Chapter 1
Minas Tirith
Pippin looked out from the shelter of Gandalf's cloak. He
wondered if he was awake or still sleeping, still in the swift-moving dream in
which he had been wrapped so long since the great ride began. The dark world was
rushing by and the wind sang loudly in his ears. He could see nothing but the
wheeling stars, and away to his right vast shadows against the sky where the
mountains of the South marched past. Sleepily he tried to reckon the times and
stages of their journey, but his memory was drowsy and
uncertain.
There had been the first ride at terrible speed
without a halt, and then in the dawn he had seen a pale gleam of gold, and they
had come to the silent town and the great empty house on the hill. And hardly
had they reached its shelter when the winged shadow had passed over once again,
and men wilted with fear. But Gandalf had spoken soft words to him, and he had
slept in a corner, tired but uneasy, dimly aware of comings and goings and of
men talking and Gandalf giving orders. And then again riding, riding in the
night. This was the second, no, the third night since he had looked in the
Stone. And with that hideous memory he woke fully, and shivered, and the noise
of the wind became filled with menacing voices.
A light
kindled in the sky, a blaze of yellow fire behind dark barriers Pippin cowered
back, afraid for a moment, wondering into what dreadful country Gandalf was
bearing him. He rubbed his eyes, and then he saw that it was the moon rising
above the eastern shadows, now almost at the full. So the night was not yet old
and for hours the dark journey would go on. He stirred and
spoke.
'Where are we, Gandalf?' he
asked.
'In the realm of Gondor,' the wizard answered. 'The
land of Anórien is still passing by.'
There was a silence
again for a while. Then, 'What is that?' cried Pippin suddenly, clutching at
Gandalf's cloak. 'Look! Fire, red fire! Are there dragons in this land? Look,
there is another!'
For answer Gandalf cried aloud to his
horse. 'On, Shadowfax! We must hasten. Time is short. See! The beacons of Gondor
are alight, calling for aid. War is kindled. See, there is the fire on Amon Dîn,
and flame on Eilenach; and there they go speeding west: Nardol, Erelas,
Min-Rimmon, Calenhad, and the Halifirien on the borders of
Rohan.'
But Shadowfax paused in his stride, slowing to a
walk, and then he lifted up his head and neighed. And out of the darkness the
answering neigh of other horses came; and presently the thudding of hoofs was
heard, and three riders swept up and passed like flying ghosts in the moon and
vanished into the West. Then Shadowfax gathered himself together and sprang
away, and the night flowed over him like a roaring
wind.
Pippin became drowsy again and paid little attention
to Gandalf telling him of the customs of Gondor, and how the Lord of the City
had beacons built on the tops of outlying hills along both borders of the great
range, and maintained posts at these points where fresh horses were always in
readiness to bear his errand-riders to Rohan in the North, or to Belfalas in the
South. 'It is long since the beacons of the North were lit,' he said, 'and in
the ancient days of Gondor they were not needed, for they had the Seven Stones.'
Pippin stirred uneasily.
'Sleep again, and do not be
afraid!' said Gandalf. 'For you are not going like Frodo to Mordor, but to Minas
Tirith, and there you will be as safe as you can be anywhere in these days. If
Gondor falls, or the Ring is taken, then the Shire will be no
refuge.'
'You do not comfort me,' said Pippin, but
nonetheless sleep crept over him. The last thing that he remembered before he
fell into deep dream was a glimpse of high white peaks, glimmering like floating
isles above the clouds as they caught the light of the westering moon. He
wondered where Frodo was, and if he was already in Mordor, or if he was dead;
and he did not know that Frodo from far away looked on that same moon as it set
beyond Gondor ere the coming of the day.
Pippin woke to the
sound of voices. Another day of hiding and a night of journey had fleeted by. It
was twilight: the cold dawn was at hand again, and chill grey mists were about
them. Shadowfax stood steaming with sweat, but he held his neck proudly and
showed no sign of weariness. Many tall men heavily cloaked stood beside him, and
behind them in the mist loomed a wall of stone. Partly ruinous it seemed, but
already before the night was passed the sound of hurried labour could be heard:
beat of hammers, clink of trowels, and the creak of wheels. Torches and flares
glowed dully here and there in the fog. Gandalf was speaking to the men that
barred his way, and as he listened Pippin became aware that he himself was being
discussed.
'Yea truly, we know you, Mithrandir,' said the
leader of the men, 'and you know the pass-words of the Seven Gates and are free
to go forward. But we do not know your companion. What is he? A dwarf out of the
mountains in the North? We wish for no strangers in the land at this time,
unless they be mighty men of arms in whose faith and help we can
trust.'
'I will vouch for him before the seat of Denethor,'
said Gandalf. 'And as for valour, that cannot be computed by stature. He has
passed through more battles and perils than you have, Ingold, though you be
twice his height; and he comes now from the storming of Isengard, of which we
bear tidings, and great weariness is on him, or I would wake him. His name is
Peregrin, a very valiant man.'
'Man?' said Ingold
dubiously; and the others laughed.
'Man!' cried Pippin, now
thoroughly roused. 'Man! Indeed not! I am a hobbit and no more valiant than I am
a man, save perhaps now and again by necessity. Do not let Gandalf deceive
you!'
'Many a doer of great deeds might say no more,' said
Ingold. 'But what is a hobbit?'
'A Halfling,' answered
Gandalf. 'Nay, not the one that was spoken of,' he added seeing the wonder in
the men's faces. 'Not he, yet one of his kindred.'
'Yes,
and one who journeyed with him,' said Pippin. 'And Boromir of your City was with
us, and he saved me in the snows of the North, and at the last he was slain
defending me from many foes.'
'Peace!' said Gandalf. 'The
news of that grief should have been told first to the
father.'
'It has been guessed already,' said Ingold, 'for
there have been strange portents here of late. But pass on now quickly! For the
Lord of Minas Tirith will be eager to see any that bear the latest tidings of
his son, be he man or—'
'Hobbit,' said Pippin. 'Little
service can I offer to your lord, but what I can do, I would do, remembering
Boromir the brave.'
'Fare you well!' said Ingold; and the
men made way for Shadowfax, and he passed through a narrow gate in the wall.
'May you bring good counsel to Denethor in his need, and to us all, Mithrandir!'
Ingold cried. 'But you come with tidings of grief and danger, as is your wont,
they say.'
'Because I come seldom but when my help is
needed,' answered Gandalf. 'And as for counsel, to you I would say that you are
over-late in repairing the wall of the Pelennor. Courage will now be your best
defence against the storm that is at hand – that and such hope as I bring. For
not all the tidings that I bring are evil. But leave your trowels and sharpen
your swords!'
'The work will be finished ere evening,' said
Ingold. 'This is the last portion of the wall to be put in defence: the least
open to attack, for it looks towards our friends of Rohan. Do you know aught of
them? Will they answer the summons, think you?'
'Yes, they
will come. But they have fought many battles at your back. This road and no road
looks towards safety any longer. Be vigilant! But for Gandalf Stormcrow you
would have seen a host of foes coming out of Anórien and no Riders of Rohan. And
you may yet. Fare you well, and sleep not!'
Gandalf passed
now into the wide land beyond the Rammas Echor. So the men of Gondor called the
out wall that they had built with great labour, after Ithilien fell under the
shadow of their Enemy. For ten leagues or more it ran from the mountains' feet
and so back again, enclosing in its fence the fields of the Pelennor: fair and
fertile townlands on the long slopes and terraces falling to the deep levels of
the Anduin. At its furthest point from the Great Gate of the City,
north-eastward, the wall was four leagues distant, and there from a frowning
bank it overlooked the long flats beside the river, and men had made it high and
strong; for at that point, upon a walled causeway, the road came in from the
fords and bridges of Osgiliath and passed through a guarded gate between
embattled towers. At its nearest point the wall was little more than one league
from the City, and that was south-eastward. There Anduin, going in a wide knee
about the hills of Emyn Arnen in South Ithilien, bent sharply west, and the
out-wall rose upon its very brink; and beneath it lay the quays and landings of
the Harlond for craft that came upstream from the southern
fiefs.
The townlands were rich, with wide tilth and many
orchards, and homesteads there were with oast and garner, fold and byre, and
many rills rippling through the green from the highlands down to Anduin. Yet the
herdsmen and husbandmen that dwelt there were not many, and the most part of the
people of Gondor lived in the seven circles of the City, or in the high vales of
the mountain-borders, in Lossarnach, or further south in fair Lebennin with its
five swift streams. There dwelt a hardy folk between the mountains and the sea.
They were reckoned men of Gondor, yet their blood was mingled, and there were
short and swarthy folk among them whose sires came more from the forgotten men
who housed in the shadow of the hills in the Dark Years ere the coming of the
kings. But beyond, in the great fief of Belfalas, dwelt Prince Imrahil in his
castle of Dol Amroth by the sea, and he was of high blood, and his folk also,
tall men and proud with sea-grey eyes.
Now after Gandalf
had ridden for some time the light of day grew in the sky, and Pippin roused
himself and looked up. To his left lay a sea of mist, rising to a bleak shadow
in the East; but to his right great mountains reared their heads, ranging from
the West to a steep and sudden end, as if in the making of the land the River
had burst through a great barrier, carving out a mighty valley to be a land of
battle and debate in times to come. And there where the White Mountains of Ered
Nimrais came to their end he saw, as Gandalf had promised, the dark mass of
Mount Mindolluin, the deep purple shadows of its high glens, and its tall face
whitening in the rising day. And upon its out-thrust knee was the Guarded City,
with its seven walls of stone so strong and old that it seemed to have been not
builded but carven by giants out of the bones of the
earth.
Even as Pippin gazed in wonder the walls passed from
looming grey to white, blushing faintly in the dawn; and suddenly the sun
climbed over the eastern shadow and sent forth a shaft that smote the face of
the City. Then Pippin cried aloud, for the Tower of Ecthelion, standing high
within the topmost walls, shone out against the sky, glimmering like a spike of
pearl and silver, tall and fair and shapely, and its pinnacle glittered as if it
were wrought of crystals; and white banners broke and fluttered from the
battlements in the morning breeze' and high and far he heard a clear ringing as
of silver trumpets.
So Gandalf and Peregrin rode to the
Great Gate of the Men of Gondor at the rising of the sun, and its iron doors
rolled back before them.
'Mithrandir! Mithrandir!' men
cried. 'Now we know that the storm is indeed nigh!'
'It is
upon you,' said Gandalf. 'I have ridden on its wings. Let me pass! I must come
to your Lord Denethor, while his stewardship lasts. Whatever betide, you have
come to the end of the Gondor that you have known. Let me
pass!'
Then men fell back before the command of his voice
and questioned him no further, though they gazed in wonder at the hobbit that
sat before him and at the horse that bore him. For the people of the City used
horses very little and they were seldom seen in their streets, save only those
ridden by the errand-riders of their lord. And they said: 'Surely that is one of
the great steeds of the King of Rohan? Maybe the Rohirrim will come soon to
strengthen us.' But Shadowfax walked proudly up the long winding
road.
For the fashion of Minas Tirith was such that it was
built on seven levels, each delved into the hill, and about each was set a wall,
and in each wall was a gate. But the gates were not set in a line: the Great
Gate in the City Wall was at the east point of the circuit, but the next faced
half south, and the third half north, and so to and fro upwards; so that the
paved way that climbed towards the Citadel turned first this way and then that
across the face of the hill. And each time that it passed the line of the Great
Gate it went through an arched tunnel, piercing a vast pier of rock whose huge
out-thrust bulk divided in two all the circles of the City save the first. For
partly in the primeval shaping of the hill, partly by the mighty craft and
labour of old, there stood up from the rear of the wide court behind the Gate a
towering bastion of stone, its edge sharp as a ship-keel facing east. Up it
rose, even to the level of the topmost circle, and there was crowned by a
battlement; so that those in the Citadel might, like mariners in a mountainous
ship, look from its peak sheer down upon the Gate seven hundred feet below. The
entrance to the Citadel also looked eastward, but was delved in the heart of the
rock; thence a long lamp-lit slope ran up to the seventh gate. Thus men reached
at last the High Court, and the Place of the Fountain before the feet of the
White Tower: tall and shapely, fifty fathoms from its base to the pinnacle,
where the banner of the Stewards floated a thousand feet above the
plain.
A strong citadel it was indeed, and not to be taken
by a host of enemies, if there were any within that could hold weapons; unless
some foe could come behind and scale the lower skirts of Mindolluin, and so come
upon the narrow shoulder that joined the Hill of Guard to the mountain mass. But
that shoulder, which rose to the height of the fifth wall, was hedged with great
ramparts right up to the precipice that overhung its western end; and in that
space stood the houses and domed tombs of bygone kings and lords, for ever
silent between the mountain and the tower.
Pippin gazed in
growing wonder at the great stone city, vaster and more splendid than anything
that he had dreamed of; greater and stronger than Isengard, and far more
beautiful. Yet it was in truth falling year by year into decay; and already it
lacked half the men that could have dwelt at ease there. In every street they
passed some great house or court over whose doors and arched gates were carved
many fair letters of strange and ancient shapes: names Pippin guessed of great
men and kindreds that had once dwelt there; and yet now they were silent, and no
footsteps rang on their wide pavements, nor voice was heard in their halls, nor
any face looked out from door or empty window.

At last they came out of shadow to the seventh
gate, and the warm sun that shone down beyond the river, as Frodo walked in the
glades of Ithilien, glowed here on the smooth walls and rooted pillars, and the
great arch with keystone carven in the likeness of a crowned and kingly head.
Gandalf dismounted, for no horse was allowed in the Citadel, and Shadowfax
suffered himself to be led away at the soft word of his
master.
The Guards of the gate were robed in black, and
their helms were of strange shape, high-crowned, with long cheek-guards
close-fitting to the face, and above the cheek-guards were set the white wings
of sea-birds; but the helms gleamed with a flame of silver, for they were indeed
wrought of
mithril, heirlooms from the glory of old days. Upon the black
surcoats were embroidered in white a tree blossoming like snow beneath a silver
crown and many-pointed stars. This was the livery of the heirs of Elendil, and
none wore it now in all Gondor, save the Guards of the Citadel before the Court
of the Fountain where the White Tree once had
grown.
Already it seemed that word of their coming had gone
before them: and at once they were admitted, silently, and without question.
Quickly Gandalf strode across the white-paved court. A sweet fountain played
there in the morning sun, and a sward of bright green lay about it; but in the
midst. drooping over the pool, stood a dead tree, and the falling drops dripped
sadly from its barren and broken branches back into the clear
water.
Pippin glanced at it as he hurried after Gandalf. It
looked mournful, he thought, and he wondered why the dead tree was left in this
place where everything else was well tended.
Seven stars
and seven stones and one white tree.
The words that
Gandalf had murmured came back into his mind. And then he found himself at the
doors of the great hall beneath the gleaming tower; and behind the wizard he
passed the tall silent door-wardens and entered the cool echoing shadows of the
house of stone.
They walked down a paved passage, long and
empty, and as they went Gandalf spoke softly to Pippin. 'Be careful of your
words, Master Peregrin! This is no time for hobbit pertness. Théoden is a kindly
old man. Denethor is of another sort, proud and subtle, a man of far greater
lineage and power, though he is not called a king. But he will speak most to
you, and question you much, since you can tell him of his son Boromir. He loved
him greatly: too much perhaps; and the more so because they were unlike. But
under cover of this love he will think it easier to learn what he witches from
you rather than from me. Do not tell him more than you need, and leave quiet the
matter of Frodo's errand. I will deal with that in due time. And say nothing
about Aragorn either, unless you must.'
'Why not? What is
wrong with Strider?' Pippin whispered. 'He meant to come here, didn't he? And
he'll be arriving soon himself anyway.'
'Maybe, maybe,'
said Gandalf. 'Though if he comes, it is likely to be in some way that no one
expects, not even Denethor. It will be better so. At least he should come
unheralded by us.'
Gandalf halted before a tall door of
polished metal. 'See, Master Pippin, there is no time to instruct you now in the
history of Gondor; though it might have been better, if you had learned
something of it, when you were still birds-nesting and playing truant in the
woods of the Shire. Do as I bid! It is scarcely wise when bringing the news of
the death of his heir to a mighty lord to speak over much of the coming of one
who will, if he comes, claim the kingship. Is that
enough?'
'Kingship?' said Pippin
amazed.
'Yes,' said Gandalf. 'If you have walked all these
days with closed ears and mind asleep, wake up now!' He knocked on the
door.
The door opened, but no one could be seen to open it.
Pippin looked into a great hall. It was lit by deep windows in the wide aisles
at either side, beyond the rows of tall pillars that upheld the roof. Monoliths
of black marble, they rose to great capitals carved in many strange figures of
beasts and leaves; and far above in shadow the wide vaulting gleamed with dull
gold, inset with flowing traceries of many colours. No hangings nor storied
webs, nor any things of woven stuff or of wood, were to be seen in that long
solemn hall; but between the pillars there stood a silent company of tall images
graven in cold stone.
Suddenly Pippin was reminded of the
hewn rocks of Argonath, and awe fell on him, as he looked down that avenue of
kings long dead. At the far end upon a dais of many steps was set a high throne
under a canopy of marble shaped like a crowned helm; behind it was carved upon
the wall and set with gems an image of a tree in flower. But the throne was
empty. At the foot of the dais, upon the lowest step which was broad and deep,
there was a stone chair, black and unadorned, and on it sat an old man gazing at
his lap. In his hand was a white rod with a golden knob. He did not look up.
Solemnly they paced the long floor towards him, until they stood three paces
from his footstool. Then Gandalf spoke.
'Hail, Lord and
Steward of Minas Tirith, Denethor son of Ecthelion! I am come with counsel and
tidings in this dark hour.'
Then the old man looked up.
Pippin saw his carven face with its proud bones and skin like ivory, and the
long curved nose between the dark deep eyes; and he was reminded not so much of
Boromir as of Aragorn. 'Dark indeed is the hour,' said the old man, 'and at such
times you are wont to come, Mithrandir. But though all the signs forebode that
the doom of Gondor is drawing nigh, less now to me is that darkness than my own
darkness. It has been told to me that you bring with you one who saw my son die.
Is this he?'
'It is,' said Gandalf. 'One of the twain. The
other is with Théoden of Rohan and may come hereafter. Halflings they are, as
you see, yet this is not he of whom the omens spoke.'
'Yet
a Halfling still,' said Denethor grimly, 'and little love do I bear the name,
since those accursed words came to trouble our counsels and drew away my son on
the wild errand to his death. My Boromir! Now we have need of you. Faramir
should have gone in his stead.'
'He would have gone,' said
Gandalf. 'Be not unjust in your grief! Boromir claimed the errand and would not
suffer any other to have it. He was a masterful man, and one to take what he
desired. I journeyed far with him and learned much of his mood. But you speak of
his death. You have had news of that ere we came?'
'I have
received this,' said Denethor, and laying down his rod he lifted from his lap
the thing that he had been gazing at. In each hand he held up one half of a
great horn cloven through the middle: a wild-ox horn bound with
silver.
'That is the horn that Boromir always wore!' cried
Pippin.
'Verily,' said Denethor. 'And in my turn I bore it,
and so did each eldest son of our house, far back into the vanished years before
the failing of the kings, since Vorondil father of Mardil hunted the wild kine
of Araw in the far fields of Rhun. I heard it blowing dim upon the northern
marches thirteen days ago, and the River brought it to me, broken: it will wind
no more.' He paused and there was a heavy silence. Suddenly he turned his black
glance upon Pippin. 'What say you to that,
Halfling?'
'Thirteen, thirteen days,' faltered Pippin.
'Yes, I think that would be so. Yes, I stood beside him, as he blew the horn.
But no help came. Only more orcs.'
'So,' said Denethor,
looking keenly at Pippin's face. 'You were there? Tell me more! Why did no help
come? And how did you escape, and yet he did not, so mighty a man as he was, and
only orcs to withstand him?'
Pippin flushed and forgot his
fear. 'The mightiest man may be slain by one arrow,' he said, 'and Boromir was
pierced by many. When last I saw him he sank beside a tree and plucked a
black-feathered shaft from his side. Then I swooned and was made captive. I saw
him no more, and know no more. But I honour his memory, for he was very valiant.
He died to save us, my kinsman Meriadoc and myself, waylaid in the woods by the
soldiery of the Dark Lord; and though he fell and failed, my gratitude is none
the less.'
Then Pippin looked the old man in the eye, for
pride stirred strangely within him, still stung by the scorn and suspicion in
that cold voice. 'Little service, no doubt, will so great a lord of Men think to
find in a hobbit, a halfling from the northern Shire; yet such as it is, I will
offer it, in payment of my debt.' Twitching aside his grey cloak, Pippin drew
forth his small sword and laid it at Denethor's feet.
A
pale smile, like a gleam of cold sun on a winter's evening, passed over the old
man's face; but he bent his head and held out his hand, laying the shards of the
horn aside. 'Give me the weapon!' he said.
Pippin lifted it
and presented the hilt to him. 'Whence came this?' said Denethor. 'Many, many
years lie on it. Surely this is a blade wrought by our own kindred in the North
in the deep past?'
'It came out of the mounds that lie on
the borders of my country,' said Pippin. 'But only evil wights dwell there now,
and I will not willingly tell more of them.'
'I see that
strange tales are woven about you,' said Denethor, 'and once again it is shown
that looks may belie the man – or the halfling. I accept your service. For you
are not daunted by words; and you have courteous speech, strange though the
sound of it may be to us in the South. And we shall have need of all folk of
courtesy, be they great or small, in the days to come. Swear to me
now!'
'Take the hilt,' said Gandalf, 'and speak after the
Lord, if you are resolved on this.'
'I am,' said
Pippin.
The old man laid the sword along his lap, and
Pippin put his hand to the hilt, and said slowly after
Denethor:
'Here do I swear fealty and service to Gondor,
and to the Lord and Steward of the realm, to speak and to be silent, to do and
to let be, to come and to go, in need or plenty, in peace or war, in living or
dying, from this hour henceforth, until my lord release me, or death take me, or
the world end. So say I, Peregrin son of Paladin of the Shire of the
Halflings.'
And this do I hear, Denethor son of Ecthelion,
Lord of Gondor, Steward of the High King, and I will not forget it, nor fail to
reward that which is given: fealty with love, valour with honour, oath-breaking
with vengeance.' Then Pippin received back his sword and put it in its
sheath.
'And now,' said Denethor, 'my first command to you:
speak and be not silent! Tell me your full tale, and see that you recall all
that you can of Boromir, my son. Sit now and begin!' As he spoke he struck a
small silver gong that stood near his footstool, and at once servants came
forward. Pippin saw then that they had been standing in alcoves on either side
of the door, unseen as he and Gandalf entered.
'Bring wine
and food and seats for the guests,' said Denethor, 'and see that none trouble us
for one hour.'
'It is all that I have to spare, for there
is much else to heed,' he said to Gandalf. 'Much of more import, it may seem,
and yet to me less pressing. But maybe we can speak again at the end of the
day.'
'And earlier, it is to be hoped,' said Gandalf. 'For
I have not ridden hither from Isengard, one hundred and fifty leagues, with the
speed of wind, only to bring you one small warrior, however courteous. Is it
naught to you that Théoden has fought a great battle and that Isengard is
overthrown, and that I have broken the staff of
Saruman?'
'It is much to me. But I know already sufficient
of these deeds for my own counsel against the menace of the East.' He turned his
dark eyes on Gandalf, and now Pippin saw a likeness between the two, and he felt
the strain between them, almost as if he saw a line of smouldering fire, drawn
from eye to eye, that might suddenly burst into
flame.
Denethor looked indeed much more like a great wizard
than Gandalf did, more kingly, beautiful, and powerful; and older. Yet by a
sense other than sight Pippin perceived that Gandalf had the greater power and
the deeper wisdom, and a majesty that was veiled. And he was older, far older.
'How much older?' he wondered, and then he thought how odd it was that he had
never thought about it before. Treebeard had said something about wizards, but
even then he had not thought of Gandalf as one of them. What was Gandalf? In
what far time and place did he come into the world, and when would he leave it?
And then his musings broke off, and he saw that Denethor and Gandalf still
looked each other in the eye, as if reading the other's mind. But it was
Denethor who first withdrew his gaze.
'Yea,' he said, 'for
though the Stones be lost, they say, still the lords of Gondor have keener sight
than lesser men, and many messages come to them. But sit
now!'
Then men came bearing a chair and a low stool, and
one brought a salver with a silver flagon and cups, and white cakes. Pippin sat
down, but he could not take his eyes from the old lord. Was it so, or had he
only imagined it, that as he spoke of the Stones a sudden gleam of his eye had
glanced upon Pippin's face?
'Now tell me your tale, my
liege,' said Denethor, half kindly; half mockingly. 'For the words of one whom
my son so befriended will be welcome indeed.'
Pippin never
forgot that hour in the great hall under the piercing eye of the Lord of Gondor,
stabbed ever and anon by his shrewd questions, and all the while conscious of
Gandalf at his side, watching and listening, and (so Pippin felt) holding in
check a rising wrath and impatience. When the hour was over and Denethor again
rang the gong, Pippin felt worn out. 'It cannot be more than nine o'clock,' he
thought. 'I could now eat three breakfasts on end.'
'Lead
the Lord Mithrandir to the housing prepared for him,' said Denethor, 'and his
companion may lodge with him for the present, if he will. But be it known that I
have now sworn him to my service, and he shall be known as Peregrin son of
Paladin and taught the lesser pass-words. Send word to the Captains that they
shall wait on me here, as soon as may be after the third hour has
rung.
'And you, my Lord Mithrandir, shall come too, as and
when you will. None shall hinder your coming to me at any time, save only in my
brief hours of sleep. Let your wrath at an old man's folly run off and then
return to my comfort!'
'Folly?' said Gandalf. 'Nay, my
lord, when you are a dotard you will die. You can use even your grief as a
cloak. Do you think that I do not understand your purpose in questioning for an
hour one who knows the least, while I sit by?'
'If you
understand it, then be content,' returned Denethor. 'Pride would be folly that
disdained help and counsel at need; but you deal out such gifts according to
your own designs. Yet the Lord of Gondor is not to be made the tool of other
men's purposes, however worthy. And to him there is no purpose higher in the
world as it now stands than the good of Gondor; and the rule of Gondor, my lord,
is mine and no other man's, unless the king should come
again.'
'Unless the king should come again?' said Gandalf.
'Well, my lord Steward, it is your task to keep some kingdom still against that
event, which few now look to see. In that task you shall have all the aid that
you are pleased to ask for. But I will say this: the rule of no realm is mine,
neither of Gondor nor any other, great or small. But all worthy things that are
in peril as the world now stands, those are my care. And for my part, I shall
not wholly fail of my task, though Gondor should perish, if anything passes
through this night that can still grow fair or bear fruit and flower again in
days to come. For I also am a steward. Did you not know?' And with that he
turned and strode from the hall with Pippin running at his
side.
Gandalf did not look at Pippin or speak a word to him
as they went. Their guide brought them from the doors of the hall, and then led
them across the Court of the Fountain into a lane between tall buildings of
stone. After several turns they came to a house close to the wall of the citadel
upon the north side, not far from the shoulder that linked the hill with the
mountain. Within, upon the first floor above the street, up a wide carven stair,
he showed them to a fair room, light and airy, with goodly hangings of dull gold
sheen unfigured. It was sparely furnished, having but a small table, two chairs
and a bench; but at either side there were curtained alcoves and well-clad beds
within with vessels and basins for washing. There were three high narrow windows
that looked northward over the great curve of Anduin, still shrouded in mists,
towards the Emyn Muil and Rauros far away. Pippin had to climb on the bench to
look out over the deep stone sill.
'Are you angry with me,
Gandalf?' he said, as their guide went out and closed the door. 'I did the best
I could.'
'You did indeed!' said Gandalf, laughing
suddenly; and he came and stood beside Pippin, putting his arm about the
hobbit's shoulders and gazing out of the window. Pippin glanced in some wonder
at the face now close beside his own, for the sound of that laugh had been gay
and merry. Yet in the wizard's face he saw at first only lines of care and
sorrow; though as he looked more intently he perceived that under all there was
a great joy: a fountain of mirth enough to set a kingdom laughing, were it to
gush forth.
'Indeed you did your best,' said the wizard,
'and I hope that it may be long before you find yourself in such a tight corner
again between two such terrible old men. Still the Lord of Gondor learned more
from you than you may have guessed, Pippin. You could not hide the fact that
Boromir did not lead the Company from Moria, and that there was one among you of
high honour who was coming to Minas Tirith; and that he had a famous sword. Men
think much about the stories of old days in Gondor; and Denethor has given long
thought to the rhyme and to the words
Isildur's Bane, since Boromir went
away.
'He is not as other men of this time, Pippin, and
whatever be his descent from father to son, by some chance the blood of
Westernesse runs nearly true in him; as it does in his other son, Faramir, and
yet did not in Boromir whom he loved best. He has long sight. He can perceive,
if he bends his will thither, much of what is passing in the minds of men, even
of those that dwell far off. It is difficult to deceive him, and dangerous to
try.
'Remember that! For you are now sworn to his service.
I do not know what put it into your head, or your heart, to do that. But it was
well done. I did not hinder it, for generous deed should not be checked by cold
counsel. It touched his heart, as well (may I say it) as pleasing his humour.
And at least you are free now to move about as you will in Minas Tirith – when
you are not on duty. For there is another side to it. You are at his command;
and he will not forget. Be wary still!'
He fell silent and
sighed. 'Well, no need to brood on what tomorrow may bring. For one thing,
tomorrow will be certain to bring worse than today, for many days to come. And
there is nothing more that I can do to help it. The board is set, and the pieces
are moving. One piece that I greatly desire to find is Faramir, now the heir of
Denethor. I do not think that he is in the City; but I have had no time to
gather news. I must go, Pippin. I must go to this lords' council and learn what
I can. But the Enemy has the move, and he is about to open his full game. And
pawns are likely to see as much of it as any, Peregrin son of Paladin, soldier
of Gondor. Sharpen your blade!'
Gandalf went to the door,
and there he turned. 'I am in haste Pippin,' he said. 'Do me a favour when you
go out. Even before you rest, if you are not too weary. Go and find Shadowfax
and see how he is housed. These people are kindly to beasts, for they are a good
and wise folk, but they have less skill with horses than
some.'
With that Gandalf went out; and as he did so, there
came the note of a clear sweet bell ringing in a tower of the citadel. Three
strokes it rang, like silver in the air, and ceased: the third hour from the
rising of the sun.
After a minute Pippin went to the door
and down the stair and looked about the street. The sun was now shining warm and
bright, and the towers and tall houses cast long clear-cut shadows westward.
High in the blue air Mount Mindolluin lifted its white helm and snowy cloak.
Armed men went to and fro in the ways of the City, as if going at the striking
of the hour to changes of post and duty.
'Nine o'clock we'd
call it in the Shire,' said Pippin aloud to himself. 'Just the time for a nice
breakfast by the open window in spring sunshine. And how I should like
breakfast! Do these people ever have it, or is it over? And when do they have
dinner, and where?'
Presently he noticed a man, clad in
black and white, coming along the narrow street from the centre of the citadel
towards him. Pippin felt lonely and made up his mind to speak as the man passed;
but he had no need. The man came straight up to him.
'You
are Peregrin the Halfling?' he said. 'I am told that you have been sworn to the
service of the Lord and of the City. Welcome! He held out his hand and Pippin
took it.
'I am named Beregond son of Baranor. I have no
duty this morning, and I have been sent to you to teach you the pass-words, and
to tell you some of the many things that no doubt you will wish to know. And for
my part, I would learn of you also. For never before have we seen a halfling in
this land and though we have heard rumour of them, little is said of them in any
tale that we know. Moreover you are a friend of Mithrandir. Do you know him
well?'
'Well,' said Pippin. 'I have known
of him all
my short life, as you might say; and lately I have travelled far with him. But
there is much to read in that book, and I cannot claim to have seen more than a
page or two. Yet perhaps I know him as well as any but a few. Aragorn was the
only one of our Company, I think, who really knew
him.'
'Aragorn?' said Beregond. 'Who is
he?'
'Oh,' stammered Pippin, 'he was a man who went about
with us. I think he is in Rohan now.'
'You have been in
Rohan, I hear. There is much that I would ask you of that land also; for we put
much of what little hope we have in its people. But I am forgetting my errand,
which was first to answer what you would ask. What would you know, Master
Peregrin?'
'Er well,' said Pippin, 'if I may venture to say
so, rather a burning question in my mind at present is, well, what about
breakfast and all that? I mean, what are the meal-times, if you understand me,
and where is the dining-room, if there is one? And the inns? I looked, but never
a one could I see as we rode up, though I had been borne up by the hope of a
draught of ale as soon as we came to the homes of wise and courtly
men.'
Beregond looked at him gravely. 'An old campaigner, I
see,' he said. 'They say that men who go warring afield look ever to the next
hope of food and of drink; though I am not a travelled man myself. Then you have
not yet eaten today?'
'Well, yes, to speak in courtesy,
yes,' said Pippin. 'But no more than a cup of wine and a white cake or two by
the kindness of your lord; but he racked me for it with an hour of questions,
and that is hungry work.'
Beregond laughed. 'At the table
small men may do the greater deeds, we say. But you have broken your fast as
well as any man in the Citadel, and with greater honour. This is a fortress and
a tower of guard and is now in posture of war. We rise ere the Sun, and take a
morsel in the grey light, and go to our duties at the opening hour. But do not
despair!' He laughed again, seeing the dismay in Pippin's face. 'Those who have
had heavy duty take somewhat to refresh their strength in the mid-morning. Then
there is the nuncheon, at noon or after as duties allow; and men gather for the
daymeal, and such mirth as there still may be, about the hour of
sunset.
