; but in his hand was a small golden bloom of elanor, and a
light was in his eyes. He was wrapped in some fair memory: and as Frodo looked
at him he knew that he beheld things as they once had been in this same place.
For the grim years were removed from the face of Aragorn, and he seemed clothed
in white, a young lord tall and fair; and he spoke words in the Elvish tongue to
one whom Frodo could not see
. Arwen vanimelda, namarie! he said, and then
he drew a breath, and returning out of his thought he looked at Frodo and
smiled.
'Here is the heart of Elvendom on earth,' he said,
'and here my heart dwells ever, unless there be a light beyond the dark roads
that we still must tread, you and I. Come with me!' And taking Frodo's hand in
his, he left the hill of Cerin Amroth and came there never again as living
man.
Chapter 7
The Mirror of
Galadriel
The sun was sinking behind the mountains, and the shadows
were deepening in the woods, when they went on again. Their paths now went into
thickets where the dusk had already gathered. Night came beneath the trees as
they walked, and the Elves uncovered their silver
lamps.
Suddenly they came out into the open again and found
themselves under a pale evening sky pricked by a few early stars. There was a
wide treeless space before them, running in a great circle and bending away on
either hand. Beyond it was a deep fosse lost in soft shadow, but the grass upon
its brink was green, as if it glowed still in memory of the sun that had gone.
Upon the further side there rose to a great height a green wall encircling a
green hill thronged with mallorn-trees taller than any they had yet seen in all
the land. Their height could not be guessed, but they stood up in the twilight
like living towers. In their many-tiered branches and amid their ever-moving
leaves countless lights were gleaming, green and gold and silver. Haldir turned
towards the Company.
'Welcome to Caras Galadhon!' he said.
'Here is the city of the Galadhrim where dwell the Lord Celeborn and Galadriel
the Lady of Lorien. But we cannot enter here, for the gates do not look
northward. We must go round to the southern side, and the way is not short, for
the city is great.'
There was a road paved with white stone
running on the outer brink of the fosse. Along this they went westward, with the
city ever climbing up like a green cloud upon their left; and as the night
deepened more lights sprang forth, until all the hill seemed afire with stars.
They came at last to a white bridge, and crossing found the great gates of the
city: they faced south-west, set between the ends of the encircling wall that
here overlapped, and they were tall and strong, and hung with many
lamps.
Haldir knocked and spoke, and the gates opened
soundlessly; but of guards Frodo could see no sign. The travellers passed
within, and the gates shut behind them. They were in a deep lane between the
ends of the wall, and passing quickly through it they entered the City of the
Trees. No folk could they see, nor hear any feet upon the paths; but there were
many voices, about them, and in the air above. Far away up on the hill they
could hear the sound of singing falling from on high like soft rain upon
leaves.
They went along many paths and climbed many stairs,
until they came to the high places and saw before them amid a wide lawn a
fountain shimmering. It was lit by silver lamps that swung from the boughs of
trees, and it fell into a basin of silver, from which a white stream spilled.
Upon the south side of the lawn there stood the mightiest of all the trees; its
great smooth bole gleamed like grey silk, and up it towered, until its first
branches, far above, opened their huge limbs under shadowy clouds of leaves.
Beside it a broad white ladder stood, and at its foot three Elves were seated.
They sprang up as the travellers approached, and Frodo saw that they were tall
and clad in grey mail, and from their shoulders hung long white
cloaks.
'Here dwell Celeborn and Galadriel,' said Haldir.
'It is their wish that you should ascend and speak with
them.'
One of the Elf-wardens then blew a clear note on a
small horn, and it was answered three times from far above. 'I will go first,'
said Haldir. 'Let Frodo come next and with him Legolas. The others may follow as
they wish. It is a long climb for those that are not accustomed to such stairs,
but you may rest upon the way.'
As he climbed slowly up
Frodo passed many flets: some on one side, some on another, and some set about
the bole of the tree, so that the ladder passed through them. At a great height
above the ground he came to a wide
talan, like the deck of a great ship.
On it was built a house, so large that almost it would have served for a hall of
Men upon the earth. He entered behind Haldir, and found that he was in a chamber
of oval shape, in the midst of which grew the trunk of the great mallorn, now
tapering towards its crown, and yet making still a pillar of wide
girth.
The chamber was filled with a soft light; its walls
were green and silver and its roof of gold. Many Elves were seated there. On two
chairs beneath the bole of the tree and canopied by a living bough there sat,
side by side, Celeborn and Galadriel. They stood up to greet their guests, after
the manner of Elves, even those who were accounted mighty kings. Very tall they
were, and the Lady no less tall than the Lord; and they were grave and
beautiful. They were clad wholly in white; and the hair of the Lady was of deep
gold, and the hair of the Lord Celeborn was of silver long and bright; but no
sign of age was upon them, unless it were in the depths of their eyes; for these
were keen as lances in the starlight, and yet profound, the wells of deep
memory.
Haldir led Frodo before them, and the Lord welcomed
him in his own tongue. The Lady Galadriel said no word but looked long upon his
face.
'Sit now beside my chair, Frodo of the Shire!' said
Celeborn. 'When all have come we will speak together.'
Each
of the companions he greeted courteously by name as they entered. 'Welcome
Aragorn son of Arathorn!' he said. 'It is eight and thirty years of the world
outside since you came to this land; and those years lie heavy on you. But the
end is near, for good or ill. Here lay aside your burden for a
while!'
'Welcome son of Thranduil! Too seldom do my kindred
journey hither from the North.'
'Welcome Gimli son of
Gloin! It is long indeed since we saw one of Durin's folk in Caras Galadhon. But
today we have broken our long law. May it be a sign that though the world is now
dark better days are at hand, and that friendship shall be renewed between our
peoples.' Gimli bowed low.
When all the guests were seated
before his chair the Lord looked at them again. 'Here there are eight,' he said.
'Nine were to set out: so said the messages. But maybe there has been some
change of counsel that we have not heard. Elrond is far away, and darkness
gathers between us, and all this year the shadows have grown
longer.'
'Nay, there was no change of counsel,' said the
Lady Galadriel speaking for the first time. Her voice was clear and musical, but
deeper than woman's wont. 'Gandalf the Grey set out with the Company, but he did
not pass the borders of this land. Now tell us where he is; for I much desired
to speak with him again. But I cannot see him from afar, unless he comes within
the fences of Lothlorien: a grey mist is about him, and the ways of his feet and
of his mind are hidden from me.'
'Alas!' said Aragorn.
'Gandalf the Grey fell into shadow. He remained in Moria and did not
escape.'
At these words all the Elves in the hall cried
aloud in grief and amazement. 'These are evil tidings,' said Celeborn, 'the most
evil that have been spoken here in long years full of grievous deeds.' He turned
to Haldir. 'Why has nothing of this been told to me before?' he asked in the
Elven-tongue.
'We have not spoken to Haldir of our deeds or
our purpose,' said Legolas. 'At first we were weary and danger was too close
behind and afterwards we almost forgot our grief for a time, as we walked in
gladness on the fair paths of Lorien.'
'Yet our grief is
great and our loss cannot be mended,' said Frodo. 'Gandalf was our guide, and he
led us through Moria; and when our escape seemed beyond hope he saved us, and he
fell.'
'Tell us now the full tale!' said
Celeborn.
Then Aragorn recounted all that had happened upon
the pass of Caradhras, and in the days that followed; and he spoke of Balin and
his book, and the fight in the Chamber of Mazarbul, and the fire, and the narrow
bridge, and the coming of the Terror. 'An evil of the Ancient World it seemed,
such as I have never seen before,' said Aragorn. 'It was both a shadow and a
flame, strong and terrible.'
'It was a Balrog of Morgoth,'
said Legolas; 'of all elf-banes the most deadly, save the One who sits in the
Dark Tower.'
'Indeed I saw upon the bridge that which
haunts our darkest dreams – I saw Durin's Bane,' said Gimli in a low voice,
and dread was in his eyes.
'Alas!' said Celeborn. 'We long
have feared that under Caradhras a terror slept. But had I known that the
Dwarves had stirred up this evil in Moria again, l would have forbidden you to
pass the northern borders, you and all that went with you. And if it were
possible, one would say that at the last Gandalf fell from wisdom into folly,
going needlessly into the net of Moria.'
'He would be rash
indeed that said that thing,' said Galadriel gravely. 'Needless were none of the
deeds of Gandalf in life. Those that followed him knew not his mind and cannot
report his full purpose. But however it may be with the guide, the followers are
blameless. Do not repent of your welcome to the Dwarf. If our folk had been
exiled long and far from Lothlorien, who of the Galadhrim, even Celeborn the
Wise, would pass nigh and would not wish to look upon their ancient home, though
it had become an abode of dragons?
'Dark is the water of
Kheled-zaram, and cold are the springs of Kibil-nala, and fair were the
many-pillared halls of Khazad-dum in Elder Days before the fall of mighty kings
beneath the stone.' She looked upon Gimli, who sat glowering and sad, and she
smiled. And the Dwarf, hearing the names given in his own ancient tongue, looked
up and met her eyes; and it seemed to him that he looked suddenly into the heart
of an enemy and saw there love and understanding. Wonder came into his face, and
then he smiled in answer.
He rose clumsily and bowed in
dwarf-fashion, saying: 'Yet more fair is the living land of Lorien, and the Lady
Galadriel is above all the jewels that lie beneath the
earth!'
There was a silence. At length Celeborn spoke
again. 'I did not know that your plight was so evil,' he said. 'Let Gimli forget
my harsh words: I spoke in the trouble of my heart. I will do what I can to aid
you, each according to his wish and need, but especially that one of the little
folk who bears the burden.'
'Your quest is known to us,'
said Galadriel, looking at Frodo. 'But we will not here speak of it more openly.
Yet not in vain will it prove, maybe, that you came to this land seeking aid, as
Gandalf himself plainly purposed. For the Lord of the Galadhrim is accounted the
wisest of the Elves of Middle-earth, and a giver of gifts beyond the power of
kings. He has dwelt in the West since the days of dawn, and I have dwelt with
him years uncounted; for ere the fall of Nargothrond or Gondolin I passed over
the mountains, and together through ages of the world we have fought the long
defeat.
'I it was who first summoned the White Council. And
if my designs had not gone amiss, it would have been governed by Gandalf the
Grey, and then mayhap things would have gone otherwise. But even now there is
hope left. I will not give you counsel, saying do this, or do that. For not in
doing or contriving, nor in choosing between this course and another, can I
avail; but only in knowing what was and is, and in part also what shall be. But
this I will say to you: your Quest stands upon the edge of a knife. Stray but a
little and it will fail, to the ruin of all. Yet hope remains while all the
Company is true.'
And with that word she held them with her
eyes, and in silence looked searchingly at each of them in turn. None save
Legolas and Aragorn could long endure her glance. Sam quickly blushed and hung
his head.
At length the Lady Galadriel released them from
her eyes, and she smiled. 'Do not let your hearts be troubled,' she said.
'Tonight you shall sleep in peace.' Then they sighed and felt suddenly weary, as
those who have been questioned long and deeply, though no words had been spoken
openly.
'Go now!' said Celeborn. 'You are worn with sorrow
and much toil. Even if your Quest did not concern us closely, you should have
refuge in this City, until you were healed and refreshed. Now you shall rest,
and we will not speak of your further road for a
while.'
That night the Company slept upon the ground, much
to the satisfaction of the hobbits. The Elves spread for them a pavilion among
the trees near the fountain, and in it they laid soft couches; then speaking
words of peace with fair elvish voices they left them. For a little while the
travellers talked of their night before in the tree-tops, and of their day's
journey, and of the Lord and Lady; for they had not yet the heart to look
further back.
'What did you blush for, Sam?' said Pippin.
'You soon broke down. Anyone would have thought you had a guilty conscience. I
hope it was nothing worse than a wicked plot to steal one of my
blankets.'
'I never thought no such thing,' answered Sam,
in no mood for jest. 'If you want to know, I felt as if I hadn't got nothing on,
and I didn't like it. She seemed to be looking inside me and asking me what I
would do if she gave me the chance of flying back home to the Shire to a nice
little hole with – with a bit of garden of my own.'
'That's
funny,' said Merry. 'Almost exactly what I felt myself; only, only well, I don't
think I'll say any more,' he ended lamely.
All of them, it
seemed, had fared alike: each had felt that he was offered a choice between a
shadow full of fear that lay ahead, and something that he greatly desired: clear
before his mind it lay, and to get it he had only to turn aside from the road
and leave the Quest and the war against Sauron to
others.
'And it seemed to me, too,' said Gimli, 'that my
choice would remain secret and known only to myself.'
'To
me it seemed exceedingly strange,' said Boromir. 'Maybe it was only a test, and
she thought to read our thoughts for her own good purpose; but almost I should
have said that she was tempting us, and offering what she pretended to have the
power to give. It need not be said that I refused to listen. The Men of Minas
Tirith are true to their word.' But what he thought that the Lady had offered
him Boromir did not tell.
And as for Frodo, he would not
speak, though Boromir pressed him with questions. 'She held you long in her
gaze, Ring-bearer,' he said.
'Yes,' said Frodo, 'but
whatever came into my mind then I will keep there.'
'Well,
have a care!' said Boromir. 'I do not feel too sure of this Elvish Lady and her
purposes.'
'Speak no evil of the Lady Galadriel!' said
Aragorn sternly. 'You know not what you say. There is in her and in this land no
evil, unless a man bring it hither himself. Then let him beware! But tonight I
shall sleep without fear for the first time since I left Rivendell. And may I
sleep deep, and forget for a while my grief! I am weary in body and in heart.'
He cast himself down upon his couch and fell at once into a long
sleep.
The others soon did the same, and no sound or dream
disturbed their slumber. When they woke they found that the light of day was
broad upon the lawn before the pavilion, and the fountain rose and fell
glittering in the sun.
They remained some days in
Lothlorien, so far as they could tell or remember. All the while that they dwelt
there the sun shone clear, save for a gentle rain that fell at times, and passed
away leaving all things fresh and clean. The air was cool and soft, as if it
were early spring, yet they felt about them the deep and thoughtful quiet of
winter. It seemed to them that they did little but eat and drink and rest, and
walk among the trees; and it was enough.
They had not seen
the Lord and Lady again, and they had little speech with the Elven-folk; for few
of these knew or would use the Westron tongue. Haldir had bidden them farewell
and gone back again to the fences of the North, where great watch was now kept
since the tidings of Moria that the Company had brought. Legolas was away much
among the Galadhrim, and after the first night he did not sleep with the other
companions, though he returned to eat and talk with them. Often he took Gimli
with him when he went abroad in the land, and the others wondered at this
change.
Now as the companions sat or walked together they
spoke of Gandalf, and all that each had known and seen of him came clear before
their minds. As they were healed of hurt and weariness of body the grief of
their loss grew more keen. Often they heard nearby Elvish voices singing, and
knew that they were making songs of lamentation for his fall, for they caught
his name among the sweet sad words that they could not
understand.
Mithrandir, Mithrandir sang the Elves,
O Pilgrim Grey! For so they loved to call him. But if Legolas was with
the Company, he would not interpret the songs for them, saying that he had not
the skill, and that for him the grief was still too near, a matter for tears and
not yet for song.