'Come! We will walk a little and then go find us
some refreshment, and eat and drink on the battlement, and survey the fair
morning.'
'One moment!' said Pippin blushing. 'Greed, or
hunger by your courtesy, put it out of my mind. But Gandalf, Mithrandir as you
call him, asked me to see to his horse – Shadowfax, a great steed of Rohan, and
the apple of the king's eye, I am told, though he has given him to Mithrandir
for his services. I think his new master loves the beast better than he loves
many men, and if his good will is of any value to this city, you will treat
Shadowfax with all honour: with greater kindness than you have treated this
hobbit, if it is possible.'
'Hobbit?' said
Beregond.
'That is what we call ourselves,' said
Pippin.
'I am glad to learn it,' said Beregond, 'for now I
may say that strange accents do not mar fair speech, and hobbits are a
fair-spoken folk. But come! You shall make me acquainted with this good horse. I
love beasts, and we see them seldom in this stony city; for my people came from
the mountain-vales, and before that from Ithilien. But fear not! The visit shall
be short, a mere call of courtesy, and we will go thence to the
butteries.'
Pippin found that Shadowfax had been well
housed and tended. For in the sixth circle, outside the walls of the citadel,
there were some fair stables where a few swift horses were kept, hard by the
lodgings of the errand-riders of the Lord: messengers always ready to go at the
urgent command of Denethor or his chief captains. But now all the horses and the
riders were out and away.
Shadowfax whinnied as Pippin
entered the stable and turned his head. 'Good morning!' said Pippin. 'Gandalf
will come as soon as he may. He is busy, but he sends greetings, and I am to see
that all is well with you; and you resting, I hope, after your long
labours.'
Shadowfax tossed his head and stamped. But he
allowed Beregond to handle his head gently and stroke his great
flanks.
'He looks as if he were spoiling for a race, and
not newly come from a great journey,' said Beregond. 'How strong and proud he
is! Where is his harness? It should be rich and
fair.'
'None is rich and fair enough for him,' said Pippin.
'He will have none. If he will consent to bear you, bear you he does; and if
not, well, no bit, bridle, whip, or thong will tame him. Farewell, Shadowfax!
Have patience. Battle is coming.'
Shadowfax lifted up his
head and neighed, so that the stable shook, and they covered their ears. Then
they took their leave, seeing that the manger was well
filled.
'And now for our manger,' said Beregond, and he led
Pippin back to the citadel, and so to a door in the north side of the great
tower. There they went down a long cool stair into a wide alley lit with lamps.
There were hatches in the walls at the side, and one of these was
open.
'This is the storehouse and buttery of my company of
the Guard.' said Beregond. 'Greetings, Targon!' he called through the hatch. 'It
is early yet, but here is a newcomer that the Lord has taken into his service.
He has ridden long and far with a tight belt, and has had sore labour this
morning, and he is hungry. Give us what you have!'
They got
there bread, and butter, and cheese and apples: the last of the winter store,
wrinkled but sound and sweet; and a leather flagon of new-drawn ale, and wooden
platters and cups. They put all into a wicker basket and climbed back into the
sun; and Beregond brought Pippin to a place at the east end of the great
out-thrust battlement where there was an embrasure in the walls with a stone
seat beneath the sill. From there they could look out on the morning over the
world.
They ate and drank; and they talked now of Gondor
and its ways and customs, now of the Shire and the strange countries that Pippin
had seen. And ever as they talked Beregond was more amazed, and looked with
greater wonder at the hobbit, swinging his short legs as he sat on the seat, or
standing tiptoe upon it to peer over the sill at the lands
below.
'I will not hide from you, Master Peregrin,' said
Beregond, 'that to us you look almost as one of our children, a lad of nine
summers or so; and yet you have endured perils and seen marvels that few of our
greybeards could boast of. I thought it was the whim of our Lord to take him a
noble page, after the manner of the kings of old, they say. But I see that it is
not so, and you must pardon my foolishness.'
'I do,' said
Pippin. 'Though you are not far wrong. I am still little more than a boy in the
reckoning of my own people, and it will be four years yet before I “come of
age”, as we say in the Shire: But do not bother about me. Come and look and tell
me what I can see.'
The sun was now climbing, and the mists
in the vale below had been drawn up. The last of them were floating away, just
overhead, as wisps of white cloud borne on the stiffening breeze from the East,
that was now flapping and tugging the flags and white standards of the citadel.
Away down in the valley-bottom, five leagues or so as the eye leaps, the Great
River could now be seen grey and glittering, coming out of the north-west, and
bending in a mighty sweep south and west again, till it was lost to view in a
haze and shimmer, far beyond which lay the Sea fifty leagues
away.
Pippin could see all the Pelennor laid out before
him, dotted into the distance with farmsteads and little walls, barns and byres,
but nowhere could he see any kine or other beasts. Many roads and tracks crossed
the green fields, and there was much coming and going: wains moving in lines
towards the Great Gate, and others passing out. Now and again a horseman would
ride up, and leap from the saddle and hasten into the City. But most of the
traffic went out along the chief highway, and that turned south, and then
bending swifter than the River skirted the hills and passed soon from sight. It
was wide and well-paved, and along its eastern edge ran a broad green
riding-track, and beyond that a wall. On the ride horsemen galloped to and fro,
but all the street seemed to be choked with great covered wains going south. But
soon Pippin saw that all was in fact well-ordered: the wains were moving in
three lines, one swifter drawn by horses; another slower, great waggons with
fair housings of many colours, drawn by oxen; and along the west rim of the road
many smaller carts hauled by trudging men.
'That is the
road to the vales of Tumladen and Lossarnach, and the mountain-villages, and
then on to Lebennin,' said Beregond. 'There go the last of the wains that bear
away to refuge the aged, the children, and the women that must go with them.
They must all be gone from the Gate and the road clear for a league before noon:
that was the order. It is a sad necessity.' He sighed. 'Few, maybe, of those now
sundered will meet again. And there were always too few children in this city;
but now there are none - save some young lads that will not depart, and may find
some task to do: my own son is one of them.'
They fell
silent for a while. Pippin gazed anxiously eastward, as if at any moment he
might see thousands of orcs pouring over the fields. 'What can I see there?' he
asked, pointing down to the middle of the great curve of the Anduin. 'Is that
another city, or what is it?'
'It was a city,' said Beregond, 'the chief city
of Gondor, of which this was only a fortress. For that is the ruin of Osgiliath
on either side of Anduin, which our enemies took and burned long ago. Yet we won
it back in the days of the youth of Denethor: not to dwell in, but to hold as an
outpost, and to rebuild the bridge for the passage of our arms. And then came
the Fell Riders out of Minas Morgul.'
'The Black Riders?'
said Pippin, opening his eyes, and they were wide and dark with an old fear
re-awakened.
'Yes, they were black,' said Beregond, 'and I
see that you know something of them, though you have not spoken of them in any
of your tales.'
'I know of them,' said Pippin softly, 'but
I will not speak of them now, so near, so near -' He broke off and lifted his
eyes above the River, and it seemed to him that all he could see was a vast and
threatening shadow. Perhaps it was mountains looming on the verge of sight,
their jagged edges softened by wellnigh twenty leagues of misty air; perhaps it
was but a cloud-wall, and beyond that again a yet deeper gloom. But even as he
looked it seemed to his eyes that the gloom was growing and gathering, very
slowly, slowly rising to smother the regions of the
sun.
'So near to Mordor?' said Beregond quietly. 'Yes,
there it lies. We seldom name it; but we have dwelt ever in sight of that
shadow: sometimes it seems fainter and more distant; sometimes nearer and
darker. It is growing and darkening now; and therefore our fear and disquiet
grow too. And the Fell Riders, less than a year ago they won back the crossings,
and many of our best men were slain. Boromir it was that drove the enemy at last
back from this western shore, and we hold still the near half of Osgiliath. For
a little while. But we await now a new onslaught there. Maybe the chief
onslaught of the war that comes.'
'When?' said Pippin.
'Have you a guess? For I saw the beacons last night and the errand-riders; and
Gandalf said that it was a sign that war had begun. He seemed in a desperate
hurry. But now everything seems to have slowed up
again.'
'Only because everything is now ready,' said
Beregond. 'It is but the deep breath before the
plunge.'
'But why were the beacons lit last
night?'
'It is over-late to send for aid when you are
already besieged,' answered Beregond. 'But I do not know the counsel of the Lord
and his captains. They have many ways of gathering news. And the Lord Denethor
is unlike other men: he sees far. Some say that as he sits alone in his high
chamber in the Tower at night, and bends his thought this way and that, he can
read somewhat of the future; and that he will at times search even the mind of
the Enemy, wrestling with him. And so it is that he is old, worn before his
time. But however that may be, my lord Faramir is abroad, beyond the River on
some perilous errand, and he may have sent tidings.
'But if
you would know what I think set the beacons ablaze, it was the news that came
yestereve out of Lebennin. There is a great fleet drawing near to the mouths of
Anduin, manned by the corsairs of Umbar in the South. They have long ceased to
fear the might of Gondor, and they have allied them with the Enemy, and now make
a heavy stroke in his cause. For this attack will draw off much of the help that
we looked to have from Lebennin and Belfalas, where folk are hardy and numerous.
All the more do our thoughts go north to Rohan; and the more glad are we for
these tidings of victory that you bring.
'And yet' – he
paused and stood up, and looked round, north, east, and south – 'the doings at
Isengard should warn us that we are caught now in a great net and strategy. This
is no longer a bickering at the fords, raiding from Ithilien and from Anórien,
ambushing and pillaging. This is a great war long-planned, and we are but one
piece in it, whatever pride may say. Things move in the far East beyond the
Inland Sea, it is reported; and north in Mirkwood and beyond; and south in
Harad. And now all realms shall be put to the test, to stand, or fall – under
the Shadow.
'Yet, Master Peregrin, we have this honour:
ever we bear the brunt of the chief hatred of the Dark Lord, for that hatred
comes down out of the depths of time and over the deeps of the Sea. Here will
the hammer-stroke fall hardest. And for that reason Mithrandir came hither in
such haste. For if we fall, who shall stand? And, Master Peregrin, do you see
any hope that we shall stand?'
Pippin did not answer. He
looked at the great walls, and the towers and brave banners, and the sun in the
high sky, and then at the gathering gloom in the East; and he thought of the
long fingers of that Shadow: of the orcs in the woods and the mountains, the
treason of Isengard, the birds of evil eye, and the Black Riders even in the
lanes of the Shire – and of the winged terror, the Nazgûl. He shuddered, and
hope seemed to wither. And even at that moment the sun for a second faltered and
was obscured, as though a dark wing had passed across it. Almost beyond hearing
he thought he caught, high and far up in the heavens, a cry: faint, but
heart-quelling, cruel and cold. He blanched and cowered against the
wall.
'What was that?' asked Beregond. 'You also felt
something?'
'Yes,' muttered Pippin. 'It is the sign of our
fall, and the shadow of doom, a Fell Rider of the
air.'
'Yes, the shadow of doom,' said Beregond. 'I fear
that Minas Tirith shall fall. Night comes. The very warmth of my blood seems
stolen away.'
For a time they sat together with bowed heads
and did not speak. Then suddenly Pippin looked up and saw that the sun was still
shining and the banners still streaming in the breeze. He shook himself. 'It is
passed,' he said. 'No, my heart will not yet despair. Gandalf fell and has
returned and is with us. We may stand, if only on one leg, or at least be left
still upon our knees.'
'Rightly said!' cried Beregond,
rising and striding to and fro. 'Nay, though all things must come utterly to an
end in time, Gondor shall not perish yet. Not though the walls be taken by a
reckless foe that will build a hill of carrion before them. There are still
other fastnesses, and secret ways of escape into the mountains. Hope and memory
shall live still in some hidden valley where the grass is
green.'
'All the same, I wish it was over for good or ill,'
said Pippin. 'I am no warrior at all and dislike any thought of battle; but
waiting on the edge of one that I can't escape is worst of all. What a long day
it seems already! I should be happier, if we were not obliged to stand and
watch, making no move, striking nowhere first. No stroke would have been struck
in Rohan, I think, but for Gandalf.'
'Ah, there you lay
your finger on the sore that many feel!' said Beregond. 'But things may change
when Faramir returns. He is bold, more bold than many deem; for in these days
men are slow to believe that a captain can be wise and learned in the scrolls of
lore and song, as he is, and yet a man of hardihood and swift judgement in the
field. But such is Faramir. Less reckless and eager than Boromir, but not less
resolute. Yet what indeed can he do? We cannot assault the mountains of – of
yonder realm. Our reach is shortened, and we cannot strike till some foe comes
within it. Then our hand must be heavy!' He smote the hilt of his
sword.
Pippin looked at him: tall and proud and noble, as
all the men that he had yet seen in that land; and with a glitter in his eye as
he thought of the battle. 'Alas! my own hand feels as light as a feather,' he
thought, but he said nothing. 'A pawn did Gandalf say? Perhaps but on the wrong
chessboard.'
So they talked until the sun reached its
height, and suddenly the noon-bells were rung, and there was a stir in the
citadel; for all save the watchmen were going to their
meal.
'Will you come with me?' said Beregond. 'You may join
my mess for this day. I do not know to what company you will be assigned; or the
Lord may hold you at his own command. But you will be welcome. And it will be
well to meet as many men as you may, while there is yet
time.'
'I shall be glad to come,' said Pippin. 'I am
lonely, to tell you the truth. I left my best friend behind in Rohan, and I have
had no one to talk to or jest with. Perhaps I could really join your company?
Are you the captain? If so, you could take me on, or speak for
me?'
'Nay, nay,' Beregond laughed, 'I am no captain.
Neither office nor rank nor lordship have I, being but a plain man of arms of
the Third Company of the Citadel. Yet, Master Peregrin, to be only a man of arms
of the Guard of the Tower of Gondor is held worthy in the City, and such men
have honour in the land.'
'Then it is far beyond me,' said
Pippin. 'Take me back to our room, and if Gandalf is not there, I will go where
you like – as your guest.'
Gandalf was not in the lodging
and had sent no message; so Pippin went with Beregond and was made known to the
men of the Third Company. And it seemed that Beregond got as much honour from it
as his guest, for Pippin was very welcome. There had already been much talk in
the citadel about Mithrandir's companion and his long closeting with the Lord;
and rumour declared that a Prince of the Halflings had come out of the North to
offer allegiance to Gondor and five thousand swords. And some said that when the
Riders came from Rohan each would bring behind him a halfling warrior, small
maybe, but doughty.
Though Pippin had regretfully to
destroy this hopeful tale, he could not be rid of his new rank, only fitting,
men thought, to one befriended by Boromir and honoured by the Lord Denethor; and
they thanked him for coming among them, and hung on his words and stories of the
outlands, and gave him as much food and ale as he could wish. Indeed his only
trouble was to be 'wary' according to the counsel of Gandalf, and not to let his
tongue wag freely after the manner of a hobbit among
friends.
At length Beregond rose. 'Farewell for this time!'
he said. 'I have duty now till sundown, as have all the others here, I think.
But if you are lonely, as you say, maybe you would like a merry guide about the
City. My son would go with you gladly. A good lad, I may say. If that pleases
you, go down to the lowest circle and ask for the Old Guesthouse in the Rath
Celerdain, the Lampwrights' Street. You will find him there with other lads that
are remaining in the City. There may be things worth seeing down at the Great
Gate ere the closing.'
He went out, and soon after all the
others followed. The day was still fine, though it was growing hazy, and it was
hot for March, even so far southwards. Pippin felt sleepy, but the lodging
seemed cheerless, and he decided to go down and explore the City. He took a few
morsels that he had saved to Shadowfax, and they were graciously accepted,
though the horse seemed to have no lack. Then he walked on down many winding
ways.
People stared much as he passed. To his face men were
gravely courteous, saluting him after the manner of Gondor with bowed head and
hands upon the breast; but behind him he heard many calls, as those out of doors
cried to others within to come and see the Prince of the Halflings, the
companion of Mithrandir. Many used some other tongue than the Common Speech, but
it was not long before he learned at least what was meant by
Ernil i
Pheriannath and knew that his title had gone down before him into the
City.
He came at last by arched streets and many fair
alleys and pavements to the lowest and widest circle, and there he was directed
to the Lampwrights' Street, a broad way running towards the Great Gate. In it he
found the Old Guesthouse, a large building of grey weathered stone with two
wings running back from the street, and between them a narrow greensward, behind
which was the many-windowed house, fronted along its whole width by a pillared
porch and a flight of steps down on to the grass. Boys were playing among the
pillars, the only children that Pippin had seen in Minas Tirith, and he stopped
to look at them. Presently one of them caught sight of him, and with a shout he
sprang across the grass and came into the street, followed by several others.
There he stood in front of Pippin, looking him up and
down.
'Greetings!' said the lad. 'Where do you come from?
You are a stranger in the City.'
'I was,' said Pippin, 'but
they say I have become a man of Gondor.'
'Oh come!' said
the lad. 'Then we are all men here. But how old are you, and what is your name?
I am ten years already, and shall soon be five feet. I am taller than you. But
then my father is a Guard, one of the tallest. What is your
father?'
'Which question shall I answer first?' said
Pippin. 'My father farms the lands round Whitwell near Tuckborough in the Shire.
I am nearly twenty-nine, so I pass you there; though I am but four feet, and not
likely to grow any more, save sideways.'
'Twenty-nine!'
said the lad and whistled. 'Why, you are quite old! As old as my uncle Iorlas.
Still,' he added hopefully, 'I wager I could stand you on your head or lay you
on your back.'
'Maybe you could, if I let you,' said Pippin
with a laugh. 'And maybe I could do the same to you: we know some wrestling
tricks in my little country. Where, let me tell you, I am considered uncommonly
large and strong; and I have never allowed anyone to stand me on my head. So if
it came to a trial and nothing else would serve, I might have to kill you. For
when you are older, you will learn that folk are not always what they seem; and
though you may have taken me for a soft stranger-lad and easy prey, let me warn
you: I am not, I am a halfling, hard, bold, and wicked!' Pippin pulled such a
grim face that the boy stepped back a pace, but at once he returned with
clenched fists and the light of battle in his eye.
'No!'
Pippin laughed. 'Don't believe what strangers say of themselves either! I am not
a fighter. But it would be politer in any case for the challenger to say who he
is.'
The boy drew himself up proudly. 'I am Bergil son of
Beregond of the Guards,' he said.
'So I thought,' said
Pippin, 'for you look like your father. I know him and he sent me to find
you.'
'Then why did you not say so at once?' said Bergil,
and suddenly a look of dismay came over his face. 'Do not tell me that he has
changed his mind, and will send me away with the maidens! But no, the last wains
have gone.'
'His message is less bad than that, if not
good.' said Pippin. 'He says that if you would prefer it to standing me on my
head, you might show me round the City for a while and cheer my loneliness. I
can tell you some tales of far countries in return.'
Bergil
clapped his hands, and laughed with relief. 'All is well,' he cried. 'Come then!
We were soon going to the Gate to look on. We will go
now.'
'What is happening there?'
'The
Captains of the Outlands are expected up the South Road ere sundown. Come with
us and you will see.'
Bergil proved a good comrade, the
best company Pippin had had since he parted from Merry, and soon they were
laughing and talking gaily as they went about the streets, heedless of the many
glances that men gave them. Before long they found themselves in a throng going
towards the Great Gate. There Pippin went up much in the esteem of Bergil, for
when he spoke his name and the pass-word the guard saluted him and let him pass
through; and what was more, he allowed him to take his companion with
him.
'That is good!' said Bergil. 'We boys are no longer
allowed to pass the Gate without an elder. Now we shall see
better.'
Beyond the Gate there was a crowd of men along the
verge of the road and of the great paved space into which all the ways to Minas
Tirith ran. All eyes were turned southwards, and soon a murmur rose: 'There is
dust away there! They are coming!'
Pippin and Bergil edged
their way forward to the front of the crowd, and waited. Horns sounded at some
distance, and the noise of cheering rolled towards them like a gathering wind.
Then there was a loud trumpet-blast, and all about them people were
shouting.
'Forlong! Forlong!' Pippin heard men calling.
'What do they say?' he asked.
'Forlong has come,' Bergil
answered, 'old Forlong the Fat, the Lord of Lossarnach. That is where my
grandsire lives. Hurrah! Here he is. Good old
Forlong!'
Leading the line there came walking a big
thick-limbed horse, and on it sat a man of wide shoulders and huge girth, but
old and grey-bearded, yet mail-clad and black-helmed and bearing a long heavy
spear. Behind him marched proudly a dusty line of men, well-armed and bearing
great battle-axes; grim-faced they were, and shorter and somewhat swarthier than
any men that Pippin had yet seen in Gondor.
'Forlong!' men
shouted. 'True heart, true friend! Forlong!' But when the men of Lossarnach had
passed they muttered: 'So few! Two hundreds, what are they? We hoped for ten
times the number. That will be the new tidings of the black fleet. They are
sparing only a tithe of their strength. Still every little is a
gain.'
And so the companies came and were hailed and
cheered and passed through the Gate, men of the Outlands marching to defend the
City of Gondor in a dark hour; but always too few, always less than hope looked
for or need asked. The men of Ringlo Vale behind the son of their lord, Dervorin
striding on foot: three hundreds. From the uplands of Morthond, the great
Blackroot Vale, tall Duinhir with his sons, Duilin and Derufin, and five hundred
bowmen. From the Anfalas, the Langstrand far away, a long line of men of many
sorts, hunters and herdsmen and men of little villages, scantily equipped save
for the household of Golasgil their lord. From Lamedon, a few grim hillmen
without a captain. Fisher-folk of the Ethir, some hundred or more spared from
the ships. Hirluin the Fair of the Green Hills from Pinnath Gelin with three
hundreds of gallant green-clad men. And last and proudest, Imrahil, Prince of
Dol Amroth, kinsman of the Lord, with gilded banners bearing his token of the
Ship and the Silver Swan, and a company of knights in full harness riding grey
horses; and behind them seven hundreds of men at arms, tall as lords, grey-eyed,
dark-haired, singing as they came.
And that was all, less
than three thousands full told. No more would come. Their cries and the tramp of
their feet passed into the City and died away. The onlookers stood silent for a
while. Dust hung in the air, for the wind had died and the evening was heavy.
Already the closing hour was drawing nigh, and the red sun had gone behind
Mindolluin. Shadow came down on the City.
Pippin looked up,
and it seemed to him that the sky had grown ashen-grey, as if a vast dust and
smoke hung above them, and light came dully through it. But in the West the
dying sun had set all the fume on fire, and now Mindolluin stood black against a
burning smoulder flecked with embers. 'So ends a fair day in wrath!' he said
forgetful of the lad at his side.
'So it will, if I have
not returned before the sundown-bells,' said Bergil. 'Come! There goes the
trumpet for the closing of the Gate.'
Hand in hand they
went back into the City, the last to pass the Gate before it was shut; and as
they reached the Lampwrights' Street all the bells in the towers tolled
solemnly. Lights sprang in many windows, and from the houses and wards of the
men at arms along the walls there came the sound of
song.
'Farewell for this time,' said Bergil. 'Take my
greetings to my father, and thank him for the company that he sent. Come again
soon, I beg. Almost I wish now that there was no war, for we might have had some
merry times. We might have journeyed to Lossarnach, to my grandsire's house; it
is good to be there in Spring, the woods and fields are full of flowers. But
maybe we will go thither together yet. They will never overcome our Lord, and my
father is very valiant. Farewell and return!'
They parted
and Pippin hurried back towards the citadel. It seemed a long way, and he grew
hot and very hungry; and night closed down swift and dark. Not a star pricked
the sky. He was late for the daymeal in the mess, and Beregond greeted him
gladly, and sat him at his side to hear news of his son. After the meal Pippin
stayed a while, and then took his leave, for a strange gloom was on him, and now
he desired very much to see Gandalf again.
'Can you find
your way?' said Beregond at the door of the small hall, on the north side of the
citadel, where they had sat. 'It is a black night, and all the blacker since
orders came that lights are to be dimmed within the City, and none are to shine
out from the walls. And I can give you news of another order: you will be
summoned to the Lord Denethor early tomorrow. I fear you will not be for the
Third Company. Still we may hope to meet again. Farewell and sleep in
peace!'
The lodging was dark, save for a little lantern set
on the table. Gandalf was not there. Gloom settled still more heavily on Pippin.
He climbed on the bench and tried to peer out of a window, but it was like
looking into a pool of ink. He got down and closed the shutter and went to bed.
For a while he lay and listened for sounds of Gandalf's return, and then he fell
into an uneasy sleep.
In the night he was wakened by a
light, and he saw that Gandalf had come and was pacing to and fro in the room
beyond the curtain of the alcove. There were candles on the table and rolls of
parchment. He heard the wizard sigh, and mutter: 'When will Faramir
return?'
'Hullo!' said Pippin, poking his head round the
curtain. 'I thought you had forgotten all about me. I am glad to see you back.
It has been a long day.'
'But the night will be too short,'
said Gandalf. 'I have come back here, for I must have a little peace, alone. You
should sleep, in a bed while you still may. At the sunrise I shall take you to
the Lord Denethor again. No, when the summons comes, not at sunrise. The
Darkness has begun. There will be no dawn.'
Chapter 2
The Passing of the Grey
Company
Gandalf was gone, and the thudding hoofs of Shadowfax
were lost in the night, when Merry came back to Aragorn. He had only a light
bundle, for he had lost his pack at Parth Galen, and all he had was a few useful
things he had picked up among the wreckage of Isengard. Hasufel was already
saddled. Legolas and Gimli with their horse stood close
by.
'So four of the Company still remain,' said Aragorn.
'We will ride on together. But we shall not go alone, as I thought. The king is
now determined to set out at once. Since the coming of the winged shadow, he
desires to return to the hills under cover of night.'
'And
then whither?' said Legolas.
'I cannot say yet,' Aragorn
answered. 'As for the king, he will go to the muster that he commanded at
Edoras, four nights from now. And there, I think, he will hear tidings of war,
and the Riders of Rohan will go down to Minas Tirith. But for myself, and any
that will go with me . . .'
'I for one!'
cried Legolas. 'And Gimli with him!' said the Dwarf.
'Well,
for myself,' said Aragorn, 'it is dark before me. I must go down also to Minas
Tirith, but I do not yet see the road. An hour long prepared
approaches.'
'Don't leave me behind!' said Merry. 'I have
not been of much use yet; but I don't want to be laid aside, like baggage to be
called for when all is over. I don't think the Riders will want to be bothered
with me now. Though, of course, the king did say that I was to sit by him when
he came to his house and tell him all about the
Shire.'
'Yes,' said Aragorn, 'and your road lies with him,
I think, Merry. But do not look for mirth at the ending. It will be long, I
fear, ere Théoden sits at ease again in Meduseld. Many hopes will wither in this
bitter Spring.'
Soon all were ready to depart: twenty-four
horses, with Gimli behind Legolas, and Merry in front of Aragorn. Presently they
were riding swiftly through the night. They had not long passed the mounds at
the Fords of Isen, when a Rider galloped up from the rear of their
line.
'My lord,' he said to the king, 'there are horsemen
behind us. As we crossed the fords I thought that I heard them. Now we are sure.
They are overtaking us, riding hard.'
Théoden at once
called a halt. The Riders turned about and seized their spears. Aragorn
dismounted and set Merry on the ground, and drawing his sword he stood by the
king's stirrup. Éomer and his esquire rode back to the rear. Merry felt more
like unneeded baggage than ever, and he wondered, if there was a fight, what he
should do. Supposing the king's small escort was trapped and overcome, but he
escaped into the darkness – alone in the wild fields of Rohan with no idea of
where he was in all the endless miles? 'No good!' he thought. He drew his sword
and tightened his belt.
The sinking moon was obscured by a
great sailing cloud, but suddenly it rode out clear again. Then they all heard
the sound of hoofs, and at the same moment they saw dark shapes coming swiftly
on the path from the fords. The moonlight glinted here and there on the points
of spears. The number of the pursuers could not be told, but they seemed no
fewer than the king's escort, at the least.
When they were
some fifty paces off, Éomer cried in a loud voice: 'Halt! Halt! Who rides in
Rohan?'
The pursuers brought their steeds to a sudden
stand. A silence followed: and then in the moonlight, a horseman could be seen
dismounting and walking slowly forward. His hand showed white as he held it up,
palm outward, in token of peace; but the king's men gripped their weapons. At
ten paces the man stopped. He was tall, a dark standing shadow. Then his clear
voice rang out.
'Rohan? Rohan did you say? That is a glad
word. We seek that land in haste from long afar.'
'You have
found it,' said Éomer. 'When you crossed the fords yonder you entered it. But it
is the realm of Théoden the King. None ride here save by his leave. Who are you?
And what is your haste?'
'Halbarad Dunadan, Ranger of the
North I am,' cried the man. 'We seek one Aragorn son of Arathorn, and we heard
that he was in Rohan.'
'And you have found him also!' cried
Aragorn. Giving his reins to Merry, he ran forward and embraced the newcomer.
'Halbarad!' he said. 'Of all joys this is the least
expected!'
Merry breathed a sigh of relief. He had thought
that this was some last trick of Saruman's, to waylay the king while he had only
a few men about him; but it seemed that there would be no need to die in
Théoden's defence, not yet at any rate. He sheathed his
sword.
'All is well,' said Aragorn, turning back. 'Here are
some of my own kin from the far land where I dwelt. But why they come, and how
many they be, Halbarad shall tell us.'
'I have thirty with
me,' said Halbarad. 'That is all of our kindred that could be gathered in haste;
but the brethren Elladan and Elrohir have ridden with us, desiring to go to the
war. We rode as swiftly as we might when your summons
came.'
'But I did not summon you,' said Aragorn, 'save only
in wish. My thoughts have often turned to you, and seldom more than tonight; yet
I have sent no word. But come! All such matters must wait. You find us riding in
haste and danger. Ride with us now, if the king will give his
leave.'
Théoden was indeed glad of the news. 'It is well!'
he said. 'If these kinsmen be in any way like to yourself, my lord Aragorn,
thirty such knights will be a strength that cannot be counted by
heads.'
Then the Riders set out again, and Aragorn for a
while rode with the Dunedain; and when they had spoken of tidings in the North
and in the South, Elrohir said to him:
'I bring word to you
from my father:
The days are short. If thou art in haste, remember the Paths
of the Dead.'
'Always my days have seemed to me too
short to achieve my desire,' answered Aragorn. 'But great indeed will be my
haste ere I take that road.'
'That will soon be seen,' said
Elrohir. 'But let us speak no more of these things upon the open
road!'
And Aragorn said to Halbarad: 'What is that that you
bear, kinsman?' For he saw that instead of a spear he bore a tall staff, as it
were a standard, but it was close-furled in a black cloth bound about with many
thongs.
'It is a gift that I bring you from the Lady of
Rivendell,' answered Halbarad. 'She wrought it in secret, and long was the
making. But she also sends word to you:
The days now are short. Either our
hope cometh, or all hopes end. Therefore I send thee what I have made for thee.
Fare well, Elfstone! '
And Aragorn said: 'Now I know
what you bear. Bear it still for me a while!' And he turned and looked away to
the North under the great stars, and then he fell silent and spoke no more while
the night's journey lasted.
The night was old and the East
grey when they rode up at last from Deeping-coomb and came back to the Hornburg.
There they were to lie and rest for a brief while and take
counsel.
Merry slept until he was roused by Legolas and
Gimli. 'The Sun is high,' said Legolas. 'All others are up and doing. Come,
Master Sluggard, and look at this place while you
may!'
'There was a battle here three nights ago,' said
Gimli, 'and here Legolas and I played a game that I won only by a single orc.
Come and see how it was! And there are caves, Merry, caves of wonder! Shall we
visit them, Legolas, do you think?'
'Nay! There is no
time,' said the Elf. 'Do not spoil the wonder with haste! I have given you my
word to return hither with you, if a day of peace and freedom comes again. But
it is now near to noon, and at that hour we eat, and then set out again, I
hear.'
Merry got up and yawned. His few hours' sleep had
not been nearly enough; he was tired and rather dismal. He missed Pippin, and
felt that he was only a burden, while everybody was making plans for speed in a
business that he did not fully understand. 'Where is Aragorn?' he
asked.
'In a high chamber of the Burg,' said Legolas. 'He
has neither rested nor slept, I think. He went thither some hours ago, saying
that he must take thought, and only his kinsman, Halbarad, went with him; but
some dark doubt or care sits on him.'
'They are a strange
company, these newcomers,' said Gimli. 'Stout men and lordly they are, and the
Riders of Rohan look almost as boys beside them; for they are grim men of face,
worn like weathered rocks for the most part, even as Aragorn himself; and they
are silent.'
'But even as Aragorn they are courteous, if
they break their silence.' said Legolas. 'And have you marked the brethren
Elladan and Elrohir? Less sombre is their gear than the others', and they are
fair and gallant as Elven-lords; and that is not to be wondered at in the sons
of Elrond of Rivendell.'
'Why have they come? Have you
heard?' asked Merry. He had now dressed, and he flung his grey cloak about his
shoulders; and the three passed out together towards the ruined gate of the
Burg.
'They answered a summons, as you heard,' said Gimli.
'Word came to Rivendell, they say:
Aragorn has need of his kindred. Let the
Dunedain ride to him in Rohan! But whence this message came they are now in
doubt. Gandalf sent it, I would guess.'
'Nay, Galadriel,'
said Legolas. 'Did she not speak through Gandalf of the ride of the Grey Company
from the North?'
'Yes, you have it,' said Gimli. 'The Lady
of the Wood! She read many hearts and desires. Now why did not we wish for some
of our own kinsfolk, Legolas?'
Legolas stood before the
gate and turned his bright eyes away north and east, and his fair face was
troubled. 'I do not think that any would come,' he answered. 'They have no need
to ride to war; war already marches on their own
lands.'
For a while the three companions walked together,
speaking of this and that turn of the battle, and they went down from the broken
gate, and passed the mounds of the fallen on the greensward beside the road,
until they stood on Helm's Dike and looked into the Coomb. The Death Down
already stood there, black and tall and stony, and the great trampling and
scoring of the grass by the Huorns could be plainly seen. The Dunlendings and
many men of the garrison of the Burg were at work on the Dike or in the fields
and about the battered walls behind; yet all seemed strangely quiet: a weary
valley resting after a great storm. Soon they turned back and went to the midday
meal in the hall of the Burg.
The king was already there,
and as soon as they entered he called for Merry and had a seat set for him at
his side. 'It is not as I would have it,' said Théoden, 'for this is little like
my fair house in Edoras. And your friend is gone, who should also be here. But
it may be long ere we sit, you and I, at the high table in Meduseld; there will
be no time for feasting when I return thither. But come now! Eat and drink, and
let us speak together while we may. And then you shall ride with
me.'
'May I?' said Merry, surprised and delighted. 'That
would be splendid!' He had never felt more grateful for any kindness in words.
'I am afraid I am only in everybody's way,' he stammered, 'but I should like to
do anything I could, you know.'
'I doubt it not,' said the
king. 'I have had a good hill-pony made ready for you. He will bear you as swift
as any horse by the roads that we shall take. For I will ride from the Burg by
mountain paths, not by the plain, and so come to Edoras by way of Dunharrow
where the Lady Éowyn awaits me. You shall be my esquire, if you will. Is there
gear of war in this place, Éomer, that my sword-thain could
use?'
'There are no great weapon-hoards here, lord.'
answered Éomer. 'Maybe a light helm might be found to fit him; but we have no
mail or sword for one of his stature.'
'I have a sword,'
said Merry, climbing from his seat, and drawing from its black sheath his small
bright blade. Filled suddenly with love for this old man, he knelt on one knee,
and took his hand and kissed it. 'May I lay the sword of Meriadoc of the Shire
on your lap Théoden King?' he cried. 'Receive my service, if you
will!'
'Gladly will I take it,' said the king; and laying
his long old hands upon the brown hair of the hobbit; he blessed him. 'Rise now,
Meriadoc, esquire of Rohan of the household of Meduseld!' he said. 'Take your
sword and bear it unto good fortune!'
'As a father you
shall be to me,' said Merry.
'For a little while,' said
Théoden.
They talked then together as they ate, until
presently Éomer spoke. 'It is near the hour that we set for our going, lord,' he
said. 'Shall I bid men sound the horns? But where is Aragorn? His place is empty
and he has not eaten.'
'We will make ready to ride,' said
Théoden, 'but let word be sent to the Lord Aragorn that the hour is
nigh.'
The king with his guard and Merry at his side passed
down from the gate of the Burg to where the Riders were assembling on the green.
Many were already mounted. It would be a great company; for the king was leaving
only a small garrison in the Burg, and all who could be spared were riding to
the weapontake at Edoras. A thousand spears had indeed already ridden away at
night; but still there would be some five hundred more to go with the king, for
the most part men from the fields and dales of Westfold.
A
little apart the Rangers sat, silent, in an ordered company, armed with spear
and bow and sword. They were clad in cloaks of dark grey, and their hoods were
cast now over helm and head. Their horses were strong and of proud bearing, but
rough-haired; and one stood there without a rider, Aragorn's own horse that they
had brought from the North; Roheryn was his name. There was no gleam of stone or
gold, nor any fair thing in all their gear and harness: nor did their riders
bear any badge or token, save only that each cloak was pinned upon the left
shoulder by a brooch of silver shaped like a rayed
star.
The king mounted his horse, Snowmane, and Merry sat
beside him on his pony; Stybba was his name. Presently Éomer came out from the
gate, and with him was Aragorn, and Halbarad bearing the great staff
close-furled in black, and two tall men, neither young nor old, so much alike
were they, the sons of Elrond, that few could tell them apart: dark-haired,
grey-eyed, and their faces elven-fair, clad alike in bright mail beneath cloaks
of silver-grey. Behind them walked Legolas and Gimli. But Merry had eyes only
for Aragorn, so startling was the change that he saw in him, as if in one night
many years had fallen on his head. Grim was his face, grey-hued and
weary.
'I am troubled in mind, lord,' he said, standing by
the king's horse. 'I have heard strange words, and I see new perils far off. I
have laboured long in thought, and now I fear that I must change my purpose.
Tell me, Théoden, you ride now to Dunharrow, how long will it be ere you come
there?'
'It is now a full hour past noon,' said Éomer.
'Before the night of the third day from now we should come to the Hold. The Moon
will then be one night past his full, and the muster that the king commanded
will be held the day after. More speed we cannot make, if the strength of Rohan
is to be gathered.'
Aragorn was silent for a moment. 'Three
days,' he murmured, 'and the muster of Rohan will only be begun. But I see that
it cannot now be hastened.' He looked up, and it seemed that he had made some
decision; his face was less troubled. 'Then, by our leave, lord, I must take new
counsel for myself and my kindred. We must ride our own road, and no longer in
secret. For me the time of stealth has passed. I will ride east by the swiftest
way, and I will take the Paths of the Dead.'
'The Paths of
the Dead!' said Théoden, and trembled. 'Why do you speak of them?' Éomer turned
and gazed at Aragorn, and it seemed to Merry that the faces of the Riders that
sat within hearing turned pale at the words. 'If there be in truth such paths,'
said Théoden, 'their gate is in Dunharrow; but no living man may pass
it.'
'Alas! Aragorn my friend!' said Éomer. 'I had hoped
that we should ride to war together; but if you seek the Paths of the Dead, then
our parting is come, and it is little likely that we shall ever meet again under
the Sun.'
'That road I will take, nonetheless,' said
Aragorn. 'But I say to you, Éomer, that in battle we may yet meet again, though
all the hosts of Mordor should stand between.'
'You will do
as you will, my lord Aragorn,' said Théoden. 'It is your doom, maybe, to tread
strange paths that others dare not. This parting grieves me, and my strength is
lessened by it; but now I must take the mountain-roads and delay no longer.
Farewell!'
'Farewell, lord!' said Aragorn. 'Ride unto great
renown! Farewell, Merry! I leave you in good hands, better than we hoped when we
hunted the orcs to Fangorn. Legolas and Gimli will still hunt with me, I hope;
but we shall not forget you.'
'Good-bye!' said Merry. He
could find no more to say. He felt very small, and he was puzzled and depressed
by all these gloomy words. More than ever he missed the unquenchable
cheerfulness of Pippin. The Riders were ready, and their horses were fidgeting;
he wished they would start and get it over.
Now Théoden
spoke to Éomer, and he lifted up his hand and cried aloud, and with that word
the Riders set forth. They rode over the Dike and down the Coomb, and then,
turning swiftly eastwards, they took a path that skirted the foothills for a
mile or so, until bending south it passed back among the hills and disappeared
from view. Aragorn rode to the Dike and watched till the king's men were far
down the Coomb. Then he turned to Halbarad.
'There go three
that I love, and the smallest not the least,' he said. 'He knows not to what end
he rides; yet if he knew, he still would go on.'
'A little
people, but of great worth are the Shire-folk,' said Halbarad. 'Little do they
know of our long labour for the safekeeping of their borders, and yet I grudge
it not.'
'And now our fates are woven together,' said
Aragorn. 'And yet, alas! here we must part. Well, I must eat a little, and then
we also must hasten away. Come, Legolas and Gimli! I must speak with you as I
eat.'
Together they went back into the Burg; yet for some
time Aragorn sat silent at the table in the hall, and the others waited for him
to speak. 'Come!' said Legolas at last. 'Speak and be comforted, and shake off
the shadow! What has happened since we came back to this grim place in the grey
morning?'
'A struggle somewhat grimmer for my part than the
battle of the Hornburg,' answered Aragorn. 'I have looked in the Stone of
Orthanc, my friends.'
'You have looked in that accursed
stone of wizardry!' exclaimed Gimli with fear and astonishment in his face. 'Did
you say aught to – him? Even Gandalf feared that
encounter.'
'You forget to whom you speak,' said Aragorn
sternly, and his eyes glinted. 'Did I not openly proclaim my title before the
doors of Edoras? What do you fear that I should say to him? Nay, Gimli,' he said
in a softer voice, and the grimness left his face, and he looked like one who
has laboured in sleepless pain for many nights. 'Nay, my friends, I am the
lawful master of the Stone, and I had both the right and the strength to use it,
or so I judged. The right cannot be doubted. The strength was enough –
barely.'
He drew a deep breath. 'It was a bitter struggle,
and the weariness is slow to pass. I spoke no word to him, and in the end I
wrenched the Stone to my own will. That alone he will find hard to endure. And
he beheld me. Yes, Master Gimli, he saw me, but in other guise than you see me
here. If that will aid him, then I have done ill. But I do not think so. To know
that I lived and walked the earth was a blow to his heart, I deem; for he knew
it not till now. The eyes in Orthanc did not see through the armour of Théoden;
but Sauron has not forgotten Isildur and the sword of Elendil. Now in the very
hour of his great designs the heir of Isildur and the Sword are revealed; for l
showed the blade re-forged to him. He is not so mighty yet that he is above
fear; nay, doubt ever gnaws him.'
'But he wields great
dominion, nonetheless,' said Gimli, 'and now he will strike more
swiftly.'
'The hasty stroke goes oft astray,' said Aragorn.
'We must press our Enemy, and no longer wait upon him for the move. See my
friends, when I had mastered the Stone, I learned many things. A grave peril I
saw coming unlooked-for upon Gondor from the South that will draw off great
strength from the defence of Minas Tirith. If it is not countered swiftly, I
deem that the City will be lost ere ten days be
gone.'
'Then lost it must be,' said Gimli. 'For what help
is there to send thither, and how could it come there in
time?'
'I have no help to send, therefore I must go
myself,' said Aragorn. 'But there is only one way through the mountains that
will bring me to the coastlands before all is lost. That is the Paths of the
Dead.'
'The Paths of the Dead!' said Gimli. 'It is a fell
name; and little to the liking to the Men of Rohan, as I saw. Can the living use
such a road and not perish? And even if you pass that way, what will so few
avail to counter the strokes of Mordor?'
'The living have
never used that road since the coming of the Rohirrim,' said Aragorn, 'for it is
closed to them. But in this dark hour the heir of Isildur may use it, if he
dare. Listen! This is the word that the sons of Elrond bring to me from their
father in Rivendell, wisest in lore:
Bid Aragorn remember the words of the
seer, and the Paths of the Dead.'
'And what may be the
words of the seer?' said Legolas.
“Thus spoke Malbeth the
Seer, in the days of Arvedui, last king at Fornost,' said Aragorn:
Over the land there lies a long shadow,
westward reaching
wings of darkness.
The Tower trembles; to the tombs of kings
doom
approaches. The Dead awaken;
for the hour is come for the
oathbreakers;
at the Stone of Erech they shall stand again
and hear
there a horn in the hills ringing.
Whose shall the horn be? Who shall call
them
from the prey twilight, the forgotten people?
The heir of him to
whom the oath they swore.
From the North shall he come, need shall drive
him:
he shall pass the Door to the Paths of the
Dead.
'Dark ways doubtless,' said
Gimli, 'but no darker than these staves are to me.'
'If you
would understand them better, then I bid you come with me,' said Aragorn, 'for
that way I now shall take. But I do not go gladly; only need drives me.
Therefore, only of your free will would I have you come, for you will find both
toil and great fear, and maybe worse.'
'I will go with you
even on the Paths of the Dead, and to whatever end they may lead,' said
Gimli.
'I also will come,' said Legolas, 'for I do not fear
the Dead.'
'I hope that the forgotten people will not have
forgotten how to fight,' said Gimli, 'for otherwise I see not why we should
trouble them.'
'That we shall know if ever we come to
Erech,' said Aragorn. 'But the oath that they broke was to fight against Sauron,
and they must fight therefore, if they are to fulfil it. For at Erech there
stands yet a black stone that was brought, it was said, from Númenor by Isildur;
and it was set upon a hill, and upon it the King of the Mountains swore
allegiance to him in the beginning of the realm of Gondor. But when Sauron
returned and grew in might again, Isildur summoned the Men of the Mountains to
fulfil their oath, and they would not: for they had worshipped Sauron in the
Dark Years.
'Then Isildur said to their king: “Thou shalt
be the last king. And if the West prove mightier than thy Black Master, this
curse I lay upon thee and thy folk: to rest never until your oath is fulfilled.
For this war will last through years uncounted, and you shall be summoned once
again ere the end.” And they fled before the wrath of Isildur, and did not dare
to go forth to war on Sauron's part; and they hid themselves in secret places in
the mountains and had no dealings with other men, but slowly dwindled in the
barren hills. And the terror of the Sleepless Dead lies about the Hill of Erech
and all places where that people lingered. But that way I must go, since there
are none living to help me.'
He stood up. 'Come!' he cried,
and drew his sword, and it flashed in the twilit hall of the Burg. 'To the Stone
of Erech! I seek the Paths of the Dead. Come with me who
will!'
Legolas and Gimli made no answer, but they rose and
followed Aragorn from the hall. On the green there waited, still and silent, the
hooded Rangers. Legolas and Gimli mounted. Aragorn sprang upon Roheryn. Then
Halbarad lifted a great horn, and the blast of it echoed in Helm's Deep; and
with that they leapt away, riding down the Coomb like thunder, while all the men
that were left on Dike or Burg stared in amaze.
And while
Théoden went by slow paths in the hills, the Grey Company passed swiftly over
the plain, and on the next day in the afternoon they came to Edoras; and there
they halted only briefly, ere they passed up the valley, and so came to
Dunharrow as darkness fell.
The Lady Éowyn greeted them and
was glad of their coming; for no mightier men had she seen than the Dunedain and
the fair sons of Elrond; but on Aragorn most of all her eyes rested. And when
they sat at supper with her, they talked together, and she heard of all that had
passed since Théoden rode away, concerning which only hasty tidings had yet
reached her; and when she heard of the battle in Helm's Deep and the great
slaughter of their foes, and of the charge of Théoden and his knights, then her
eyes shone.
But at last she said: 'Lords, you are weary and
shall now go to your beds with such ease as can be contrived in haste. But
tomorrow fairer housing shall be found for you.'
But
Aragorn said: 'Nay, lady, be not troubled for us! If we may lie here tonight and
break our fast tomorrow, it will be enough. For I ride on an errand most urgent,
and with the first light of morning we must go.'
She smiled
on him and said: 'Then it was kindly done, lord, to ride so many miles out of
your way to bring tidings to Éowyn, and to speak with her in her
exile.'
'Indeed no man would count such a journey wasted,'
said Aragorn, 'and yet, lady, I could not have come hither, if it were not that
the road which I must take leads me to Dunharrow.'
And she
answered as one that likes not what is said: “Then, lord, you are astray; for
out of Harrowdale no road runs east or south; and you had best return as you
came.'
'Nay, lady,' said he, 'I am not astray; for I walked
in this land ere you were born to grace it. There is a road out of this valley,
and that road I shall take. Tomorrow I shall ride by the Paths of the
Dead.'
Then she stared at him as one that is stricken, and
her face blanched, and for long she spoke no more, while all sat silent. 'But,
Aragorn,' she said at last, 'is it then your errand to seek death? For that is
all that you will find on that road. They do not suffer the living to
pass.'
'They may suffer me to pass,' said Aragorn, 'but at
the least I will adventure it. No other road will
serve.'
'But this is madness,' she said. 'For here are men
of renown and prowess, whom you should not take into the shadows, but should
lead to war, where men are needed. I beg you to remain and ride with my brother;
for then all our hearts will be gladdened, and our hope be the
brighter.'
'It is not madness, lady,' he answered, 'for I
go on a path appointed. But those who follow me do so of their free will; and if
they wish now to remain and ride with the Rohirrim, they may do so. But I shall
take the Paths of the Dead, alone, if needs be.'
Then they
said no more, and they ate in silence; but her eyes were ever upon Aragorn, and
the others saw that she was in great torment of mind. At length they arose, and
took their leave of the Lady, and thanked her for her care, and went to their
rest.
But as Aragorn came to the booth where he was to
lodge with Legolas and Gimli, and his companions had gone in, there came the
Lady Éowyn after him and called to him. He turned and saw her as a glimmer in
the night, for she was clad in white; but her eyes were on
fire.
'Aragorn,' she said, 'why will you go on this deadly
road?'
'Because I must,' he said. 'Only so can I see any
hope of doing my part in the war against Sauron. I do not choose paths of peril,
Éowyn. Were I to go where my heart dwells, far in the North I would now be
wandering in the fair valley of Rivendell.'
For a while she
was silent, as if pondering what this might mean. Then suddenly she laid her
hand on his arm. 'You are a stern lord and resolute,' she said, 'and thus do men
win renown.' She paused. 'Lord,' she said, 'if you must go, then let me ride in
your following. For I am weary of skulking in the hills, and wish to face peril
and battle.'
'Your duty is with your people,' he
answered.
'Too often have I heard of duty,' she cried. 'But
am I not of the House of Eorl, a shieldmaiden and not a dry-nurse? I have waited
on faltering feet long enough. Since they falter no longer, it seems, may I not
now spend my life as I will?'
'Few may do that with
honour,' he answered. 'But as for you, lady: did you not accept the charge to
govern the people until their lord's return? If you had not been chosen, then
some marshal or captain would have been set in the same place, and he could not
ride away from his charge, were he weary of it or
no.'
'Shall I always be chosen?' she said bitterly. 'Shall
I always be left behind when the Riders depart, to mind the house while they win
renown, and find food and beds when they return?'
'A time
may come soon,' said he, 'when none will return. Then there will be need of
valour without renown, for none shall remember the deeds that are done in the
last defence of your homes. Yet the deeds will not be less valiant because they
are unpraised.'
And she answered: 'All your words are but
to say: you are a woman, and your part is in the house. But when the men have
died in battle and honour, you have leave to be burned in the house, for the men
will need it no more. But I am of the House of Eorl and not a serving-woman. I
can ride and wield blade, and I do not fear either pain or
death.'
'What do you fear, lady?' he
asked.
'A cage,' she said. 'To stay behind bars, until use
and old age accept them, and all chance of doing great deeds is gone beyond
recall or desire.'
'And yet you counselled me not to
adventure on the road that I had chosen, because it is
perilous?'
'So may one counsel another,' she said. 'Yet I
do not bid you flee from peril, but to ride to battle where your sword may win
renown and victory. I would not see a thing that is high and excellent cast away
needlessly.'
'Nor would I,' he said. 'Therefore I say to
you, lady: Stay! For you have no errand to the
South.'
'Neither have those others who go with thee. They
go only because they would not be parted from thee – because they love thee.'
Then she turned and vanished into the night.
When the light
of day was come into the sky but the sun was not yet risen above the high ridges
in the East, Aragorn made ready to depart. His company was all mounted, and he
was about to leap into the saddle, when the Lady Éowyn came to bid them
farewell. She was clad as a Rider and girt with a sword. In her hand she bore a
cup, and she set it to her lips and drank a little, wishing them good speed; and
then she gave the cup to Aragorn, and he drank, and he said: 'Farewell, Lady of
Rohan! I drink to the fortunes of your House, and of you, and of all your
people. Say to your brother: beyond the shadows we may meet again!'
Then it seemed to Gimli and Legolas who were
nearby that she wept, and in one so stern and proud that seemed the more
grievous. But she said: 'Aragorn, wilt thou go?'
'I will,'
he said.
'Then wilt thou not let me ride with this company,
as I have asked?'
'I will not, lady,' he said. 'For that I
could not grant without leave of the king and of your brother; and they will not
return until tomorrow. But I count now every hour, indeed every minute.
Farewell!'
Then she fell on her knees, saying: 'I beg
thee!'
'Nay, lady,' he said, and taking her by the hand he
raised her. Then he kissed her hand, and sprang into the saddle, and rode away,
and did not look back; and only those who knew him well and were near to him saw
the pain that he bore.
But Éowyn stood still as a figure
carven in stone, her hands clenched at her sides, and she watched them until
they passed into the shadows under the black Dwimorberg, the Haunted Mountain,
in which was the Gate of the Dead. When they were lost to view, she turned,
stumbling as one that is blind, and went back to her lodging. But none of her
folk saw this parting, for they hid themselves in fear and would not come forth
until the day was up, and the reckless strangers were
gone.
And some said: 'They are Elvish wights. Let them go
where they belong, into the dark places, and never return. The times are evil
enough.'
The light was still grey as they rode, for the sun
had not yet climbed over the black ridges of the Haunted Mountain before them. A
dread fell on them, even as they passed between the lines of ancient stones and
so came to the Dimholt. There under the gloom of black trees that not even
Legolas could long endure they found a hollow place opening at the mountain's
root, and right in their path stood a single mighty stone like a finger of
doom.
'My blood runs chill,' said Gimli, but the others
were silent, and his voice fell dead on the dank fir-needles at his feet. The
horses would not pass the threatening stone, until the riders dismounted and led
them about. And so they came at last deep into the glen; and there stood a sheer
wall of rock, and in the wall the Dark Door gaped before them like the mouth of
night. Signs and figures were carved above its wide arch too dim to read, and
fear flowed from it like a grey vapour.
The company halted,
and there was not a heart among them that did not quail, unless it were the
heart of Legolas of the Elves, for whom the ghosts of Men have no
terror.
'This is an evil door,' said Halbarad, 'and my
death lies beyond it. I will dare to pass it nonetheless; but no horse will
enter.'
'But we must go in, and therefore the horses must
go too,' said Aragorn. 'For if ever we come through this darkness, many leagues
lie beyond, and every hour that is lost there will bring the triumph of Sauron
nearer. Follow me!'
Then Aragorn led the way, and such was
the strength of his will in that hour that all the Dunedain and their horses
followed him. And indeed the love that the horses of the Rangers bore for their
riders was so great that they were willing to face even the terror of the Door,
if their masters' hearts were steady as they walked beside them. But Arod, the
horse of Rohan, refused the way, and he stood sweating and trembling in a fear
that was grievous to see. Then Legolas laid his hands on his eyes and sang some
words that went soft in the gloom, until he suffered himself to be led, and
Legolas passed in. And there stood Gimli the Dwarf left all
alone.
His knees shook, and he was wroth with himself.
'Here is a thing unheard of!' he said. 'An Elf will go underground and a Dwarf
dare not!' With that he plunged in. But it seemed to him that he dragged his
feet like lead over the threshold; and at once a blindness came upon him, even
upon Gimli Glóin's son who had walked unafraid in many deep places of the
world.
Aragorn had brought torches from Dunharrow, and now
he went ahead bearing one aloft; and Elladan with another went at the rear, and
Gimli, stumbling behind, strove to overtake him. He could see nothing but the
dim flame of the torches; but if the company halted, there seemed an endless
whisper of voices all about him, a murmur of words in no tongue that he had ever
heard before.
Nothing assailed the company nor withstood
their passage, and yet steadily fear grew on the Dwarf as he went on: most of
all because he knew now that there could be no turning back; all the paths
behind were thronged by an unseen host that followed in the
dark.
So time unreckoned passed, until Gimli saw a sight
that he was ever afterwards loth to recall. The road was wide, as far as he
could judge, but now the company came suddenly into a great empty space, and
there were no longer any walls upon either side. The dread was so heavy on him
that he could hardly walk. Away to the left something glittered in the gloom as
Aragorn's torch drew near. Then Aragorn halted and went to look what it might
be.
'Does he feel no fear?' muttered the Dwarf. 'In any
other cave Gimli Glóin's son would have been the first to run to the gleam of
gold. But not here! Let it lie!'
Nonetheless he drew near,
and saw Aragorn kneeling, while Elladan held aloft both torches. Before him were
the bones of a mighty man. He had been clad in mail, and still his harness lay
there whole; for the cavern's air was as dry as dust, and his hauberk was
gilded. His belt was of gold and garnets, and rich with gold was the helm upon
his bony head face downward on the floor. He had fallen near the far wall of the
cave, as now could be seen, and before him stood a stony door closed fast: his
finger-bones were still clawing at the cracks. A notched and broken sword lay by
him, as if he had hewn at the rock in his last
despair.
Aragorn did not touch him, but after gazing
silently for a while he rose and sighed. 'Hither shall the flowers of
simbelmyne come never unto world's end,' he murmured. 'Nine mounds and
seven there are now green with grass, and through all the long years he has lain
at the door that he could not unlock. Whither does it lead? Why would he pass?
None shall ever know!
'For that is not my errand!' he
cried, turning back and speaking to the whispering darkness behind. 'Keep your
hoards and your secrets hidden in the Accursed Years! Speed only we ask. Let us
pass, and then come! I summon you to the Stone of
Erech!'
There was no answer, unless it were an utter
silence more dreadful than the whispers before; and then a chill blast came in
which the torches flickered and went out, and could not be rekindled. Of the
time that followed, one hour or many, Gimli remembered little. The others
pressed on, but he was ever hindmost, pursued by a groping horror that seemed
always just about to seize him; and a rumour came after him like the
shadow-sound of many feet. He stumbled on until he was crawling like a beast on
the ground and felt that he could endure no more: he must either find an ending
and escape or run back in madness to meet the following
fear.
Suddenly he heard the tinkle of water, a sound hard
and clear as a stone falling into a dream of dark shadow. Light grew, and lo!
the company passed through another gateway, high-arched and broad, and a rill
ran out beside them; and beyond, going steeply down, was a road between sheer
cliffs, knife-edged against the sky far above. So deep and narrow was that chasm
that the sky was dark, and in it small stars glinted. Yet as Gimli after learned
it was still two hours ere sunset of the day on which they had set out from
Dunharrow; though for all that he could then tell it might have been twilight in
some later year, or in some other world.
The Company now
mounted again, and Gimli returned to Legolas. They rode in file, and evening
came on and a deep blue dusk; and still fear pursued them. Legolas turning to
speak to Gimli looked back and the Dwarf saw before his face the glitter in the
Elf's bright eyes. Behind them rode Elladan, last of the Company, but not the
last of those that took the downward road.
'The Dead are
following,' said Legolas. 'I see shapes of Men and of horses, and pale banners
like shreds of cloud, and spears like winter-thickets on a misty night. The Dead
are following.'
'Yes, the Dead ride behind. They have been
summoned,' said Elladan.
The Company came at last out of
the ravine, as suddenly as it they had issued from a crack in a wall; and there
lay the uplands of a great vale before them, and the stream beside them went
down with a cold voice over many falls.
'Where in
Middle-earth are we?' said Gimli; and Elladan answered: 'We have descended from
the uprising of the Morthond, the long chill river that flows at last to the sea
that washes the walls of Dol Amroth. You will not need to ask hereafter how
comes its name: Blackroot men call it.'
The Morthond Vale
made a great bay that beat up against the sheer southern faces of the mountains.
Its steep slopes were grass-grown; but all was grey in that hour, for the sun
had gone, and far below lights twinkled in the homes of Men. The vale was rich
and many folk dwelt there.
Then without turning Aragorn
cried aloud so that all could hear: 'Friends, forget your weariness! Ride now,
ride! We must come to the Stone of Erech ere this day passes, and long still is
the way.' So without looking back they rode the mountain-fields, until they came
to a bridge over the growing torrent and found a road that went down into the
land.
Lights went out in house and hamlet as they came, and
doors were shut, and folk that were afield cried in terror and ran wild like
hunted deer. Ever there rose the same cry in the gathering night: 'The King of
the Dead! The King of the Dead is come upon us!'
Bells were
ringing far below, and all men fled before the face of Aragorn; but the Grey
Company in their haste rode like hunters, until their horses were stumbling with
weariness. And thus, just ere midnight, and in a darkness as black as the
caverns in the mountains, they came at last to the Hill of
Erech.
Long had the terror of the Dead lain upon that hill
and upon the empty fields about it. For upon the top stood a black stone, round
as a great globe, the height of a man, though its half was buried in the ground.
Unearthly it looked, as though it had fallen from the sky, as some believed; but
those who remembered still the lore of Westernesse told that it had been brought
out of the ruin of Númenor and there set by Isildur at his landing. None of the
people of the valley dared to approach it, nor would they dwell near; for they
said that it was a trysting-place of the Shadow-men, and there they would gather
in times of fear, thronging round the Stone and
whispering.
To that Stone the Company came and halted in
the dead of night. Then Elrohir gave to Aragorn a silver horn, and he blew upon
it and it seemed to those that stood near that they heard a sound of answering
horns, as if it was an echo in deep caves far away. No other sound they heard,
and yet they were aware of a great host gathered all about the hill on which
they stood; and a chill wind like the breath of ghosts came down from the
mountains. But Aragorn dismounted, and standing by the Stone he cried in a great
voice:
'Oathbreakers, why have ye
come?'
And a voice was heard out of the night that answered
him, as if from far away:
'To fulfil our oath and have
peace.'
Then Aragorn said: 'The hour is come at last. Now I
go to Pelargir upon Anduin, and ye shall come after me. And when all this land
is clean of the servants of Sauron, I will hold the oath fulfilled, and ye shall
have peace and depart for ever. For I am Elessar, Isildur's heir of
Gondor.'
And with that he bade Halbarad unfurl the great
standard which he had brought; and behold! it was black, and if there was any
device upon it, it was hidden in the darkness. Then there was silence, and not a
whisper nor a sigh was heard again all the long night. The Company camped beside
the Stone, but they slept little, because of the dread of the Shadows that
hedged them round.
But when the dawn came, cold and pale,
Aragorn rose at once, and he led the Company forth upon the journey of greatest
haste and weariness that any among them had known, save he alone, and only his
will held them to go on. No other mortal Men could have endured it, none but the
Dunedain of the North, and with them Gimli the Dwarf and Legolas of the
Elves.
They passed Tarlang's Neck and came into Lamedon;
and the Shadow Host pressed behind and fear went on before them, until they came
to Calembel upon Ciril, and the sun went down like blood behind Pinnath Gelin
away in the West behind them. The township and the fords of Ciril they found
deserted, for many men had gone away to war, and all that were left fled to the
hills at the rumour of the coming of the King of the Dead. But the next day
there came no dawn, and the Grey Company passed on into the darkness of the
Storm of Mordor and were lost to mortal sight; but the Dead followed
them.
Chapter 3
The Muster of
Rohan
Now all roads were running together to the East to meet
the coming of war and the onset of the Shadow. And even as Pippin stood at the
Great Gate of the City and saw the Prince of Dol Amroth ride in with his
banners, the King of Rohan came down out of the hills.
Day
was waning. In the last rays of the sun the Riders cast long pointed shadows
that went on before them. Darkness had already crept beneath the murmuring
fir-woods that clothed the steep mountain-sides. The king rode now slowly at the
end of the day. Presently the path turned round a huge bare shoulder of rock and
plunged into the gloom of soft-sighing trees. Down, down they went in a long
winding file. When at last they came to the bottom of the gorge they found that
evening had fallen in the deep places. The sun was gone. Twilight lay upon the
waterfalls.
All day far below them a leaping stream had run
down from the high pass behind, cleaving its narrow way between pine-clad walls;
and now through a stony gate it flowed out and passed into a wider vale. The
Riders followed it, and suddenly Harrowdale lay before them, loud with the noise
of waters in the evening. There the white Snowbourn, joined by the lesser
stream, went rushing, fuming on the stones, down to Edoras and the green hills
and the plains. Away to the right at the head of the great dale the mighty
Starkhorn loomed up above its vast buttresses swathed in cloud; but its jagged
peak, clothed in everlasting snow, gleamed far above the world, blue-shadowed
upon the East, red-stained by the sunset in the West.
Merry
looked out in wonder upon this strange country, of which he had heard many tales
upon their long road. It was a skyless world, in which his eye, through dim
gulfs of shadowy air, saw only ever-mounting slopes, great walls of stone behind
great walls, and frowning precipices wreathed with mist. He sat for a moment
half dreaming, listening to the noise of water, the whisper of dark trees, the
crack of stone, and the vast waiting silence that brooded behind all sound. He
loved mountains, or he had loved the thought of them marching on the edge of
stories brought from far away; but now he was borne down by the insupportable
weight of Middle-earth. He longed to shut out the immensity in a quiet room by a
fire.
He was very tired, for though they had ridden slowly,
they had ridden with very little rest. Hour after hour for nearly three weary
days he had jogged up and down, over passes, and through long dales, and across
many streams. Sometimes where the way was broader he had ridden at the king's
side, not noticing that many of the Riders smiled to see the two together: the
hobbit on his little shaggy grey pony, and the Lord of Rohan on his great white
horse. Then he had talked to Théoden, telling him about his home and the doings
of the Shire-folk, or listening in turn to tales of the Mark and its mighty men
of old. But most of the time, especially on this last day, Merry had ridden by
himself just behind the king, saying nothing, and trying to understand the slow
sonorous speech of Rohan that he heard the men behind him using. It was a
language in which there seemed to be many words that he knew, though spoken more
richly and strongly than in the Shire, yet he could not piece the words
together. At times some Rider would lift up his clear voice in stirring song,
and Merry felt his heart leap, though he did not know what it was
about.
All the same he had been lonely, and never more so
than now at the day's end. He wondered where in all this strange world Pippin
had got to; and what would become of Aragorn and Legolas and Gimli. Then
suddenly like a cold touch on his heart he thought of Frodo and Sam. 'I am
forgetting them!' he said to himself reproachfully. 'And yet they are more
important than all the rest of us. And I came to help them; but now they must be
hundreds of miles away, if they are still alive.' He
shivered.