It was Frodo who first put something of
his sorrow into halting words. He was seldom moved to make song or rhyme; even
in Rivendell he had listened and had not sung himself, though his memory was
stored with many things that others had made before him. But now as he sat
beside the fountain in Lorien and heard about him the voices of the Elves, his
thought took shape in a song that seemed fair to him; yet when he tried to
repeat it to Sam only snatches remained, faded as a handful of withered
leaves.
When evening in the Shire was grey
his footsteps on the
Hill were heard;
before the dawn he went away
on journey long without a
word.
From Wilderland to Western shore,
from
northern waste to southern hill,
through dragon-lair and hidden door
and
darkling woods he walked at will.
With Dwarf and
Hobbit, Elves and Men,
with mortal and immortal folk,
with bird on bough
and beast in den,
in their own secret tongues he
spoke.
A deadly sword, a healing hand,
a back
that bent beneath its load;
a trumpet-voice, a burning brand,
a weary
pilgrim on the road.
A lord of wisdom throned he
sat,
swift in anger, quick to laugh;
an old man in a battered hat
who
leaned upon a thorny staff.
He stood upon the bridge
alone
and Fire and Shadow both defied;
his staff was broken on the
stone,
in Khazad-dum his wisdom
died.
'Why, you'll be beating Mr.
Bilbo next!' said Sam.
'No, I am afraid not,' said Frodo.
'But that is the best I can do yet.'
'Well, Mr. Frodo, if
you do have another go, I hope you'll say a word about his fireworks,' said Sam.
'Something like this:
The finest rockets ever seen:
they burst in stars of blue
and green,
or after thunder golden showers
came falling like a rain of
flowers.
Though that doesn't do them
justice by a long road.'
'No, I'll leave that to you, Sam.
Or perhaps to Bilbo. But – well, I can't talk of it any more. I can't bear to
think of bringing the news to him.'
One evening Frodo and
Sam were walking together in the cool twilight. Both of them felt restless
again. On Frodo suddenly the shadow of parting had fallen: he knew somehow that
the time was very near when he must leave Lothlorien.
'What
do you think of Elves now, Sam?' he said. 'I asked you the same question once
before – it seems a very long while ago; but you have seen more of them since
then.'
'I have indeed!' said Sam. 'And I reckon there's
Elves and Elves. They're all elvish enough, but they're not all the same. Now
these folk aren't wanderers or homeless, and seem a bit nearer to the likes of
us: they seem to belong here, more even than Hobbits do in the Shire. Whether
they've made the land, or the land's made them, it's hard to say, if you take my
meaning. It's wonderfully quiet here. Nothing seems to be going on, and nobody
seems to want it to. If there's any magic about, it's right down deep, where I
can't lay my hands on it, in a manner of speaking.'
'You
can see and feel it everywhere,' said Frodo.
'Well,' said
Sam, 'you can't see nobody working it. No fireworks like poor Gandalf used to
show. I wonder we don't see nothing of the Lord and Lady in all these days. I
fancy now that
she could do some wonderful things, if she had a mind. I'd
dearly love to see some Elf-magic, Mr. Frodo!'
'I
wouldn't,' said Frodo. 'I am content. And I don't miss Gandalf's fireworks, but
his bushy eyebrows, and his quick temper, and his
voice.'
'You're right,' said Sam. 'And don't think I'm
finding fault. I've often wanted to see a bit of magic like what it tells of in
old tales, but I've never heard of a better land than this. It's like being at
home and on a holiday at the same time, if you understand me. I don't want to
leave. All the same, I'm beginning to feel that if we've got to go on, then we'd
best get it over.
'
It's the job that's never started as
takes longest to finish, as my old gaffer used to say. And I don't reckon
that these folk can do much more to help us, magic or no. It's when we leave
this land that we shall miss Gandalf worse, I'm
thinking.'
'I am afraid that's only too true, Sam,' said
Frodo. 'Yet I hope very much that before we leave we shall see the Lady of the
Elves again.'
Even as he spoke, they saw, as if she came in
answer to their words, the Lady Galadriel approaching. Tall and white and fair
she walked beneath the trees. She spoke no word, but beckoned to
them.
Turning aside, she led them toward the southern
slopes of the hill of Caras Galadhon, and passing through a high green hedge
they came into an enclosed garden. No trees grew there, and it lay open to the
sky. The evening star had risen and was shining with white fire above the
western woods. Down a long flight of steps the Lady went into a deep green
hollow, through which ran murmuring the silver stream that issued from the
fountain on the hill. At the bottom, upon a low pedestal carved like a branching
tree, stood a basin of silver, wide and shallow, and beside it stood a silver
ewer.
With water from the stream Galadriel filled the basin
to the brim, and breathed on it, and when the water was still again she spoke.
'Here is the Mirror of Galadriel,' she said. 'I have brought you here so that
you may look in it, if you will.'
The air was very still,
and the dell was dark, and the Elf-lady beside him was tall and pale. 'What
shall we look for, and what shall we see?' asked Frodo, filled with
awe.
'Many things I can command the Mirror to reveal,' she
answered, 'and to some I can show what they desire to see. But the Mirror will
also show things unbidden, and those are often stranger and more profitable than
things which we wish to behold. What you will see, if you leave the Mirror free
to work, I cannot tell. For it shows things that were, and things that are,
things that yet may be. But which it is that he sees, even the wisest cannot
always tell. Do you wish to look?'
Frodo did not
answer.
'And you?' she said, turning to Sam. 'For this is
what your folk would call magic, I believe; though I do not understand clearly
what they mean; and they seem also to use the same word of the deceits of the
Enemy. But this, if you will, is the magic of Galadriel. Did you not say that
you wished to see Elf-magic?'
'I did,' said Sam, trembling
a little between fear and curiosity. 'I'll have a peep, Lady, if you're
willing.'
'And I'd not mind a glimpse of what's going on at
home,' he said in an aside to Frodo. 'It seems a terrible long time that I've
been away. But there, like as not I'll only see the stars, or something that I
won't understand.'
'Like as not,' said the Lady with a
gentle laugh. 'But come, you shall look and see what you may. Do not touch the
water!'
Sam climbed up on the foot of the pedestal and
leaned over the basin. The water looked hard and dark. Stars were reflected in
it.
'There's only stars, as I thought,' he said. Then he
gave a low gasp, for the stars went out. As if a dark veil had been withdrawn,
the Mirror grew grey, and then clear. There was sun shining, and the branches of
trees were waving and tossing in the wind. But before Sam could make up his mind
what it was that he saw, the light faded; and now he thought he saw Frodo with a
pale face lying fast asleep under a great dark cliff. Then he seemed to see
himself going along a dim passage, and climbing an endless winding stair. It
came to him suddenly that he was looking urgently for something, but what it was
he did not know. Like a dream the vision shifted and went back, and he saw the
trees again. But this time they were not so close, and he could see what was
going on: they were not waving in the wind, they were falling, crashing to the
ground.
'Hi!' cried Sam in an outraged voice. 'There's that
Ted Sandyman a-cutting down trees as he shouldn't. They didn't ought to be
felled: it's that avenue beyond the Mill that shades the road to Bywater. I wish
I could get at Ted, and I'd fell
him!'
But now Sam
noticed that the Old Mill had vanished, and a large red-brick building was being
put up where it had stood. Lots of folk were busily at work. There was a tall
red chimney nearby. Black smoke seemed to cloud the surface of the
Mirror.
'There's some devilry at work in the Shire,' he
said. 'Elrond knew what he was about when he wanted to send Mr. Merry back.'
Then suddenly Sam gave a cry and sprang away. 'I can't stay here,' he said
wildly. 'I must go home. They've dug up Bagshot Row, and there's the poor old
gaffer going down the Hill with his bits of things on a barrow. I must go
home!'
'You cannot go home alone,' said the Lady. 'You did
not wish to go home without your master before you looked in the Mirror, and yet
you knew that evil things might well be happening in the Shire. Remember that
the Mirror shows many things, and not all have yet come to pass. Some never come
to be, unless those that behold the visions turn aside from their path to
prevent them. The Mirror is dangerous as a guide of
deeds.'
Sam sat on the ground and put his head in his
hands. 'I wish I had never come here, and I don't want to see no more magic,' he
said and fell silent. After a moment he spoke again thickly, as if struggling
with tears. 'No, I'll go home by the long road with Mr. Frodo, or not at all,'
he said. 'But I hope I do get back some day. If what I've seen turns out true,
somebody's going to catch it hot!'
'Do you now wish to
look, Frodo?' said the Lady Galadriel. 'You did not wish to see Elf-magic and
were content.'
'Do you advise me to look?' asked
Frodo.
'No,' she said. 'I do not counsel you one way or the
other. I am not a counsellor. You may learn something, and whether what you see
be fair or evil, that may be profitable, and yet it may not. Seeing is both good
and perilous. Yet I think, Frodo, that you have courage and wisdom enough for
the venture, or I would not have brought you here. Do as you will!'

'I will look,' said Frodo, and he
climbed on the pedestal and bent over the dark water. At once the Mirror cleared
and he saw a twilit land. Mountains loomed dark in the distance against a pale
sky. A long grey road wound back out of sight. Far away a figure came slowly
down the road, faint and small at first, but growing larger and clearer as it
approached. Suddenly Frodo realized that it reminded him of Gandalf. He almost
called aloud the wizard's name, and then he saw that the figure was clothed not
in grey but in white, in a white that shone faintly in the dusk; and in its hand
there was a white staff. The head was so bowed that he could see no face, and
presently the figure turned aside round a bend in the road and went out of the
Mirror's view. Doubt came into Frodo's mind: was this a vision of Gandalf on one
of his many lonely journeys long ago, or was it
Saruman?
The vision now changed. Brief and small but very
vivid he caught a glimpse of Bilbo walking restlessly about his room. The table
was littered with disordered papers; rain was beating on the
windows.
Then there was a pause, and after it many swift
scenes followed that Frodo in some way knew to be parts of a great history in
which he had become involved. The mist cleared and he saw a sight which he had
never seen before but knew at once: the Sea. Darkness fell. The sea rose and
raged in a great storm. Then he saw against the Sun, sinking blood-red into a
wrack of clouds, the black outline of a tall ship with torn sails riding up out
of the West. Then a wide river flowing through a populous city. Then a white
fortress with seven towers. And then again a ship with black sails, but now it
was morning again, and the water rippled with light, and a banner bearing the
emblem of a white tree shone in the sun. A smoke as of fire and battle arose,
and again the sun went down in a burning red that faded into a grey mist; and
into the mist a small ship passed away, twinkling with lights. It vanished, and
Frodo sighed and prepared to draw away.
But suddenly the
Mirror went altogether dark, as dark as if a hole had opened in the world of
sight, and Frodo looked into emptiness. In the black abyss there appeared a
single Eye that slowly grew. until it filled nearly all the Mirror. So terrible
was it that Frodo stood rooted, unable to cry out or to withdraw his gaze. The
Eye was rimmed with fire, but was itself glazed, yellow as a cat's, watchful and
intent, and the black slit of its pupil opened on a pit, a window into
nothing.
Then the Eye began to rove, searching this way and
that; and Frodo knew with certainty and horror that among the many things that
it sought he himself was one. But he also knew that it could not see him-not
yet, not unless he willed it. The Ring that hung upon its chain about his neck
grew heavy, heavier than a great stone, and his head was dragged downwards. The
Mirror seemed to be growing hot and curls of steam were rising from the water.
He was slipping forward.
'Do not touch the water!' said the
Lady Galadriel softly. The vision faded, and Frodo found that he was looking at
the cool stars twinkling in the silver basin. He stepped back shaking all over
and looked at the Lady.
'I know what it was that you last
saw,' she said; 'for that is also in my mind. Do not be afraid! But do not think
that only by singing amid the trees, nor even by the slender arrows of
elven-bows, is this land of Lothlorien maintained and defended against its
Enemy. I say to you, Frodo, that even as I speak to you, I perceive the Dark
Lord and know his mind, or all of his mind that concerns the Elves. And he
gropes ever to see me and my thought. But still the door is
closed!'
She lifted up her white arms, and spread out her
hands towards the East in a gesture of rejection and denial. Earendil, the
Evening Star, most beloved of the Elves, shone clear above. So bright was it
that the figure of the Elven-lady cast a dim shadow on the ground. Its rays
glanced upon a ring about her finger; it glittered like polished gold overlaid
with silver light, and a white stone in it twinkled as if the Even-star had come
down to rest upon her hand. Frodo gazed at the ring with awe; for suddenly it
seemed to him that he understood.
'Yes,' she said, divining
his thought, 'it is not permitted to speak of it, and Elrond could not do so.
But it cannot be hidden from the Ring-bearer, and one who has seen the Eye.
Verily it is in the land of Lorien upon the finger of Galadriel that one of the
Three remains. This is Nenya, the Ring of Adamant, and I am its
keeper.
'He suspects, but he does not know – not yet. Do
you not see now wherefore your coming is to us as the footstep of Doom? For if
you fail, then we are laid bare to the Enemy. Yet if you succeed, then our power
is diminished, and Lothlorien will fade, and the tides of Time will sweep it
away. We must depart into the West, or dwindle to a rustic folk of dell and
cave, slowly to forget and to be forgotten.'
Frodo bent his
head. 'And what do you wish?' he said at last.
'That what
should be shall be,' she answered. 'The love of the Elves for their land and
their works is deeper than the deeps of the Sea, and their regret is undying and
cannot ever wholly be assuaged. Yet they will cast all away rather than submit
to Sauron: for they know him now. For the fate of Lothlorien you are not
answerable but only for the doing of your own task. Yet I could wish, were it of
any avail, that the One Ring had never been wrought, or had remained for ever
lost.'
'You are wise and fearless and fair, Lady
Galadriel,' said Frodo. 'I will give you the One Ring, if you ask for it. It is
too great a matter for me.'
Galadriel laughed with a sudden
clear laugh. 'Wise the Lady Galadriel may be,' she said, 'yet here she has met
her match in courtesy. Gently are you revenged for my testing of your heart at
our first meeting. You begin to see with a keen eye. I do not deny that my heart
has greatly desired to ask what you offer. For many long years I had pondered
what I might do, should the Great Ring come into my hands, and behold! it was
brought within my grasp. The evil that was devised long ago works on in many
ways, whether Sauron himself stands or falls. Would not that have been a noble
deed to set to the credit of his Ring, if I had taken it by force or fear from
my guest?
'And now at last it comes. You will give me the
Ring freely! In place of the Dark Lord you will set up a Queen. And I shall not
be dark, but beautiful and terrible as the Morning and the Night! Fair as the
Sea and the Sun and the Snow upon the Mountain! Dreadful as the Storm and the
Lightning! Stronger than the foundations of the earth. All shall love me and
despair!'
She lifted up her hand and from the ring that she
wore there issued a great light that illuminated her alone and left all else
dark. She stood before Frodo seeming now tall beyond measurement, and beautiful
beyond enduring, terrible and worshipful. Then she let her hand fall, and the
light faded, and suddenly she laughed again, and lo! she was shrunken: a slender
elf-woman, clad in simple white, whose gentle voice was soft and
sad.
'I pass the test,' she said. 'I will diminish, and go
into the West and remain Galadriel.'
They stood for a long
while in silence. At length the Lady spoke again. 'Let us return!' she said. 'In
the morning you must depart for now we have chosen, and the tides of fate are
flowing.'