'Harrowdale at last!' said Éomer. 'Our journey is
almost at an end.' They halted. The paths out of the narrow gorge fell steeply.
Only a glimpse, as through a tall window, could be seen of the great valley in
the gloaming below. A single small light could be seen twinkling by the
river.
'This journey is over, maybe,' said Théoden, 'but I
have far yet to go. Last night the moon was full, and in the morning I shall
ride to Edoras to the gathering of the Mark.'
'But if you
would take my counsel,' said Éomer in a low voice, 'you would then return
hither, until the war is over, lost or won.'
Théoden
smiled. 'Nay, my son, for so I will call you, speak not the soft words of
Wormtongue in my old ears!' He drew himself up and looked back at the long line
of his men fading into the dusk behind. 'Long years in the space of days it
seems since I rode west; but never will I lean on a staff again. If the war is
lost, what good will be my hiding in the hills? And if it is won, what grief
will it be, even if I fall, spending my last strength? But we will leave this
now. Tonight I will lie in the Hold of Dunharrow. One evening of peace at least
is left us. Let us ride on!'
In the deepening dusk they
came down into the valley. Here the Snowbourn flowed near to the western walls
of the dale, and soon the path led them to a ford where the shallow waters
murmured loudly on the stones. The ford was guarded. As the king approached many
men sprang up out of the shadow of the rocks; and when they saw the king they
cried with glad voices: 'Théoden King! Théoden King! The King of the Mark
returns!'
Then one blew a long call on a horn. It echoed in
the valley. Other horns answered it, and lights shone out across the
river.
And suddenly there rose a great chorus of trumpets
from high above, sounding from some hollow place, as it seemed, that gathered
their notes into one voice and sent it rolling and beating on the walls of
stone.
So the King of the Mark came back victorious out of
the West to Dunharrow beneath the feet of the White Mountains. There he found
the remaining strength of his people already assembled; for as soon as his
coming was known captains rode to meet him at the ford, bearing messages from
Gandalf. Dunhere, chieftain of the folk of Harrowdale, was at their
head.
'At dawn three days ago, lord,' he said. 'Shadowfax
came like a wind out of the West to Edoras, and Gandalf brought tidings of your
victory to gladden our hearts. But he brought also word from you to hasten the
gathering of the Riders. And then came the winged
Shadow.'
'The winged Shadow?' said Théoden. 'We saw it
also, but that was in the dead of night before Gandalf left
us.'
'Maybe, lord,' said Dunhere. 'Yet the same, or another
like to it, a flying darkness in the shape of a monstrous bird, passed over
Edoras that morning, and all men were shaken with fear. For it stooped upon
Meduseld, and as it came low, almost to the gable, there came a cry that stopped
our hearts. Then it was that Gandalf counselled us not to assemble in the
fields, but to meet you here in the valley under the mountains. And he bade us
to kindle no more lights or fires than barest need asked. So it has been done.
Gandalf spoke with great authority. We trust that it is as you would wish.
Naught has been seen in Harrowdale of these evil
things.'
'It is well,' said Théoden. 'I will ride now to
the Hold, and there before I go to rest I will meet the marshals and captains.
Let them come to me as soon as may be!'
The road now led
eastward straight across the valley, which was at that point little more than
half a mile in width. Flats and meads of rough grass, grey now in the falling
night, lay all about, but in front on the far side of the dale Merry saw a
frowning wall, a last outlier of the great roots of the Starkhorn, cloven by the
river in ages past.
On all the level spaces there was great
concourse of men. Some thronged to the roadside, hailing the king and the riders
from the West with glad cries; but stretching away into the distance behind
there were ordered rows of tents and booths, and lines of picketed horses, and
great store of arms, and piled spears bristling like thickets of new-planted
trees. Now all the great assembly was falling into shadow, and yet, though the
night-chill blew cold from the heights no lanterns glowed, no fires were lit.
Watchmen heavily cloaked paced to and fro.
Merry wondered
how many Riders there were. He could not guess their number in the gathering
gloom, but it looked to him like a great army, many thousands strong. While he
was peering from side to side the king's party came up under the looming cliff
on the eastern side of the valley; and there suddenly the path began to climb,
and Merry looked up in amazement. He was on a road the like of which he had
never seen before, a great work of men's hands in years beyond the reach of
song. Upwards it wound, coiling like a snake, boring its way across the sheer
slope of rock. Steep as a stair, it looped backwards and forwards as it climbed.
Up it horses could walk, and wains could be slowly hauled; but no enemy could
come that way, except out of the air, if it was defended from above. At each
turn of the road there were great standing stones that had been carved in the
likeness of men, huge and clumsy-limbed, squatting cross-legged with their
stumpy arms folded on fat bellies. Some in the wearing of the years had lost all
features save the dark holes of their eyes that still stared sadly at the
passers-by. The Riders hardly glanced at them. The Pukel-men they called them,
and heeded them little: no power or terror was left in them; but Merry gazed at
them with wonder and a feeling almost of pity, as they loomed up mournfully in
the dusk.

After a while he looked back and found that he
had already climbed some hundreds of feet above the valley, but still far below
he could dimly see a winding line of Riders crossing the ford and filing along
the road towards the camp prepared for them. Only the king and his guard were
going up into the Hold.
At last the king's company came to
a sharp brink, and the climbing road passed into a cutting between walls of
rock, and so went up a short slope and out on to a wide upland. The Firienfeld
men called it, a green mountain-field of grass and heath, high above the
deep-delved courses of the Snowbourn, laid upon the lap of the great mountains
behind: the Starkhorn southwards, and northwards the saw-toothed mass of
Irensaga, between which there faced the riders, the grim black wall of the
Dwimorberg, the Haunted Mountain rising out of steep slopes of sombre pines.
Dividing the upland into two there marched a double line of unshaped standing
stones that dwindled into the dusk and vanished in the trees. Those who dared to
follow that road came soon to the black Dimholt under Dwimorberg, and the menace
of the pillar of stone, and the yawning shadow of the forbidden
door.
Such was the dark Dunharrow, the work of
long-forgotten men. Their name was lost and no song or legend remembered it. For
what purpose they had made this place, as a town or secret temple or a tomb of
kings, none could say. Here they laboured in the Dark Years, before ever a ship
came to the western shores, or Gondor of the Dunedain was built; and now they
had vanished, and only the old Pukel-men were left, still sitting at the
turnings of the road.
Merry stared at the lines of marching
stones: they were worn and black; some were leaning, some were fallen, some
cracked or broken; they looked like rows of old and hungry teeth. He wondered
what they could be, and he hoped that the king was not going to follow them into
the darkness beyond. Then he saw that there were clusters of tents and booths on
either side of the stony way; but these were not set near the trees, and seemed
rather to huddle away from them towards the brink of the cliff. The greater
number were on the right, where the Firienfeld was wider; and on the left there
was a smaller camp, in the midst of which stood a tall pavilion. From this side
a rider now came out to meet them, and they turned from the
road.
As they drew near Merry saw that the rider was a
woman with long braided hair gleaming in the twilight, yet she wore a helm and
was clad to the waist like a warrior and girded with a
sword.
'Hail, Lord of the Mark!' she cried. 'My heart is
glad at your returning.'
'And you, Éowyn,' said Théoden,
'is all well with you?'
'All is well,' she answered; yet it
seemed to Merry that her voice belied her, and he would have thought that she
had been weeping, if that could be believed of one so stern of face. 'All is
well. It was a weary road for the people to take, torn suddenly from their
homes. There were hard words, for it is long since war has driven us from the
green fields; but there have been no evil deeds. All is now ordered, as you see.
And your lodging is prepared for you; for I have had full tidings of you and
knew the hour of your coming.'
'So Aragorn has come then,'
said Éomer. 'Is he still here?'
'No, he is gone,' said
Éowyn turning away and looking at the mountains dark against the East and
South.
'Whither did he go?' asked
Éomer.
'I do not know,' she answered. 'He came at night,
and rode away yestermorn, ere the Sun had climbed over the mountain-tops. He is
gone.'
'You are grieved, daughter,' said Théoden. 'What has
happened? Tell me, did he speak of that road?' He pointed away along the
darkening lines of stones towards the Dwimorberg. 'Of the Paths of the
Dead?'
'Yes, lord,' said Éowyn. 'And he has passed into the
shadows from which none have returned. I could not dissuade him. He is
gone.'
'Then our paths are sundered,' said Éomer. 'He is
lost. We must ride without him, and our hope
dwindles.'
Slowly they passed through the short heath and
upland grass, speaking no more, until they came to the king's pavilion. There
Merry found that everything was made ready, and that he himself was not
forgotten. A little tent had been pitched for him beside the king's lodging; and
there he sat alone, while men passed to and fro, going in to the king and taking
counsel with him. Night came on, and the half-seen heads of the mountains
westward were crowned with stars, but the East was dark and blank. The marching
stones faded slowly from sight, but still beyond them, blacker than the gloom,
brooded the vast crouching shadow of the Dwimorberg.
'The
Paths of the Dead,' he muttered to himself. 'The Paths of the Dead? What does
all this mean? They have all left me now. They have all gone to some doom:
Gandalf and Pippin to war in the East; and Sam and Frodo to Mordor; and Strider
and Legolas and Gimli to the Paths of the Dead. But my turn will come soon
enough, I suppose. I wonder what they are all talking about, and what the king
means to do. For I must go where he goes now.'
In the midst
of these gloomy thoughts he suddenly remembered that he was very hungry, and he
got up to go and see if anyone else in this strange camp felt the same. But at
that very moment a trumpet sounded, and a man came summoning him, the king's
esquire, to wait at the king's board.
In the inner part of
the pavilion was a small space, curtained off with broidered hangings, and
strewn with skins: and there at a small table sat Théoden with Éomer and Éowyn,
and Dunhere, lord of Harrowdale. Merry stood beside the king's stool and waited
on him till presently the old man, coming out of deep thought, turned to him and
smiled.
'Come, Master Meriadoc!' he said. 'You shall not
stand. You shall sit beside me, as long as I remain in my own lands, and lighten
my heart with tales.'
Room was made for the hobbit at the
king's left hand, but no one called for any tale. There was indeed little
speech, and they ate and drank for the most part in silence, until at last,
plucking up courage, Merry asked the question that was tormenting
him.
'Twice now, lord, I have heard of the Paths of the
Dead,' he said. 'What are they? And where has Strider, I mean the Lord Aragorn
where has he gone?'
The king sighed, but no one answered,
until at last Éomer spoke. 'We do not know, and our hearts are heavy,' he said.
'But as for the Paths of the Dead, you have yourself walked on their first
steps. Nay, I speak no words of ill omen! The road that we have climbed is the
approach to the Door, yonder in the Dimholt. But what lies beyond no man
knows.'
'No man knows,' said Théoden; 'yet ancient legend,
now seldom spoken, has somewhat to report. If these old tales speak true that
have come down from father to son in the House of Eorl, then the Door under
Dwimorberg leads to a secret way that goes beneath the mountain to some
forgotten end. But none have ever ventured in to search its secrets, since
Baldor, son of Brego, passed the Door and was never seen among men again. A rash
vow he spoke, as he drained the horn at that feast which Brego made to hallow
new-built Meduseld, and he came never to the high seat of which he was the
heir.
'Folk say that Dead Men out of the Dark Years guard
the way and will suffer no living man to come to their hidden halls; but at
whiles they may themselves be seen passing out of the door like shadows and down
the stony road. Then the people of Harrowdale shut fast their doors and shroud
their windows and are afraid. But the Dead come seldom forth and only at times
of great unquiet and coming death.'
'Yet it is said in
Harrowdale,' said Éowyn in a low voice. 'that in the moonless nights but little
while ago a great host in strange array passed by. Whence they came none knew,
but they went up the stony road and vanished into the hill, as if they went to
keep a tryst.'
'Then why has Aragorn gone that way?' asked
Merry. 'Don't you know anything that would explain
it?'
'Unless he has spoken words to you as his friend that
we have not heard,' said Éomer, 'none now in the land of the living can tell his
purpose.'
'Greatly changed he seemed to me since I saw him
first in the king's house,' said Éowyn, 'grimmer, older. Fey I thought him, and
like one whom the Dead call.'
'Maybe he was called,' said
Théoden, 'and my heart tells me that I shall not see him again. Yet he is a
kingly man of high destiny. And take comfort in this, daughter, since comfort
you seem to need in your grief for this guest. It is said that when the
Eorlingas came out of the North and passed at length up the Snowbourn, seeking
strong places of refuge in time of need, Brego and his son Baldor climbed the
Stair of the Hold and so came before the Door. On the threshold sat an old man,
aged beyond guess of years; tall and kingly he had been, but now he was withered
as an old stone. Indeed for stone they took him, for he moved not, and he said
no word, until they sought to pass him by and enter. And then a voice came out
of him, as it were out of the ground, and to their amaze it spoke in the western
tongue:
The way is shut.
'Then they halted and
looked at him and saw that he lived still; but he did not look at them.
The
way is shut, his voice said again,
It was made by those who are Dead, and
the Dead keep it, until the time comes. The way is
shut.
'
And when will that time be? said Baldor.
But no answer did he ever get. For the old man died in that hour and fell upon
his face; and no other tidings of the ancient dwellers in the mountains have our
folk ever learned. Yet maybe at last the time foretold has come, and Aragorn may
pass.'
'But how shall a man discover whether that time be
come or no, save by daring the Door?' said Éomer. 'And that way I would not go
though all the hosts of Mordor stood before me, and I were alone and had no
other refuge. Alas that a fey mood should fall on a man so greathearted in this
hour of need! Are there not evil things enough abroad without seeking them under
the earth? War is at hand.'
He paused, for at that moment
there was a noise outside, a man's voice crying the name of Théoden, and the
challenge of the guard.
Presently the captain of the Guard
thrust aside the curtain. 'A man is here, lord,' he said, 'an errand-rider of
Gondor. He wishes to come before you at once.'
'Let him
come!' said Théoden.
A tall man entered, and Merry choked
back a cry; for a moment it seemed to him that Boromir was alive again and had
returned. Then he saw that it was not so; the man was a stranger, though as like
to Boromir as if he were one of his kin, tall and grey-eyed and proud. He was
clad as a rider with a cloak of dark green over a coat of fine mail; on the
front of his helm was wrought a small silver star. In his hand he bore a single
arrow, black-feathered and barbed with steel, but the point was painted
red.
He sank on one knee and presented the arrow to
Théoden. 'Hail Lord of the Rohirrim, friend of Gondor!' he said. 'Hirgon I am,
errand-rider of Denethor, who bring you this token of war. Gondor is in great
need. Often the Rohirrim have aided us, but now the Lord Denethor asks for all
your strength and all your speed; lest Gondor fall at
last.'
'The Red Arrow!' said Théoden, holding it, as one
who receives a summons long expected and yet dreadful when it comes. His hand
trembled. 'The Red Arrow has not been seen in the Mark in all my years! Has it
indeed come to that? And what does the Lord Denethor reckon that all my strength
and all my speed may be?'
'That is best known to yourself,
lord,' said Hirgon. 'But ere long it may well come to pass that Minas Tirith is
surrounded, and unless you have the strength to break a siege of many powers,
the Lord Denethor bids me say that he judges that the strong arms of the
Rohirrim would be better within his walls than
without.'
'But he knows that we are a people who fight
rather upon horseback and in the open, and that we are also a scattered people
and time is needed for the gathering of our Riders. Is it not true, Hirgon, that
the Lord of Minas Tirith knows more than he sets in his message? For we are
already at war, as you may have seen, and you do not find us all unprepared.
Gandalf the Grey has been among us, and even now we are mustering for battle in
the East.'
'What the Lord Denethor may know or guess of all
these things I cannot say,' answered Hirgon. 'But indeed our case is desperate.
My lord does not issue any command to you, he begs you only to remember old
friendship and oaths long spoken, and for your own good to do all that you may.
It is reported to us that many kings have ridden in from the East to the service
of Mordor. From the North to the field of Dagorlad there is skirmish and rumour
of war. In the South the Haradrim are moving, and fear has fallen on all our
coastlands, so that little help will come to us thence. Make haste! For it is
before the walls of Minas Tirith that the doom of our time will be decided, and
if the tide be not stemmed there, then it will flow over all the fair fields of
Rohan, and even in this Hold among the hills there shall be no
refuge.'
'Dark tidings,' said Théoden, 'yet not all
unguessed. But say to Denethor that even if Rohan itself felt no peril, still we
would come to his aid. But we have suffered much loss in our battles with
Saruman the traitor, and we must still think of our frontier to the north and
east, as his own tidings make clear. So great a power as the Dark Lord seems now
to wield might well contain us in battle before the City and yet strike with
great force across the River away beyond the Gate of
Kings.
'But we will speak no longer counsels of prudence.
We will come. The weapontake was set for the morrow. When all is ordered we will
set out. Ten thousand spears I might have sent riding over the plain to the
dismay of your foes. It will be less now, I fear; for I will not leave my
strongholds all unguarded. Yet six thousands at the least shall ride behind me.
For say to Denethor that in this hour the King of the Mark himself will come
down to the land of Gondor, though maybe he will not ride back. But it is a long
road, and man and beast must reach the end with strength to fight. A week it may
be from tomorrow's morn ere you hear the cry of the Sons of Eorl coming from the
North.
'A week!' said Hirgon. 'If it must be so, it must.
But you are like to find only ruined walls in seven days from now, unless other
help unlooked-for comes. Still, you may at the least disturb the Orcs and
Swarthy Men from their feasting in the White Tower.'
'At
the least we will do that,' said Théoden. 'But I myself am new-come from battle
and long journey, and I will now go to rest. Tarry here this night. Then you
shall look on the muster of Rohan and ride away the gladder for the sight, and
the swifter for the rest. In the morning counsels are best, and night changes
many thoughts.
With that the king stood up, and they all
rose. 'Go now each to your rest,' he said, 'and sleep well. And you, Master
Meriadoc, I need no more tonight. But be ready to my call as soon as the Sun is
risen.'
'I will be ready,' said Merry, 'even if you bid me
ride with you on the Paths of the Dead.'
'Speak not words
of omen!' said the king. 'For there may be more roads than one that could bear
that name. But I did not say that I would bid you ride with me on any road. Good
night!'
'I won't be left behind, to be called for on
return!' said Merry. 'I won't be left, I won't.' And repeating this over and
over again to himself he fell asleep at last in his
tent.
He was wakened by a man shaking him. 'Wake up, wake
up. Master Holbytla!' he cried; and at length Merry came out of deep dreams and
sat up with a start. It still seemed very dark, he
thought.
'What is the matter?' he
asked.
'The king calls for you.'
'But
the Sun has not risen, yet,' said Merry.
'No, and will not
rise today, Master Holbytla. Nor ever again, one would think under this cloud.
But time does not stand still, though the Sun be lost. Make
haste!'
Flinging on some clothes, Merry looked outside. The
world was darkling. The very air seemed brown, and all things about were black
and grey and shadowless; there was a great stillness. No shape of cloud could be
seen, unless it were far away westward, where the furthest groping fingers of
the great gloom still crawled onwards and a little light leaked through them.
Overhead there hung a heavy roof, sombre and featureless, and light seemed
rather to be failing than growing.
Merry saw many folk
standing, looking up and muttering: all their faces were grey and sad, and some
were afraid. With a sinking heart he made his way to the king. Hirgon the rider
of Gondor was there before him, and beside him stood now another man, like him
and dressed alike, but shorter and broader. As Merry entered he was speaking to
the king.
'It comes from Mordor, lord,' he said. 'It began
last night at sunset. From the hills in the Eastfold of your realm I saw it rise
and creep across the sky, and all night as I rode it came behind eating up the
stars. Now the great cloud hangs over all the land between here and the
Mountains of Shadow; and it is deepening. War has already
begun.'
For a while the king sat silent. At last he spoke.
'So we come to it in the end,' he said; 'the great battle of our time, in which
many things shall pass away. But at least there is no longer need for hiding. We
will ride the straight way and the open road and with all our speed. The muster
shall begin at once, and wait for none that tarry. Have you good store in Minas
Tirith? For if we must ride now in all haste, then we must ride light, with but
meal and water enough to last us into battle.'
'We have
very great store long prepared,' answered Hirgon. Ride now as light and as swift
as you may!'
'Then call the heralds, Éomer,' said Théoden.
'Let the Riders be marshalled!'
Éomer went out, and
presently the trumpets rang in the Hold and were answered by many others from
below; but their voices no longer sounded clear and brave as they had seemed to
Merry the night before. Dull they seemed and harsh in the heavy air, braying
ominously.
The king turned to Merry. 'I am going to war,
Master Meriadoc,' he said. 'In a little while I shall take the road. I release
you from my service, but not from my friendship. You shall abide here, and if
you will, you shall serve the Lady Éowyn, who will govern the folk in my
stead.'
'But, but, lord,' Merry stammered, 'I offered you
my sword. I do not want to be parted from you like this, Théoden King. And as
all my friends have gone to the battle, I should be ashamed to stay
behind.'
'But we ride on horses tall and swift,' said
Théoden, 'and great though your heart be, you cannot ride on such
beasts.'
'Then tie me on to the back of one, or let me hang
on a stirrup, or something,' said Merry. 'It is a long way to run; but run I
shall, if I cannot ride, even if I wear my feet off and arrive weeks too
late.'
Théoden smiled. 'Rather than that I would bear you
with me on Snowmane,' he said. 'But at the least you shall ride with me to
Edoras and look on Meduseld; for that way I shall go. So far Stybba can bear
you: the great race will not begin till we reach the
plains.'
Then Éowyn rose up. 'Come now, Meriadoc!' she
said. 'I will show you the gear that I have prepared fur you.' They went out
together. 'This request only did Aragorn make to me,' said Éowyn, as they passed
among the tents, 'that you should be armed for battle. I have granted it, as I
could. For my heart tells me that you will need such gear ere the
end.'
Now she led Merry to a booth among the lodges of the
king's guard and there an armourer brought out to her a small helm, and a round
shield, and other gear.
'No mail have we to fit you,' said
Éowyn, 'nor any time for the forging of such a hauberk; but here is also a stout
jerkin of leather, a belt, and a knife. A sword you
have.'
Merry bowed, and the lady showed him the shield,
which was like the shield that had been given to Gimli, and it bore on it the
device of the white horse. 'Take all these things,' she said, 'and bear them to
good fortune! Farewell now, Master Meriadoc! Yet maybe we shall meet again, you
and I.'
So it was that amid a gathering gloom the King of
the Mark made ready to lead all his Riders on the eastward road. Hearts were
heavy and many quailed in the shadow. But they were a stern people, loyal to
their lord, and little weeping or murmuring was heard, even in the camp in the
Hold where the exiles from Edoras were housed, women and children and old men.
Doom hung over them, but they faced it silently.
Two swift
hours passed, and now the king sat upon his white horse, glimmering in the half
light. Proud and tall he seemed, though the hair that flowed beneath his high
helm was like snow; and many marvelled at him and took heart to see him unbent
and unafraid.
There on the wide flats beside the noisy
river were marshalled in many companies well nigh five and fifty hundreds of
Riders fully armed, and many hundreds of other men with spare horses lightly
burdened. A single trumpet sounded. The king raised his hand, and then silently
the host of the Mark began to move. Foremost went twelve of the king's
household-men, Riders of renown. Then the king followed with Éomer on his right.
He had said farewell to Éowyn above in the Hold, and the memory was grievous;
but now he turned his mind to the road that lay ahead. Behind him Merry rode on
Stybba with the errand riders of Gondor, and behind them again twelve more of
the king's household. They passed down the long ranks of waiting men with stern
and unmoved faces. But when they had come almost to the end of the line one
looked up glancing keenly at the hobbit. A young man, Merry thought as he
returned the glance, less in height and girth than most. He caught the glint of
clear grey eyes; and then he shivered, for it came suddenly to him that it was
the face of one without hope who goes in search of
death.
On down the grey road they went beside the Snowbourn
rushing on its stones; through the hamlets of Underharrow and Upbourn, where
many sad faces of women looked out from dark doors; and so without horn or harp
or music of men's voices the great ride into the East began with which the songs
of Rohan were busy for many long lives of men thereafter.
From dark Dunharrow in the dim morning
with thane and
captain rode Thengel's son:
to Edoras he came, the ancient halls
of the
Mark-wardens mist-enshrouded;
golden timbers were in gloom
mantled.
Farewell he bade to his free people,
hearth and high-seat, and
the hallowed places,
where long he had feasted ere the light
faded.
Forth rode the king, fear behind him,
fate before him. Fealty
kept he;
oaths he had taken, all fulfilled them.
Forth rode Théoden.
Five nights and days
east and onward rode the Eorlingas
through Folde
and Fenmarch and the Firienwood,
six thousand spears to
Sunlending,
Mundburg the mighty under Mindolluin,
Sea-kings' city in the
South-kingdom
foe-beleaguered, fire-encircled.
Doom drove them on.
Darkness took them,
Horse and horseman; hoofbeats afar
sank into
silence: so the songs tell us.
It
was indeed in deepening gloom that the king came to Edoras, although it was then
but noon by the hour. There he halted only a short while and strengthened his
host by some three score of Riders that came late to the weapontake. Now having
eaten he made ready to set out again, and he wished his esquire a kindly
farewell. But Merry begged for the last time not to be parted from
him.
'This is no journey for such steeds as Stybba, as I
have told you,' said Théoden. 'And in such a battle as we think to make on the
fields of Gondor what would you do, Master Meriadoc, sword-thain though you be,
and greater of heart than of stature?'
'As for that, who
can tell?' answered Merry. 'But why, lord, did you receive me as sword-thain, if
not to stay by your side? And I would not have it said of me in song only that I
was always left behind!'
'I received you for your
safe-keeping,' answered Théoden, 'and also to do as I might bid. None of my
Riders can bear you as burden. If the battle were before my gates, maybe your
deeds would be remembered by the minstrels; but it is a hundred leagues and two
to Mundburg where Denethor is lord. I will say no
more.'
Merry bowed and went away unhappily, and stared at
the lines of horsemen. Already the companies were preparing to start: men were
tightening girths, looking to saddles, caressing their horses; some gazed
uneasily at the lowering sky. Unnoticed a Rider came up and spoke softly in the
hobbit's ear.
'
Where will wants not, a way opens, so
we say,' he whispered, 'and so I have found myself.' Merry looked up and saw
that it was the young Rider whom he had noticed in the morning. 'You wish to go
whither the Lord of the Mark goes: I see it in your
face.'
'I do,' said Merry.
'Then you
shall go with me,' said the Rider. 'I will bear you before me, under my cloak
until we are far afield, and this darkness is yet darker. Such good will should
not be denied. Say no more to any man, but come!'
'Thank
you indeed!' said Merry. 'Thank you, sir, though I do not know your
name.'
'Do you not?' said the Rider softly. 'Then call me
Dernhelm.'
Thus it came to pass that when the king set out,
before Dernhelm sat Meriadoc the hobbit, and the great grey steed Windfola made
little of the burden; for Dernhelm was less in weight than many men, though
lithe and well-knit in frame.
On into the shadow they rode.
In the willow-thickets where Snowbourn flowed into Entwash, twelve leagues east
of Edoras, they camped that night. And then on again through the Folde; and
through the Fenmarch, where to their right great oakwoods climbed on the skirts
of the hills under the shades of dark Halifirien by the borders of Gondor; but
away to their left the mists lay on the marshes fed by the mouths of Entwash.
And as they rode rumour came of war in the North. Lone men, riding wild, brought
word of foes assailing their east-borders, of orc-hosts marching in the Wold of
Rohan.
'Ride on! Ride on!' cried Éomer. 'Too late now to
turn aside. The fens of Entwash must guard our flank. Haste now we need. Ride
on!'
And so King Théoden departed from his own realm, and
mile by mile the long road wound away, and the beacon hills marched past:
Calenhad, Min-Rimmon, Erelas, Nardol. But their fires were quenched. All the
lands were grey and still; and ever the shadow deepened before them, and hope
waned in every heart.
Chapter 4
The Siege of
Gondor
Pippin was roused by Gandalf. Candles were lit in their
chamber, for only a dim twilight came through the windows; the air was heavy as
with approaching thunder.
'What is the time?' said Pippin
yawning.
'Past the second hour,' said Gandalf. 'Time to get
up and make yourself presentable. You are summoned to the Lord of the City to
learn your new duties.'
'And will he provide
breakfast?'
'No! I have provided it: all that you will get
till noon. Food is now doled out by order.'
Pippin looked
ruefully at the small loaf and (he thought) very inadequate pat of butter which
was set out for him, beside a cup of thin milk. 'Why did you bring me here?' he
said.
'You know quite well,' said Gandalf. 'To keep you out
of mischief; and if you do not like being here, you can remember that you
brought it on yourself.' Pippin said no more.
Before long
he was walking with Gandalf once more down the cold corridor to the door of the
Tower Hall. There Denethor sat in a grey gloom, like an old patient spider,
Pippin thought: he did not seem to have moved since the day before. He beckoned
Gandalf to a seat, but Pippin was left for a while standing unheeded. Presently
the old man turned to him:
'Well, Master Peregrin, I hope
that you used yesterday to your profit, and to your liking? Though I fear that
the board is barer in this city than you could
wish.'
Pippin had an uncomfortable feeling that most of
what he had said or done was somehow known to the Lord of the City, and much was
guessed of what he thought as well. He did not
answer.
'What would you do in my
service?'
'I thought, sir, that you would tell me my
duties.'
'I will, when I learn what you are fit for,' said
Denethor. 'But that I shall learn soonest, maybe, if I keep you beside me. The
esquire of my chamber has begged leave to go to the out-garrison, so you shall
take his place for a while. You shall wait on me, bear errands, and talk to me,
if war and council leave me any leisure. Can you
sing?'
'Yes,' said Pippin. 'Well, yes, well enough for my
own people. But we have no songs fit for great halls and evil times, lord. We
seldom sing of anything more terrible than wind or rain. And most of my songs
are about things that make us laugh; or about food and drink, of
course.'
'And why should such songs be unfit for my halls,
or for such hours as these? We who have lived long under the Shadow may surely
listen to echoes from a land untroubled by it? Then we may feel that our vigil
was not fruitless, though it may have been
thankless.'
Pippin's heart sank. He did not relish the idea
of singing any song of the Shire to the Lord of Minas Tirith, certainly not the
comic ones that he knew best; they were too, well, rustic for such an occasion.
He was however spared the ordeal for the present. He was not commanded to sing.
Denethor turned to Gandalf, asking questions about the Rohirrim and their
policies, and the position of Éomer, the king's nephew. Pippin marvelled at the
amount that the Lord seemed to know about a people that lived far away, though
it must, he thought, be many years since Denethor himself had ridden
abroad.
Presently Denethor waved to Pippin and dismissed
him again for a while. 'Go to the armouries of the Citadel,' he said, 'and get
you there the livery and gear of the Tower. It will be ready. It was commanded
yesterday. Return when you are clad!'
It was as he said;
and Pippin soon found himself arrayed in strange garments, all of black and
silver. He had a small hauberk, its rings forged of steel, maybe, yet black as
jet; and a high-crowned helm with small raven-wings on either side, set with a
silver star in the centre of the circlet. Above the mail was a short surcoat of
black, but broidered on the breast in silver with the token of the Tree. His old
clothes were folded and put away, but he was permitted to keep the grey cloak of
Lórien, though not to wear it when on duty. He looked now, had he known it,
verily
Ernil i Pheriannath, the Prince of the Halflings, that folk had
called him; but he felt uncomfortable. And the gloom began to weigh on his
spirits.
It was dark and dim all day. From the sunless dawn
until evening the heavy shadow had deepened, and all hearts in the City were
oppressed. Far above a great cloud streamed slowly westward from the Black Land,
devouring light, borne upon a wind of war; but below the air was still and
breathless, as if all the Vale of Anduin waited for the onset of a ruinous
storm.
About the eleventh hour, released at last for a
while from service, Pippin came out and went in search of food and drink to
cheer his heavy heart and make his task of waiting more supportable. In the
messes he met Beregond again, who had just come from an errand over the Pelennor
out to the Guard-towers upon the Causeway. Together they strolled out to the
walls; for Pippin felt imprisoned indoors, and stifled even in the lofty
citadel. Now they sat side by side again in the embrasure looking eastward,
where they had eaten and talked the day before.
It was the
sunset-hour, but the great pall had now stretched far into the West, and only as
it sank at last into the Sea did the Sun escape to send out a brief farewell
gleam before the night, even as Frodo saw it at the Cross-roads touching the
head of the fallen king. But to the fields of the Pelennor, under the shadow of
Mindolluin, there came no gleam: they were brown and
drear.
Already it seemed years to Pippin since he had sat
there before, in some half-forgotten time when he had still been a hobbit, a
light-hearted wanderer touched little by the perils he had passed through. Now
he was one small soldier in a city preparing for a great assault, clad in the
proud but sombre manner of the Tower of Guard.
In some
other time and place Pippin might have been pleased with his new array, but he
knew now that he was taking part in no play; he was in deadly earnest the
servant of a grim master in the greatest peril. The hauberk was burdensome, and
the helm weighed upon his head. His cloak he had cast aside upon the seat. He
turned his tired gaze away from the darkling fields below and yawned, and then
he sighed.
'You are weary of this day?' said
Beregond.
'Yes,' said Pippin, 'very: tired out with
idleness and waiting. I have kicked my heels at the door of my master's chamber
for many slow hours, while he has debated with Gandalf and the Prince and other
great persons. And I'm not used, Master Beregond, to waiting hungry on others
while they eat. It is a sore trial for a hobbit, that. No doubt you will think I
should feel the honour more deeply. But what is the good of such honour? Indeed
what is the good even of food and drink under this creeping shadow? What does it
mean? The very air seems thick and brown! Do you often have such glooms when the
wind is in the East?'
'Nay,' said Beregond, 'this is no
weather of the world. This is some device of his malice; some broil of fume from
the Mountain of Fire that he sends to darken hearts and counsel. And so it doth
indeed. I wish the Lord Faramir would return. He would not be dismayed. But now,
who knows if he will ever come back across the River out of the
Darkness?'
'Yes,' said Pippin, 'Gandalf, too, is anxious.
He was disappointed. I think, not to find Faramir here. And where has he got to
himself? He left the Lord's council before the noon-meal, and in no good mood
either, I thought. Perhaps he has some foreboding of bad
news.'
Suddenly as they talked they were stricken dumb,
frozen as it were to listening stones. Pippin cowered down with his hands
pressed to his ears; but Beregond, who had been looking out from the battlement
as he spoke of Faramir, remained there, stiffened, staring out with starting
eyes. Pippin knew the shuddering cry that he had heard: it was the same that he
had heard long ago in the Marish of the Shire, but now it was grown in power and
hatred, piercing the heart with a poisonous despair.
At
last Beregond spoke with an effort. 'They have come!' he said. 'Take courage and
look! There are fell things below.'
Reluctantly Pippin
climbed on to the seat and looked out over the wall. The Pelennor lay dim
beneath him, fading away to the scarce guessed line of the Great River. But now
wheeling swiftly across it, like shadows of untimely night, he saw in the middle
airs below him five birdlike forms, horrible as carrion-fowl yet greater than
eagles, cruel as death. Now they swooped near, venturing almost within bowshot
of the walls, now they circled away.
'Black Riders!'
muttered Pippin. 'Black Riders of the air! But see, Beregond!' he cried. 'They
are looking for something, surely? See how they wheel and swoop, always down to
that point over there! And can you see something moving on the ground? Dark
little things. Yes, men on horses: four or five. Ah! I cannot stand it! Gandalf!
Gandalf save us!'
Another long screech rose and fell, and
he threw himself back again from the wall, panting like a hunted animal. Faint
and seemingly remote through that shuddering cry he heard winding up from below
the sound of a trumpet ending on a long high
note.
'Faramir! The Lord Faramir! It is his call!' cried
Beregond. 'Brave heart! But how can he win to the Gate, if these foul hell-hawks
have other weapons than fear? But look! They hold on. They will make the Gate.
No! the horses are running mad. Look! the men are thrown; they are running on
foot. No, one is still up, but he rides back to the others. That will be the
Captain: he can master both beasts and men. Ah! there one of the foul things is
stooping on him. Help! help! Will no one go out to him?
Faramir!'
With that Beregond sprang away and ran off into
the gloom. Ashamed of his terror, while Beregond of the Guard thought first of
the captain whom he loved, Pippin got up and peered out. At that moment he
caught a flash of white and silver coming from the North, like a small star down
on the dusky fields. It moved with the speed of an arrow and grew as it came,
converging swiftly with the flight of the four men towards the Gate. It seemed
to Pippin that a pale light was spread about it and the heavy shadows gave way
before it; and then as it drew near he thought that he heard, like an echo in
the walls, a great voice calling.
'Gandalf!' he cried.
'Gandalf! He always turns up when things are darkest. Go on! Go on, White Rider!
Gandalf, Gandalf!' he shouted wildly, like an onlooker at a great race urging on
a runner who is far beyond encouragement.
But now the dark
swooping shadows were aware of the newcomer. One wheeled towards him; but it
seemed to Pippin that he raised his hand, and from it a shaft of white light
stabbed upwards. The Nazgûl gave a long wailing cry and swerved away; and with
that the four others wavered, and then rising in swift spirals they passed away
eastward vanishing into the lowering cloud above; and down on the Pelennor it
seemed for a while less dark.
Pippin watched, and he saw
the horseman and the White Rider meet and halt, waiting for those on foot. Men
now hurried out to them from the City; and soon they all passed from sight under
the outer walls, and he knew that they were entering the Gate. Guessing that
they would come at once to the Tower and the Steward, he hurried to the entrance
of the citadel. There he was joined by many others who had watched the race and
the rescue from the high walls.
It was not long before a
clamour was heard in the streets leading up from the outer circles, and there
was much cheering and crying of the names of Faramir and Mithrandir. Presently
Pippin saw torches, and followed by a press of people two horsemen riding
slowly: one was in white but shining no longer, pale in the twilight as if his
fire was spent or veiled; the other was dark and his head was bowed. They
dismounted, and as grooms took Shadowfax and the other horse, they walked
forward to the sentinel at the gate: Gandalf steadily, his grey cloak flung
back, and a fire still smouldering in his eyes; the other, clad all in green,
slowly, swaying a little as a weary or a wounded
man.
Pippin pressed forward as they passed under the lamp
beneath the gate-arch, and when he saw the pale face of Faramir he caught his
breath. It was the face of one who has been assailed by a great fear or anguish,
but has mastered it and now is quiet. Proud and grave he stood for a moment as
he spoke to the guard, and Pippin gazing at him saw how closely he resembled his
brother Boromir – whom Pippin had liked from the first, admiring the great man's
lordly but kindly manner. Yet suddenly for Faramir his heart was strangely moved
with a feeling that he had not known before. Here was one with an air of high
nobility such as Aragorn at times revealed, less high perhaps, yet also less
incalculable and remote: one of the Kings of Men born into a later time, but
touched with the wisdom and sadness of the Elder Race. He knew now why Beregond
spoke his name with love. He was a captain that men would follow, that he would
follow, even under the shadow of the black
wings.
'Faramir!' he cried aloud with the others.
'Faramir!' And Faramir catching his strange voice among the clamour of the men
of the City, turned and looked down at him and was
amazed.
'Whence come you?' he said. 'A halfling, and in the
livery of the Tower! Whence…?'
But with that Gandalf
stepped to his side and spoke. 'He came with me from the land of the Halflings,'
he said. 'He came with me. But let us not tarry here. There is much to say and
to do, and you are weary. He shall come with us. Indeed he must, for if he does
not forget his new duties more easily than I do, he must attend on his lord
again within this hour. Come, Pippin, follow us!'
So at
length they came to the private chamber of the Lord of the City. There deep
seats were set about a brazier of charcoal; and wine was brought; and there
Pippin, hardly noticed, stood behind the chair of Denethor and felt his
weariness little, so eagerly did he listen to all that was
said.
When Faramir had taken white bread and drunk a
draught of wine, he sat upon a low chair at his father's left hand. Removed a
little upon the other side sat Gandalf in a chair of carven wood; and he seemed
at first to be asleep. For at the beginning Faramir spoke only of the errand
upon which he had been sent out ten days before, and he brought tidings of
Ithilien and of movements of the Enemy and his allies; and he told of the fight
on the road when the men of Harad and their great beast were overthrown: a
captain reporting to his master such matters as had often been heard before,
small things of border-war that now seemed useless and petty, shorn of their
renown.
Then suddenly Faramir looked at Pippin. 'But now we
come to strange matters,' he said. 'For this is not the first halfling that I
have seen walking out of northern legends into the
Southlands.'
At that Gandalf sat up and gripped the arms of
his chair; but he said nothing, and with a look stopped the exclamation on
Pippin's lips. Denethor looked at their faces and nodded his head, as though in
sign that he had read much there before it was spoken. Slowly, while the others
sat silent and still, Faramir told his tale, with his eyes for the most part on
Gandalf, though now and again his glance strayed to Pippin, as if to refresh his
memory of others that he had seen.
As his story was
unfolded of his meeting with Frodo and his servant and of the events at Henneth
Annun, Pippin became aware that Gandalf's hands were trembling as they clutched
the carven wood. White they seemed now and very old, and as he looked at them,
suddenly with a thrill of fear Pippin knew that Gandalf, Gandalf himself, was
troubled, even afraid. The air of the room was close and still. At last when
Faramir spoke of his parting with the travellers, and of their resolve to go to
Cirith Ungol, his voice fell, and he shook his head and sighed. Then Gandalf
sprang up.
'Cirith Ungol? Morgul Vale?' he said. 'The time,
Faramir, the time? When did you part with them? When would they reach that
accursed valley?'
'I parted with them in the morning two
days ago,' said Faramir. 'It is fifteen leagues thence to the vale of the
Morgulduin, if they went straight south; and then they would be still five
leagues westward of the accursed Tower. At swiftest they could not come there
before today, and maybe they have not come there yet. Indeed I see what you
fear. But the darkness is not due to their venture. It began yestereve, and all
Ithilien was under shadow last night. It is clear to me that the Enemy has long
planned an assault on us, and its hour had already been determined before ever
the travellers left my keeping.'
Gandalf paced the floor.
'The morning of two days ago, nigh on three days of journey! How far is the
place where you parted?'
'Some twenty-five leagues as a
bird flies,' answered Faramir. 'But I could not come more swiftly. Yestereve I
lay at Cair Andros, the long isle in the River northward which we hold in
defence; and horses are kept on the hither bank. As the dark drew on I knew that
haste was needed, so I rode thence with three others that could also be horsed.
The rest of my company I sent south to strengthen the garrison at the fords of
Osgiliath. I hope that I have not done ill?' He looked at his
father.
'Ill?' cried Denethor, and his eyes flashed
suddenly. 'Why do you ask? The men were under your command. Or do you ask for my
judgement on all your deeds? Your bearing is lowly in my presence, yet it is
long now since you turned from your own way at my counsel. See, you have spoken
skilfully, as ever; but I, have I not seen your eye fixed on Mithrandir, seeking
whether you said well or too much? He has long had your heart in his
keeping.
'My son, your father is old but not yet dotard. I
can see and hear, as was my wont; and little of what you have half said or left
unsaid is now hidden from me. I know the answer to many riddles. Alas, alas for
Boromir!'
'If what I have done displeases you, my father,'
said Faramir quietly, 'I wish I had known your counsel before the burden of so
weighty a judgement was thrust on me.'
'Would that have
availed to change your judgement?' said Denethor. 'You would still have done
just so, I deem. I know you well. Ever your desire is to appear lordly and
generous as a king of old, gracious, gentle. That may well befit one of high
race, if he sits in power and peace. But in desperate hours gentleness may be
repaid with death.'
'So be it,' said
Faramir.
'So be it!' cried Denethor. 'But not with your
death only, Lord Faramir: with the death also of your father, and of all your
people, whom it is your part to protect now that Boromir is
gone.'
'Do you wish then,' said Faramir, 'that our places
had been exchanged?'
'Yes, I wish that indeed,' said
Denethor. 'For Boromir was loyal to me and no wizard's pupil. He would have
remembered his father's need, and would not have squandered what fortune gave.
He would have brought me a mighty gift.'
For a moment
Faramir's restraint gave way. 'I would ask you, my father, to remember why it
was that I, not he, was in Ithilien. On one occasion at least your counsel has
prevailed, not long ago. It was the Lord of the City that gave the errand to
him.'
'Stir not the bitterness in the cup that I mixed for
myself,' said Denethor. 'Have I not tasted it now many nights upon my tongue
foreboding that worse yet lay in the dregs? As now indeed I find. Would it were
not so! Would that this thing had come to me!'
'Comfort
yourself!' said Gandalf. 'In no case would Boromir have brought it to you. He is
dead, and died well; may he sleep in peace! Yet you deceive yourself. He would
have stretched out his hand to this thing, and taking it he would have fallen.
He would have kept it for his own, and when he returned you would not have known
your son.'
The face of Denethor set hard and cold. 'You
found Boromir less apt to your hand, did you not?' he said softly. 'But I who
was his father say that he would have brought it to me. You are wise, maybe,
Mithrandir, yet with all your subtleties you have not all wisdom. Counsels may
be found that are neither the webs of wizards nor the haste of fools. I have in
this matter more lore and wisdom than you deem. '
'What
then is your wisdom?' said Gandalf.
'Enough to perceive
that there are two follies to avoid. To use this thing is perilous. At this
hour, to send it in the hands of a witless halfling into the land of the Enemy
himself, as you have done, and this son of mine, that is
madness.'
'And the Lord Denethor what would he have
done?'
'Neither. But most surely not for any argument would
he have set this thing at a hazard beyond all but a fool's hope, risking our
utter ruin, if the Enemy should recover what he lost. Nay, it should have been
kept, hidden, hidden dark and deep. Not used, I say, unless at the uttermost end
of need, but set beyond his grasp, save by a victory so final that what then
befell would not trouble us, being dead.'
'You think, as is
your wont, my lord, of Gondor only,' said Gandalf. 'Yet there are other men and
other lives, and time still to be. And for me, I pity even his
slaves.'
'And where will other men look for help, if Gondor
falls?' answered Denethor. 'If I had this thing now in the deep vaults of this
citadel, we should not then shake with dread under this gloom, fearing the
worst, and our counsels would be undisturbed. If you do not trust me to endure
the test, you do not know me yet.'
'Nonetheless I do not
trust you,' said Gandalf. 'Had I done so, I could have sent this thing hither to
your keeping and spared myself and others much anguish. And now hearing you
speak I trust you less, no more than Boromir. Nay, stay your wrath! I do not
trust myself in this, and I refused this thing, even as a freely given gift. You
are strong and can still in some matters govern yourself, Denethor; yet if you
had received this thing, it would have overthrown you. Were it buried beneath
the roots of Mindolluin, still it would burn your mind away, as the darkness
grows, and the yet worse things follow that soon shall come upon
us.'
For a moment the eyes of Denethor glowed again as he
faced Gandalf, and Pippin felt once more the strain between their wills; but now
almost it seemed as if their glances were like blades from eye to eye,
flickering as they fenced. Pippin trembled fearing some dreadful stroke. But
suddenly Denethor relaxed and grew cold again. He shrugged his
shoulders.
'If I had! If you had!' he said. 'Such words and
ifs are vain. It has gone into the Shadow, and only time will show what doom
awaits it and us. The time will not be long. In what is left, let all who fight
the Enemy in their fashion be at one, and keep hope while they may, and after
hope still the hardihood to die free.' He turned to Faramir. 'What think you of
the garrison at Osgiliath?'
'It is not strong,' said
Faramir. 'I have sent the company of Ithilien to strengthen it, as I have
said.'
'Not enough, I deem,' said Denethor. 'It is there
that the first blow will fall. They will have need of some stout captain
there.'
'There and elsewhere in many places,' said Faramir,
and sighed. 'Alas for my brother, whom I too loved!' He rose. 'May I have your
leave, father?' And then he swayed and leaned upon his father's
chair.
'You are weary, I see,' said Denethor. 'You have
ridden fast and far, and under shadows of evil in the air, I am
told.'
'Let us not speak of that!' said
Faramir.
'Then we will not,' said Denethor. 'Go now and
rest as you may. Tomorrow's need will be sterner.'
All now
took leave of the Lord of the City and went to rest while they still could.
Outside there was a starless blackness as Gandalf with Pippin beside him bearing
a small torch, made his way to their lodging. They did not speak until they were
behind closed doors. Then at last Pippin took Gandalf's
hand.
'Tell me,' he said, 'is there any hope? For Frodo, I
mean; or at least mostly for Frodo.'
Gandalf put his hand
on Pippin's head. 'There never was much hope,' he answered. 'Just a fool's hope,
as I have been told. And when I heard of Cirith Ungol———' He broke off and
strode to the window as if his eyes could pierce the night in the East. 'Cirith
Ungol!' he muttered. 'Why that way, I wonder?' He turned. 'Just now, Pippin, my
heart almost failed me, hearing that name. And yet in truth I believe that the
news that Faramir brings has some hope in it. For it seems clear that our Enemy
has opened his war at last and made the first move while Frodo was still free.
So now for many days he will have his eye turned this way and that, away from
his own land. And yet, Pippin, I feel from afar his haste and fear. He has begun
sooner than he would. Something has happened to stir
him.'
Gandalf stood for a moment in thought. 'Maybe,' he
muttered. 'Maybe even your foolishness helped, my lad. Let me see: some five
days ago now he would discover that we had thrown down Saruman and had taken the
Stone. Still what of that? We could not use it to much purpose, or without his
knowing. Ah! I wonder. Aragorn? His time draws near. And he is strong and stern
underneath, Pippin; bold, determined, able to take his own counsel and dare
great risks at need. That may be it. He may have used the Stone and shown
himself to the Enemy, challenging him, for this very purpose. I wonder. Well, we
shall not know the answer till the Riders of Rohan come, if they do not come too
late. There are evil days ahead. To sleep while we
may!'
'But,' said Pippin.
'But what?'
said Gandalf. 'Only one
but will I allow
tonight.'
'Gollum,' said Pippin. 'How on earth could they
be going about
with him, even following him? And I could see that Faramir
did not like the place he was taking them to any more than you do. What is
wrong?'
'I cannot answer that now,' said Gandalf. 'Yet my
heart guessed that Frodo and Gollum would meet before the end. For good, or for
evil. But of Cirith Ungol I will not speak tonight. Treachery, treachery I fear;
treachery of that miserable creature. But so it must be. Let us remember that a
traitor may betray himself and do good that he does not intend. It can be so,
sometimes. Good night! '
The next day came with a morning
like a brown dusk, and the hearts of men, lifted for a while by the return of
Faramir, sank low again. The winged Shadows were not seen again that day, yet
ever and anon, high above the city, a faint cry would come, and many who heard
it would stand stricken with a passing dread, while the less stout-hearted
quailed and wept.
And now Faramir was gone again. 'They
give him no rest,' some murmured. 'The Lord drives his son too hard, and now he
must do the duty of two, for himself and for the one that will not return.' And
ever men looked northward, asking: 'Where are the Riders of
Rohan?'
In truth Faramir did not go by his own choosing.
But the Lord of the City was master of his Council, and he was in no mood that
day to bow to others. Early in the morning the Council had been summoned. There
all the captains judged that because of the threat in the South their force was
too weak to make any stroke of war on their own part, unless perchance the
Riders of Rohan yet should come. Meanwhile they must man the walls and
wait.
'Yet,' said Denethor, 'we should not lightly abandon
the outer defences, the Rammas made with so great a labour. And the Enemy must
pay dearly for the crossing of the River. That he cannot do, in force to assail
the City, either north of Cair Andros because of the marshes, or southwards
towards Lebennin because of the breadth of the River, that needs many boats. It
is at Osgiliath that he will put his weight, as before when Boromir denied him
the passage.'
'That was but a trial,' said Faramir. 'Today
we may make the Enemy pay ten times our loss at the passage and yet rue the
exchange. For he can afford to lose a host better than we to lose a company. And
the retreat of those that we put out far afield will be perilous, if he wins
across in force.'
'And what of Cair Andros?' said the
Prince. 'That, too, must be held, if Osgiliath is defended. Let us not forget
the danger on our left. The Rohirrim may come, and they may not. But Faramir has
told us of great strength drawing ever to the Black Gate. More than one host may
issue from it, and strike for more than one passage.'
'Much
must be risked in war,' said Denethor. 'Cair Andros is manned and no more can be
sent so far. But I will not yield the River and the Pelennor unfought – not if
there is a captain here who has still the courage to do his lord's
will.'
Then all were silent, but at length Faramir said: 'I
do not oppose your will, sire. Since you are robbed of Boromir, I will go and do
what I can in his stead – if you command it.'
'I do so,'
said Denethor.
'Then farewell!' said Faramir. 'But if I
should return, think better of me!'
'That depends on the
manner of your return,' said Denethor.
Gandalf it was that
last spoke to Faramir ere he rode east. 'Do not throw your live away rashly or
in bitterness,' he said. 'You will be needed here, for other things than war.
Your father loves you, Faramir, and will remember it ere the end.
Farewell!'
So now the Lord Faramir had gone forth again,
and had taken with him such strength of men as were willing to go or could be
spared. On the walls some gazed through the gloom towards the ruined city, and
they wondered what chanced there, for nothing could be seen. And others, as
ever, looked north and counted the leagues to Théoden in Rohan. 'Will he come?
Will he remember our old alliance?' they said.
'Yes, he
will come,' said Gandalf, 'even if he comes too late. But think! At best the Red
Arrow cannot have reached him more than two days ago, and the miles are long
from Edoras.'
It was night again ere news came. A man rode
in haste from the fords, saying that a host had issued from Minas Morgul and was
already drawing nigh to Osgiliath; and it had been joined by regiments from the
South, Haradrim, cruel and tall. 'And we have learned,' said the messenger,
'that the Black Captain leads them once again, and the fear of him has passed
before him over the River.'
With those ill-boding words the
third day closed since Pippin came to Minas Tirith. Few went to rest, for small
hope had any now that even Faramir could hold the fords for
long.
The next day, though the darkness had reached its
full and grew no deeper, it weighed heavier on men's hearts, and a great dread
was on them. Ill news came soon again. The passage of Anduin was won by the
Enemy. Faramir was retreating to the wall of the Pelennor, rallying his men to
the Causeway Forts; but he was ten times outnumbered.
'If
he wins back at all across the Pelennor, his enemies will be on his heels,' said
the messenger. 'They have paid dear for the crossing but less dearly than we
hoped. The plan has been well laid. It is now seen that in secret they have long
been building floats and barges in great numbers in East Osgiliath. They swarmed
across like beetles. But it is the Black Captain that defeats us. Few will stand
and abide even the rumour of his coming. His own folk quail at him, and they
would slay themselves at his bidding.'
'Then I am needed
there more than here,' said Gandalf, and rode off at once, and the glimmer of
him faded soon from sight. And all that night Pippin alone and sleepless stood
upon the wall and gazed eastward.
The bells of day had
scarcely rung out again, a mockery in the unlightened dark, when far away he saw
fires spring up, across in the dim spaces where the walls of the Pelennor stood.
The watchmen cried aloud, and all men in the City stood to arms. Now ever and
anon there was a red flash, and slowly through the heavy air dull rumbles could
be heard.
'They have taken the wall!' men cried. 'They are
blasting breaches in it. They are coming!'
'Where is
Faramir?' cried Beregond in dismay. 'Say not that he has
fallen!'
It was Gandalf that brought the first tidings.
With a handful of horsemen he came in the middle morning, riding as escort to a
line of wains. They were filled with wounded men, all that could be saved from
the wreck of the Causeway Forts. At once he went to Denethor. The Lord of the
City sat now in a high chamber above the Hall of the White Tower with Pippin at
his side; and through the dim windows, north and south and east, he bent his
dark eyes, as if to pierce the shadows of doom that ringed him round. Most to
the north he looked, and would pause at whiles to listen as if by some ancient
art his ears might hear the thunder of hoofs on the plains far
away.
'Is Faramir come?' he
asked.
'No,' said Gandalf. 'But he still lived when I left
him. Yet he is resolved to stay with the rearguard, lest the retreat over the
Pelennor become a rout. He may, perhaps, hold his men together long enough, but
I doubt it. He is pitted against a foe too great. For one has come that I
feared.'
'Not – the Dark Lord?' cried Pippin, forgetting
his place in his terror.
Denethor laughed bitterly. 'Nay,
not yet, Master Peregrin! He will not come save only to triumph over me when all
is won. He uses others as his weapons. So do all great lords, if they are wise,
Master Halfling. Or why should I sit here in my tower and think, and watch, and
wait, spending even my sons? For I can still wield a
brand.'
He stood up and cast open his long black cloak, and
behold! he was clad in mail beneath, and girt with a long sword, great-hilted in
a sheath of black and silver. 'Thus have I walked, and thus now for many years
have I slept,' he said, 'lest with age the body should grow soft and
timid.'
'Yet now under the Lord of Barad-dur the most fell
of all his captains is already master of your outer walls,' said Gandalf. 'King
of Angmar long ago, Sorcerer, Ringwraith, Lord of the Nazgûl, a spear of terror
in the hand of Sauron, shadow of despair.'
'Then,
Mithrandir, you had a foe to match you,' said Denethor. 'For myself, I have long
known who is the chief captain of the hosts of the Dark Tower. Is this all that
you have returned to say? Or can it be that you have withdrawn because you are
overmatched?'
Pippin trembled, fearing that Gandalf would
be stung to sudden wrath, but his fear was needless. 'It might be so,' Gandalf
answered softly. 'But our trial of strength is not yet come. And if words spoken
of old be true, not by the hand of man shall he fall, and hidden from the Wise
is the doom that awaits him. However that may be, the Captain of Despair does
not press forward, yet. He rules rather according to the wisdom that you have
just spoken, from the rear, driving his slaves in madness on
before.
'Nay, I came rather to guard the hurt men that can
yet be healed; for the Rammas is breached far and wide, and soon the host of
Morgul will enter in at many points. And I came chiefly to say this. Soon there
will be battle on the fields. A sortie must be made ready. Let it be of mounted
men. In them lies our brief hope, for in one thing only is the enemy still
poorly provided: he has few horsemen.'
'And we also have
few. Now would the coming of Rohan be in the nick of time,' said
Denethor.
'We are likely to see other newcomers first,'
said Gandalf. 'Fugitives from Cair Andros have already reached us. The isle has
fallen. Another army is come from the Black Gate, crossing from the
north-east.'
'Some have accused you, Mithrandir, of
delighting to bear ill news,' said Denethor, 'but to me this is no longer news:
it was known to me ere nightfall yesterday. As for the sortie, I had already
given thought to it. Let us go down.'
Time passed. At
length watchers on the walls could see the retreat of the out-companies. Small
bands of weary and often wounded men came first with little order; some were
running wildly as if pursued. Away to the eastward the distant fires flickered;
and now it seemed that here and there they crept across the plain. Houses and
barns were burning. Then from many points little rivers of red flame came
hurrying on, winding through the gloom, converging towards the line of the broad
road that led from the City-gate to Osgiliath.
'The enemy,'
men murmured. 'The dike is down. Here they come pouring through the breaches!
And they carry torches, it seems. Where are our own
folk?'
It drew now to evening by the hour, and the light
was so dim that even far-sighted men upon the Citadel could discern little
clearly out upon the fields, save only the burnings that ever multiplied, and
the lines of fire that grew in length and speed. At last, less than a mile from
the City, a more ordered mass of men came into view, marching not running, still
holding together.
The watchers held their breath. 'Faramir
must be there,' they said. 'He can govern man and beast. He will make it
yet.'
Now the main retreat was scarcely two furlongs
distant. Out of the gloom behind a small company of horsemen galloped, all that
was left of the rearguard. Once again they turned at bay, facing the oncoming
lines of fire. Then suddenly there was a tumult of fierce cries. Horsemen of the
enemy swept up. The lines of fire became flowing torrents, file upon file of
Orcs bearing flames, and wild Southron men with red banners, shouting with harsh
tongues, surging up, overtaking the retreat. And with a piercing cry out of the
dim sky fell the winged shadows, the Nazgûl stooping to the
kill.
The retreat became a rout. Already men were breaking
away, flying wild and witless here and there, flinging away their weapons,
crying out in fear, falling to the ground.
And then a
trumpet rang from the Citadel, and Denethor at last released the sortie. Drawn
up within the shadow of the Gate and under the looming walls outside they had
waited for his signal: all the mounted men that were left in the City. Now they
sprang forward, formed, quickened to a gallop, and charged with a great shout.
And from the walls an answering shout went up; for foremost on the field rode
the swan-knights of Dol Amroth with their Prince and his blue banner at their
head.
'Amroth for Gondor!' they cried. 'Amroth to
Faramir!'
Like thunder they broke upon the enemy on either
flank of the retreat; but one rider outran them all, swift as the wind in the
grass: Shadowfax bore him, shining, unveiled once more, a light starting from
his upraised hand.
The Nazgûl screeched and swept away, for
their Captain was not yet come to challenge the white fire of his foe. The hosts
of Morgul intent on their prey, taken at unawares in wild career, broke,
scattering like sparks in a gale. The out-companies with a great cheer turned
and smote their pursuers. Hunters became the hunted. The retreat became an
onslaught. The field was strewn with stricken orcs and men, and a reek arose of
torches cast away, sputtering out in swirling smoke. The cavalry rode on.

But Denethor did not permit them to go far.
Though the enemy was checked, and for the moment driven back, great forces were
flowing in from the East. Again the trumpet rang, sounding the retreat. The
cavalry of Gondor halted. Behind their screen the out-companies re-formed. Now
steadily they came marching back. They reached the Gate of the City and entered,
stepping proudly: and proudly the people of the City looked on them and cried
their praise, and yet they were troubled in heart. For the companies were
grievously reduced. Faramir had lost a third of his men. And where was
he?
Last of all he came. His men passed in. The mounted
knights returned, and at their rear the banner of Dol Amroth, and the Prince.
And in his arms before him on his horse he bore the body of his kinsman, Faramir
son of Denethor, found upon the stricken field.
'Faramir!
Faramir!' men cried, weeping in the streets. But he did not answer, and they
bore him away up the winding road to the Citadel and his father. Even as the
Nazgûl had swerved aside from the onset of the White Rider, there came flying a
deadly dart, and Faramir, as he held at bay a mounted champion of Harad, had
fallen to the earth. Only the charge of Dol Amroth had saved him from the red
southland swords that would have hewed him as he lay.
The
Prince Imrahil brought Faramir to the White Tower, and he said: 'Your son has
returned, lord, after great deeds, and he told all that he had seen.' But
Denethor rose and looked on the face of his son and was silent. Then he bade
them make a bed in the chamber and lay Faramir upon it and depart. But he
himself went up alone into the secret room under the summit of the Tower; and
many who looked up thither at that time saw a pale light that gleamed and
flickered from the narrow windows for a while, and then flashed and went out.
And when Denethor descended again he went to Faramir and sat beside him without
speaking, but the face of the Lord was grey, more deathlike than his
son's.
So now at last the City was besieged, enclosed in a
ring of foes. The Rammas was broken, and all the Pelennor abandoned to the
Enemy. The last word to come from outside the walls was brought by men flying
down the northward road ere the Gate was shut. They were the remnant of the
guard that was kept at that point where the way from Anórien and Rohan ran into
the townlands: Ingold led them, the same who had admitted Gandalf and Pippin
less than five days before, while the sun still rose and there was hope in the
morning.
'There is no news of the Rohirrim,' he said.
'Rohan will not come now. Or if they come, it will not avail us. The new host
that we had tidings of has come first, from over the River by way of Andros, it
is said. They are strong: battalions of Orcs of the Eye, and countless companies
of Men of a new sort that we have not met before. Not tall, but broad and grim,
bearded like dwarves, wielding great axes. Out of some savage land in the wide
East they come, we deem. They hold the northward road; and many have passed on
into Anórien. The Rohirrim cannot come.'
The Gate was shut.
All night watchmen on the walls heard the rumour of the enemy that roamed
outside, burning field and tree, and hewing any man that they found abroad,
living or dead. The numbers that had already passed over the River could not be
guessed in the darkness, but when morning, or its dim shadow, stole over the
plain, it was seen that even fear by night had scarcely over-counted them. The
plain was dark with their marching companies, and as far as eyes could strain in
the mirk there sprouted, like a foul fungus-growth, all about the beleaguered
city great camps of tents, black or sombre red.
Busy as
ants hurrying orcs were digging, digging lines of deep trenches in a huge ring,
just out of bowshot from the walls; and as the trenches were made each was
filled with fire, though how it was kindled or fed, by art or devilry, none
could see. All day the labour went forward, while the men of Minas Tirith looked
on, unable to hinder it. And as each length of trench was completed, they could
see great wains approaching; and soon yet more companies of the enemy were
swiftly setting up, each behind the cover of a trench, great engines for the
casting of missiles. There were none upon the City walls large enough to reach
so far or to stay the work.
At first men laughed and did
not greatly fear such devices. For the main wall of the City was of great height
and marvellous thickness, built ere the power and craft of Númenor waned in
exile; and its outward face was like to the Tower of Orthanc, hard and dark and
smooth, unconquerable by steel or fire, unbreakable except by some convulsion
that would rend the very earth on which it stood.
'Nay,'
they said, 'not if the Nameless One himself should come, not even he could enter
here while we yet live.' But some answered: 'While we yet live? How long? He has
a weapon that has brought low many strong places since the world began. Hunger.
The roads are cut. Rohan will not come.'
But the engines
did not waste shot upon the indomitable wall. It was no brigand or orc-chieftain
that ordered the assault upon the Lord of Mordor's greatest foe. A power and
mind of malice guided it. As soon as the great catapults were set, with many
yells and the creaking of rope and winch, they began to throw missiles
marvellously high, so that they passed right above the battlement and fell
thudding within the first circle of the City; and many of them by some secret
art burst into flame as they came toppling down.
Soon there
was great peril of fire behind the wall, and all who could be spared were busy
quelling the flames that sprang up in many places. Then among the greater casts
there fell another hail, less ruinous but more horrible. All about the streets
and lanes behind the Gate it tumbled down, small round shot that did not burn.
But when men ran to learn what it might be, they cried aloud or wept. For the
enemy was flinging into the City all the heads of those who had fallen fighting
at Osgiliath, or on the Rammas, or in the fields. They were grim to look on; for
though some were crushed and shapeless, and some had been cruelly hewn, yet many
had features that could be told, and it seemed that they had died in pain; and
all were branded with the foul token of the Lidless Eye. But marred and
dishonoured as they were, it often chanced that thus a man would see again the
face of someone that he had known, who had walked proudly once in arms, or
tilled the fields, or ridden in upon a holiday from the green vales in the
hills.
In vain men shook their fists at the pitiless foes
that swarmed before the Gate. Curses they heeded not, nor understood the tongues
of western men; crying with harsh voices like beasts and carrion-birds. But soon
there were few left in Minas Tirith who had the heart to stand up and defy the
hosts of Mordor. For yet another weapon, swifter than hunger, the Lord of the
Dark Tower had: dread and despair.