'I would ask one thing before we go,' said Frodo,
'a thing which I often meant to ask Gandalf in Rivendell. I am permitted to wear
the One Ring: why cannot I see all the others and know the thoughts of those
that wear them?'
'You have not tried,' she said. 'Only
thrice have you set the Ring upon your finger since you knew what you possessed.
Do not try! It would destroy you. Did not Gandalf tell you that the rings give
power according to the measure of each possessor? Before you could use that
power you would need to become far stronger, and to train your will to the
domination of others. Yet even so, as Ring-bearer and as one that has borne it
on finger and seen that which is hidden, your sight is grown keener. You have
perceived my thought more clearly than many that are accounted wise. You saw the
Eye of him that holds the Seven and the Nine. And did you not see and recognize
the ring upon my finger? Did you see my ring?' she asked turning again to
Sam.
'No, Lady,' he answered. 'To tell you the truth, I
wondered what you were talking about. I saw a star through your finger. But if
you'll pardon my speaking out, I think my master was right. I wish you'd take
his Ring. You'd put things to rights. You'd stop them digging up the gaffer and
turning him adrift. You'd make some folk pay for their dirty
work.'
'I would,' she said. 'That is how it would begin.
But it would not stop with that, alas! We will not speak more of it. Let us
go!'
Chapter 8
Farewell to
Lorien
That night the Company was again summoned to the chamber
of Celeborn, and there the Lord and Lady greeted them with fair words. At length
Celeborn spoke of their departure.
'Now is the time,' he
said, 'when those who wish to continue the Quest must harden their hearts to
leave this land. Those who no longer wish to go forward may remain here, for a
while. But whether they stay or go, none can be sure of peace. For we are come
now to the edge of doom. Here those who wish may await the oncoming of the hour
till either the ways of the world lie open again, or we summon them to the last
need of Lorien. Then they may return to their own lands, or else go to the long
home of those that fall in battle.'
There was a silence.
'They all resolved to go forward,' said Galadriel looking in their
eyes.
'As for me,' said Boromir, 'my way home lies onward
and not back.'
'That is true,' said Celeborn, 'but is all
this Company going with you to Minas Tirith?'
'We have not
decided our course,' said Aragorn. 'Beyond Lothlorien I do not know what Gandalf
intended to do. Indeed I do not think that even he had any clear
purpose.'
'Maybe not,' said Celeborn, 'yet when you leave
this land, you can no longer forget the Great River. As some of you know well,
it cannot be crossed by travellers with baggage between Lorien and Gondor, save
by boat. And are not the bridges of Osgiliath broken down and all the landings
held now by the Enemy?
'On which side will you journey? The
way to Minas Tirith lies upon this side, upon the west; but the straight road of
the Quest lies east of the River, upon the darker shore. Which shore will you
now take?'
'If my advice is heeded, it will be the western
shore, and the way to Minas Tirith,' answered Boromir. 'But I am not the leader
of the Company.' The others said nothing, and Aragorn looked doubtful and
troubled.
'I see that you do not yet know what to do,' said
Celeborn. 'It is not my part to choose for you; but I will help you as I may.
There are some among you who can handle boats: Legolas, whose folk know the
swift Forest River; and Boromir of Gondor; and Aragorn the
traveller.'
'And one Hobbit!' cried Merry. 'Not all of us
look on boats as wild horses. My people live by the banks of the
Brandywine.'
'That is well,' said Celeborn. 'Then I will
furnish your Company with boats. They must be small and light, for if you go far
by water, there are places where you will be forced to carry them. You will come
to the rapids of Sarn Gebir, and maybe at last to the great falls of Rauros
where the River thunders down from Nen Hithoel; and there are other perils.
Boats may make your journey less toilsome for a while. Yet they will not give
you counsel: in the end you must leave them and the River, and turn west – or
east.'
Aragorn thanked Celeborn many times. The gift of
boats comforted him much, not least because there would now be no need to decide
his course for some days. The others, too, looked more hopeful. Whatever perils
lay ahead, it seemed better to float down the broad tide of Anduin to meet them
than to plod forward with bent backs. Only Sam was doubtful: he at any rate
still thought boats as bad as wild horses, or worse, and not all the dangers
that he had survived made him think better of them.
'All
shall be prepared for you and await you at the haven before noon tomorrow,' said
Celeborn. 'I will send my people to you in the morning to help you make ready
for the journey. Now we will wish you all a fair night and untroubled
sleep.'
'Good night, my friends!' said Galadriel. 'Sleep in
peace! Do not trouble your hearts overmuch with thought of the road tonight.
Maybe the paths that you each shall tread are already laid before your feet,
though you do not see them. Good night!'
The Company now
took their leave and returned to their pavilion. Legolas went with them, for
this was to be their last night in Lothlorien, and in spite of the words of
Galadriel they wished to take counsel together.
For a long
time they debated what they should do, and how it would be best to attempt the
fulfilling of their purpose with the Ring: but they came to no decision. It was
plain that most of them desired to go first to Minas Tirith, and to escape at
least for a while from the terror of the Enemy. They would have been willing to
follow a leader over the River and into the shadow of Mordor; but Frodo spoke no
word, and Aragorn was still divided in his mind.
His own
plan, while Gandalf remained with them, had been to go with Boromir, and with
his sword help to deliver Gondor. For he believed that the message of the dreams
was a summons, and that the hour had come at last when the heir of Elendil
should come forth and strive with Sauron for the mastery. But in Moria the
burden of Gandalf had been laid on him; and he knew that he could not now
forsake the Ring, if Frodo refused in the end to go with Boromir. And yet what
help could he or any of the Company give to Frodo, save to walk blindly with him
into the darkness?
'I shall go to Minas Tirith, alone if
need be, for it is my duty,' said Boromir; and after that he was silent for a
while, sitting with his eyes fixed on Frodo, as if he was trying to read the
halfling's thoughts. At length he spoke again, softly, as if he was debating
with himself. 'If you wish only to destroy the Ring,' he said, 'then there is
little use in war and weapons; and the Men of Minas Tirith cannot help. But if
you wish to destroy the armed might of the Dark Lord, then it is folly to go
without force into his domain; and folly to throw away.' He paused suddenly, as
if he had become aware that he was speaking his thoughts aloud. 'It would be
folly to throw lives away, I mean,' he ended. 'It is a choice between defending
a strong place and walking openly into the arms of death. At least, that is how
I see it.'
Frodo caught something new and strange in
Boromir's glance, and he looked hard at him. Plainly Boromir's thought was
different from his final words. It would be folly to throw away: what? The Ring
of Power? He had said something like this at the Council, but then he had
accepted the correction of Elrond. Frodo looked at Aragorn, but he seemed deep
in his own thought and made no sign that he had heeded Boromir's words. And so
their debate ended. Merry and Pippin were already asleep, and Sam was nodding.
The night was growing old.
In the morning, as they were
beginning to pack their slender goods, Elves that could speak their tongue came
to them and brought them many gifts of food and clothing for the journey. The
food was mostly in the form of very thin cakes, made of a meal that was baked a
light brown on the outside, and inside was the colour of cream. Gimli took up
one of the cakes and looked at it with a doubtful
eye.
'
Cram,' he said under his breath, as he broke
off a crisp corner and nibbled at it. His expression quickly changed, and he ate
all the rest of the cake with relish.
'No more, no more!'
cried the Elves laughing. 'You have eaten enough already for a long day's
march.'
'I thought it was only a kind of
cram, such
as the Dale-men make for journeys in the wild,' said the
Dwarf.
'So it is,' they answered. 'But we call it
lembas or waybread, and it is more strengthening than any food made by
Men, and it is more pleasant than
cram, by all
accounts.'
'Indeed it is,' said Gimli. 'Why it is better
than the honey-cakes of the Beornings, and that is great praise, for the
Beornings are the best bakers that I know of; but they are none too willing to
deal out their cakes to travellers in these days. You are kindly
hosts!'
'All the same, we bid you spare the food,' they
said. 'Eat little at a time, and only at need. For these things are given to
serve you when all else fails. The cakes will keep sweet for many many days, if
they are unbroken and left in their leaf-wrappings, as we have brought them. One
will keep a traveller on his feet for a day of long labour, even if he be one of
the tall Men of Minas Tirith.'
The Elves next unwrapped and
gave to each of the Company the clothes they had brought. For each they had
provided a hood and cloak, made according to his size, of the light but warm
silken stuff that the Galadhrim wove. It was hard to say of what colour they
were: grey with the hue of twilight under the trees they seemed to be; and yet
if they were moved, or set in another light, they were green as shadowed leaves,
or brown as fallow fields by night, dusk-silver as water under the stars. Each
cloak was fastened about the neck with a brooch like a green leaf veined with
silver.
'Are these magic cloaks?' asked Pippin, looking at
them with wonder.
'I do not know what you mean by that,'
answered the leader of the Elves. 'They are fair garments, and the web is good,
for it was made in this land. They are elvish robes certainly, if that is what
you mean. Leaf and branch, water and stone: they have the hue and beauty of all
these things under the twilight of Lorien that we love; for we put the thought
of all that we love into all that we make. Yet they are garments, not armour,
and they will not turn shaft or blade. But they should serve you well: they are
light to wear, and warm enough or cool enough at need. And you will find them a
great aid in keeping out of the sight of unfriendly eyes, whether you walk among
the stones or the trees. You are indeed high in the favour of the Lady! For she
herself and her maidens wove this stuff; and never before have we clad strangers
in the garb of our own people.'
After their morning meal
the Company said farewell to the lawn by the fountain. Their hearts were heavy;
for it was a fair place, and it had become like home to them, though they could
not count the days and nights that they had passed there. As they stood for a
moment looking at the white water in the sunlight, Haldir came walking towards
them over the green grass of the glade. Frodo greeted him with
delight.
'I have returned from the Northern Fences,' said
the Elf, 'and I am sent now to be your guide again. The Dimrill Dale is full of
vapour and clouds of smoke, and the mountains are troubled. There are noises in
the deeps of the earth. If any of you had thought of returning northwards to
your homes, you would not have been able to pass that way. But come! Your path
now goes south.'
As they walked through Caras Galadhon the
green ways were empty; but in the trees above them many voices were murmuring
and singing. They themselves went silently. At last Haldir led them down the
southward slopes of the hill, and they came again to the great gate hung with
lamps, and to the white bridge; and so they passed out and left the city of the
Elves. Then they turned away from the paved road and took a path that went off
into a deep thicket of mallorn-trees, and passed on, winding through rolling
woodlands of silver shadow, leading them ever down, southwards and eastwards,
towards the shores of the River.
They had gone some ten
miles and noon was at hand when they came on a high green wall. Passing through
an opening they came suddenly out of the trees. Before them lay a long lawn of
shining grass, studded with golden
elanor that glinted in the sun. The
lawn ran out into a narrow tongue between bright margins: on the right and west
the Silverlode flowed glittering; on the left and east the Great River rolled
its broad waters, deep and dark. On the further shores the woodlands still
marched on southwards as far as the eye could see, but all the banks were bleak
and bare. No mallorn lifted its gold-hung boughs beyond the Land of
Lorien.
On the bank of the Silverlode, at some distance up
from the meeting of the streams, there was a hythe of white stones and white
wood. By it were moored many boats and barges. Some were brightly painted, and
shone with silver and gold and green, but most were either white or grey. Three
small grey boats had been made ready for the travellers, and in these the Elves
stowed their goods. And they added also coils of rope, three to each boat.
Slender they looked, but strong, silken to the touch, grey of hue like the
elven-cloaks.
'What are these?' asked Sam, handling one
that lay upon the greensward.
'Ropes indeed!' answered an
Elf from the boats. 'Never travel far without a rope! And one that is long and
strong and light. Such are these. They may be a help in many
needs.'
'You don't need to tell me that!' said Sam. 'I came
without any and I've been worried ever since. But I was wondering what these
were made of, knowing a bit about rope-making: it's in the family as you might
say.'
'They are made of
hithlain,' said the Elf,
'but there is no time now to instruct you in the art of their making. Had we
known that this craft delighted you, we could have taught you much. But now
alas! unless you should at some time return hither, you must be content with our
gift. May it serve you well!'
'Come!' said Haldir. 'All is
now ready for you. Enter the boats! But take care at
first!'
'Heed the words!' said the other Elves. 'These
boats are light-built, and they are crafty and unlike the boats of other folk.
They will not sink, lade them as you will; but they are wayward if mishandled.
It would be wise if you accustomed yourselves to stepping in and out, here where
there is a landing-place, before you set off
downstream.'
The Company was arranged in this way: Aragorn,
Frodo, and Sam were in one boat; Boromir, Merry, and Pippin in another; and in
the third were Legolas and Gimli, who had now become fast friends. In this last
boat most of the goods and packs were stowed. The boats were moved and steered
with short-handled paddles that had broad leaf-shaped blades. When all was ready
Aragorn led them on a trial up the Silverlode. The current was swift and they
went forward slowly. Sam sat in the bows, clutching the sides, and looking back
wistfully to the shore. The sunlight glittering on the water dazzled his eyes.
As they passed beyond the green field of the Tongue, the trees drew down to the
river's brink. Here and there golden leaves tossed and floated on the rippling
stream. The air was very bright and still, and there was a silence, except for
the high distant song of larks.
They turned a sharp bend in
the river, and there, sailing proudly down the stream toward them, they saw a
swan of great size. The water rippled on either side of the white breast beneath
its curving neck. Its beak shone like burnished gold, and its eyes glinted like
jet set in yellow stones; its huge white wings were half lifted. A music came
down the river as it drew nearer; and suddenly they perceived that it was a
ship, wrought and carved with elven-skill in the likeness of a bird. Two elves
clad in white steered it with black paddles. In the midst of the vessel sat
Celeborn, and behind him stood Galadriel, tall and white; a circlet of golden
flowers was in her hair, and in her hand she held a harp, and she sang. Sad and
sweet was the sound of her voice in the cool clear air:
I sang of leaves, of leaves of gold, and leaves of gold there
grew:
Of wind I sang, a wind there came and in the branches blew.
Beyond
the Sun, beyond the Moon, the foam was on the Sea,
And by the strand of
Ilmarin there grew a golden Tree.
Beneath the stars of Ever-eve in Eldamar
it shone,
In Eldamar beside the walls of Elven Tirion.
There long the
golden leaves have grown upon the branching years,
While here beyond the
Sundering Seas now fall the Elven-tears.
O Lorien! The Winter comes, the
bare and leafless Day;
The leaves are falling in the stream, the River
flows away.
O Lorien! Too long I have dwelt upon this Hither Shore
And
in a fading crown have twined the golden elanor.
But if of ships I now
should sing, what ship would come to me,
What ship would bear me ever back
across so wide a Sea?
Aragorn stayed
his boat as the Swan-ship drew alongside. The Lady ended her song and greeted
them. 'We have come to bid you our last farewell,' she said, 'and to speed you
with blessings from our land.'
'Though you have been our
guests,' said Celeborn, 'you have not yet eaten with us, and we bid you,
therefore, to a parting feast, here between the flowing waters that will bear
you far from Lorien.'
The Swan passed on slowly to the
hythe, and they turned their boats and followed it. There in the last end of
Egladil upon the green grass the parting feast was held; but Frodo ate and drank
little, heeding only the beauty of the Lady and her voice. She seemed no longer
perilous or terrible, nor filled with hidden power. Already she seemed to him,
as by men of later days Elves still at times are seen: present and yet remote, a
living vision of that which has already been left far behind by the flowing
streams of Time.