The Nazgûl came again,
and as their Dark Lord now grew and put forth his strength, so their voices,
which uttered only his will and his malice, were filled with evil and horror.
Ever they circled above the City, like vultures that expect their fill of doomed
men's flesh. Out of sight and shot they flew, and yet were ever present, and
their deadly voices rent the air. More unbearable they became, not less, at each
new cry. At length even the stout-hearted would fling themselves to the ground
as the hidden menace passed over them, or they would stand, letting their
weapons fall from nerveless hands while into their minds a blackness came, and
they thought no more of war, but only of hiding and of crawling, and of
death.
During all this black day Faramir lay upon his bed
in the chamber of the White Tower, wandering in a desperate fever; dying someone
said, and soon 'dying' all men were saying upon the walls and in the streets.
And by him his father sat, and said nothing, but watched, and gave no longer any
heed to the defence.
No hours so dark had Pippin known, not
even in the clutches of the Uruk-hai. It was his duty to wait upon the Lord, and
wait he did, forgotten it seemed, standing by the door of the unlit chamber,
mastering his own fears as best he could. And as he watched, it seemed to him
that Denethor grew old before his eyes, as if something had snapped in his proud
will, and his stern mind was overthrown. Grief maybe had wrought it, and
remorse. He saw tears on that once tearless face, more unbearable than
wrath.
'Do not weep, lord,' he stammered. 'Perhaps he will
get well. Have you asked Gandalf?'
'Comfort me not with
wizards!' said Denethor. 'The fool's hope has failed. The Enemy has found it,
and now his power waxes; he sees our very thoughts, and all we do is
ruinous.
'I sent my son forth, unthanked, unblessed, out
into needless peril, and here he lies with poison in his veins. Nay, nay,
whatever may now betide in war, my line too is ending, even the House of the
Stewards has failed. Mean folk shall rule the last remnant of the Kings of Men,
lurking in the hills until all are hounded out.'
Men came
to the door crying for the Lord of the City. 'Nay, I will not come down,' he
said. 'I must stay beside my son. He might still speak before the end. But that
is near. Follow whom you will, even the Grey Fool, though his hope has failed.
Here I stay.'
So it was that Gandalf took command of the
last defence of the City of Gondor. Wherever he came men's hearts would lift
again, and the winged shadows pass from memory. Tirelessly he strode from
Citadel to Gate, from north to south about the wall; and with him went the
Prince of Dol Amroth in his shining mail. For he and his knights still held
themselves like lords in whom the race of Númenor ran true. Men that saw them
whispered saying: 'Belike the old tales speak well; there is Elvish blood in the
veins of that folk, for the people of Nimrodel dwelt in that land once long
ago.' And then one would sing amid the gloom some staves of the Lay of Nimrodel,
or other songs of the Vale of Anduin out of vanished
years.
And yet – when they had gone, the shadows closed on
men again, and their hearts went cold, and the valour of Gondor withered into
ash. And so slowly they passed out of a dim day of fears into the darkness of a
desperate night. Fires now raged unchecked in the first circle of the City, and
the garrison upon the outer wall was already in many places cut off from
retreat. But the faithful who remained there at their posts were few; most had
fled beyond the second gate.
Far behind the battle the
River had been swiftly bridged, and all day more force and gear of war had
poured across. Now at last in the middle night the assault was loosed. The
vanguard passed through the trenches of fire by many devious paths that had been
left between them. On they came, reckless of their loss as they approached,
still bunched and herded, within the range of bowmen on the wall. But indeed
there were too few now left there to do them great damage, though the light of
the fires showed up many a mark for archers of such skill as Gondor once had
boasted. Then perceiving that the valour of the City was already beaten down,
the hidden Captain put forth his strength. Slowly the great siege-towers built
in Osgiliath rolled forward through the dark.
Messengers
came again to the chamber in the White Tower, and Pippin let them enter, for
they were urgent. Denethor turned his head slowly from Faramir's face, and
looked at them silently.
'The first circle of the City is
burning, lord,' they said. 'What are your commands? You are still the Lord and
Steward. Not all will follow Mithrandir. Men are flying from the walls and
leaving them unmanned.'
'Why? Why do the fools fly?' said
Denethor. 'Better to burn sooner than late, for burn we must. Go back to your
bonfire! And I? I will go now to my pyre. To my pyre! No tomb for Denethor and
Faramir. No tomb! No long slow sleep of death embalmed. We will burn like
heathen kings before ever a ship sailed hither from the West. The West has
failed. Go back and burn!'
The messengers without bow or
answer turned and fled.
Now Denethor stood up and released
the fevered hand of Faramir that he had held. 'He is burning, already burning,'
he said sadly. 'The house of his spirit crumbles.' Then stepping softly towards
Pippin he looked down at him.
'Farewell!' he said.
'Farewell, Peregrin son of Paladin! Your service has been short, and now it is
drawing to an end. I release you from the little that remains. Go now, and die
in what way seems best to you. And with whom you will, even that friend whose
folly brought you to this death. Send for my servants and then go.
Farewell!'
'I will not say farewell, my lord,' said Pippin
kneeling. And then suddenly hobbit-like once more, he stood up and looked the
old man in the eyes. 'I will take your leave, sir,' he said, 'for I want to see
Gandalf very much indeed. But he is no fool; and I will not think of dying until
he despairs of life. But from my word and your service I do not wish to be
released while you live. And if they come at last to the Citadel, I hope to be
here and stand beside you and earn perhaps the arms that you have given
me.'
'Do as you will, Master Halfling,' said Denethor. 'But
my life is broken. Send for my servants!' He turned back to
Faramir.
Pippin left him and called for the servants, and
they came: six men of the household, strong and fair; yet they trembled at the
summons. But in a quiet voice Denethor bade them lay warm coverlets on Faramir's
bed and take it up. And they did so, and lifting up the bed they bore it from
the chamber. Slowly they paced to trouble the fevered man as little as might be,
and Denethor, now bending on a staff, followed them; and last came
Pippin.
Out from the White Tower they walked, as if to a
funeral, out into the darkness, where the overhanging cloud was lit beneath with
flickers of dull red. Softly they paced the great courtyard, and at a word from
Denethor halted beside the Withered Tree.
All was silent,
save for the rumour of war in the City down below, and they heard the water
dripping sadly from the dead branches into the dark pool. Then they went on
through the Citadel gate, where the sentinel stared at them in wonder and dismay
as they passed by. Turning westward they came at length to a door in the
rearward wall of the sixth circle. Fen Hollen it was called, for it was kept
ever shut save at times of funeral, and only the Lord of the City might use that
way, or those who bore the token of the tombs and tended the houses of the dead.
Beyond it went a winding road that descended in many curves down to the narrow
land under the shadow of Mindolluin's precipice where stood the mansions of the
dead Kings and of their Stewards.
A porter sat in a little
house beside the way, and with fear in his eyes he came forth bearing a lantern
in his hand. At the Lord's command he unlocked the door, and silently it swung
back; and they passed through, taking the lantern from his hand. It was dark on
the climbing road between ancient walls and many-pillared balusters looming in
the swaying lantern-beam. Their slow feet echoed as they walked down, down,
until at last they came to the Silent Street, Rath Dínen, between pale domes and
empty halls and images of men long dead; and they entered into the House of the
Stewards and set down their burden.
There Pippin, staring
uneasily about him, saw that he was in a wide vaulted chamber, draped as it were
with the great shadows that the little lantern threw upon its shrouded walls.
And dimly to be seen were many rows of tables, carved of marble; and upon each
table lay a sleeping form, hands folded, head pillowed upon stone. But one table
near at hand stood broad and bare. Upon it at a sign from Denethor they laid
Faramir and his father side by side, and covered them with one covering, and
stood then with bowed heads as mourners beside a bed of death. Then Denethor
spoke in a low voice.
'Here we will wait,' he said. 'But
send not for the embalmers. Bring us wood quick to burn, and lay it all about
us, and beneath; and pour oil upon it. And when I bid you thrust in a torch. Do
this and speak no more to me. Farewell!'
'By your leave,
lord!' said Pippin and turned and fled in terror from the deathly house. 'Poor
Faramir!' he thought. 'I must find Gandalf. Poor Faramir! Quite likely he needs
medicine more than tears. Oh, where can I find Gandalf? In the thick of things,
I suppose; and he will have no time to spare for dying men or
madmen.'
At the door he turned to one of the servants who
had remained on guard there. 'Your master is not himself,' he said. 'Go slow!
Bring no fire to this place while Faramir lives! Do nothing until Gandalf
comes!'
'Who is the master of Minas Tirith?' the man
answered. 'The Lord Denethor or the Grey Wanderer?'
'The
Grey Wanderer or no one, it would seem,' said Pippin, and he sped back and up
the winding way as swiftly as his feet would carry him, past the astonished
porter, out through the door, and on, till he came near the gate of the Citadel.
The sentinel hailed him as he went by, and he recognized the voice of
Beregond.
'Whither do you run, Master Peregrin?' he
cried.
'To find Mithrandir,' Pippin
answered.
'The Lord's errands are urgent and should not be
hindered by me,' said Beregond, 'but tell me quickly, if you may: what goes
forward? Whither has my Lord gone? I have just come on duty, but I heard that he
passed towards the Closed Door, and men were bearing Faramir before
him.'
'Yes,' said Pippin, 'to the Silent
Street.'
Beregond bowed his head to hide his tears. 'They
said that he was dying,' he sighed, 'and now he is
dead.'
'No,' said Pippin, 'not yet. And even now his death
might be prevented, I think. But the Lord of the City, Beregond, has fallen
before his city is taken. He is fey and dangerous.' Quickly he told of
Denethor's strange words and deeds. 'I must find Gandalf at
once.'
'Then you must go down to the
battle.'
'I know. The Lord has given me leave. But,
Beregond, if you can, do something to stop any dreadful thing
happening.'
'The Lord does not permit those who wear the
black and silver to leave their post for any cause, save at his own
command.'
'Well, you must choose between orders and the
life of Faramir,' said Pippin. 'And as for orders, I think you have a madman to
deal with, not a lord. I must run. I will return if I
can.'
He ran on, down, down towards the outer city. Men
flying back from the burning passed him, and some seeing his livery turned and
shouted, but he paid no heed. At last he was through the Second Gate, beyond
which great fires leaped up between the walls. Yet it seemed strangely silent.
No noise or shouts of battle or din of arms could be heard. Then suddenly there
was a dreadful cry and a great shock, and a deep echoing boom. Forcing himself
on against a gust of fear and horror that shook him almost to his knees, Pippin
turned a corner opening on the wide place behind the City Gate. He stopped dead.
He had found Gandalf; but he shrank back, cowering into a
shadow.
Ever since the middle night the great assault had
gone on. The drums rolled. To the north and to the south company upon company of
the enemy pressed to the walls. There came great beasts, like moving houses in
the red and fitful light, the
mumakil of the Harad dragging through the
lanes amid the fires huge towers and engines. Yet their Captain cared not
greatly what they did or how many might be slain: their purpose was only to test
the strength of the defence and to keep the men of Gondor busy in many places.
It was against the Gate that he would throw his heaviest weight. Very strong it
might be, wrought of steel and iron, and guarded with towers and bastions of
indomitable stone, yet it was the key, the weakest point in all that high and
impenetrable wall.
The drums rolled louder. Fires leaped
up. Great engines crawled across the field; and in the midst was a huge ram,
great as a forest-tree a hundred feet in length, swinging on mighty chains. Long
had it been forging in the dark smithies of Mordor, and its hideous head,
founded of black steel, was shaped in the likeness of a ravening wolf; on it
spells of ruin lay. Grond they named it, in memory of the Hammer of the
Underworld of old. Great beasts drew it, Orcs surrounded it, and behind walked
mountain-trolls to wield it.
But about the Gate resistance
still was stout, and there the knights of Dol Amroth and the hardiest of the
garrison stood at bay. Shot and dart fell thick; siege-towers crashed or blazed
suddenly like torches. All before the walls on either side of the Gate the
ground was choked with wreck and with bodies of the slain; yet still driven as
by a madness more and more came up.
Grond crawled on. Upon
its housing no fire would catch; and though now and again some great beast that
hauled it would go mad and spread stamping ruin among the orcs innumerable that
guarded it, their bodies were cast aside from its path and others took their
place.
Grond crawled on. The drums rolled wildly. Over the
hills of slain a hideous shape appeared: a horseman, tall, hooded, cloaked in
black. Slowly, trampling the fallen, he rode forth, heeding no longer any dart.
He halted and held up a long pale sword. And as he did so a great fear fell on
all, defender and foe alike; and the hands of men drooped to their sides, and no
bow sang. For a moment all was still.
The drums rolled and
rattled. With a vast rush Grond was hurled forward by huge hands. It reached the
Gate. It swung. A deep boom rumbled through the City like thunder running in the
clouds. But the doors of iron and posts of steel withstood the
stroke.
Then the Black Captain rose in his stirrups and
cried aloud in a dreadful voice, speaking in some forgotten tongue words of
power and terror to rend both heart and stone.
Thrice he
cried. Thrice the great ram boomed. And suddenly upon the last stroke the Gate
of Gondor broke. As if stricken by some blasting spell it burst asunder: there
was a flash of searing lightning, and the doors tumbled in riven fragments to
the ground.
In rode the Lord of the Nazgûl. A great black
shape against the fires beyond he loomed up, grown to a vast menace of despair.
In rode the Lord of the Nazgûl, under the archway that no enemy ever yet had
passed, and all fled before his face.
All save one. There
waiting, silent and still in the space before the Gate, sat Gandalf upon
Shadowfax: Shadowfax who alone among the free horses of the earth endured the
terror, unmoving, steadfast as a graven image in Rath
Dínen.
'You cannot enter here,' said Gandalf, and the huge
shadow halted. 'Go back to the abyss prepared for you! Go back! Fall into the
nothingness that awaits you and your Master. Go!'
The Black
Rider flung back his hood, and behold! he had a kingly crown; and yet upon no
head visible was it set. The red fires shone between it and the mantled
shoulders vast and dark. From a mouth unseen there came a deadly
laughter.
'Old fool!' he said. 'Old fool! This is my hour.
Do you not know Death when you see it? Die now and curse in vain!' And with that
he lifted high his sword and flames ran down the
blade.
Gandalf did not move. And in that very moment, away
behind in some courtyard of the City, a cock crowed. Shrill and clear he crowed,
recking nothing of wizardry or war, welcoming only the morning that in the sky
far above the shadows of death was coming with the
dawn.
And as if in answer there came from far away another
note. Horns, horns, horns. In dark Mindolluin's sides they dimly echoed. Great
horns of the North wildly blowing. Rohan had come at last.
Chapter 5
The Ride of the
Rohirrim
It was dark and Merry could see nothing as he lay on the
ground rolled in a blanket; yet though the night was airless and windless, all
about him hidden trees were sighing softly. He lifted his head. Then he heard it
again: a sound like faint drums in the wooded hills and mountain-steps. The
throb would cease suddenly and then be taken up again at some other point, now
nearer, now further off. He wondered if the watchmen had heard
it.
He could not see them, but he knew that all round him
were the companies of the Rohirrim. He could smell the horses in the dark, and
could hear their shiftings and their soft stamping on the needle-covered ground.
The host was bivouacked in the pine-woods that clustered about Eilenach Beacon,
a tall hill standing up from the long ridges of the Druadan Forest that lay
beside the great road in East Anórien.
Tired as he was
Merry could not sleep. He had ridden now for four days on end, and the
ever-deepening gloom had slowly weighed down his heart. He began to wonder why
he had been so eager to come, when he had been given every excuse, even his
lord's command, to stay behind. He wondered, too, if the old King knew that he
had been disobeyed and was angry. Perhaps not. There seemed to be some
understanding between Dernhelm and Elfhelm, the Marshal who commanded the
éored in which they were riding. He and all his men ignored Merry and
pretended not to hear if he spoke. He might have been just another bag that
Dernhelm was carrying. Dernhelm was no comfort: he never spoke to anyone. Merry
felt small, unwanted, and lonely. Now the time was anxious, and the host was in
peril. They were less than a day's ride from the out-walls of Minas Tirith that
encircled the townlands. Scouts had been sent ahead. Some had not returned.
Others hastening back had reported that the road was held in force against them.
A host of the enemy was encamped upon it, three miles west of Amon Dîn, and some
strength of men was already thrusting along the road and was no more than three
leagues away. Orcs were roving in the hills and woods along the roadside. The
king and Éomer held council in the watches of the
night.
Merry wanted somebody to talk to, and he thought of
Pippin. But that only increased his restlessness. Poor Pippin, shut up in the
great city of stone, lonely and afraid. Merry wished he was a tall Rider like
Éomer and could blow a horn or something and go galloping to his rescue. He sat
up, listening to the drums that were beating again, now nearer at hand.
Presently he heard voices speaking low, and he saw dim half-shrouded lanterns
passing through the trees. Men nearby began to move uncertainly in the
dark.
A tall figure loomed up and stumbled over him,
cursing the tree-roots. He recognized the voice of the Marshal,
Elfhelm.
'I am not a tree-root, Sir,' he said, 'nor a bag,
but a bruised hobbit. The least you can do in amends is to tell me what is
afoot.'
'Anything that can keep so in this devil's mirk,'
answered Elfhelm. 'But my lord sends word that we must set ourselves in
readiness: orders may come for a sudden move.'
'Is the
enemy coming then?' asked Merry anxiously. 'Are those their drums? I began to
think I was imagining them, as no one else seemed to take any notice of
them.'
'Nay, nay,' said Elfhelm, 'the enemy is on the road
not in the hills. You hear the Woses, the Wild Men of the Woods: thus they talk
together from afar. They still haunt Druadan Forest, it is said. Remnants of an
older time they be, living few and secretly, wild and wary as the beasts. They
go not to war with Gondor or the Mark; but now they are troubled by the darkness
and the coming of the orcs: they fear lest the Dark Years be returning, as seems
likely enough. Let us be thankful that they are not hunting us: for they use
poisoned arrows, it is said, and they are woodcrafty beyond compare. But they
have offered their services to Théoden. Even now one of their headmen is being
taken to the king. Yonder go the lights. So much I have heard but no more. And
now I must busy myself with my lord's commands. Pack yourself up, Master Bag!'
He vanished into the shadows.
Merry did not like this talk
of wild men and poisoned darts, but quite apart from that a great weight of
dread was on him. Waiting was unbearable. He longed to know what was going to
happen. He got up and soon was walking warily in pursuit of the last lantern
before it disappeared among the trees.
Presently he came to
an open space where a small tent had been set up for the king under a great
tree. A large lantern, covered above, was hanging from a bough and cast a pale
circle of light below. There sat Théoden and Éomer, and before them on the
ground sat a strange squat shape of a man, gnarled as an old stone, and the
hairs of his scanty beard straggled on his lumpy chin like dry moss. He was
short-legged and fat-armed, thick and stumpy, and clad only with grass about his
waist. Merry felt that he had seen him before somewhere, and suddenly he
remembered the Pukel-men of Dunharrow. Here was one of those old images brought
to life, or maybe a creature descended in true line through endless years from
the models used by the forgotten craftsmen long ago.
There
was a silence as Merry crept nearer, and then the Wild Man began to speak, in
answer to some question, it seemed. His voice was deep and guttural, yet to
Merry's surprise he spoke the Common Speech, though in a halting fashion, and
uncouth words were mingled with it.
'No, father of
Horse-men,' he said, 'we fight not. Hunt only. Kill
gorgun in woods, hate
orc-folk. You hate
gorgun too. We help as we can. Wild Men have long ears
and long eyes; know all paths. Wild Men live here before Stone-houses; before
Tall Men come up out of Water.'
'But our need is for aid in
battle,' said Éomer. 'How will you and your folk help
us?'
'Bring news,' said the Wild Man. 'We look out from
hills. We climb big mountain and look down. Stone-city is shut. Fire burns there
outside; now inside too. You wish to come there? Then you must be quick. But
gorgun and men out of far-away,' he waved a short gnarled arm eastward,
'sit on horse-road. Very many, more than Horse-men.'
'How
do you know that?' said Éomer.
The old man's flat face and
dark eyes showed nothing, but his voice was sullen with displeasure. 'Wild men
are wild, free, but not children,' he answered. 'I am great headman,
Ghan-buri-Ghan. I count many things: stars in sky, leaves on trees, men in the
dark. You have a score of scores counted ten times and five. They have more. Big
fight, and who will win? And many more walk round walls of
Stone-houses.'
'Alas! he speaks all too shrewdly,' said
Théoden. 'And our scouts say that they have cast trenches and stakes across the
road. We cannot sweep them away in sudden onset.'
'And yet
we need great haste,' said Éomer. 'Mundburg is on
fire!'
'Let Ghan-buri-Ghan finish!' said the Wild Man.
'More than one road he knows. He will lead you by road where no pits are, no
gorgun walk, only Wild Men and beasts. Many paths were made when
Stonehouse-folk were stronger. They carved hills as hunters carve beast-flesh.
Wild Men think they ate stone for food. They went through Druadan to Rimmon with
great wains. They go no longer. Road is forgotten, but not by Wild Men. Over
hill and behind hill it lies still under grass and tree, there behind Rimmon and
down to Dîn, and back at the end to Horse-men's road. Wild Men will show you
that road. Then you will kill
gorgun and drive away bad dark with bright
iron, and Wild Men can go back to sleep in the wild
woods.'
Éomer and the king spoke together in their own
tongue. At length Théoden turned to the Wild Man. 'We will receive your offer,'
he said. 'For though we leave a host of foes behind, what matter? If the
Stone-city falls, then we shall have no returning. If it is saved, then the
orc-host itself will be cut off. If you are faithful, Ghan-buri-Ghan, then we
will give you rich reward, and you shall have the friendship of the Mark for
ever.'
'Dead men are not friends to living men, and give
them no gifts,' said the Wild Man. 'But if you live after the Darkness, then
leave Wild Men alone in the woods and do not hunt them like beasts any more.
Ghan-buri-Ghan will not lead you into trap. He will go himself with father of
Horse-men, and if he leads you wrong, you will kill
him.'
'So be it!' said Théoden.
'How
long will it take to pass by the enemy and come back to the road?' asked Éomer.
'We must go at foot-pace, if you guide us; and I doubt not the way is
narrow.'
'Wild Men go quick on feet,' said Ghan. 'Way is
wide for four horses in Stonewain Valley yonder,' he waved his hand southwards,
'but narrow at beginning and at end. Wild Man could walk from here to Din
between sunrise and noon.'
'Then we must allow at least
seven hours for the leaders,' said Éomer, 'but we must reckon rather on some ten
hours for all. Things unforeseen may hinder us, and if our host is all strung
out, it will be long ere it can be set in order when we issue from the hills.
What is the hour now?'
'Who knows?' said Théoden. 'All is
night now.'
'It is all dark, but it is not all night.' said
Ghan. 'When Sun comes we feel her, even when she is hidden. Already she climbs
over East-mountains. It is the opening of day in the
sky-fields.'
'Then we must set out as soon as may be,' said
Éomer. 'Even so we cannot hope to come to Gondor's aid
today.'
Merry waited to hear no more, but slipped away to
get ready for the summons to the march. This was the last stage before the
battle. It did not seem likely to him that many of them would survive it. But he
thought of Pippin and the flames in Minas Tirith and thrust down his own
dread.
All went well that day, and no sight or sound had
they of the enemy waiting to waylay them. The Wild Men had put out a screen of
wary hunters, so that no orc or roving spy should learn of the movements in the
hills. The light was more dim than ever as they drew nearer to the beleaguered
city, and the Riders passed in long files like dark shadows of men and horses.
Each company was guided by a wild woodman; but old Ghan walked beside the king.
The start had been slower than was hoped, for it had taken time for the Riders,
walking and leading their horses, to find paths over the thickly wooded ridges
behind their camp and down into the hidden Stonewain Valley. It was late in the
afternoon when the leaders came to wide grey thickets stretching beyond the
eastward side of Amon Dîn, and masking a great gap in the line of hills that
from Nardol to Din ran east and west. Through the gap the forgotten wain-road
long ago had run down, back into the main horse-way from the City through
Anórien; but now for many lives of men trees had had their way with it, and it
had vanished, broken and buried under the leaves of uncounted years. But the
thickets offered to the Riders their last hope of cover before they went into
open battle; for beyond them lay the road and the plains of Anduin, while east
and southwards the slopes were bare and rocky, as the writhen hills gathered
themselves together and climbed up, bastion upon bastion, into the great mass
and shoulders of Mindolluin.
The leading company was
halted, and as those behind filed up out of the trough of the Stonewain Valley
they spread out and passed to camping-places under the grey trees. The king
summoned the captains to council. Éomer sent out scouts to spy upon the road;
but old Ghan shook his head.
'No good to send Horse-men,'
he said. 'Wild Men have already seen all that can be seen in the bad air. They
will come soon and speak to me here.'
The captains came;
and then out of the trees crept warily other pukel-shapes so like old Ghan that
Merry could hardly tell them apart. They spoke to Ghan in a strange throaty
language.
Presently Ghan turned to the king. 'Wild Men say
many things,' he said. 'First, be wary! Still many men in camp beyond Dîn, an
hour's walk yonder,' he waved his arm west towards the black beacon. 'But none
to see between here and Stone-folk's new walls. Many busy there. Walls stand up
no longer:
gorgun knock them down with earth-thunder and with clubs of
black iron. They are unwary and do not look about them. They think their friends
watch all roads!' At that old Ghan made a curious gurgling noise, and it seemed
that he was laughing.
'Good tidings!' cried Éomer. 'Even in
this gloom hope gleams again. Our Enemy's devices oft serve us in his despite.
The accursed darkness itself has been a cloak to us. And now, lusting to destroy
Gondor and throw it down stone from stone, his orcs have taken away my greatest
fear. The out-wall could have been held long against us. Now we can sweep
through – if once we win so far.'
'Once again I thank you,
Ghan-buri-Ghan of the woods,' said Théoden. 'Good fortune go with you for
tidings and for guidance!'
'Kill
gorgun! Kill
orc-folk! No other words please Wild Men,' answered Ghan. 'Drive away bad air
and darkness with bright iron!'
'To do these things we have
ridden far,' said the king, 'and we shall attempt them. But what we shall
achieve only tomorrow will show.'
Ghan-buri-Ghan squatted
down and touched the earth with his horny brow in token of farewell. Then he got
up as if to depart. But suddenly he stood looking up like some startled woodland
animal snuffling a strange air. A light came in his
eyes.
'Wind is changing!' he cried, and with that, in a
twinkling as it seemed, he and his fellows had vanished into the glooms, never
to be seen by any Rider of Rohan again. Not long after far away eastward the
faint drums throbbed again. Yet to no heart in all the host came any fear that
the Wild Men were unfaithful, strange and unlovely though they might
appear.
'We need no further guidance,' said Elfhelm, 'for
there are riders in the host who have ridden down to Mundburg in days of peace.
I for one. When we come to the road it will veer south, and there will lie
before us still seven leagues ere we reach the wall of the townlands. Along most
of that way there is much grass on either side of the road. On that stretch the
errand-riders of Gondor reckoned to make their greatest speed. We may ride it
swiftly and without great rumour.'
'Then since we must look
for fell deeds and the need of all our strength,' said Éomer, 'I counsel that we
rest now, and set out hence by night, and so time our going that we come upon
the fields when tomorrow is as light as it will be, or when our lord gives the
signal.'
To this the king assented, and the captains
departed. But soon Elfhelm returned. 'The scouts have found naught to report
beyond the grey wood, lord,' he said, 'save two men only: two dead men and two
dead horses.'
'Well?' said Éomer. 'What of
it?'
'This, lord: they were errand-riders of Gondor; Hirgon
was one maybe. At least his hand still clasped the Red Arrow, but his head was
hewn off. And this also: it would seem by the signs that they were fleeing
westward when they fell. As I read it, they found the enemy already on
the out-wall, or assailing it, when they returned – and that would be two nights
ago, if they used fresh horses from the posts, as is their wont. They could not
reach the City and turned back.'
'Alas!' said Théoden.
'Then Denethor has heard no news of our riding and will despair of our
coming.'
'
Need brooks no delay, yet late is better than
never,' said Éomer. 'And mayhap in this time shall the old saw be proved
truer than ever before since men spoke with mouth.'
It was
night. On either side of the road the host of Rohan was moving silently. Now the
road passing about the skirts of Mindolluin turned southward. Far away and
almost straight ahead there was a red glow under the black sky and the sides of
the great mountain loomed dark against it. They were drawing near the Rammas of
the Pelennor; but the day was not yet come.
The king rode
in the midst of the leading company, his household-men about him. Elfhelm's
éored came next; and now Merry noticed that Dernhelm had left his place
and in the darkness was moving steadily forward, until at last he was riding
just in rear of the king's guard. There came a check. Merry heard voices in
front speaking softly. Out-riders had come back who had ventured forward almost
to the wall. They came to the king.
'There are great fires,
lord,' said one. 'The City is all set about with flame, and the field is full of
foes. But all seem drawn off to the assault. As well as we could guess, there
are few left upon the out-wall, and they are heedless, busy in
destruction.'
'Do you remember the Wild Man's words, lord?'
said another. 'I live upon the open Wold in days of peace; Widfara is my name,
and to me also the air brings messages. Already the wind is turning. There comes
a breath out of the South; there is a sea-tang in it, faint though it be. The
morning will bring new things. Above the reek it will be dawn when you pass the
wall.'
'If you speak truly, Widfara, then may you live
beyond this day in years of blessedness!' said Théoden. He turned to the men of
his household who were near, and he spoke now in a clear voice so that many also
of the riders of the first
éored heard him:
'Now is
the hour come, Riders of the Mark, sons of Eorl! Foes and fire are before you,
and your homes far behind. Yet, though you fight upon an alien field, the glory
that you reap there shall be your own for ever. Oaths ye have taken: now fulfil
them all, to lord and land and league of friendship!'
Men
clashed spear upon shield.
'Éomer, my son! You lead the
first
éored,' said Théoden, 'and it shall go behind the king's banner in
the centre. Elfhelm, lead your company to the right when we pass the wall. And
Grimbold shall lead his towards the left. Let the other companies behind follow
these three that lead, as they have chance. Strike wherever the enemy gathers.
Other plans we cannot make, for we know not yet how things stand upon the field.
Forth now, and fear no darkness!'
The leading company rode
off as swiftly as they could, for it was still deep dark, whatever change
Widfara might forebode. Merry was riding behind Dernhelm, clutching with the
left hand while with the other he tried to loosen his sword in its sheath. He
felt now bitterly the truth of the old king's words:
in such a battle what
would you do Meriadoc? Just this,' he thought; 'encumber a rider, and hope
at best to stay in my seat and not be pounded to death by galloping
hoofs!'
It was no more than a league to where the out-walls
had stood. They soon reached them; too soon for Merry. Wild cries broke out, and
there was some clash of arms, but it was brief. The orcs busy about the walls
were few and amazed, and they were quickly slain or driven off. Before the ruin
of the north-gate in the Rammas the king halted again. The first
éored
drew up behind him and about him on either side. Dernhelm kept close to the
king, though Elfhelm's company was away on the right. Grimbold's men turned
aside and passed round to a great gap in the wall further
eastward.
Merry peered from behind Dernhelm's back. Far
away, maybe ten miles or more, there was a great burning, but between it and the
Riders lines of fire blazed in a vast crescent, at the nearest point less than a
league distant. He could make out little more on the dark plain, and as yet he
neither saw any hope of morning, nor felt any wind, changed or
unchanged.
Now silently the host of Rohan moved forward
into the field of Gondor, pouring in slowly but steadily, like the rising tide
through breaches in a dike that men have thought secure. But the mind and will
of the Black Captain were bent wholly on the falling city, and as yet no tidings
came to him warning that his designs held any flaw.
After a
while the king led his men away somewhat eastward, to come between the fires of
the siege and the outer fields. Still they were unchallenged, and still Théoden
gave no signal. At last he halted once again. The City was now nearer. A smell
of burning was in the air and a very shadow of death. The horses were uneasy.
But the king sat upon Snowmane, motionless, gazing upon the agony of Minas
Tirith, as if stricken suddenly by anguish, or by dread. He seemed to shrink
down, cowed by age. Merry himself felt as if a great weight of horror and doubt
had settled on him. His heart beat slowly. Time seemed poised in uncertainty.
They were too late! Too late was worse than never! Perhaps Théoden would quail,
bow his old head, turn, slink away to hide in the
hills.
Then suddenly Merry felt it at last, beyond doubt: a
change. Wind was in his face! Light was glimmering. Far, far away, in the South
the clouds could be dimly seen as remote grey shapes, rolling up, drifting:
morning lay beyond them.
But at that same moment there was
a flash, as if lightning had sprung from the earth beneath the City. For a
searing second it stood dazzling far off in black and white, its topmost tower
like a glittering needle: and then as the darkness closed again there came
rolling over the fields a great
boom.
At that sound
the bent shape of the king sprang suddenly erect. Tall and proud he seemed
again; and rising in his stirrups he cried in a loud voice, more clear than any
there had ever heard a mortal man achieve before:
Arise, arise, Riders of Théoden!
Fell deeds awake: fire and
slaughter!
spear shall be shaken, shield be splintered,
a sword-day, a
red day, ere the sun rises!
Ride now, ride now! Ride to
Gondor!
With that he seized a great
horn from Guthláf his banner-bearer, and he blew such a blast upon it that it
burst asunder. And straightway all the horns in the host were lifted up in
music, and the blowing of the horns of Rohan in that hour was like a storm upon
the plain and a thunder in the mountains.
Ride now, ride now! Ride to
Gondor!
Suddenly the king cried to
Snowmane and the horse sprang away. Behind him his banner blew in the wind,
white horse upon a field of green, but he outpaced it. After him thundered the
knights of his house, but he was ever before them. Éomer rode there, the white
horsetail on his helm floating in his speed, and the front of the first
éored roared like a breaker foaming to the shore, but Théoden could not
be overtaken. Fey he seemed, or the battle-fury of his fathers ran like new tire
in his veins, and he was borne up on Snowmane like a god of old, even as Orome
the Great in the battle of the Valar when the world was young. His golden shield
was uncovered, and lo! it shone like an image of the Sun, and the grass flamed
into green about the white feet of his steed. For morning came, morning and a
wind from the sea; and the darkness was removed, and the hosts of Mordor wailed,
and terror took them, and they fled, and died, and the hoofs of wrath rode over
them. And then all the host of Rohan burst into song, and they sang as they
slew, for the joy of battle was on them, and the sound of their singing that was
fair and terrible came even to the City.
Chapter 6
The Battle of the
Pelennor Fields
But it was no orc-chieftain or brigand that led the
assault upon Gondor. The darkness was breaking too soon, before the date that
his Master had set for it: fortune had betrayed him for the moment, and the
world had turned against him; victory was slipping from his grasp even as he
stretched out his hand to seize it. But his arm was long. He was still in
command, wielding great powers. King, Ringwraith, Lord of the Nazgûl, he had
many weapons. He left the Gate and vanished.
Théoden King
of the Mark had reached the road from the Gate to the River, and he turned
towards the City that was now less than a mile distant. He slackened his speed a
little, seeking new foes, and his knights came about him, and Dernhelm was with
them. Ahead nearer the walls Elfhelm's men were among the siege-engines, hewing,
slaying, driving their foes into the fire-pits. Well nigh all the northern half
of the Pelennor was overrun, and there camps were blazing, orcs were flying
towards the River like herds before the hunters; and the Rohirrim went hither
and thither at their will. But they had not yet overthrown the siege, nor won
the Gate. Many foes stood before it, and on the further half of the plain were
other hosts still unfought. Southward beyond the road lay the main force of the
Haradrim, and there their horsemen were gathered about the standard of their
chieftain. And he looked out, and in the growing light he saw the banner of the
king, and that it was far ahead of the battle with few men about it. Then he was
filled with a red wrath and shouted aloud, and displaying his standard, black
serpent upon scarlet, he came against the white horse and the green with great
press of men; and the drawing of the scimitars of the Southrons was like a
glitter of stars.
Then Théoden was aware of him, and would
not wait for his onset, but crying to Snowmane he charged headlong to greet him.
Great was the clash of their meeting. But the white fury of the Northmen burned
the hotter, and more skilled was their knighthood with long spears and bitter.
Fewer were they but they clove through the Southrons like a fire-bolt in a
forest. Right through the press drove Théoden Thengel's son, and his spear was
shivered as he threw down their chieftain. Out swept his sword, and he spurred
to the standard, hewed staff and bearer; and the black serpent foundered. Then
all that was left unslain of their cavalry turned and fled far
away.
But lo! suddenly in the midst of the glory of the
king his golden shield was dimmed. The new morning was blotted from the sky.
Dark fell about him. Horses reared and screamed. Men cast from the saddle lay
grovelling on the ground.
'To me! To me!' cried Théoden.
'Up Eorlingas! Fear no darkness!' But Snowmane wild with terror stood up on
high, fighting with the air, and then with a great scream he crashed upon his
side: a black dart had pierced him. The king fell beneath
him.
The great shadow descended like a falling cloud. And
behold! it was a winged creature: if bird, then greater than all other birds,
and it was naked, and neither quill nor feather did it bear, and its vast
pinions were as webs of hide between horned fingers; and it stank. A creature of
an older world maybe it was, whose kind, fingering in forgotten mountains cold
beneath the Moon, outstayed their day, and in hideous eyrie bred this last
untimely brood, apt to evil. And the Dark Lord took it, and nursed it with fell
meats, until it grew beyond the measure of all other things that fly; and he
gave it to his servant to be his steed. Down, down it came, and then, folding
its fingered webs, it gave a croaking cry, and settled upon the body of
Snowmane, digging in its claws, stooping its long naked
neck.
Upon it sat a shape, black-mantled, huge and
threatening. A crown of steel he bore, but between rim and robe naught was there
to see, save only a deadly gleam of eyes: the Lord of the Nazgûl. To the air he
had returned, summoning his steed ere the darkness failed, and now he was come
again, bringing ruin, turning hope to despair, and victory to death. A great
black mace he wielded.
But Théoden was not utterly
forsaken. The knights of his house lay slain about him, or else mastered by the
madness of their steeds were borne far away. Yet one stood there still: Dernhelm
the young, faithful beyond fear; and he wept, for he had loved his lord as a
father. Right through the charge Merry had been borne unharmed behind him, until
the Shadow came; and then Windfola had thrown them in his terror, and now ran
wild upon the plain. Merry crawled on all fours like a dazed beast, and such a
horror was on him that he was blind and sick.
'King's man!
King's man!' his heart cried within him. 'You must stay by him. As a father you
shall be to me, you said.' But his will made no answer, and his body shook. He
dared not open his eyes or look up.
Then out of the
blackness in his mind he thought that he heard Dernhelm speaking; yet now the
voice seemed strange, recalling some other voice that he had
known.
'Begone, foul dwimmerlaik, lord of carrion! Leave
the dead in peace!'
A cold voice answered: 'Come not
between the Nazgûl and his prey! Or he will not slay thee in thy turn. He will
bear thee away to the houses of lamentation, beyond all darkness, where thy
flesh shall be devoured, and thy shrivelled mind be left naked to the Lidless
Eye.'
A sword rang as it was drawn. 'Do what you will; but
I will hinder it, if I may.'
'Hinder me? Thou fool. No
living man may hinder me!'
Then Merry heard of all sounds
in that hour the strangest. It seemed that Dernhelm laughed, and the clear voice
was like the ring of steel. 'But no living man am I! You look upon a woman.
Éowyn I am, Éomund's daughter. You stand between me and my lord and kin. Begone,
if you be not deathless! For living or dark undead, I will smite you, if you
touch him.'
The winged creature screamed at her, but the
Ringwraith made no answer, and was silent, as if in sudden doubt. Very amazement
for a moment conquered Merry's fear. He opened his eyes and the blackness was
lifted from them. There some paces from him sat the great beast, and all seemed
dark about it, and above it loomed the Nazgûl Lord like a shadow of despair. A
little to the left facing them stood she whom he had called Dernhelm. But the
helm of her secrecy, had fallen from her, and her bright hair, released from its
bonds, gleamed with pale gold upon her shoulders. Her eyes grey as the sea were
hard and fell, and yet tears were on her cheek. A sword was in her hand, and she
raised her shield against the horror of her enemy's
eyes.
Éowyn it was, and Dernhelm also. For into Merry's
mind flashed the memory of the face that he saw at the riding from Dunharrow:
the face of one that goes seeking death, having no hope. Pity filled his heart
and great wonder, and suddenly the slow-kindled courage of his race awoke. He
clenched his hand. She should not die, so fair, so desperate. At least she
should not die alone, unaided.
The face of their enemy was
not turned towards him, but still he hardly dared to move, dreading lest the
deadly eyes should fall on him. Slowly, slowly he began to crawl aside; but the
Black Captain, in doubt and malice intent upon the woman before him, heeded him
no more than a worm in the mud.
Suddenly the great beast
beat its hideous wings, and the wind of them was foul. Again it leaped into the
air, and then swiftly fell down upon Éowyn, shrieking, striking with beak and
claw.
Still she did not blench: maiden of the Rohirrim,
child of kings, slender but as a steel-blade, fair but terrible. A swift stroke
she dealt, skilled and deadly. The outstretched neck she clove asunder, and the
hewn head fell like a stone. Backward she sprang as the huge shape crashed to
ruin, vast wings outspread, crumpled on the earth; and with its fall the shadow
passed away. A light fell about her, and her hair shone in the
sunrise.
Out of the wreck rose the Black Rider, tall and
threatening, towering above her. With a cry of hatred that stung the very ears
like venom he let fall his mace. Her shield was shivered in many pieces, and her
arm was broken; she stumbled to her knees. He bent over her like a cloud, and
his eyes glittered; he raised his mace to kill.
But
suddenly he too stumbled forward with a cry of bitter pain, and his stroke went
wide, driving into the ground. Merry's sword had stabbed him from behind,
shearing through the black mantle, and passing up beneath the hauberk had
pierced the sinew behind his mighty knee.
'Éowyn! Éowyn!'
cried Merry. Then tottering, struggling up, with her last strength she drove her
sword between crown and mantle, as the great shoulders bowed before her. The
sword broke sparkling into many shards. The crown rolled away with a clang.
Éowyn fell forward upon her fallen foe. But lo! the mantle and hauberk were
empty. Shapeless they lay now on the ground, torn and tumbled; and a cry went up
into the shuddering air, and faded to a shrill wailing, passing with the wind, a
voice bodiless and thin that died, and was swallowed up, and was never heard
again in that age of this world.
And there stood Meriadoc
the hobbit in the midst of the slain, blinking like an owl in the daylight, for
tears blinded him; and through a mist he looked on Éowyn's fair head, as she lay
and did not move; and he looked on the face of the king, fallen in the midst of
his glory, for Snowmane in his agony had rolled away from him again; yet he was
the bane of his master.
Then Merry stooped and lifted his
hand to kiss it, and lo! Théoden opened his eyes, and they were clear, and he
spoke in a quiet voice though laboured.
'Farewell, Master
Holbytla!' he said. 'My body is broken. I go to my fathers. And even in their
mighty company I shall not now be ashamed. I felled the black serpent. A grim
morn, and a glad day, and a golden sunset!'
Merry could not
speak, but wept anew. 'Forgive me, lord,' he said at last, 'if I broke your
command, and yet have done no more in your service than to weep at our
parting.'
The old king smiled. 'Grieve not! It is forgiven.
Great heart will not be denied. Live now in blessedness; and when you sit in
peace with your pipe, think of me! For never now shall I sit with you in
Meduseld, as I promised, or listen to your herb-lore.' He closed his eyes, and
Merry bowed beside him. Presently he spoke again. 'Where is Éomer? For my eyes
darken, and I would see him ere I go. He must be king after me. And I would send
word to Éowyn. She, she would not have me leave her, and now I shall not see her
again, dearer than daughter.'
'Lord, lord,' began Merry
brokenly, 'she is—'; but at that moment there was a great clamour, and all about
them horns and trumpets were blowing. Merry looked round: he had forgotten the
war, and all the world beside, and many hours it seemed since the king rode to
his fall, though in truth it was only a little while. But now he saw that they
were in danger of being caught in the very midst of the great battle that would
soon be joined.
New forces of the enemy were hastening up
the road from the River; and from under the walls came the legions of Morgul;
and from the southward fields came footmen of Harad with horsemen before them,
and behind them rose the huge backs of the
mumakil with war-towers upon
them. But northward the white crest of Éomer led the great front of the Rohirrim
which he had again gathered and marshalled; and out of the City came all the
strength of men that was in it, and the silver swan of Dol Amroth was borne in
the van, driving the enemy from the Gate.
For a moment the
thought flitted through Merry's mind: 'Where is Gandalf? Is he not here? Could
he not have saved the king and Éowyn?' But thereupon Éomer rode up in haste, and
with him came the knights of the household that still lived and had now mastered
their horses. They looked in wonder at the carcase of the fell beast that lay
there: and their steeds would not go near. But Éomer leaped from the saddle, and
grief and dismay fell upon him as he came to the king's side and stood there in
silence.
Then one of the knights took the king's banner
from the hand of Guthláf the banner-bearer who lay dead, and he lifted it up.
Slowly Théoden opened his eyes. Seeing the banner he made a sign that it should
be given to Éomer.
'Hail, King of the Mark!' he said. 'Ride
now to victory! Bid Éowyn farewell!' And so he died, and knew not that Éowyn lay
near him. And those who stood by wept, crying: 'Théoden King! Théoden
King!'
But Éomer said to them:
Mourn not overmuch! Mighty was the fallen,
meet was his
ending. When his mound is raised,
women then shall weep. War now calls
us!
Yet he himself wept as he spoke.
'Let his knights remain here,' he said, 'and bear his body in honour from the
field, lest the battle ride over it! Yea, and all these other of the king's men
that lie here.' And he looked at the slain, recalling their names. Then suddenly
he beheld his sister Éowyn as she lay, and he knew her. He stood a moment as a
man who is pierced in the midst of a cry by an arrow through the heart; and then
his face went deathly white; and a cold fury rose in him, so that all speech
failed him for a while. A fey mood took him.
'Éowyn,
Éowyn!' he cried at last. 'Éowyn, how come you here? What madness or devilry is
this? Death, death, death! Death take us all!'
Then without
taking counsel or waiting for the approach of the men of the City, he spurred
headlong back to the front of the great host, and blew a horn, and cried aloud
for the onset. Over the field rang his clear voice calling: 'Death! Ride, ride
to ruin and the world's ending!'
And with that the host
began to move. But the Rohirrim sang no more.
Death they cried with one
voice loud and terrible, and gathering speed like a great tide their battle
swept about their fallen king and passed, roaring away
southwards.
And still Meriadoc the hobbit stood there
blinking through his tears and no one spoke to him, indeed none seemed to heed
him. He brushed away the tears, and stooped to pick up the green shield that
Éowyn had given him; and he slung it at his back. Then he looked for his sword
that he had let fall; for even as he struck his blow his arm was numbed, and now
he could only use his left hand. And behold! there lay his weapon, but the blade
was smoking like a dry branch that has been thrust in a fire; and as he watched
it, it writhed and withered and was consumed.
So passed the
sword of the Barrow-downs, work of Westernesse. But glad would he have been to
know its fate who wrought it slowly long ago in the North-kingdom when the
Dunedain were young, and chief among their foes was the dread realm of Angmar
and its sorcerer king. No other blade, not though mightier hands had wielded it,
would have dealt that foe a wound so bitter, cleaving the undead flesh, breaking
the spell that knit his unseen sinews to his will.
Men now
raised the king, and laying cloaks upon spear-truncheons they made shift to bear
him away towards the City; and others lifted Éowyn gently up and bore her after
him. But the men of the king's household they could not yet bring from the
field; for seven of the king's knights had fallen there, and Deorwine their
chief was among them. So they laid them apart from their foes and the fell beast
and set spears about them. And afterwards when all was over men returned and
made a fire there and burned the carcase of the beast; but for Snowmane they dug
a grave and set up a stone upon which was carved in the tongues of Gondor and
the Mark:
Faithful servant yet master's bane
Lightfoot's foal, swift
Snowmane.
Green and long grew the
grass on Snowmane's Howe, but ever black and bare was the ground where the beast
was burned.
Now slowly and sadly Merry walked beside the
bearers, and he gave no more heed to the battle. He was weary and full of pain,
and his limbs trembled as with a chill. A great rain came out of the Sea, and it
seemed that all things wept for Théoden and Éowyn, quenching the fires in the
City with grey tears. It was through a mist that presently he saw the van of the
men of Gondor approaching. Imrahil, Prince of Dol Amroth, rode up and drew rein
before them.
'What burden do you bear, Men of Rohan?' he
cried.
'Théoden King,' they answered. 'He is dead. But
Éomer King now rides in the battle: he with the white crest in the
wind.'
Then the prince went from his horse, and knelt by
the bier in honour of the king and his great onset; and he wept. And rising he
looked then on Éowyn and was amazed. 'Surely, here is a woman?' he said. 'Have
even the women of the Rohirrim come to war in our
need?'
'Nay! One only,' they answered. 'The Lady Éowyn is
she, sister of Éomer; and we knew naught of her riding until this hour, and
greatly we rue it.'
Then the prince seeing her beauty,
though her face was pale and cold, touched her hand as he bent to look more
closely on her. 'Men of Rohan!' he cried. 'Are there no leeches among you? She
is hurt to the death maybe, but I deem that she yet lives.' And he held the
bright-burnished vambrace that was upon his arm before her cold tips, and
behold! a little mist was laid on it hardly to be
seen.
'Haste now is needed,' he said, and he sent one
riding back swiftly to the City to bring aid. But he bowing low to the fallen,
bade them farewell, and mounting rode away into battle.
And
now the fighting waxed furious on the fields of the Pelennor; and the din of
arms rose upon high, with the crying of men and the neighing of horses. Horns
were blown and trumpets were braying, and the
mumakil were bellowing as
they were goaded to war. Under the south walls of the City the footmen of Gondor
now drove against the legions of Morgul that were still gathered there in
strength. But the horsemen rode eastward to the succour of Éomer: Hurin the Tall
Warden of the Keys, and the Lord of Lossarnach, and Hirluin of the Green Hills,
and Prince Imrahil the fair with his knights all about
him.
Not too soon came their aid to the Rohirrim; for
fortune had turned against Éomer, and his fury had betrayed him. The great wrath
of his onset had utterly overthrown the front of his enemies, and great wedges
of his Riders had passed clear through the ranks of the Southrons, discomfiting
their horsemen and riding their footmen to ruin. But wherever the
mumakil
came there the horses would not go, but blenched and swerved away; and the great
monsters were unfought, and stood like towers of defence, and the Haradrim
rallied about them. And if the Rohirrim at their onset were thrice outnumbered
by the Haradrim alone, soon their case became worse; for new strength came now
streaming to the field out of Osgiliath. There they had been mustered for the
sack of the City and the rape of Gondor, waiting on the call of their Captain.
He now was destroyed; but Gothmog the lieutenant of Morgul had flung them into
the fray; Easterlings with axes, and Variags of Khand. Southrons in scarlet, and
out of Far Harad black men like half-trolls with white eyes and red tongues.
Some now hastened up behind the Rohirrim, others held westward to hold off the
forces of Gondor and prevent their joining with Rohan.

It was even as the day thus began to turn
against Gondor and their hope wavered that a new cry went up in the City, it
being then midmorning, and a great wind blowing, and the rain flying north, and
the sun shining. In that clear air watchmen on the walls saw afar a new sight of
fear, and their last hope left them.
For Anduin, from the
bend at the Harlond, so flowed that from the City men could look down it
lengthwise for some leagues, and the far-sighted could see any ships that
approached. And looking thither they cried in dismay; for black against the
glittering stream they beheld a fleet borne up on the wind: dromunds, and ships
of great draught with many oars, and with black sails bellying in the
breeze.
'The Corsairs of Umbar!' men shouted. 'The Corsairs
of Umbar! Look! The Corsairs of Umbar are coming! So Belfalas is taken, and the
Ethir, and Lebennin is gone. The Corsairs are upon us! It is the last stroke of
doom!'
And some without order, for none could he found to
command them in the City, ran to the bells and tolled the alarm; and some blew
the trumpets sounding the retreat. 'Back to the walls!' they cried. 'Back to the
walls! Come back to the City before all are overwhelmed!' But the wind that sped
the ships blew all their clamour away.
The Rohirrim indeed
had no need of news or alarm. All too well they could see for themselves the
black sails. For Éomer was now scarcely a mile from the Harlond, and a great
press of his first foes was between him and the haven there, while new foes came
swirling behind, cutting him off from the Prince. Now he looked to the River,
and hope died in his heart, and the wind that he had blessed he now called
accursed. But the hosts of Mordor were enheartened, and filled with a new lust
and fury they came yelling to the onset.
Stern now was
Éomer's mood, and his mind clear again. He let blow the horns to rally all men
to his banner that could come thither; for he thought to make a great
shield-wall at the last, and stand, and fight there on foot till all fell, and
do deeds of song on the fields of Pelennor, though no man should be left in the
West to remember the last King of the Mark. So he rode to a green hillock and
there set his banner, and the White Horse ran rippling in the wind.
Out of doubt, out of dark to the day's rising
I came
singing in the sun, sword unsheathing.
To hope's end I rode and to heart's
breaking:
Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red
nightfall!
These staves he spoke,
yet he laughed as he said them. For once more lust of battle was on him; and he
was still unscathed, and he was young, and he was king: the lord of a fell
people. And lo! even as he laughed at despair he looked out again on the black
ships, and he lifted up his sword to defy them.
And then
wonder took him, and a great joy; and he cast his sword up in the sunlight and
sang as he caught it. And all eyes followed his gaze, and behold! upon the
foremost ship a great standard broke, and the wind displayed it as she turned
towards the Harlond. There flowered a White Tree, and that was for Gondor; but
Seven Stars were about it, and a high crown above it, the signs of Elendil that
no lord had borne for years beyond count. And the stars flamed in the sunlight,
for they were wrought of gems by Arwen daughter of Elrond; and the crown was
bright in the morning, for it was wrought of mithril and
gold.
Thus came Aragorn son of Arathorn, Elessar, Isildur's
heir, out of the Paths of the Dead, borne upon a wind from the Sea to the
kingdom of Gondor; and the mirth of the Rohirrim was a torrent of laughter and a
flashing of swords, and the joy and wonder of the City was a music of trumpets
and a ringing of bells. But the hosts of Mordor were seized with bewilderment,
and a great wizardry it seemed to them that their own ships should be filled
with their foes; and a black dread fell on them, knowing that the tides of fate
had turned against them and their doom was at hand.
East
rode the knights of Dol Amroth driving the enemy before them: troll-men and
Variags and orcs that hated the sunlight. South strode Éomer and men fled before
his face, and they were caught between the hammer and the anvil. For now men
leaped from the ships to the quays of the Harlond and swept north like a storm.
There came Legolas, and Gimli wielding his axe, and Halbarad with the standard,
and Elladan and Elrohir with stars on their brow, and the dour-handed Dunedain,
Rangers of the North, leading a great valour of the folk of Lebennin and Lamedon
and the fiefs of the South. But before all went Aragorn with the Flame of the
West, Anduril like a new fire kindled, Narsil re-forged as deadly as of old: and
upon his brow was the Star of Elendil.
And so at length
Éomer and Aragorn met in the midst of the battle, and they leaned on their
swords and looked on one another and were glad.
'Thus we
meet again, though all the hosts of Mordor lay between us,' said Aragorn. 'Did I
not say so at the Hornburg?'
'So you spoke,' said Éomer,
'but hope oft deceives, and I knew not then that you were a man foresighted. Yet
twice blessed is help unlooked for, and never was a meeting of friends more
joyful.' And they clasped hand in hand. 'Nor indeed more timely,' said Éomer.
'You come none too soon, my friend. Much loss and sorrow has befallen
us.'
'Then let us avenge it, ere we speak of it!' said
Aragorn, and they rode back to battle together.
Hard
fighting and long labour they had still; for the Southrons were bold men and
grim, and fierce in despair; and the Easterlings were strong and war-hardened
and asked for no quarter. And so in this place and that, by burned homestead or
barn, upon hillock or mound, under wall or on field, still they gathered and
rallied and fought until the day wore away.
Then the Sun
went at last behind Mindolluin and filled all the sky with a great burning, so
that the hills and the mountains were dyed as with blood; fire glowed in the
River, and the grass of the Pelennor lay red in the nightfall. And in that hour
the great Battle of the field of Gondor was over; and not one living foe was
left within the circuit of the Rammas. All were slain save those who fled to
die, or to drown in the red foam of the River. Few ever came eastward to Morgul
or Mordor; and to the land of the Haradrim came only a tale from far off: a
rumour of the wrath and terror of Gondor.
Aragorn and Éomer
and Imrahil rode back towards the Gate of the City, and they were now weary
beyond joy or sorrow. These three were unscathed, for such was their fortune and
the skill and might of their arms, and few indeed had dared to abide them or
look on their faces in the hour of their wrath. But many others were hurt or
maimed or dead upon the field. The axes hewed Forlong as he fought alone and
unhorsed; and both Duilin of Morthond and his brother were trampled to death
when they assailed the
mumakil, leading their bowmen close to shoot at
the eyes of the monsters. Neither Hirluin the fair would return to Pinnath
Gelin, nor Grimbold to Grimslade, nor Halbarad to the Northlands, dour-handed
Ranger. No few had fallen, renowned or nameless, captain or soldier; for it was
a great battle and the full count of it no tale has told. So long afterward a
maker in Rohan said in his song of the Mounds of Mundburg:
We heard of the horns in the hills ringing,
the swords
shining in the South-kingdom.
Steeds went striding to the Stoningland
as
wind in the morning. War was kindled.
There Théoden fell, Thengling
mighty,
to his golden halls and green pastures
in the Northern fields
never returning,
high lord of the host. Harding and Guthláf
Dunhere and
Deorwine, doughty Grimbold,
Herefara and Herubrand, Horn and
Fastred,
fought and fell there in a far country:
in the Mounds of
Mundburg under mould they lie
with their league-fellows, lords of
Gondor.
Neither Hirluin the Fair to the hills by the sea,
nor Forlong
the old to the flowering vales
ever, to Arnach, to his own
country
returned in triumph; nor the tall bowmen,
Derufin and Duilin, to
their dark waters,
meres of Morthond under
mountain-shadows.
Death in the morning and at day's ending
lords
took and lowly. Long now they sleep
under grass in Gondor by the Great
River.
Grey now as tears, gleaming silver,
red then it rolled, roaring
water:
foam dyed with blood flamed at sunset;
as beacons mountains
burned at evening;
red fell the dew in Rammas
Echor.
Chapter 7
The Pyre of
Denethor
When the dark shadow at the Gate withdrew Gandalf still
sat motionless. But Pippin rose to his feet, as if a great weight had been
lifted from him; and he stood listening to the horns, and it seemed to him that
they would break his heart with joy. And never in after years could he hear a
horn blown in the distance without tears starting in his eyes. But now suddenly
his errand returned to his memory, and he ran forward. At that moment Gandalf
stirred and spoke to Shadowfax, and was about to ride through the
Gate.
'Gandalf, Gandalf!' cried Pippin, and Shadowfax
halted.
'What are you doing here?' said Gandalf. 'Is it not
a law in the City that those who wear the black and silver must stay in the
Citadel, unless their lord gives them leave?'
'He has,'
said Pippin. 'He sent me away. But I am frightened. Something terrible may
happen up there. The Lord is out of his mind, I think. I am afraid he will kill
himself, and kill Faramir too. Can't you do
something?'
Gandalf looked through the gaping Gate, and
already on the fields he heard the gathering sound of battle. He clenched his
hand. 'I must go,' he said. 'The Black Rider is abroad, and he will yet bring
ruin on us. I have no time.'
'But Faramir!' cried Pippin.
'He is not dead, and they will burn him alive, if someone does not stop
them.'
'Burn him alive?' said Gandalf. 'What is this tale?
Be quick!'
'Denethor has gone to the Tombs,' said Pippin,
'and he has taken Faramir, and he says we are all to burn, and he will not wait,
and they are to make a pyre and burn him on it, and Faramir as well. And he has
sent men to fetch wood and oil. And I have told Beregond, but I'm afraid he
won't dare to leave his post: he is on guard. And what can he do anyway?' So
Pippin poured out his tale, reaching up and touching Gandalf's knee with
trembling hands. 'Can't you save Faramir?'
'Maybe I can,'
said Gandalf, 'but if I do, then others will die, I fear. Well, I must come,
since no other help can reach him. But evil and sorrow will come of this. Even
in the heart of our stronghold the Enemy has power to strike us: for his will it
is that is at work.'
Then having made up his mind he acted
swiftly; and catching up Pippin and setting him before him, he turned Shadowfax
with a word. Up the climbing streets of Minas Tirith they clattered, while the
noise of war rose behind them. Everywhere men were rising from their despair and
dread, seizing their weapons, crying one to another: 'Rohan has come!' Captains
were shouting, companies were mustering; many already were marching down to the
Gate.
They met the Prince Imrahil, and he called to them:
'Whither now, Mithrandir? The Rohirrim are fighting on the fields of Gondor! We
must gather all the strength that we can find.'
'You will
need every man and more,' said Gandalf. 'Make all haste. I will come when I can.
But I have an errand to the Lord Denethor that will not wait. Take command in
the Lord's absence!'
They passed on; and as they climbed
and drew near to the Citadel they felt the wind blowing in their faces, and they
caught the glimmer of morning far away, a light growing in the southern sky. But
it brought little hope to them, not knowing what evil lay before them, fearing
to come too late.
'Darkness is passing,' said Gandalf, 'but
it still lies heavy on this City.'
At the gate of the
Citadel they found no guard. 'Then Beregond has gone,' said Pippin more
hopefully. They turned away and hastened along the road to the Closed Door. It
stood wide open, and the porter lay before it. He was slain and his key had been
taken.
'Work of the Enemy!' said Gandalf. 'Such deeds he
loves: friend at war with friend; loyalty divided in confusion of hearts.' Now
he dismounted and bade Shadowfax return to his stable. 'For, my friend,' he
said, 'you and I should have ridden to the fields long ago, but other matters
delay me. Yet come swiftly if I call!'
They passed the Door
and walked on down the steep winding road. Light was growing, and the tall
columns and carven figures beside the way went slowly by like grey
ghosts.
Suddenly the silence was broken, and they heard
below them cries and the ringing of swords: such sounds as had not been heard in
the hallowed places since the building of the City. At last they came to Rath
Dínen and hastened towards the House of the Stewards, looming in the twilight
under its great dome.
'Stay! Stay!' cried Gandalf,
springing forward to the stone stair before the door. 'Stay this
madness!'
For there were the servants of Denethor with
swords and torches in their hands; but alone in the porch upon the topmost step
stood Beregond, clad in the black and silver of the Guard; and he held the door
against them. Two of them had already fallen to his sword, staining the hallows
with their blood; and the others cursed him, calling him outlaw and traitor to
his master.
Even as Gandalf and Pippin ran forward, they
heard from within the house of the dead the voice of Denethor crying: 'Haste,
haste! Do as I have bidden! Slay me this renegade! Or must I do so myself?'
Thereupon the door which Beregond held shut with his left hand was wrenched
open, and there behind him stood the Lord of the City, tall and fell; a light
like flame was in his eyes, and he held a drawn sword.
But
Gandalf sprang up the steps, and the men fell back from him and covered their
eyes; for his coming was like the incoming of a white light into a dark place,
and he came with great anger. He lifted up his hand, and in the very stroke, the
sword of Denethor flew up and left his grasp and fell behind him in the shadows
of the house; and Denethor stepped backward before Gandalf as one
amazed.
'What is this, my lord?' said the wizard. 'The
houses of the dead are no places for the living. And why do men fight here in
the Hallows when there is war enough before the Gate? Or has our Enemy come even
to Rath Dínen?'
'Since when has the Lord of Gondor been
answerable to thee?' said Denethor. 'Or may I not command my own
servants?'
'You may,' said Gandalf. 'But others may contest
your will, when it is turned to madness and evil. Where is your son,
Faramir?'
'He lies within,' said Denethor, 'burning,
already burning. They have set a fire in his flesh. But soon all shall be
burned. The West has failed. It shall all go up in a great fire, and all shall
be ended. Ash! Ash and smoke blown away on the wind!'
Then
Gandalf seeing the madness that was on him feared that he had already done some
evil deed, and he thrust forward, with Beregond and Pippin behind him, while
Denethor gave back until he stood beside the table within. But there they found
Faramir, still dreaming in his fever, lying upon the table. Wood was piled under
it, and high all about it, and all was drenched with oil, even the garments of
Faramir and the coverlets; but as yet no fire had been set to the fuel. Then
Gandalf revealed the strength that lay hid in him; even as the light of his
power was hidden under his grey mantle. He leaped up on to the faggots, and
raising the sick man lightly he sprang down again, and bore him towards the
door. But as he did so Faramir moaned and called on his father in his
dream.
Denethor started as one waking from a trance, and
the flame died in his eyes, and he wept; and he said: 'Do not take my son from
me! He calls for me.'
'He calls,' said Gandalf, 'but you
cannot come to him yet. For he must seek healing on the threshold of death, and
maybe find it not. Whereas your part is to go out to the battle of your City,
where maybe death awaits you. This you know in your
heart.'
'He will not wake again,' said Denethor. 'Battle is
vain. Why should we wish to live longer? Why should we not go to death side by
side?'
'Authority is not given to you, Steward of Gondor,
to order the hour of your death,' answered Gandalf. 'And only the heathen kings,
under the domination of the Dark Power, did thus, slaying themselves in pride
and despair, murdering their kin to ease their own death.' Then passing through
the door he took Faramir from the deadly house and laid him on the bier on which
he had been brought, and which had now been set in the porch. Denethor followed
him, and stood trembling, looking with longing on the face of his son. And for a
moment, while all were silent and still, watching the Lord in his throes, he
wavered.
'Come!' said Gandalf. 'We are needed. There is
much that you can yet do.'
Then suddenly Denethor laughed.
He stood up tall and proud again, and stepping swiftly back to the table he
lifted from it the pillow on which his head had lain. Then coming to the doorway
he drew aside the covering, and lo! he had between his hands a palantír.
And as he held it up, it seemed to those that looked on that the globe began to
glow with an inner flame, so that the lean face of the Lord was lit as with a
red fire, and it seemed cut out of hard stone, sharp with black shadows, noble,
proud, and terrible. His eyes glittered.
'Pride and
despair!' he cried. 'Didst thou think that the eyes of the White Tower were
blind? Nay, I have seen more than thou knowest, Grey Fool. For thy hope is but
ignorance. Go then and labour in healing! Go forth and fight! Vanity. For a
little space you may triumph on the field, for a day. But against the Power that
now arises there is no victory. To this City only the first finger of its hand
has yet been stretched. All the East is moving. And even now the wind of thy
hope cheats thee and wafts up Anduin a fleet with black sails. The West has
failed. It is time for all to depart who would not be
slaves.'