After they had eaten and drunk, sitting
upon the grass, Celeborn spoke to them again of their journey, and lifting his
hand he pointed south to the woods beyond the Tongue.
'As
you go down the water,' he said, 'you will find that the trees will fail, and
you will come to a barren country. There the River flows in stony vale amid high
moors, until at last after many leagues it comes to the tall island of the
Tindrock, that we call Tol Brandir. There it casts its arms about the steep
shores of the isle, and falls then with a great noise and smoke over the
cataracts of Rauros down into the Nindalf, the Wetwang as it is called in your
tongue. That is a wide region of sluggish fen where the stream becomes tortuous
and much divided. There the Entwash flows in by many mouths from the Forest of
Fangorn in the west. About that stream, on this side of the Great River, lies
Rohan. On the further side are the bleak hills of the Emyn Muil. The wind blows
from the East there, for they look out over the Dead Marshes and the Noman-lands
to Cirith Gorgor and the black gates of Mordor.
'Boromir,
and any that go with him seeking Minas Tirith, will do well to leave the Great
River above Rauros and cross the Entwash before it finds the marshes. Yet they
should not go too far up that stream, nor risk becoming entangled in the Forest
of Fangorn. That is a strange land, and is now little known. But Boromir and
Aragorn doubtless do not need this warning.'
'Indeed we
have heard of Fangorn in Minas Tirith,' said Boromir. 'But what I have heard
seems to me for the most part old wives' tales, such as we tell to our children.
All that lies north of Rohan is now to us so far away that fancy can wander
freely there. Of old Fangorn lay upon the borders of our realm; but it is now
many lives of men since any of us visited it, to prove or disprove the legends
that have come down from distant years.
'I have myself been
at whiles in Rohan, but I have never crossed it northwards. When I was sent out
as a messenger, I passed through the Gap by the skirts of the White Mountains,
and crossed the Isen and the Greyflood into Northerland. A long and wearisome
journey. Four hundred leagues I reckoned it, and it took me many months; for I
lost my horse at Tharbad, at the fording of the Greyflood. After that journey,
and the road I have trodden with this Company, I do not much doubt that I shall
find a way through Rohan, and Fangorn too, if need
be.'
'Then I need say no more,' said Celeborn. 'But do not
despise the lore that has come down from distant years; for oft it may chance
that old wives keep in memory word of things that once were needful for the wise
to know.'
Now Galadriel rose from the grass, and taking a
cup from one of her maidens she filled it with white mead and gave it to
Celeborn.
'Now it is time to drink the cup of farewell,'
she said. 'Drink, Lord of the Galadhrim! And let not your heart be sad though
night must follow noon, and already our evening draweth
nigh.'
Then she brought the cup to each of the Company, and
bade them drink and farewell. But when they had drunk she commanded them to sit
again on the grass, and chairs were set for her and for Celeborn. Her maidens
stood silent about her, and a while she looked upon her guests. At last she
spoke again.
'We have drunk the cup of parting,' she said,
'and the shadows fall between us. But before you go, I have brought in my ship
gifts which the Lord and Lady of the Galadhrim now offer you in memory of
Lothlorien.' Then she called to each in turn.
'Here is the
gift of Celeborn and Galadriel to the leader of your Company,' she said to
Aragorn, and she gave him a sheath that had been made to fit his sword. It was
overlaid with a tracery of flowers and leaves wrought of silver and gold, and on
it were set in elven runes formed of many gems the name Anduril and the lineage
of the sword.
'The blade that is drawn from this sheath
shall not be stained or broken even in defeat,' she said. 'But is there aught
else that you desire of me at our parting? For darkness will flow between us,
and it may be that we shall not meet again, unless it be far hence upon a road
that has no returning.'
And Aragorn answered: 'Lady, you
know all my desire, and long held in keeping the only treasure that I seek. Yet
it is not yours to give me, even if you would; and only through darkness shall I
come to it.'
'Yet maybe this will lighten your heart,' said
Galadriel, 'for it was left in my care to be given to you, should you pass
through this land.' Then she lifted from her lap a great stone of a clear green,
set in a silver brooch that was wrought in the likeness of an eagle with
outspread wings; and as she held it up the gem flashed like the sun shining
through the leaves of spring. 'This stone I gave to Celebrian my daughter, and
she to hers; and now it comes to you as a token of hope. In this hour take the
name that was foretold for you, Elessar, the Elfstone of the house of
Elendil!'
Then Aragorn took the stone and pinned the brooch
upon his breast, and those who saw him wondered; for they had not marked before
how tall and kingly he stood, and it seemed to them that many years of toil had
fallen from his shoulders. 'For the gifts that you have given me I thank you,'
he said, 'O Lady of Lorien of whom were sprung Celebrian and Arwen Evenstar.
What praise could I say more?'
The Lady bowed her head, and
she turned then to Boromir, and to him she gave a belt of gold; and to Merry and
Pippin she gave small silver belts, each with a clasp wrought like a golden
flower. To Legolas she gave a bow such as the Galadhrim used, longer and stouter
than the bows of Mirkwood, and strung with a string of elf-hair. With it went a
quiver of arrows.
'For you little gardener and lover of
trees,' she said to Sam, 'I have only a small gift.' She put into his hand a
little box of plain grey wood, unadorned save for a single silver rune upon the
lid. 'Here is set G for Galadriel,' she said; 'but also it may stand for garden
in your tongue. In this box there is earth from my orchard, and such blessing as
Galadriel has still to bestow is upon it. It will not keep you on your road, nor
defend you against any peril; but if you keep it and see your home again at
last, then perhaps it may reward you. Though you should find all barren and laid
waste, there will be few gardens in Middle-earth that will bloom like your
garden, if you sprinkle this earth there. Then you may remember Galadriel, and
catch a glimpse far off of Lorien, that you have seen only in our winter. For
our spring and our summer are gone by, and they will never be seen on earth
again save in memory.'
Sam went red to the ears and
muttered something inaudible, as he clutched the box and bowed as well as he
could.
'And what gift would a Dwarf ask of the Elves?' said
Galadriel turning to Gimli.
'None, Lady,' answered Gimli.
'It is enough for me to have seen the Lady of the Galadhrim, and to have heard
her gentle words.'
'Hear all ye Elves!' she cried to those
about her. 'Let none say again that Dwarves are grasping and ungracious! Yet
surely, Gimli son of Gloin, you desire something that I could give? Name it, I
bid you! You shall not be the only guest without a
gift.'
'There is nothing, Lady Galadriel,' said Gimli,
bowing low and stammering. 'Nothing, unless it might be – unless it is permitted
to ask, nay, to name a single strand of your hair, which surpasses the gold of
the earth as the stars surpass the gems of the mine. I do not ask for such a
gift. But you commanded me to name my desire.'
The Elves
stirred and murmured with astonishment, and Celeborn gazed at the Dwarf in
wonder, but the Lady smiled. 'It is said that the skill of the Dwarves is in
their hands rather than in their tongues,' she said, 'yet that is not true of
Gimli. For none have ever made to me a request so bold and yet so courteous. And
how shall I refuse, since I commanded him to speak? But tell me, what would you
do with such a gift?'
'Treasure it, Lady,' he answered, 'in
memory of your words to me at our first meeting. And if ever I return to the
smithies of my home, it shall be set in imperishable crystal to be an heirloom
of my house, and a pledge of good will between the Mountain and the Wood until
the end of days.'
Then the Lady unbraided one of her long
tresses, and cut off three golden hairs, and laid them in Gimli's hand. 'These
words shall go with the gift,' she said. 'I do not foretell, for all foretelling
is now vain: on the one hand lies darkness, and on the other only hope. But if
hope should not fail, then I say to you, Gimli son of Gloin, that your hands
shall flow with gold, and yet over you gold shall have no
dominion.
'And you, Ring-bearer,' she said, turning to
Frodo. 'I come to you last who are not last in my thoughts. For you I have
prepared this.' She held up a small crystal phial: it glittered as she moved it,
and rays of white light sprang from her hand. 'In this phial,' she said, 'is
caught the light of Earendil's star, set amid the waters of my fountain. It will
shine still brighter when night is about you. May it be a light to you in dark
places, when all other lights go out. Remember Galadriel and her
Mirror!'
Frodo took the phial, and for a moment as it shone
between them, he saw her again standing like a queen, great and beautiful, but
no longer terrible. He bowed, but found no words to
say.
Now the Lady arose, and Celeborn led them back to the
hythe. A yellow noon lay on the green land of the Tongue, and the water
glittered with silver. All at last was made ready. The Company took their places
in the boats as before. Crying farewell, the Elves of Lorien with long grey
poles thrust them out into the flowing stream, and the rippling waters bore them
slowly away. The travellers sat still without moving or speaking. On the green
bank near to the very point of the Tongue the Lady Galadriel stood alone and
silent. As they passed her they turned and their eyes watched her slowly
floating away from them. For so it seemed to them: Lorien was slipping backward,
like a bright ship masted with enchanted trees, sailing on to forgotten shores,
while they sat helpless upon the margin of the grey and leafless
world.
Even as they gazed, the Silverlode passed out into
the currents of the Great River, and their boats turned and began to speed
southwards. Soon the white form of the Lady was small and distant. She shone
like a window of glass upon a far hill in the westering sun, or as a remote lake
seen from a mountain: a crystal fallen in the lap of the land. Then it seemed to
Frodo that she lifted her arms in a final farewell, and far but piercing-clear
on the following wind came the sound of her voice singing. But now she sang in
the ancient tongue of the Elves beyond the Sea, and he did not understand the
words: fair was the music, but it did not comfort him.
Yet
as is the way of Elvish words, they remained graven in his memory, and long
afterwards he interpreted them, as well as he could: the language was that of
Elven-song and spoke of things little known on Middle-earth.
Ai! laurie lantar lassi surinen,
Yeni unotime ve ramar
aldaron!
Yeni ve linte yuldar avanier
mi oromardi
lisse-miruvoreva
Andune pella, Vardo tellumar
nu luini yassen tintilar i
eleni
omaryo airetari-lirinen.
Si man i yulma
nin enquantuva?
An si Tintalle Varda
Oiolosseo
ve fanyar maryat Elentari ortane
ar ilye tier undulave
lumbule;
ar sindanoriello caita mornie
i falmalinnar imbe met, ar
hisie
untupa Calaciryo miri oiale.
Si vanwa na, Romello vanwa,
Valimar!
Namarie! Nai hiruvalye Valimar.
Nai
elye hiruva. Namarie!
'Ah! like gold
fall the leaves in the wind, long years numberless as the wings of trees! The
long years have passed like swift draughts of the sweet mead in lofty halls
beyond the West, beneath the blue vaults of Varda wherein the stars tremble in
the song of her voice, holy and queenly. Who now shall refill the cup for me?
For now the Kindler, Varda, the Queen of the Stars, from Mount Everwhite has
uplifted her hands like clouds, and all paths are drowned deep in shadow; and
out of a grey country darkness lies on the foaming waves between us, and mist
covers the jewels of Calacirya for ever. Now lost, lost to those from the East
is Valimar! Farewell! Maybe thou shalt find Valimar. Maybe even thou shalt find
it. Farewell!' Varda is the name of that Lady whom the Elves in these lands of
exile name Elbereth.
Suddenly the River swept round a bend,
and the banks rose upon either side, and the light of Lorien was hidden. To that
fair land Frodo never came again.
The travellers now turned
their faces to the journey; the sun was before them, and their eyes were
dazzled, for all were filled with tears. Gimli wept
openly.
'I have looked the last upon that which was
fairest,' he said to Legolas his companion. 'Henceforward I will call nothing
fair, unless it be her gift.' He put his hand to his
breast.
'Tell me, Legolas, why did I come on this Quest?
Little did I know where the chief peril lay! Truly Elrond spoke, saying that we
could not foresee what we might meet upon our road. Torment in the dark was the
danger that I feared, and it did not hold me back. But I would not have come,
had I known the danger of light and joy. Now I have taken my worst wound in this
parting, even if I were to go this night straight to the Dark Lord. Alas for
Gimli son of Gloin!'
'Nay!' said Legolas. 'Alas for us all!
And for all that walk the world in these after-days. For such is the way of it:
to find and lose, as it seems to those whose boat is on the running stream. But
I count you blessed, Gimli son of Gloin: for your loss you suffer of your own
free will, and you might have chosen otherwise. But you have not forsaken your
companions, and the least reward that you shall have is that the memory of
Lothlorien shall remain ever clear and unstained in your heart, and shall
neither fade nor grow stale.'
'Maybe,' said Gimli, 'and I
thank you for your words. True words doubtless; yet all such comfort is cold.
Memory is not what the heart desires. That is only a mirror, be it clear as
Kheled-zaram. Or so says the heart of Gimli the Dwarf. Elves may see things
otherwise. Indeed I have heard that for them memory is more like to the waking
world than to a dream. Not so for Dwarves.
'But let us talk
no more of it. Look to the boat! She is too low in the water with all this
baggage, and the Great River is swift. I do not wish to drown my grief in cold
water.' He took up a paddle, and steered towards the western bank, following
Aragorn's boat ahead, which had already moved out of the middle
stream.
So the Company went on their long way, down the
wide hurrying waters, borne ever southwards. Bare woods stalked along either
bank, and they could not see any glimpse of the lands behind. The breeze died
away and the River flowed without a sound. No voice of bird broke the silence.
The sun grew misty as the day grew old, until it gleamed in a pale sky like a
high white pearl. Then it faded into the West, and dusk came early, followed by
a grey and starless night. Far into the dark quiet hours they floated on,
guiding their boats under the overhanging shadows of the western woods. Great
trees passed by like ghosts, thrusting their twisted thirsty roots through the
mist down into the water. It was dreary and cold. Frodo sat and listened to the
faint lap and gurgle of the River fretting among the tree-roots and driftwood
near the shore, until his head nodded and he fell into an uneasy
sleep.
Chapter 9
The Great River
Frodo was roused by Sam. He found that he was lying, well
wrapped, under tall grey-skinned trees in a quiet corner of the woodlands on the
west bank of the Great River, Anduin. He had slept the night away, and the grey
of morning was dim among the bare branches. Gimli was busy with a small fire
near at hand.
They started again before the day was broad.
Not that most of the Company were eager to hurry southwards: they were content
that the decision, which they must make at latest when they came to Rauros and
the Tindrock Isle, still lay some days ahead; and they let the River bear them
on at its own pace, having no desire to hasten towards the perils that lay
beyond, whichever course they took in the end. Aragorn let them drift with the
stream as they wished, husbanding their strength against weariness to come. But
he insisted that at least they should start early each day and journey on far
into the evening; for he felt in his heart that time was pressing, and he feared
that the Dark Lord had not been idle while they lingered in
Lorien.
Nonetheless they saw no sign of an enemy that day,
nor the next. The dull grey hours passed without event. As the third day of
their voyage wore on the lands changed slowly: the trees thinned and then failed
altogether. On the eastern bank to their left they saw long formless slopes
stretching up and away toward the sky; brown and withered they looked, as if
fire had passed over them, leaving no living blade of green: an unfriendly waste
without even a broken tree or a bold stone to relieve the emptiness. They had
come to the Brown Lands that lay, vast and desolate, between Southern Mirkwood
and the hills of the Emyn Muil. What pestilence or war or evil deed of the Enemy
had so blasted all that region even Aragorn could not
tell.
Upon the west to their right the land was treeless
also, but it was flat, and in many places green with wide plains of grass. On
this side of the River they passed forests of great reeds, so tall that they
shut out all view to the west, as the little boats went rustling by along their
fluttering borders. Their dark withered plumes bent and tossed in the light cold
airs, hissing softly and sadly. Here and there through openings Frodo could
catch sudden glimpses of rolling meads, and far beyond them hills in the sunset,
and away on the edge of sight a dark line, where marched the southernmost ranks
of the Misty Mountains.
There was no sign of living moving
things, save birds. Of these there were many: small fowl whistling and piping in
the reeds, but they were seldom seen. Once or twice the travellers heard the
rush and whine of swan-wings, and looking up they saw a great phalanx streaming
along the sky.
'Swans!' said Sam. 'And mighty big ones
too!'
'Yes,' said Aragorn, 'and they are black
swans.'
'How wide and empty and mournful all this country
looks!' said Frodo. 'I always imagined that as one journeyed south it got warmer
and merrier, until winter was left behind for ever.'
'But
we have not journeyed far south yet,' answered Aragorn. 'It is still winter, and
we are far from the sea. Here the world is cold until the sudden spring, and we
may yet have snow again. Far away down in the Bay of Belfalas, to which Anduin
runs, it is warm and merry, maybe, or would be but for the Enemy. But here we
are not above sixty leagues, I guess, south of the Southfarthing away in your
Shire, hundreds of long miles yonder. You are looking now south-west across the
north plains of the Riddermark, Rohan the land of the Horse-lords. Ere long we
shall come to the mouth of the Limlight that runs down from Fangorn to join the
Great River. That is the north boundary of Rohan; and of old all that lay
between Limlight and the White Mountains belonged to the Rohirrim. It is a rich
and pleasant land, and its grass has no rival; but in these evil days folk do
not dwell by the River or ride often to its shores. Anduin is wide, yet the orcs
can shoot their arrows far across the stream; and of late, it is said, they have
dared to cross the water and raid the herds and studs of
Rohan.'
Sam looked from bank to bank uneasily. The trees
had seemed hostile before, as if they harboured secret eyes and lurking dangers;
now he wished that the trees were still there. He felt that the Company was too
naked, afloat in little open boats in the midst of shelterless lands, and on a
river that was the frontier of war.
In the next day or two,
as they went on, borne steadily southwards, this feeling of insecurity grew on
all the Company. For a whole day they took to their paddles and hastened
forward. The banks slid by. Soon the River broadened and grew more shallow; long
stony beaches lay upon the east, and there were gravel-shoals in the water, so
that careful steering was needed. The Brown Lands rose into bleak wolds, over
which flowed a chill air from the East. On the other side the meads had become
rolling downs of withered grass amidst a land of fen and tussock. Frodo
shivered, thinking of the lawns and fountains, the clear sun and gentle rains of
Lothlorien. There was little speech and no laughter in any of the boats. Each
member of the Company was busy with his own thoughts.
The
heart of Legolas was running under the stars of a summer night in some northern
glade amid the beech-woods; Gimli was fingering gold in his mind, and wondering
if it were fit to be wrought into the housing of the Lady's gift. Merry and
Pippin in the middle boat were ill at ease, for Boromir sat muttering to
himself, sometimes biting his nails, as if some restlessness or doubt consumed
him, sometimes seizing a paddle and driving the boat close behind Aragorn's.
Then Pippin, who sat in the bow looking back, caught a queer gleam in his eye,
as he peered forward gazing at Frodo. Sam had long ago made up his mind that,
though boats were maybe not as dangerous as he had been brought up to believe,
they were far more uncomfortable than even he had imagined. He was cramped and
miserable, having nothing to do but stare at the winter-lands crawling by and
the grey water on either side of him. Even when the paddles were in use they did
not trust Sam with one.
As dusk drew down on the fourth
day, he was looking back over the bowed heads of Frodo and Aragorn and the
following boats; he was drowsy and longed for camp and the feel of earth under
his toes. Suddenly something caught his sight: at first he stared at it
listlessly, then he sat up and rubbed his eyes; but when he looked again he
could not see it any more.
That night they camped on a
small eyot close to the western bank. Sam lay rolled in blankets beside Frodo.
'I had a funny dream an hour or two before we stopped, Mr. Frodo,' he said. 'Or
maybe it wasn't a dream. Funny it was anyway.'
'Well, what
was it?' said Frodo, knowing that Sam would not settle down until he had told
his tale, whatever it was. 'I haven't seen or thought of anything to make me
smile since we left Lothlorien.'
'It wasn't funny that way,
Mr. Frodo. It was queer. All wrong, if it wasn't a dream. And you had best hear
it. It was like this: I saw a log with eyes!'
'The log's
all right,' said Frodo. 'There are many in the River. But leave out the
eyes!'
'That I won't,' said Sam. ''Twas the eyes as made me
sit up, so to speak. I saw what I took to be a log floating along in the
half-light behind Gimli's boat; but I didn't give much heed to it. Then it
seemed as if the log was slowly catching us up. And that was peculiar, as you
might say, seeing as we were all floating on the stream together. Just then I
saw the eyes: two pale sort of points, shiny-like, on a hump at the near end of
the log. What's more, it wasn't a log, for it had paddle-feet, like a swan's
almost, only they seemed bigger, and kept dipping in and out of the
water.
'That's when I sat right up and rubbed my eyes,
meaning to give a shout, if it was still there when I had rubbed the drowse out
of my head. For the whatever-it-was was coming along fast now and getting close
behind Gimli. But whether those two lamps spotted me moving and staring, or
whether I came to my senses, I don't know. When I looked again, it wasn't there.
Yet I think I caught a glimpse with the tail of-my eye, as the saying is, of
something dark shooting under the shadow of the bank. I couldn't see no more
eyes though.
'I said to myself: "dreaming again, Sam
Gamgee," I said, and I said no more just then. But I've been thinking since, and
now I'm not so sure. What do you make of it, Mr. Frodo?'
'I
should make nothing of it but a log and the dusk and sleep in your eyes Sam,'
said Frodo, 'if this was the first time that those eyes had been seen. But it
isn't. I saw them away back north before we reached Lorien. And I saw a strange
creature with eyes climbing to the flet that night. Haldir saw it too. And do
you remember the report of the Elves that went after the
orc-band?'
'Ah,' said Sam. 'I do; and I remember more too.
I don't like my thoughts; but thinking of one thing and another, and Mr. Bilbo's
stories and all, I fancy I could put a name on the creature, at a guess. A nasty
name. Gollum, maybe?'
'Yes, that is what I have feared for
some time,' said Frodo. 'Ever since the night on the flet. I suppose he was
lurking in Moria, and picked up our trail then; but I hoped that our stay in
Lorien would throw him off the scent again. The miserable creature must have
been hiding in the woods by the Silverlode, watching us start
off!'
'That's about it,' said Sam. 'And we'd better be a
bit more watchful ourselves, or we'll feel some nasty fingers round our necks
one of these nights, if we ever wake up to feel anything. And that's what I was
leading up to. No need to trouble Strider or the others tonight. I'll keep
watch. I can sleep tomorrow, being no more than luggage in a boat, as you might
say.'
'I might,' said Frodo, 'and I might say "luggage with
eyes". You shall watch; but only if you promise to wake me halfway towards
morning, if nothing happens before then.'
In the dead hours
Frodo came out of a deep dark sleep to find Sam shaking him. 'It's a shame to
wake you,' whispered Sam, 'but that's what you said. There's nothing to tell, or
not much. I thought I heard some soft plashing and a sniffing noise, a while
back; but you hear a lot of such queer sounds by a river at
night.'
He lay down, and Frodo sat up, huddled in his
blankets, and fought off his sleep. Minutes or hours passed slowly, and nothing
happened. Frodo was just yielding to the temptation to lie down again when a
dark shape, hardly visible, floated close to one of the moored boats. A long
whitish hand could be dimly seen as it shot out and grabbed the gunwale; two
pale lamplike eyes shone coldly as they peered inside, and then they lifted and
gazed up at Frodo on the eyot. They were not more than a yard or two away, and
Frodo heard the soft hiss of intaken breath. He stood up, drawing Sting from its
sheath, and faced the eyes. Immediately their light was shut off. There was
another hiss and a splash, and the dark log-shape shot away downstream into the
night. Aragorn stirred in his sleep, turned over, and sat
up.
'What is it?' he whispered, springing up and coming to
Frodo. 'I felt something in my sleep. Why have you drawn your
sword?'
'Gollum,' answered Frodo. 'Or at least, so I
guess.'
'Ah!' said Aragorn. 'So you know about our little
footpad, do you? He padded after us all through Moria and right down to
Nimrodel. Since we took to boats, he has been lying on a log and paddling with
hands and feet. I have tried to catch him once or twice at night; but he is
slier than a fox, and as slippery as a fish. I hoped the river-voyage would beat
him, but he is too clever a waterman.
'We shall have to try
going faster tomorrow. You lie down now, and I will keep watch for what is left
of the night. I wish I could lay my hands on the wretch. We might make him
useful. But if I cannot, we shall have to try and lose him. He is very
dangerous. Quite apart from murder by night on his own account, he may put any
enemy that is about on our track.'
The night passed without
Gollum showing so much as a shadow again. After that the Company kept a sharp
look-out, but they saw no more of Gollum while the voyage lasted. If he was
still following, he was very wary and cunning. At Aragorn's bidding they paddled
now for long spells, and the banks went swiftly by. But they saw little of the
country, for they journeyed mostly by night and twilight, resting by day, and
lying as hidden as the land allowed. In this way the time passed without event
until the seventh day.
The weather was still grey and
overcast, with wind from the East, but as evening drew into night the sky away
westward cleared, and pools of faint light, yellow and pale green, opened under
the grey shores of cloud. There the white rind of the new Moon could be seen
glimmering in the remote lakes. Sam looked at it and puckered his
brows.
The next day the country on either side began to
change rapidly. The banks began to rise and grow stony. Soon they were passing
through a hilly rocky land, and on both shores there were steep slopes buried in
deep brakes of thorn and sloe, tangled with brambles and creepers. Behind them
stood low crumbling cliffs, and chimneys of grey weathered stone dark with ivy;
and beyond these again there rose high ridges crowned with wind-writhen firs.
They were drawing near to the grey hill-country of the Emyn Muil, the southern
march of Wilderland.
There were many birds about the cliffs
and the rock-chimneys, and all day high in the air flocks of birds had been
circling, black against the pale sky. As they lay in their camp that day Aragorn
watched the flights doubtfully, wondering if Gollum had been doing some mischief
and the news of their voyage was now moving in the wilderness. Later as the sun
was setting, and the Company was stirring and getting ready to start again, he
descried a dark spot against the fading light: a great bird high and far off,
now wheeling, now flying on slowly southwards.
'What is
that, Legolas?' he asked, pointing to the northern sky. 'Is it, as I think, an
eagle?'
'Yes.' said Legolas. 'It is an eagle, a hunting
eagle. I wonder what that forebodes. It is far from the
mountains.'
'We will not start until it is fully dark,'
said Aragorn.
The eighth night of their journey came. It
was silent and windless; the grey east wind had passed away. The thin crescent
of the Moon had fallen early into the pale sunset, but the sky was clear above,
and though far away in the South there were great ranges of cloud that still
shone faintly, in the West stars glinted bright.
'Come!'
said Aragorn. 'We will venture one more journey by night. We are coming to
reaches of the River that I do not know well: for I have never journeyed by
water in these parts before, not between here and the rapids of Sarn Gebir. But
if I am right in my reckoning, those are still many miles ahead. Still there are
dangerous places even before we come there: rocks and stony eyots in the stream.
We must keep a sharp watch and not try to paddle
swiftly.'
To Sam in the leading boat was given the task of
watchman. He lay forward peering into the gloom. The night grew dark, but the
stars above were strangely bright, and there was a glimmer on the face of the
River. It was close on midnight, and they had been drifting for some while,
hardly using the paddles, when suddenly Sam cried out. Only a few yards ahead
dark shapes loomed up in the stream and he heard the swirl of racing water.
There was a swift current which swung left, towards the eastern shore where the
channel was clear. As they were swept aside the travellers could see, now very
close, the pale foam of the River lashing against sharp rocks that were thrust
out far into the stream like a ridge of teeth. The boats were all huddled
together.
'Hoy there, Aragorn!' shouted Boromir, as his
boat bumped into the leader. 'This is madness! We cannot dare the Rapids by
night! But no boat can live in Sarn Gebir, be it night or
day.'
'Back, back!' cried Aragorn. 'Turn! Turn if you can!'
He drove his paddle into the water, trying to hold the boat and bring it
round.
'I am out of my reckoning,' he said to Frodo. 'I did
not know that we had come so far: Anduin flows faster than I thought. Sarn Gebir
must be close at hand already.'
With great efforts they
checked the boats and slowly brought them about; but at first they could make
only small headway against the current, and all the time they were carried
nearer and nearer to the eastern bank. Now dark and ominous it loomed up in the
night.
'All together, paddle!' shouted Boromir. 'Paddle! Or
we shall be driven on the shoals.' Even as he spoke Frodo felt the keel beneath
him grate upon stone.
At that moment there was a twang of
bowstrings: several arrows whistled over them, and some fell among them. One
smote Frodo between the shoulders and he lurched forward with a cry, letting go
his paddle; but the arrow fell back, foiled by his hidden coat of mail. Another
passed through Aragorn's hood; and a third stood fast in the gunwale of the
second boat, close by Merry's hand. Sam thought he could glimpse black figures
running to and fro upon the long shingle-banks that lay under the eastern shore.
They seemed very near.
'Yrch!' said Legolas, falling
into his own tongue.
'Orcs!' cried
Gimli.
'Gollum's doing, I'll be bound.' said Sam to Frodo.
'And a nice place to choose, too. The River seems set on taking us right into
their arms!'
They all leaned forward straining at the
paddles: even Sam took a hand. Every moment they expected to feel the bite of
black-feathered arrows. Many whined overhead or struck the water nearby; but
there were no more hits. It was dark, but not too dark for the night-eyes of
Orcs, and in the star-glimmer they must have offered their cunning foes some
mark, unless it was that the grey cloaks Of Lorien and the grey timber of the
elf-wrought boats defeated the malice of the archers of
Mordor.
Stroke by stroke they laboured on. In the darkness
it was hard to be sure that they were indeed moving at all; but slowly the swirl
of the water grew less, and the shadow of the eastern bank faded back into the
night. At last, as far as they could judge, they had reached the middle of the
stream again and had driven their boats back some distance above the jutting
rocks. Then half turning they thrust them with all their strength towards the
western shore. Under the shadow of bushes leaning out over the water they halted
and drew breath.
Legolas laid down his paddle and took up
the bow that he had brought from Lorien. Then he sprang ashore and climbed a few
paces up the bank. Stringing the bow and fitting an arrow he turned, peering
back over the River into the darkness. Across the water there were shrill cries,
but nothing could be seen.
Frodo looked up at the Elf
standing tall above him, as he gazed into the night, seeking a mark to shoot at.
His head was dark, crowned with sharp white stars that glittered in the black
pools of the sky behind. But now rising and sailing up from the South the great
clouds advanced, sending out dark outriders into the starry fields. A sudden
dread fell on the Company.
'Elbereth Gilthoniel!'
sighed Legolas as he looked up. Even as he did so, a dark shape, like a cloud
and yet not a cloud, for it moved far more swiftly, came out of the blackness in
the South, and sped towards the Company, blotting out all light as it
approached. Soon it appeared as a great winged creature, blacker than the pits
in the night. Fierce voices rose up to greet it from across the water. Frodo
felt a sudden chill running through him and clutching at his heart; there was a
deadly cold, like the memory of an old wound, in his shoulder. He crouched down,
as if to hide.
Suddenly the great bow of Lorien sang.
Shrill went the arrow from the elven-string. Frodo looked up. Almost above him
the winged shape swerved. There was a harsh croaking scream, as it fell out of
the air, vanishing down into the gloom of the eastern shore. The sky was clean
again. There was a tumult of many voices far away, cursing and wailing in the
darkness, and then silence. Neither shaft nor cry came again from the east that
night.
After a while Aragorn led the boats back upstream.
They felt their way along the water's edge for some distance, until they found a
small shallow bay. A few low trees grew there close to the water, and behind
them rose a steep rocky bank. Here the Company decided to stay and await the
dawn: it was useless to attempt to move further by night. They made no camp and
lit no fire, but lay huddled in the boats, moored close
together.
'Praised be the bow of Galadriel, and the hand
and eye of Legolas!' said Gimli, as he munched a wafer of lembas. 'That
was a mighty shot in the dark, my friend!'
'But who can say
what it hit?' said Legolas.
'I cannot,' said Gimli. 'But I
am glad that the shadow came no nearer. I liked it not at all. Too much it
reminded me of the shadow in Moria – the shadow of the Balrog,' he ended in a
whisper.
'It was not a Balrog,' said Frodo, still shivering
with the chill that had come upon him. 'It was something colder. I think it was
–' Then he paused and fell silent.
'What do you think?'
asked Boromir eagerly, leaning from his boat, as if he was trying to catch a
glimpse of Frodo's face.
'I think – No, I will not say,'
answered Frodo. 'Whatever it was, its fall has dismayed our
enemies.'
'So it seems,' said Aragorn. 'Yet where they are,
and how many, and what they will do next, we do not know. This night we must all
be sleepless! Dark hides us now. But what the day will show who can tell? Have
your weapons close to hand!'
Sam sat tapping the hilt of
his sword as if he were counting on his fingers, and looking up at the sky.
'It's very strange,' he murmured. 'The Moon's the same in the Shire and in
Wilderland, or it ought to be. But either it's out of its running, or I'm all
wrong in my reckoning. You'll remember, Mr. Frodo, the Moon was waning as we lay
on the flet up in that tree: a week from the full, I reckon. And we'd been a
week on the way last night, when up pops a New Moon as thin as a nail-paring, as
if we had never stayed no time in the Elvish
country.
'Well, I can remember three nights there for
certain, and I seem to remember several more, but I would take my oath it was
never a whole month. Anyone would think that time did not count in
there!'
'And perhaps that was the way of it,' said Frodo.
'In that land, maybe, we were in a time that has elsewhere long gone by. It was
not, I think, until Silverlode bore us back to Anduin that we returned to the
time that flows through mortal lands to the Great Sea. And I don't remember any
moon, either new or old, in Caras Galadhon: only stars by night and sun by
day.'
Legolas stirred in his boat. 'Nay, time does not
tarry ever,' he said; 'but change and growth is not in all things and places
alike. For the Elves the world moves, and it moves both very swift and very
slow. Swift, because they themselves change little, and all else fleets by: it
is a grief to them. Slow, because they do not count the running years, not for
themselves. The passing seasons are but ripples ever repeated in the long long
stream. Yet beneath the Sun all things must wear to an end at
last.'
'But the wearing is slow in Lorien,' said Frodo.
'The power of the Lady is on it. Rich are the hours, though short they seem, in
Caras Galadhon, where Galadriel wields the
Elven-ring.'
'That should not have been said outside
Lorien, not even to me,' said Aragorn. 'Speak no more of it! But so it is, Sam:
in that land you lost your count. There time flowed swiftly by us, as for the
Elves. The old moon passed, and a new moon waxed and waned in the world outside,
while we tarried there. And yestereve a new moon came again. Winter is nearly
gone. Time flows on to a spring of little hope.'
The night
passed silently. No voice or call was heard again across the water. The
travellers huddled in their boats felt the changing of the weather. The air grew
warm and very still under the great moist clouds that had floated up from the
South and the distant seas. The rushing of the River over the rocks of the
rapids seemed to grow louder and closer. The twigs of the trees above them began
to drip.
When the day came the mood of the world about them
had become soft and sad. Slowly the dawn grew to a pale light, diffused and
shadowless. There was mist on the River, and white fog swathed the shore; the
far bank could not be seen.
'I can't abide fog,' said Sam;
'but this seems to be a lucky one. Now perhaps we can get away without those
cursed goblins seeing us.'
'Perhaps so,' said Aragorn. 'But
it will be hard to find the path unless the fog lifts a little later on. And we
must find the path, if we are to pass Sarn Gebir and come to the Emyn
Muil.'
'I do not see why we should pass the Rapids or
follow the River any further,' said Boromir. 'If the Emyn Muil lie before us,
then we can abandon these cockle-boats, and strike westward and southward, until
we come to the Entwash and cross into my own land.'
'We
can, if we are making for Minas Tirith,' said Aragorn, 'but that is not yet
agreed. And such a course may be more perilous than it sounds. The vale of
Entwash is flat and fenny, and fog is a deadly peril there for those on foot and
laden. I would not abandon our boats until we must. The River is at least a path
that cannot be missed.'
'But the Enemy holds the eastern
bank,' objected Boromir. 'And even if you pass the Gates of Argonath and come
unmolested to the Tindrock, what will you do then? Leap down the Falls and land
in the marshes?'
'No!' answered Aragorn. 'Say rather that
we will bear our boats by the ancient way to Rauros-foot, and there take to the
water again. Do you not know, Boromir, or do you choose to forget the North
Stair, and the high seat upon Amon Hen, that were made in the days of the great
kings? I at least have a mind to stand in that high place again, before I decide
my further course. There, maybe, we shall see some sign that will guide
us.'
Boromir held out long against this choice; but when it
became plain that Frodo would follow Aragorn, wherever he went, he gave in. 'It
is not the way of the Men of Minas Tirith to desert their friends at need,' he
said, 'and you will need my strength, if ever you are to reach the Tindrock. To
the tall isle I will go, but no further. There I shall turn to my home, alone if
my help has not earned the reward of any
companionship.'
The day was now growing, and the fog had
lifted a little. It was decided that Aragorn and Legolas should at once go
forward along the shore, while the others remained by the boats. Aragorn hoped
to find some way by which they could carry both their boats and their baggage to
the smoother water beyond the Rapids.
'Boats of the Elves
would not sink, maybe,' he said, 'but that does not say that we should come
through Sarn Gebir alive. None have ever done so yet. No road was made by the
Men of Gondor in this region, for even in their great days their realm did not
reach up Anduin beyond the Emyn Muil; but there is a portage-way somewhere on
the western shore, if I can find it. It cannot yet have perished; for light
boats used to journey out of Wilderland down to Osgiliath, and still did so
until a few years ago, when the Orcs of Mordor began to
multiply.'
'Seldom in my life has any boat come out of the
North, and the Orcs prowl on the east-shore,' said Boromir. 'If you go forward,
peril will grow with every mile, even if you find a
path.'
'Peril lies ahead on every southward road,' answered
Aragorn. 'Wait for us one day. If we do not return in that time, you will know
that evil has indeed befallen us. Then you must take a new leader and follow him
as best you can.'
It was with a heavy heart that Frodo saw
Aragorn and Legolas climb the steep bank and vanish into the mists; but his
fears proved groundless. Only two or three hours had passed, and it was barely
mid-day, when the shadowy shapes of the explorers appeared
again.
'All is well,' said Aragorn, as he clambered down
the bank. 'There is a track, and it leads to a good landing that is still
serviceable. The distance is not great: the head of the Rapids is but half a
mile below us, and they are little more than a mile long. Not far beyond them
the stream becomes clear and smooth again, though it runs swiftly. Our hardest
task will be to get our boats and baggage to the old portage-way. We have found
it, but it lies well back from the water-side here, and runs under the lee of a
rock-wall, a furlong or more from the shore. We did not find where the northward
landing lies. If it still remains, we must have passed it yesterday night. We
might labour far upstream and yet miss it in the fog. I fear we must leave the
River now, and make for the portage-way as best we can from
here.'
'That would not be easy, even if we were all Men,'
said Boromir.
'Yet such as we are we will try it,' said
Aragorn.
'Aye, we will,' said Gimli. 'The legs of Men will
lag on a rough road, while a Dwarf goes on, be the burden twice his own weight,
Master Boromir!'
The task proved hard indeed, yet in the
end it was done. The goods were taken out of the boats and brought to the top of
the bank, where there was a level space. Then the boats were drawn out of the
water and carried up. They were far less heavy than any had expected. Of what
tree growing in the elvish country they were made not even Legolas knew; but the
wood was tough and yet strangely light. Merry and Pippin alone could carry their
boat with ease along the flat. Nonetheless it needed the strength of the two Men
to lift and haul them over the ground that the Company now had to cross. It
sloped up away from the River, a tumbled waste of grey limestone-boulders, with
many hidden holes shrouded with weeds and bushes; there were thickets of
brambles, and sheer dells; and here and there boggy pools fed by waters
trickling from the terraces further inland.
One by one
Boromir and Aragorn carried the boats, while the others toiled and scrambled
after them with the baggage. At last all was removed and laid on the
portage-way. Then with little further hindrance, save from sprawling briars and
many fallen stones, they moved forward all together. Fog still hung in veils
upon the crumbling rock-wall, and to their left mist shrouded the River: they
could hear it rushing and foaming over the sharp shelves and stony teeth of Sarn
Gebir, but they could not see it. Twice they made the journey, before all was
brought safe to the southern landing.
There the
portage-way, turning back to the water-side, ran gently down to the shallow edge
of a little pool. It seemed to have been scooped in the river-side, not by hand,
but by the water swirling down from Sarn Gebir against a low pier of rock that
jutted out some way into the stream. Beyond it the shore rose sheer into a grey
cliff, and there was no further passage for those on
foot.
Already the short afternoon was past, and a dim
cloudy dusk was closing in. They sat beside the water listening to the confused
rush and roar of the Rapids hidden in the mist; they were tired and sleepy, and
their hearts were as gloomy as the dying day.
'Well, here
we are, and here we must pass another night,' said Boromir. 'We need sleep, and
even if Aragorn had a mind to pass the Gates of Argonath by night, we are all
too tired – except, no doubt, our sturdy dwarf.'
Gimli made
no reply: he was nodding as he sat.
'Let us rest as much as
we can now,' said Aragorn. 'Tomorrow we must journey by day again. Unless the
weather changes once more and cheats us, we shall have a good chance of slipping
through, unseen by any eyes on the eastern shore. But tonight two must watch
together in turns: three hours off and one on
guard.'
Nothing happened that night worse than a brief
drizzle of rain an hour before dawn. As soon as it was fully light they started.
Already the fog was thinning. They kept as close as they could to the western
side, and they could see the dim shapes of the low cliffs rising ever higher,
shadowy walls with their feet in the hurrying river. In the mid-morning the
clouds drew down lower, and it began to rain heavily. They drew the skin-covers
over their boats to prevent them from being flooded, and drifted on: little
could be seen before them or about them through the grey falling
curtains.
The rain, however, did not last long. Slowly the
sky above grew lighter, and then suddenly the clouds broke, and their draggled
fringes trailed away northward up the River. The fogs and mists were gone.
Before the travellers lay a wide ravine, with great rocky sides to which clung,
upon shelves and in narrow crevices, a few thrawn trees. The channel grew
narrower and the River swifter. Now they were speeding along with little hope of
stopping or turning, whatever they might meet ahead. Over them was a lane of
pale-blue sky, around them the dark overshadowed River, and before them black,
shutting out the sun, the hills of Emyn Muil, in which no opening could be
seen.
Frodo peering forward saw in the distance two great
rocks approaching: like great pinnacles or pillars of stone they seemed. Tall
and sheer and ominous they stood upon either side of the stream. A narrow gap
appeared between them, and the River swept the boats towards
it.
'Behold the Argonath, the Pillars of the Kings!' cried
Aragorn. 'We shall pass them soon. Keep the boats in line, and as far apart as
you can! Hold the middle of the stream!'
As Frodo was borne
towards them the great pillars rose like towers to meet him. Giants they seemed
to him, vast grey figures silent but threatening. Then he saw that they were
indeed shaped and fashioned: the craft and power of old had wrought upon them,
and still they preserved through the suns and rains of forgotten years the
mighty likenesses in which they had been hewn. Upon great pedestals founded in
the deep waters stood two great kings of stone: still with blurred eyes and
crannied brows they frowned upon the North. The left hand of each was raised
palm outwards in gesture of warning; in each right hand there was an axe; upon
each head there was a crumbling helm and crown. Great power and majesty they
still wore, the silent wardens of a long-vanished kingdom. Awe and fear fell
upon Frodo, and he cowered down, shutting his eyes and not daring to look up as
the boat drew near. Even Boromir bowed his head as the boats whirled by, frail
and fleeting as little leaves, under the enduring shadow of the sentinels of
Numenor. So they passed into the dark chasm of the
Gates.
Sheer rose the dreadful cliffs to unguessed heights
on either side. Far off was the dim sky. The black waters roared and echoed, and
a wind screamed over them. Frodo crouching over his knees heard Sam in front
muttering and groaning: 'What a place! What a horrible place! Just let me get
out of this boat, and I'll never wet my toes in a puddle again, let alone a
river!'
'Fear not!' said a strange voice behind him. Frodo
turned and saw Strider, and yet not Strider; for the weatherworn Ranger was no
longer there. In the stern sat Aragorn son of Arathorn, proud and erect, guiding
the boat with skilful strokes; his hood was cast back, and his dark hair was
blowing in the wind, a light was in his eyes: a king returning from exile to his
own land.
'Fear not!' he said. 'Long have I desired to look
upon the likenesses of Isildur and Anarion, my sires of old. Under their shadow
Elessar, the Elfstone son of Arathorn of the House of Valandil Isildur's son
heir of Elendil, has nought to dread!'
Then the light of
his eyes faded, and he spoke to himself: 'Would that Gandalf were here! How my
heart yearns for Minas Anor and the walls of my own city! But whither now shall
I go?'
The chasm was long and dark, and filled with the
noise of wind and rushing water and echoing stone. It bent somewhat towards the
west so that at first all was dark ahead; but soon Frodo saw a tall gap of light
before him, ever growing. Swiftly it drew near, and suddenly the boats shot
through, out into a wide clear light.
The sun, already long
fallen from the noon, was shining in a windy sky. The pent waters spread out
into a long oval lake, pale Nen Hithoel, fenced by steep grey hills whose sides
were clad with trees, but their heads were bare, cold-gleaming in the sunlight.
At the far southern end rose three peaks. The midmost stood somewhat forward
from the others and sundered from them, an island in the waters, about which the
flowing River flung pale shimmering arms. Distant but deep there came up on the
wind a roaring sound like the roll of thunder heard far
away.
'Behold Tol Brandir!' said Aragorn, pointing south to
the tall peak. 'Upon the left stands Amon Lhaw, and upon the right is Amon Hen
the Hills of Hearing and of Sight. In the days of the great kings there were
high seats upon them, and watch was kept there. But it is said that no foot of
man or beast has ever been set upon Tol Brandir. Ere the shade of night falls we
shall come to them. I hear the endless voice of Rauros
calling.'
The Company rested now for a while, drifting
south on the current that flowed through the middle of the lake. They ate some
food, and then they took to their paddles and hastened on their way. The sides
of the westward hills fell into shadow, and the Sun grew round and red. Here and
there a misty star peered out. The three peaks loomed before them, darkling in
the twilight. Rauros was roaring with a great voice. Already night was laid on
the flowing waters when the travellers came at last under the shadow of the
hills.
The tenth day of their journey was over. Wilderland
was behind them. They could go no further without choice between the east-way
and the west. The last stage of the Quest was before them.
Chapter 10
The Breaking of the
Fellowship
Aragorn led them to the right arm of the River. Here upon
its western side under the shadow of Tol Brandir a green lawn ran down to the
water from the feet of Amon Hen. Behind it rose the first gentle slopes of the
hill clad with trees, and trees marched away westward along the curving shores
of the lake. A little spring fell tumbling down and fed the
grass.
'Here we will rest tonight,' said Aragorn. 'This is
the lawn of Parth Galen: a fair place in the summer days of old. Let us hope
that no evil has yet come here.'
They drew up their boats
on the green banks, and beside them they made their camp. They set a watch, but
had no sight nor sound of their enemies. If Gollum had contrived to follow them,
he remained unseen and unheard. Nonetheless as the night wore on Aragorn grew
uneasy, tossing often in his sleep and waking. In the small hours he got up and
came to Frodo, whose turn it was to watch.
'Why are you
waking?' asked Frodo. 'It is not your watch.'
'I do not
know,' answered Aragorn; 'but a shadow and a threat has been growing in my
sleep. It would be well to draw your sword.'
'Why?' said
Frodo. 'Are enemies at hand?'
'Let us see what Sting may
show,' answered Aragorn.
Frodo then drew the elf-blade from
its sheath. To his dismay the edges gleamed dimly in the night. 'Orcs!' he said.
'Not very near, and yet too near, it seems.'
'I feared as
much,' said Aragorn. 'But maybe they are not on this side of the River. The
light of Sting is faint, and it may point to no more than spies of Mordor
roaming on the slopes of Amon Lhaw. I have never heard before of Orcs upon Amon
Hen. Yet who knows what may happen in these evil days, now that Minas Tirith no
longer holds secure the passages of Anduin. We must go warily
tomorrow.'
The day came like fire and smoke. Low in the
East there were black bars of cloud like the fumes of a great burning. The
rising sun lit them from beneath with flames of murky red; but soon it climbed
above them into a clear sky. The summit of Tol Brandir was tipped with gold.
Frodo looked out eastward and gazed at the tall island. Its sides sprang sheer
out of the running water. High up above the tall cliffs were steep slopes upon
which trees climbed, mounting one head above another; and above them again were
grey faces of inaccessible rock, crowned by a great spire of stone. Many birds
were circling about it, but no sign of other living things could be
seen.
When they had eaten, Aragorn called the Company
together. 'The day has come at last,' he said, 'the day of choice which we have
long delayed. What shall now become of our Company that has travelled so far in
fellowship? Shall we turn west with Boromir and go to the wars of Gondor; or
turn east to the Fear and Shadow; or shall we break our fellowship and go this
way and that as each may choose? Whatever we do must be done soon. We cannot
long halt here. The enemy is on the eastern shore, we know; but I fear that the
Orcs may already be on this side of the water.'
There was a
long silence in which no one spoke or moved.
'Well, Frodo,'
said Aragorn at last. 'I fear that the burden is laid upon you. You are the
Bearer appointed by the Council. Your own way you alone can choose. In this
matter I cannot advise you. I am not Gandalf, and though I have tried to bear
his part, I do not know what design or hope he had for this hour, if indeed he
had any. Most likely it seems that if he were here now the choice would still
wait on you. Such is your fate.'
Frodo did not answer at
once. Then he spoke slowly. 'I know that haste is needed, yet I cannot choose.
The burden is heavy. Give me an hour longer, and I will speak. Let me be
alone!'
Aragorn looked at him with kindly pity. 'Very well,
Frodo son of Drogo,' he said. 'You shall have an hour, and you shall be alone.
We will stay here for a while. But do not stray far or out of
call.'
Frodo sat for a moment with his head bowed. Sam, who
had been watching his master with great concern, shook his head and muttered:
'Plain as a pikestaff it is, but it's no good Sam Gamgee putting in his spoke
just now.'
Presently Frodo got up and walked away; and Sam
saw that while the others restrained themselves and did not stare at him, the
eyes of Boromir followed Frodo intently, until he passed out of sight in the
trees at the foot of Amon Hen.
Wandering aimlessly at first
in the wood, Frodo found that his feet were leading him up towards the slopes of
the hill. He came to a path, the dwindling ruins of a road of long ago. In steep
places stairs of stone had been hewn, but now they were cracked and worn, and
split by the roots of trees. For some while he climbed, not caring which way he
went, until he came to a grassy place. Rowan-trees grew about it, and in the
midst was a wide flat stone. The little upland lawn was open upon the East and
was filled now with the early sunlight. Frodo halted and looked out over the
River, far below him, to Tol Brandir and the birds wheeling in the great gulf of
air between him and the untrodden isle. The voice of Rauros was a mighty roaring
mingled with a deep throbbing boom.

He sat down upon the stone and cupped
his chin in his hands, staring eastwards but seeing little with his eyes. All
that had happened since Bilbo left the Shire was passing through his mind, and
he recalled and pondered everything that he could remember of Gandalf's words.
Time went on, and still he was no nearer to a
choice.
Suddenly he awoke from his thoughts: a strange
feeling came to him that something was behind him, that unfriendly eyes were
upon him. He sprang up and turned; but all that he saw to his surprise was
Boromir, and his face was smiling and kind.
'I was afraid
for you, Frodo,' he said, coming forward. 'If Aragorn is right and Orcs are
near, then none of us should wander alone, and you least of all: so much depends
on you. And my heart too is heavy. May I stay now and talk for a while, since I
have found you? It would comfort me. Where there are so many, all speech becomes
a debate without end. But two together may perhaps find
wisdom.'
'You are kind,' answered Frodo. 'But I do not
think that any speech will help me. For I know what I should do, but I am afraid
of doing it, Boromir, afraid.'
Boromir stood silent. Rauros
roared endlessly on. The wind murmured in the branches of the trees. Frodo
shivered.
Suddenly Boromir came and sat beside him. 'Are
you sure that you do not suffer needlessly?' he said. 'I wish to help you. You
need counsel in your hard choice. Will you not take
mine?'
'I think I know already what counsel you would give,
Boromir,' said Frodo. 'And it would seem like wisdom but for the warning of my
heart.'
'Warning? Warning against what?' said Boromir
sharply.
'Against delay. Against the way that seems easier.
Against refusal of the burden that is laid on me. Against – well, if it must be
said, against trust in the strength and truth of Men.'
'Yet
that strength has long protected you far away in your little country, though you
knew it not.'
'I do not doubt the valour of your people.
But the world is changing. The walls of Minas Tirith may be strong, but they are
not strong enough. If they fail, what then?'
'We shall fall
in battle valiantly. Yet there is still hope that they will not
fail.'
'No hope while the Ring lasts,' said
Frodo.
'Ah! The Ring!' said Boromir, his eyes lighting.
'The Ring! Is it not a strange fate that we should suffer so much fear and doubt
for so small a thing? So small a thing! And I have seen it only for an instant
in the House of Elrond. Could I not have a sight of it
again?'
Frodo looked up. His heart went suddenly cold. He
caught the strange gleam in Boromir's eyes, yet his face was still kind and
friendly. 'It is best that it should lie hidden,' he
answered.
'As you wish. I care not,' said Boromir. 'Yet may
I not even speak of it? For you seem ever to think only of its power in the
hands of the Enemy: of its evil uses not of its good. The world is changing, you
say. Minas Tirith will fall, if the Ring lasts. But why? Certainly, if the Ring
were with the Enemy. But why, if it were with us?'
'Were
you not at the Council?' answered Frodo. 'Because we cannot use it, and what is
done with it turns to evil.'
Boromir got up and walked
about impatiently. 'So you go on,' he cried. 'Gandalf, Elrond – all these folk
have taught you to say so. For themselves they may be right. These elves and
half-elves and wizards, they would come to grief perhaps. Yet often I doubt if
they are wise and not merely timid. But each to his own kind. True-hearted Men,
they will not be corrupted. We of Minas Tirith have been staunch through long
years of trial. We do not desire the power of wizard-lords, only strength to
defend ourselves, strength in a just cause. And behold! in our need chance
brings to light the Ring of Power. It is a gift, I say; a gift to the foes of
Mordor. It is mad not to use it, to use the power of the Enemy against him. The
fearless, the ruthless, these alone will achieve victory. What could not a
warrior do in this hour, a great leader? What could not Aragorn do? Or if he
refuses, why not Boromir? The Ring would give me power of Command. How I would
drive the hosts of Mordor, and all men would flock to my
banner!'
Boromir strode up and down, speaking ever more
loudly; almost he seemed to have forgotten Frodo, while his talk dwelt on walls
and weapons, and the mustering of men; and he drew plans for great alliances and
glorious victories to be; and he cast down Mordor, and became himself a mighty
king, benevolent and wise. Suddenly he stopped and waved his
arms.
'And they tell us to throw it away!' he cried. 'I do
not say
destroy it. That might be well, if reason could show any hope of
doing so. It does not. The only plan that is proposed to us is that a halfling
should walk blindly into Mordor and offer the Enemy every chance of recapturing
it for himself. Folly!
'Surely you see it, my friend?' he
said, turning now suddenly to Frodo again. 'You say that you are afraid. If it
is so, the boldest should pardon you. But is it not really your good sense that
revolts?'
'No, I am afraid,' said Frodo. 'Simply afraid.
But I am glad to have heard you speak so fully. My mind is clearer
now.'
'Then you will come to Minas Tirith?' cried Boromir.
His eyes were shining and his face eager.
'You
misunderstand me,' said Frodo.
'But you will come, at least
for a while?' Boromir persisted. 'My city is not far now; and it is little
further from there to Mordor than from here. We have been long in the
wilderness, and you need news of what the Enemy is doing before you make a move.
Come with me, Frodo,' he said. 'You need rest before your venture, if go you
must.' He laid his hand on the hobbit's shoulder in friendly fashion; but Frodo
felt the hand trembling with suppressed excitement. He stepped quickly away, and
eyed with alarm the tall Man, nearly twice his height and many times his match
in strength.
'Why are you so unfriendly?' said Boromir. 'I
am a true man, neither thief nor tracker. I need your Ring: that you know now;
but I give you my word that I do not desire to keep it. Will you not at least
let me make trial of my plan? Lend me the Ring!'
'No! no!'
cried Frodo. 'The Council laid it upon me to bear it.'
'It
is by our own folly that the Enemy will defeat us,' cried Boromir. 'How it
angers me! Fool! Obstinate fool! Running wilfully to death and ruining our
cause. If any mortals have claim to the Ring, it is the men of Numenor, and not
Halflings. It is not yours save by unhappy chance. It might have been mine. It
should be mine. Give it to me!'
Frodo did not answer, but
moved away till the great flat stone stood between them. 'Come, come, my
friend!' said Boromir in a softer voice. 'Why not get rid of it? Why not be free
of your doubt and fear? You can lay the blame on me, if you will. You can say
that I was too strong and took it by force. For I am too strong for you,
halfling,' he cried; and suddenly he sprang over the stone and leaped at Frodo.
His fair and pleasant face was hideously changed; a raging fire was in his
eyes.
Frodo dodged aside and again put the stone between
them. There was only one thing he could do: trembling he pulled out the Ring
upon its chain and quickly slipped it on his finger, even as Boromir sprang at
him again. The Man gasped, stared for a moment amazed, and then ran wildly
about, seeking here and there among the rocks and
trees.
'Miserable trickster!' he shouted. 'Let me get my
hands on you! Now I see your mind. You will take the Ring to Sauron and sell us
all. You have only waited your chance to leave us in the lurch. Curse you and
all halflings to death and darkness!' Then, catching his foot on a stone, he
fell sprawling and lay upon his face. For a while he was as still as if his own
curse had struck him down; then suddenly he wept.
He rose
and passed his hand over his eyes, dashing away the tears. 'What have I said?'
he cried. 'What have I done? Frodo, Frodo!' he called. 'Come back! A madness
took me, but it has passed. Come back!'
There was no
answer. Frodo did not even hear his cries. He was already far away, leaping
blindly up the path to the hill-top. Terror and grief shook him, seeing in his
thought the mad fierce face of Boromir, and his burning
eyes.
Soon he came out alone on the summit of Amon Hen, and
halted, gasping for breath. He saw as through a mist a wide flat circle, paved
with mighty flags, and surrounded with a crumbling battlement; and in the
middle, set upon four carven pillars, was a high seat, reached by a stair of
many steps. Up he went and sat upon the ancient chair, feeling like a lost child
that had clambered upon the throne of mountain-kings.
At
first he could see little. He seemed to be in a world of mist in which there
were only shadows: the Ring was upon him. Then here and there the mist gave way
and he saw many visions: small and clear as if they were under his eyes upon a
table, and yet remote. There was no sound, only bright living images. The world
seemed to have shrunk and fallen silent. He was sitting upon the Seat of Seeing,
on Amon Hen, the Hill of the Eye of the Men of Numenor. Eastward he looked into
wide uncharted lands, nameless plains, and forests unexplored. Northward he
looked, and the Great River lay like a ribbon beneath him, and the Misty
Mountains stood small and hard as broken teeth. Westward he looked and saw the
broad pastures of Rohan; and Orthanc, the pinnacle of Isengard, like a black
spike. Southward he looked, and below his very feet the Great River curled like
a toppling wave and plunged over the falls of Rauros into a foaming pit; a
glimmering rainbow played upon the fume. And Ethir Anduin he saw, the mighty
delta of the River, and myriads of sea-birds whirling like a white dust in the
sun, and beneath them a green and silver sea, rippling in endless
lines.
But everywhere he looked he saw the signs of war.
The Misty Mountains were crawling like anthills: orcs were issuing out of a
thousand holes. Under the boughs of Mirkwood there was deadly strife of Elves
and Men and fell beasts. The land of the Beornings was aflame; a cloud was over
Moria; smoke rose on the borders of Lorien.
Horsemen were
galloping on the grass of Rohan; wolves poured from Isengard. From the havens of
Harad ships of war put out to sea; and out of the East Men were moving
endlessly: swordsmen, spearmen, bowmen upon horses, chariots of chieftains and
laden wains. All the power of the Dark Lord was in motion. Then turning south
again he beheld Minas Tirith. Far away it seemed, and beautiful: white-walled,
many-towered, proud and fair upon its mountain-seat; its battlements glittered
with steel, and its turrets were bright with many banners. Hope leaped in his
heart. But against Minas Tirith was set another fortress, greater and more
strong. Thither, eastward, unwilling his eye was drawn. It passed the ruined
bridges of Osgiliath, the grinning gates of Minas Morgul, and the haunted
Mountains, and it looked upon Gorgoroth, the valley of terror in the Land of
Mordor. Darkness lay there under the Sun. Fire glowed amid the smoke. Mount Doom
was burning, and a great reek rising. Then at last his gaze was held: wall upon
wall, battlement upon battlement, black, immeasurably strong, mountain of iron,
gate of steel, tower of adamant, he saw it: Barad-dur, Fortress of Sauron. All
hope left him.
And suddenly he felt the Eye. There was an
eye in the Dark Tower that did not sleep. He knew that it had become aware of
his gaze. A fierce eager will was there. It leaped towards him; almost like a
finger he felt it, searching for him. Very soon it would nail him down, know
just exactly where he was. Amon Lhaw it touched. It glanced upon Tol Brandir he
threw himself from the seat, crouching, covering his head with his grey
hood.
He heard himself crying out:
Never, never! Or
was it:
Verily I come, I come to you? He could not tell. Then as a flash
from some other point of power there came to his mind another thought:
Take
it off! Take it off! Fool, take it off! Take off the
Ring! The two powers strove in him. For a moment,
perfectly balanced between their piercing points, he writhed, tormented.
Suddenly he was aware of himself again. Frodo, neither the Voice nor the Eye:
free to choose, and with one remaining instant in which to do so. He took the
Ring off his finger. He was kneeling in clear sunlight before the high seat. A
black shadow seemed to pass like an arm above him; it missed Amon Hen and groped
out west, and faded. Then all the sky was clean and blue and birds sang in every
tree.
Frodo rose to his feet. A great weariness was on him,
but his will was firm and his heart lighter. He spoke aloud to himself. 'I will
do now what I must,' he said. 'This at least is plain: the evil of the Ring is
already at work even in the Company, and the Ring must leave them before it does
more harm. I will go alone. Some I cannot trust, and those I can trust are too
dear to me: poor old Sam, and Merry and Pippin. Strider, too: his heart yearns
for Minas Tirith, and he will be needed there, now Boromir has fallen into evil.
I will go alone. At once.'
He went quickly down the path
and came back to the lawn where Boromir had found him. Then he halted,
listening. He thought he could hear cries and calls from the woods near the
shore below.
'They'll be hunting for me,' he said. 'I
wonder how long I have been away. Hours, I should think.' He hesitated. 'What
can I do?' he muttered. 'I must go now or I shall never go. I shan't get a
chance again. I hate leaving them, and like this without any explanation. But
surely they will understand. Sam will. And what else can I
do?'
Slowly he drew out the Ring and put it on once more.
He vanished and passed down the hill, less than a rustle of the
wind.
The others remained long by the river-side. For some
time they had been silent, moving restlessly about; but now they were sitting in
a circle, and they were talking. Every now and again they made efforts to speak
of other things, of their long road and many adventures; they questioned Aragorn
concerning the realm of Gondor and its ancient history, and the remnants of its
great works that could still be seen in this strange border-land of the Emyn
Muil: the stone kings and the seats of Lhaw and Hen, and the great Stair beside
the falls of Rauros. But always their thoughts and words strayed back to Frodo
and the Ring. What would Frodo choose to do? Why was he
hesitating?
'He is debating which course is the most
desperate, I think,' said Aragorn. 'And well he may. It is now more hopeless
than ever for the Company to go east, since we have been tracked by Gollum, and
must fear that the secret of our journey is already betrayed. But Minas Tirith
is no nearer to the Fire and the destruction of the
Burden.
'We may remain there for a while and make a brave
stand; but the Lord Denethor and all his men cannot hope to do what even Elrond
said was beyond his power: either to keep the Burden secret, or to hold off the
full might of the Enemy when he comes to take it. Which way would any of us
choose in Frodo's place? I do not know. Now indeed we miss Gandalf
most.'
'Grievous is our loss,' said Legolas. 'Yet we must
needs make up our minds without his aid. Why cannot we decide, and so help
Frodo? Let us call him back and then vote! I should vote for Minas
Tirith.'
'And so should I,' said Gimli. 'We, of course,
were only sent to help the Bearer along the road, to go no further than we
wished; and none of us is under any oath or command to seek Mount Doom. Hard was
my parting from Lothlorien. Yet I have come so far, and I say this: now we have
reached the last choice, it is clear to me that I cannot leave Frodo. I would
choose Minas Tirith, but if he does not, then I follow
him.'
'And I too will go with him,' said Legolas. 'It would
be faithless now to say farewell.'
'It would indeed be a
betrayal, if we all left him,' said Aragorn. 'But if he goes east, then all need
not go with him; nor do I think that all should. That venture is desperate: as
much so for eight as for three or two, or one alone. If you would let me choose,
then I should appoint three companions: Sam, who could not bear it otherwise;
and Gimli; and myself. Boromir will return to his own city, where his father and
his people need him; and with him the others should go, or at least Meriadoc and
Peregrin, if Legolas is not willing to leave us.'
'That
won't do at all!' cried Merry. 'We can't leave Frodo! Pippin and I always
intended to go wherever he went, and we still do. But we did not realize what
that would mean. It seemed different so far away, in the Shire or in Rivendell.
It would be mad and cruel to let Frodo go to Mordor. Why can't we stop
him?'
'We must stop him,' said Pippin. 'And that is what he
is worrying about, I am sure. He knows we shan't agree to his going east. And he
doesn't like to ask anyone to go with him, poor old fellow. Imagine it: going
off to Mordor alone!' Pippin shuddered. 'But the dear silly old hobbit, he ought
to know that he hasn't got to ask. He ought to know that if we can't stop him,
we shan't leave him.'
'Begging your pardon,' said Sam. 'I
don't think you understand my master at all. He isn't hesitating about which way
to go. Of course not! What's the good of Minas Tirith anyway? To him, I mean,
begging your pardon, Master Boromir,' he added, and turned. It was then that
they discovered that Boromir, who at first had been sitting silent on the
outside of the circle, was no longer there.
'Now where's he
got to?' cried Sam, looking worried. 'He's been a bit queer lately, to my mind.
But anyway he's not in this business. He's off to his home, as he always said;
and no blame to him. But Mr. Frodo, he knows he's got to find the Cracks of
Doom, if he can. But he's
afraid. Now it's come to the point, he's just
plain terrified. That's what his trouble is. Of course he's had a bit of
schooling, so to speak – we all have – since we left home, or he'd be so
terrified he'd just fling the Ring in the River and bolt. But he's still too
frightened to start. And he isn't worrying about us either: whether we'll go
along with him or no. He knows we mean to. That's another thing that's bothering
him. If he screws himself up to go, he'll want to go alone. Mark my words! We're
going to have trouble when he comes back. For he'll screw himself up all right,
as sure as his name's Baggins.'
'I believe you speak more
wisely than any of us, Sam,' said Aragorn. 'And what shall we do, if you prove
right?'
'Stop him! Don't let him go!' cried
Pippin.
'I wonder?' said Aragorn. 'He is the Bearer, and
the fate of the Burden is on him. I do not think that it is our part to drive
him one way or the other. Nor do I think that we should succeed, if we tried.
There are other powers at work far stronger.'
'Well, I wish
Frodo would "screw himself up" and come back. and let us get it over,' said
Pippin. 'This waiting is horrible! Surely the time is
up?'
'Yes,' said Aragorn. 'The hour is long passed. The
morning is wearing away. We must call for him.'
At that
moment Boromir reappeared. He came out from the trees and walked towards them
without speaking. His face looked grim and sad. He paused as if counting those
that were present, and then sat down aloof, with his eyes on the
ground.
'Where have you been, Boromir?' asked Aragorn.
'Have you seen Frodo?'
Boromir hesitated for a second.
'Yes, and no,' he answered slowly. 'Yes: I found him some way up the hill, and I
spoke to him. I urged him to come to Minas Tirith and not to go east. I grew
angry and he left me. He vanished. I have never seen such a thing happen before,
though I have heard of it in tales. He must have put the Ring on. I could not
find him again. I thought he would return to you.'
'Is that
all that you have to say?' said Aragorn, looking hard and not too kindly at
Boromir.
'Yes,' he answered. 'I will say no more
yet.'
'This is bad!' cried Sam, jumping up. 'I don't know
what this Man has been up to. Why should Mr. Frodo put the thing on? He didn't
ought to have; and if he has, goodness knows what may have
happened!'
'But he wouldn't keep it on,' said Merry. 'Not
when he had escaped the unwelcome visitor, like Bilbo used
to.'
'But where did he go? Where is he?' cried Pippin.
'He's been away ages now.'
'How long is it since you saw
Frodo last, Boromir?' asked Aragorn.
'Half an hour, maybe,'
he answered. 'Or it might be an hour. I have wandered for some time since. I do
not know! I do not know!' He put his head in his hands, and sat as if bowed with
grief.
'An hour since he vanished!' shouted Sam. 'We must
try and find him at once. Come on!'
'Wait a moment!' cried
Aragorn. 'We must divide up into pairs, and arrange – here, hold on!
Wait!'
It was no good. They took no notice of him. Sam had
dashed off first. Merry and Pippin had followed, and were already disappearing
westward into the trees by the shore, shouting:
Frodo! Frodo! in their
clear, high hobbit-voices. Legolas and Gimli were running. A sudden panic or
madness seemed to have fallen on the Company.
'We shall all
be scattered and lost,' groaned Aragorn. 'Boromir! I do not know what part you
have played in this mischief, but help now! Go after those two young hobbits,
and guard them at the least, even if you cannot find Frodo. Come back to this
spot, if you find him, or any traces of him. I shall return
soon.'
Aragorn sprang swiftly away and went in pursuit of
Sam. Just as he reached the little lawn among the rowans he overtook him,
toiling uphill, panting and calling:
Frodo! 'Come
with me, Sam!' he said. 'None of us should be alone. There is mischief about. I
feel it. I am going to the top, to the Seat of Amon Hen, to see what may be
seen. And look! It is as my heart guessed, Frodo went this way. Follow me, and
keep your eyes open!' He sped up the path.
Sam did his
best, but he could not keep up with Strider the Ranger, and soon fell behind. He
had not gone far before Aragorn was out of sight ahead. Sam stopped and puffed.
Suddenly he clapped his hand to his head.
'Whoa, Sam
Gamgee!' he said aloud. 'Your legs are too short, so use your head! Let me see
now! Boromir isn't lying, that's not his way; but he hasn't told us everything.
Something scared Mr. Frodo badly. He screwed himself up to the point, sudden. He
made up his mind at last to go. Where to? Off East. Not without Sam? Yes,
without even his Sam. That's hard, cruel hard.'
Sam passed
his hand over his eyes, brushing away the tears. 'Steady, Gamgee!' he said.
'Think, if you can! He can't fly across rivers, and he can't jump waterfalls.
He's got no gear. So he's got to get back to the boats. Back to the boats! Back
to the boats, Sam, like lightning!'
Sam turned and bolted
back down the path. He fell and cut his knees. Up he got and ran on. He came to
the edge of the lawn of Parth Galen by the shore, where the boats were drawn up
out of the water. No one was there. There seemed to be cries in the woods
behind, but he did not heed them. He stood gazing for a moment, stock-still,
gaping. A boat was sliding down the bank all by itself. With a shout Sam raced
across the grass. The boat slipped into the water.
'Coming,
Mr. Frodo! Coming!' called Sam, and flung himself from the bank, clutching at
the departing boat. He missed it by a yard. With a cry and a splash he fell face
downward into deep swift water. Gurgling he went under, and the River closed
over his curly head.
An exclamation of dismay came from the
empty boat. A paddle swirled and the boat put about. Frodo was just in time to
grasp Sam by the hair as he came up, bubbling and struggling. Fear was staring
in his round brown eyes.
'Up you come, Sam my lad!' said
Frodo. 'Now take my hand!'
'Save me, Mr. Frodo!' gasped
Sam. 'I'm drownded. I can't see your hand.'
'Here it is.
Don't pinch, lad! I won't let you go. Tread water and don't flounder, or you'll
upset the boat. There now, get hold of the side, and let me use the
paddle!'
With a few strokes Frodo brought the boat back to
the bank, and Sam was able to scramble out, wet as a water-rat. Frodo took off
the Ring and stepped ashore again.
'Of all the confounded
nuisances you are the worst, Sam!' he said.
'Oh, Mr. Frodo,
that's hard!' said Sam shivering. 'That's hard, trying to go without me and all.
If I hadn't a guessed right, where would you be
now?'
'Safely on my way.'
'Safely!'
said Sam. 'All alone and without me to help you? I couldn't have a borne it,
it'd have been the death of me.'
'It would be the death of
you to come with me, Sam,' said Frodo and I could not have borne
that.'
'Not as certain as being left behind,' said
Sam.
'But I am going to Mordor.'
'I
know that well enough, Mr. Frodo. Of course you are. And I'm coming with
you.'
'Now, Sam,' said Frodo, 'don't hinder me! The others
will be coming back at any minute. If they catch me here, I shall have to argue
and explain, and I shall never have the heart or the chance to get off. But I
must go at once. It's the only way.'
'Of course it is,'
answered Sam. 'But not alone. I'm coming too, or neither of us isn't going. I'll
knock holes in all the boats first.'
Frodo actually
laughed. A sudden warmth and gladness touched his heart. 'Leave one!' he said.
'We'll need it. But you can't come like this without your gear or food or
anything.'
'Just hold on a moment, and I'll get my stuff!'
cried Sam eagerly. 'It's all ready. I thought we should be off today.' He rushed
to the camping place, fished out his pack from the pile where Frodo had laid it
when he emptied the boat of his companions' goods grabbed a spare blanket, and
some extra packages of food, and ran back.
'So all my plan
is spoilt!' said Frodo. 'It is no good trying to escape you. But I'm glad, Sam.
I cannot tell you how glad. Come along! It is plain that we were meant to go
together. We will go, and may the others find a safe road! Strider will look
after them. I don't suppose we shall see them again.'
'Yet
we may, Mr Frodo. We may,' said Sam.
So Frodo and Sam set
off on the last stage of the Quest together. Frodo paddled away from the shore,
and the River bore them swiftly away, down the western arm, and past the
frowning cliffs of Tol Brandir. The roar of the great falls drew nearer. Even
with such help as Sam could give, it was hard work to pass across the current at
the southward end of the island and drive the boat eastward towards the far
shore.
At length they came to land again upon the southern
slopes of Amon Lhaw. There they found a shelving shore, and they drew the boat
out, high above the water, and hid it as well as they could behind a great
boulder. Then shouldering their burdens, they set off, seeking a path that would
bring them over the grey hills of the Emyn Muil, and down into the Land of
Shadow.
Here ends the first part of the history of the
War of the Ring.
The second part is called The
Two Towers
, since the events recounted in it are dominated by Orthanc
,
the citadel of Saruman, and the fortress of Minas Morgul
that guards the
secret entrance to Mordor; it tells of the deeds and perils of all the members
of the now sundered fellowship, until the coming of the Great
Darkness.
The third part tells of the last defence
against the Shadow, and the end of the mission of the Ring-bearer in The
Return of the King.