'Such counsels will make the Enemy's victory
certain indeed,' said Gandalf.
'Hope on then!' laughed
Denethor. 'Do I not know thee, Mithrandir? Thy hope is to rule in my stead, to
stand behind every throne, north, south, or west. I have read thy mind and its
policies. Do I not know that you commanded this halfling here to keep silence?
That you brought him hither to be a spy within my very chamber? And yet in our
speech together I have learned the names and purpose of all thy companions. So!
With the left hand thou wouldst use me for a little while as a shield against
Mordor, and with the right bring up this Ranger of the North to supplant
me.
'But I say to thee, Gandalf Mithrandir, I will not be
thy tool! I am Steward of the House of Anárion. I will not step down to be the
dotard chamberlain of an upstart. Even were his claim proved to me, still he
comes but of the line of Isildur. I will not bow to such a one, last of a ragged
house long bereft of lordship and dignity.'
'What then
would you have,' said Gandalf, 'if your will could have its
way?'
'I would have things as they were in all the days of
my life,' answered Denethor, 'and in the days of my longfathers before me: to be
the Lord of this City in peace, and leave my chair to a son after me, who would
be his own master and no wizard's pupil. But if doom denies this to me, then I
will have naught: neither life diminished, nor love halved, nor honour
abated.'
'To me it would not seem that a Steward who
faithfully surrenders his charge is diminished in love or in honour,' said
Gandalf. 'And at the least you shall not rob your son of his choice while his
death is still in doubt.'
At those words Denethor's eyes
flamed again, and taking the Stone under his arm he drew a knife and strode
towards the bier. But Beregond sprang forward and set himself before
Faramir.
'So!' cried Denethor. 'Thou hadst already stolen
half my son's love. Now thou stealest the hearts of my knights also, so that
they rob me wholly of my son at the last. But in this at least thou shalt not
defy my will: to rule my own end.'
'Come hither!' he cried
to his servants. 'Come, if you are not all recreant!' Then two of them ran up
the steps to him. Swiftly he snatched a torch from the hand of one and sprang
back into the house. Before Gandalf could hinder him he thrust the brand amid
the fuel, and at once it crackled and roared into
flame.
Then Denethor leaped upon the table, and standing
there wreathed in fire and smoke he took up the staff of his stewardship that
lay at his feet and broke it on his knee. Casting the pieces into the blaze he
bowed and laid himself on the table, clasping the palantír with both
hands upon his breast. And it was said that ever after, if any man looked in
that Stone, unless he had a great strength of will to turn it to other purpose,
he saw only two aged hands withering in flame.
Gandalf in
grief and horror turned his face away and closed the door. For a while he stood
in thought, silent upon the threshold, while those outside heard the greedy
roaring of the fire within. And then Denethor gave a great cry, and afterwards
spoke no more, nor was ever again seen by mortal men.
'So
passes Denethor, son of Ecthelion,' said Gandalf. Then he turned to Beregond and
the Lord's servants that stood there aghast. 'And so pass also the days of
Gondor that you have known; for good or evil they are ended. Ill deeds have been
done here; but let now all enmity that lies between you be put away, for it was
contrived by the Enemy and works his will. You have been caught in a net of
warring duties that you did not weave. But think, you servants of the Lord,
blind in your obedience, that but for the treason of Beregond Faramir, Captain
of the White Tower, would now also be burned.
'Bear away
from this unhappy place your comrades who have fallen. And we will bear Faramir,
Steward of Gondor, to a place where he can sleep in peace, or die if that be his
doom.'
Then Gandalf and Beregond taking up the bier bore it
away towards the Houses of Healing, while behind them walked Pippin with
downcast head. But the servants of the Lord stood gazing as stricken men at the
house of the dead; and even as Gandalf came to the end of Rath Dínen there was a
great noise. Looking back they saw the dome of the house crack and smokes issue
forth; and then with a rush and rumble of stone it fell in a flurry of fire; but
still unabated the flames danced and flickered among the ruins. Then in terror
the servants fled and followed Gandalf.
At length they came
back to the Steward's Door, and Beregond looked with grief at the porter. 'This
deed I shall ever rue,' he said, 'but a madness of haste was on me, and he would
not listen, but drew sword against me.' Then taking the key that he had wrested
from the slain man he closed the door and locked it. 'This should now be given
to the Lord Faramir,' he said.
'The Prince of Dol Amroth is
in command in the absence of the Lord,' said Gandalf, 'but since he is not here,
I must take this on myself. I bid you keep the key and guard it, until the City
is set in order again.'
Now at last they passed into the
high circles of the City, and in the light of morning they went their way
towards the Houses of Healing; and these were fair houses set apart, for the
care of those who were grievously sick, but now they were prepared for the
tending of men hurt in battle or dying. They stood not far from the
Citadel-gate, in the sixth circle, nigh to its southward wall, and about them
was a garden and a greensward with trees, the only such place in the City. There
dwelt the few women that had been permitted to remain in Minas Tirith, since
they were skilled in healing or in the service of the
healers.
But even as Gandalf and his companions came
carrying the bier to the main door of the Houses, they heard a great cry that
went up from the field before the Gate and rising shrill and piercing into the
sky passed, and died away on the wind. So terrible was the cry that for a moment
all stood still, and yet when it had passed, suddenly their hearts were lifted
up in such a hope as they had not known since the darkness came out of the East;
and it seemed to them that the light grew clear and the sun broke through the
clouds.
But Gandalf's face was grave and sad, and bidding
Beregond and Pippin to take Faramir into the Houses of Healing, he went up on to
the walls nearby; and there like a figure carven in white he stood in the new
sun and looked out. And he beheld with the sight that was given to him all that
had befallen; and when Éomer rode out from the forefront of his battle and stood
beside those who lay upon the field, he sighed, and he cast his cloak about him
again, and went from the walls. And Beregond and Pippin found him standing in
thought before the door of the Houses when they came
out.
They looked at him, and for a while he was silent. At
last he spoke. 'My friends,' he said, 'and all you people of this city and of
the Western lands! Things of great sorrow and renown have come to pass. Shall we
weep or be glad? Beyond hope the Captain of our foes has been destroyed, and you
have heard the echo of his last despair. But he has not gone without woe and
bitter loss. And that I might have averted but for the madness of Denethor. So
long has the reach of our Enemy become! Alas! but now I perceive how his will
was able to enter into the very heart of the City.
'Though
the Stewards deemed that it was a secret kept only by themselves, long ago I
guessed that here in the White Tower, one at least of the Seven Seeing Stones
was preserved. In the days of his wisdom Denethor did not presume to use it, nor
to challenge Sauron, knowing the limits of his own strength. But his wisdom
failed; and I fear that as the peril of his realm grew he looked in the Stone
and was deceived: far too often, I guess, since Boromir departed. He was too
great to be subdued to the will of the Dark Power, he saw nonetheless only those
things which that Power permitted him to see. The knowledge which he obtained
was, doubtless, often of service to him; yet the vision of the great might of
Mordor that was shown to him fed the despair of his heart until it overthrew his
mind.'
'Now I understand what seemed so strange to me!'
said Pippin shuddering at his memories as he spoke. 'The Lord went away from the
room where Faramir lay; and it was only when he returned that I first thought he
was changed, old and broken.'
'It was in the very hour that
Faramir was brought to the Tower that many of us saw a strange light in the
topmost chamber,' said Beregond. 'But we have seen that light before, and it has
long been rumoured in the City, that the Lord would at times wrestle in thought
with his Enemy.'
'Alas! then I have guessed rightly,' said
Gandalf. 'Thus the will of Sauron entered into Minas Tirith; and thus I have
been delayed here. And here I shall still be forced to remain, for I shall soon
have other charges, not Faramir only.
'Now I must go down
to meet those who come. I have seen a sight upon the field that is very grievous
to my heart, and greater sorrow may yet come to pass. Come with me, Pippin! But
you, Beregond, should return to the Citadel and tell the chief of the Guard
there what has befallen. It will be his duty, I fear, to withdraw you from the
Guard; but say to him that, if I may give him counsel, you should be sent to the
Houses of Healing, to be the guard and servant of your captain, and to be at his
side when he awakes – if that shall ever be again. For by you he was saved from
the fire. Go now! I shall return soon.'
With that he turned
away and went with Pippin down towards the lower city. And even as they hastened
on their way the wind brought a grey rain, and all the fires sank, and there
arose a great smoke before them.
Chapter 8
The Houses of
Healing
A mist was in Merry's eyes of tears and weariness when
they drew near the ruined Gate of Minas Tirith. He gave little heed to the wreck
and slaughter that lay about all. Fire and smoke and stench was in the air; for
many engines had been burned or cast into the fire-pits, and many of the slain
also, while here and there lay many carcases of the great Southron monsters,
half-burned, or broken by stone-cast, or shot through the eyes by the valiant
archers of Morthond. The flying rain had ceased for a time, and the sun gleamed
up above; but all the lower city was still wrapped in a smouldering reek.
Already men were labouring to clear a way
through the jetsam of battle; and now out from the Gate came some bearing
litters. Gently they laid Éowyn upon soft pillows; but the king's body they
covered with a great cloth of gold, and they bore torches about him, and their
flames, pale in the sunlight, were fluttered by the
wind.
So Théoden and Éowyn came to the City of Gondor, and
all who saw them bared their heads and bowed; and they passed through the ash
and fume of the burned circle, and went on and up along the streets of stone. To
Merry the ascent seemed agelong, a meaningless journey in a hateful dream, going
on and on to some dim ending that memory cannot
seize.
Slowly the lights of the torches in front of him
flickered and went out, and he was walking in a darkness; and he thought: 'This
is a tunnel leading to a tomb; there we shall stay forever.' But suddenly into
his dream there fell a living voice.
'Well, Merry! Thank
goodness I have found you!'
He looked up and the mist
before his eyes cleared a little. There was Pippin! They were face to face in a
narrow lane, and but for themselves it was empty. He rubbed his
eyes.
'Where is the king?' he said. 'And Éowyn?' Then he
stumbled and sat down on a doorstep and began to weep
again.
'They have gone up into the Citadel,' said Pippin.
'I think you must have fallen asleep on your feet and taken the wrong turning.
When we found that you were not with them, Gandalf sent me to look for you. Poor
old Merry! How glad I am to see you again! But you are worn out, and I won't
bother you with any talk. But tell me, are you hurt, or
wounded?'
'No,' said Merry. 'Well, no, I don't think so.
But I can't use my right arm, Pippin, not since I stabbed him. And my sword
burned all away like a piece of wood.'
Pippin's face was
anxious. 'Well, you had better come with me as quick as you can,' he said. 'I
wish I could carry you. You aren't fit to walk any further. They shouldn't have
let you walk at all; but you must forgive them. So many dreadful things have
happened in the City, Merry, that one poor hobbit coming in from the battle is
easily overlooked.'
'It's not always a misfortune being
overlooked,' said Merry. 'I was overlooked just now by – no, no, I can't speak
of it. Help me, Pippin! It's all going dark again, and my arm is so
cold.'
'Lean on me, Merry lad!' said Pippin. 'Come now!
Foot by foot. It's not far.'
'Are you going to bury me?'
said Merry.
'No, indeed!' said Pippin, trying to sound
cheerful, though his heart was wrung with fear and pity. 'No, we are going to
the Houses of Healing.'
They turned out of the lane that
ran between tall houses and the outer wall of the fourth circle, and they
regained the main street climbing up to the Citadel. Step by step they went,
while Merry swayed and murmured as one in sleep.
'I'll
never get him there,' thought Pippin. 'Is there no one to help me? I can't leave
him here.' Just then to his surprise a boy came running up behind, and as he
passed he recognized Bergil Beregond's son.
'Hullo,
Bergil!' he called. 'Where are you going? Glad to see you again, and still
alive!'
'I am running errands for the Healers,' said
Bergil. 'I cannot stay.'
'Don't!' said Pippin. 'But tell
them up there that I have a sick hobbit, a
perian mind you, come from the
battle-field. I don't think he can walk so far. If Mithrandir is there, he will
be glad of the message.' Bergil ran on.
'I'd better wait
here,' thought Pippin. So he let Merry sink gently down on to the pavement in a
patch of sunlight, and then he sat down beside him, laying Merry's head in his
lap. He felt his body and limbs gently, and took his friend's hands in his own.
The right hand felt icy to the touch.
It was not long
before Gandalf himself came in search of them. He stooped over Merry and
caressed his brow; then he lifted him carefully. 'He should have been borne in
honour into this city,' he said. 'He has well repaid my trust; for if Elrond had
not yielded to me, neither of you would have set out; and then far more grievous
would the evils of this day have been.' He sighed. 'And yet here is another
charge on my hands, while all the time the battle hangs in the
balance.'
So at last Faramir and Éowyn and Meriadoc were
laid in beds in the Houses of Healing; and there they were tended well. For
though all lore was in these latter days fallen from its fullness of old, the
leechcraft of Gondor was still wise, and skilled in the healing of wound and
hurt, and all such sickness as east of the Sea mortal men were subject to. Save
old age only. For that they had found no cure; and indeed the span of their
lives had now waned to little more than that of other men, and those among them
who passed the tale of five score years with vigour were grown few, save in some
houses of purer blood. But now their art and knowledge were baffled; for there
were many sick of a malady that would not be healed; and they called it the
Black Shadow, for it came from the Nazgûl. And those who were stricken with it
fell slowly into an ever deeper dream, and then passed to silence and a deadly
cold, and so died. And it seemed to the tenders of the sick that on the Halfling
and on the Lady of Rohan this malady lay heavily. Still at whiles as the morning
wore away they would speak, murmuring in their dreams; and the watchers listened
to all that they said, hoping perhaps to learn something that would help them to
understand their hurts. But soon they began to fall down into the darkness, and
as the sun turned west a grey shadow crept over their faces. But Faramir burned
with a fever that would not abate.
Gandalf went from one to
the other full of care, and he was told all that the watchers could hear. And so
the day passed, while the great battle outside went on with shifting hopes and
strange tidings; and still Gandalf waited and watched and did not go forth; till
at last the red sunset filled all the sky, and the light through the windows
fell on the grey faces of the sick. Then it seemed to those who stood by that in
the glow the faces flushed softly as with health returning, but it was only a
mockery of hope.
Then an old wife, Ioreth, the eldest of
the women who served in that house, looking on the fair face of Faramir, wept,
for all the people loved him. And she said: 'Alas! if he should die. Would that
there were kings in Gondor, as there were once upon a time, they say! For it is
said in old lore:
The hands of the king are the hands of a healer. And so
the rightful king could ever be known.'
And Gandalf, who
stood by, said: 'Men may long remember your words, Ioreth! For there is hope in
them. Maybe a king has indeed returned to Gondor; or have you not heard the
strange tidings that have come to the City?'
'I have been
too busy with this and that to heed all the crying and shouting,' she answered.
'All I hope is that those murdering devils do not come to this House and trouble
the sick.'
Then Gandalf went out in haste, and already the
fire in the sky was burning out, and the smouldering hills were fading, while
ash-grey evening crept over the fields.
Now as the sun went
down Aragorn and Éomer and Imrahil drew near the City with their captains and
knights; and when they came before the Gate Aragorn
said:
'Behold the Sun setting in a great fire! It is a sign
of the end and fall of many things, and a change in the tides of the world. But
this City and realm has rested in the charge of the Stewards for many long
years, and I fear that if I enter it unbidden, then doubt and debate may arise,
which should not be while this war is fought. I will not enter in, nor make any
claim, until it be seen whether we or Mordor shall prevail. Men shall pitch my
tents upon the field, and here I will await the welcome of the Lord of the
City.'
But Éomer said: 'Already you have raised the banner
of the Kings and displayed the tokens of Elendil's House. Will you suffer these
to be challenged?'
'No,' said Aragorn. 'But I deem the time
unripe; and I have no mind for strife except with our Enemy and his
servants.'
And the Prince Imrahil said: 'Your words, lord,
are wise, if one who is a kinsman of the Lord Denethor may counsel you in this
matter. He is strong-willed and proud, but old; and his mood has been strange
since his son was stricken down. Yet I would not have you remain like a beggar
at the door.'
'Not a beggar,' said Aragorn. 'Say a captain
of the Rangers, who are unused to cities and houses of stone.' And he commanded
that his banner should be furled; and he did off the Star of the North Kingdom
and gave it to the keeping of the sons of Elrond.
Then the
Prince Imrahil and Éomer of Rohan left him and passed through the City and the
tumult of the people, and mounted to the Citadel; and they came to the Hall of
the Tower, seeking the Steward. But they found his chair empty, and before the
dais lay Théoden King of the Mark upon a bed of state; and twelve torches stood
about it, and twelve guards, knights both of Rohan and Gondor. And the hangings
of the bed were of green and white, but upon the king was laid the great cloth
of gold up to his breast, and upon that his unsheathed sword, and at his feet
his shield, The light of the torches shimmered in his white hair like sun in the
spray of a fountain, but his face was fair and young, save that a peace lay on
it beyond the reach of youth; and it seemed that he
slept.
When they had stood silent for a time beside the
king, Imrahil said: 'Where is the Steward? And where also is
Mithrandir?'
And one of the guards answered: 'The Steward
of Gondor is in the Houses of Healing.'
But Éomer said:
'Where is the Lady Éowyn, my sister; for surely she should be lying beside the
king, and in no less honour? Where have they bestowed
her?'
And Imrahil said: 'But the Lady Éowyn was yet living
when they bore her hither. Did you not know?'
Then hope
unlooked-for came so suddenly to Éomer's heart, and with it the bite of care and
fear renewed, that he said no more, but turned and went swiftly from the hall;
and the Prince followed him. And when they came forth evening had fallen and
many stars were in the sky. And there came Gandalf on foot and with him one
cloaked in grey; and they met before the doors of the Houses of Healing. And
they greeted Gandalf and said: 'We seek the Steward, and men say that he is in
this House. Has any hurt befallen him? And the Lady Éowyn, where is
she?'
And Gandalf answered: 'She lies within and is not
dead, but is near death. But the Lord Faramir was wounded by an evil dart, as
you have heard, and he is now the Steward; for Denethor has departed, and his
house is in ashes.' And they were filled with grief and wonder at the tale that
he told.
But Imrahil said: 'So victory is shorn of
gladness, and it is bitter bought, if both Gondor and Rohan are in one day
bereft of their lords. Éomer rules the Rohirrim. Who shall rule the City
meanwhile? Shall we not send now for the Lord Aragorn?'
And
the cloaked man spoke and said: 'He is come.' And they saw as he stepped into
the light of the lantern by the door that it was Aragorn, wrapped in the grey
cloak of Lórien above his mail, and bearing no other token than the green stone
of Galadriel. 'I have come because Gandalf begs me to do so,' he said. 'But for
the present I am but the Captain of the Dunedain of Arnor; and the Lord of Dol
Amroth shall rule the City until Faramir awakes. But it is my counsel that
Gandalf should rule us all in the days that follow and in our dealings with the
Enemy.' And they agreed upon that.
Then Gandalf said: 'Let
us not stay at the door, for the time is urgent. Let us enter! For it is only in
the coming of Aragorn that any hope remains for the sick that lie in the House.
Thus spake Ioreth, wise-woman of Gondor:
The hands of the king are the hands
of a healer, and so shall the rightful king be
known.'
Then Aragorn entered first and the others
followed. And there at the door were two guards in the livery of the Citadel:
one tall, but the other scarce the height of a boy; and when he saw them he
cried aloud in surprise and joy.
'Strider! How splendid! Do
you know, I guessed it was you in the black ships. But they were all shouting
corsairs and wouldn't listen to me. How did you do
it?'
Aragorn laughed, and took the hobbit by the hand.
'Well met indeed!' he said. 'But there is not time yet for travellers'
tales.'
But Imrahil said to Éomer: 'Is it thus that we
speak to our kings? Yet maybe he will wear his crown in some other
name!'
And Aragorn hearing him, turned and said: 'Verily,
for in the high tongue of old I am
Elessar, the
Elfstone, and
Envinyatar, the Renewer': and he lifted from his breast the green stone
that lay there. 'But Strider shall be the name of my house, if that be ever
established. In the high tongue it will not sound so ill, and
Telcontar I
will be and all the heirs of my body.'
And with that they
passed into the House; and as they went towards the rooms where the sick were
tended Gandalf told of the deeds of Éowyn and Meriadoc. 'For,' he said, 'long
have I stood by them and at first they spoke much in their dreaming, before they
sank into the deadly darkness. Also it is given to me to see many things far
off.'
Aragorn went first to Faramir, and then to the Lady
Éowyn, and last to Merry. When he had looked on the faces of the sick and seen
their hurts he sighed. 'Here I must put forth all such power and skill as is
given to me,' he said. 'Would that Elrond were here, for he is the eldest of all
our race, and has the greater power.'
And Éomer seeing that
he was sorrowful and weary said: 'First you must rest, surely, and at the least
eat a little?'
But Aragorn answered: 'Nay, for these three,
and most soon for Faramir, time is running out. All speed is
needed.'
Then he called to Ioreth and he said: 'You have
store in this House of the herbs of healing?'
'Yes, lord,'
she answered, 'but not enough, I reckon, for all that will need them. But I am
sure I do not know where we shall find more; for all things are amiss in these
dreadful days, what with fires and burnings, and the lads that run errands so
few, and all the roads blocked. Why, it is days out of count since ever a
carrier came in from Lossarnach to the market! But we do our best in this House
with what we have, as I am sure your lordship will
know.'
'I will judge that when I see,' said Aragorn. 'One
thing also is short time for speech. Have you
athelas?'
'I do not know, I am sure, lord,' she
answered, 'at least not by that name. I will go and ask of the herb-master; he
knows all the old names.'
'It is also called
kingsfoil,' said Aragorn, 'and maybe you know it by that name, for so the
country-folk call it in these latter days.'
'Oh that!' said
Ioreth. 'Well, if your lordship had named it at first I could have told you. No,
we have none of it, I am sure. Why, I have never heard that it had any great
virtue; and indeed I have often said to my sisters when we came upon it growing
in the woods: “kingsfoil” I said, “ 'tis a strange name, and I wonder why 'tis
called so; for if I were a king, I would have plants more bright in my garden”.
Still it smells sweet when bruised, does it not? If sweet is the right word:
wholesome, maybe, is nearer.'
'Wholesome verily,' said
Aragorn. 'And now, dame, if you love the Lord Faramir, run as quick as your
tongue and get me kingsfoil, if there is a leaf in the
City.'
'And if not,' said Gandalf, 'I will ride to
Lossarnach with Ioreth behind me, and she shall take me to the woods, but not to
her sisters. And Shadowfax shall show her the meaning of
haste.'
When Ioreth was gone, Aragorn bade the other women
to make water hot. Then he took Faramir's hand in his, and laid the other hand
upon the sick man's brow. It was drenched with sweat; but Faramir did not move
or make any sign, and seemed hardly to breathe.
'He is
nearly spent,' said Aragorn turning to Gandalf. 'But this comes not from the
wound. See! that is healing. Had he been smitten by some dart of the Nazgûl, as
you thought, he would have died that night. This hurt was given by some Southron
arrow, I would guess. Who drew it forth? Was it kept?'
'I
drew it forth,' said Imrahil, 'and staunched the wound. But I did not keep the
arrow, for we had much to do. It was, as I remember, just such a dart as the
Southrons use. Yet I believed that it came from the Shadows above, for else his
fever and sickness were not to be understood; since the wound was not deep or
vital. How then do you read the matter?'
'Weariness, grief
for his father's mood, a wound, and over all the Black Breath,' said Aragorn.
'He is a man of staunch will, for already he had come close under the Shadow
before ever he rode to battle on the out-walls. Slowly the dark must have crept
on him, even as he fought and strove to hold his outpost. Would that I could
have been here sooner!'
Thereupon the herb-master entered.
'Your lordship asked for kingsfoil, as the rustics name it, he said; or
athelas in the noble tongue, or to those who know somewhat of the
Valinorean...'
'I do so,' said Aragorn, 'and I care not
whether you say now
asea aranion or
kingsfoil, so long as you have
some.'
'Your pardon lord!' said the man. 'I see you are a
lore-master, not merely a captain of war. But alas! sir, we do not keep this
thing in the Houses of Healing, where only the gravely hurt or sick are tended.
For it has no virtue that we know of, save perhaps to sweeten a fouled air, or
to drive away some passing heaviness. Unless, of course, you give heed to rhymes
of old days which women such as our good Ioreth still repeat without
understanding.
When the black breath blows
and death's shadow grows
and
all lights pass,
come athelas! come athelas!
Life to the dying
In the
king's hand lying!
It is but a
doggrel, I fear, garbled in the memory of old wives. Its meaning I leave to your
judgement, if indeed it has any. But old folk still use an infusion of the herb
for headaches.'
'Then in the name of the king, go and find
some old man of less lore and more wisdom who keeps some in his house!' cried
Gandalf.
Now Aragorn knelt beside Faramir, and held a hand
upon his brow. And those that watched felt that some great struggle was going
on. For Aragorn's face grew grey with weariness; and ever and anon he called the
name of Faramir, but each time more faintly to their hearing, as if Aragorn
himself was removed from them, and walked afar in some dark vale, calling for
one that was lost.
And at last Bergil came running in, and
he bore six leaves in a cloth. 'It is kingsfoil, Sir,' he said, 'but not fresh,
I fear. It must have been culled two weeks ago at the least. I hope it will
serve, Sir?' Then looking at Faramir he burst into
tears.
But Aragorn smiled. 'It will serve,' he said. 'The
worst is now over. Stay and be comforted!' Then taking two leaves, he laid them
on his hands and breathed on them, and then he crushed them, and straightway a
living freshness filled the room, as if the air itself awoke and tingled,
sparkling with joy. And then he cast the leaves into the bowls of steaming water
that were brought to him, and at once all hearts were lightened. For the
fragrance that came to each was like a memory of dewy mornings of unshadowed sun
in some land of which the fair world in Spring is itself but a fleeting memory.
But Aragorn stood up as one refreshed, and his eyes smiled as he held a bowl
before Faramir's dreaming face.
'Well now! Who would have
believed it?' said Ioreth to a woman that stood beside her. 'The weed is better
than I thought. It reminds me of the roses of Imloth Melui when I was a lass,
and no king could ask for better.'
Suddenly Faramir
stirred, and he opened his eyes, and he looked on Aragorn who bent over him; and
a light of knowledge and love was kindled in his eyes, and he spoke softly. 'My
lord, you called me. I come. What does the king
command?'
'Walk no more in the shadows, but awake!' said
Aragorn. 'You are weary. Rest a while, and take food, and be ready when I
return.'
'I will, lord,' said Faramir. 'For who would lie
idle when the king has returned?'
'Farewell then for a
while!' said Aragorn. 'I must go to others who need me.' And he left the chamber
with Gandalf and Imrahil; but Beregond and his son remained behind, unable to
contain their joy. As he followed Gandalf and shut the door Pippin heard Ioreth
exclaim:
'King! Did you hear that? What did I say? The
hands of a healer, I said.' And soon the word had gone out from the House that
the king was indeed come among them, and after war he brought healing; and the
news ran through the City.
But Aragorn came to Éowyn, and
he said: 'Here there is a grievous hurt and a heavy blow. The arm that was
broken has been tended with due skill, and it will mend in time, if she has the
strength to live. It is the shield-arm that is maimed; but the chief evil comes
through the sword-arm. In that there now seems no life, although it is
unbroken.
'Alas! For she was pitted against a foe beyond
the strength of her mind or body. And those who will take a weapon to such an
enemy must be sterner than steel, if the very shock shall not destroy them. It
was an evil doom that set her in his path. For she is a fair maiden, fairest
lady of a house of queens. And yet I know not how I should speak of her. When I
first looked on her and perceived her unhappiness, it seemed to me that I saw a
white flower standing straight and proud, shapely as a lily, and yet knew that
it was hard, as if wrought by elf-wrights out of steel. Or was it, maybe, a
frost that had turned its sap to ice, and so it stood, bitter-sweet, still fair
to see, but stricken, soon to fall and die? Her malady begins far back before
this day, does it not, Éomer?'
'I marvel that you should
ask me, lord,' he answered. 'For I hold you blameless in this matter, as in all
else; yet I knew not that Éowyn, my sister, was touched by any frost, until she
first looked on you. Care and dread she had, and shared with me, in the days of
Wormtongue and the king's bewitchment; and she tended the king in growing fear.
But that did not bring her to this pass!'
'My friend,' said
Gandalf, 'you had horses, and deeds of arms, and the free fields; but she, born
in the body of a maid, had a spirit and courage at least the match of yours. Yet
she was doomed to wait upon an old man, whom she loved as a father, and watch
him falling into a mean dishonoured dotage; and her part seemed to her more
ignoble than that of the staff he leaned on.
'Think you
that Wormtongue had poison only for Théoden's ears?
Dotard! What is the house
of Eorl but a thatched barn where brigands drink in the reek, and their brats
roll on the floor among their dogs? Have you not heard those words before?
Saruman spoke them, the teacher of Wormtongue. Though I do not doubt that
Wormtongue at home wrapped their meaning in terms more cunning. My lord, if your
sister's love for you, and her will still bent to her duty, had not restrained
her lips; you might have heard even such things as these escape them. But who
knows what she spoke to the darkness, alone, in the bitter watches of the night,
when all her life seemed shrinking, and the walls of her bower closing in about
her, a hutch to trammel some wild thing in?'
Then Éomer was
silent, and looked on his sister, as if pondering anew all the days of their
past life together. But Aragorn said: 'I saw also what you saw, Éomer. Few other
griefs amid the ill chances of this world have more bitterness and shame for a
man's heart than to behold the love of a lady so fair and brave that cannot be
returned. Sorrow and pity have followed me ever since I left her desperate in
Dunharrow and rode to the Paths of the Dead; and no fear upon that way was so
present as the fear for what might befall her. And yet, Éomer, I say to you that
she loves you more truly than me; for you she loves and knows; but in me she
loves only a shadow and a thought: a hope of glory and great deeds, and lands
far from the fields of Rohan.
'I have, maybe, the power to
heal her body, and to recall her from the dark valley. But to what she will
awake: hope, or forgetfulness, or despair, I do not know. And if to despair,
then she will die, unless other healing comes which I cannot bring. Alas! for
her deeds have set her among the queens of great
renown.'
Then Aragorn stooped and looked in her face, and
it was indeed white as a lily, cold as frost, and hard as graven stone. But he
bent and kissed her on the brow, and called her softly,
saying:
'Éowyn Éomund's daughter, awake! For your enemy has
passed away!'
She did not stir, but now she began again to
breathe deeply, so that her breast rose and fell beneath the white linen of the
sheet. Once more Aragorn bruised two leaves of
athelas and cast them into
steaming water; and he laved her brow with it, and her right arm lying cold and
nerveless on the coverlet.
Then, whether Aragorn had indeed
some forgotten power of Westernesse, or whether it was but his words of the Lady
Éowyn that wrought on them, as the sweet influence of the herb stole about the
chamber it seemed to those who stood by that a keen wind blew through the
window, and it bore no scent, but was an air wholly fresh and clean and young,
as if it had not before been breathed by any living thing and came new-made from
snowy mountains high beneath a dome of stars, or from shores of silver far away
washed by seas of foam.
'Awake, Éowyn, Lady of Rohan!' said
Aragorn again, and he took her right hand in his and felt it warm with life
returning. 'Awake! The shadow is gone and all darkness is washed clean!' Then he
laid her hand in Éomer's and stepped away. 'Call her!' he said, and he passed
silently from the chamber.
'Éowyn, Éowyn!' cried Éomer amid
his tears. But she opened her eyes and said: 'Éomer! What joy is this? For they
said that you were slain. Nay, but that was only the dark voices in my dream.
How long have I been dreaming?'
'Not long, my sister,' said
Éomer. 'But think no more on it!'
' I am strangely weary,'
she said. 'I must rest a little. But tell me, what of the Lord of the Mark?
Alas! Do not tell me that that was a dream for I know that it was not. He is
dead as he foresaw.'
'He is dead,' said Éomer, 'but he bade
me say farewell to Éowyn dearer than daughter. He lies now in great honour in
the Citadel of Gondor.'
'That is grievous,' she said. 'And
yet it is good beyond all that I dared hope in the dark days, when it seemed
that the House of Eorl was sunk in honour less than any shepherd's cot. And what
of the king's esquire, the Halfling? Éomer, you shall make him a knight of the
Riddermark, for he is valiant!'
'He lies nearby in this
House, and I will go to him,' said Gandalf. 'Éomer shall stay here for a while.
But do not speak yet of war or woe, until you are made whole again. Great
gladness it is to see you wake again to health and hope, so valiant a
lady!'
'To health?' said Éowyn. 'It may be so. At least
while there is an empty saddle of some fallen Rider that I can fill, and there
are deeds to do. But to hope? I do not know.'
Gandalf and
Pippin came to Merry's room, and there they found Aragorn standing by the bed.
'Poor old Merry!' cried Pippin, and he ran to the bedside, for it seemed to him
that his friend looked worse, and a greyness was in his face, as if a weight of
years of sorrow lay on him; and suddenly a fear seized Pippin that Merry would
die.
'Do not be afraid,' said Aragorn. 'I came in time, and
I have called him back. He is weary now, and grieved, and he has taken a hurt
like the Lady Éowyn, daring to smite that deadly thing. But these evils can be
amended, so strong and gay a spirit is in him. His grief he will not forget; but
it will not darken his heart, it will teach him
wisdom.'
Then Aragorn laid his hand on Merry's head, and
passing his hand gently through the brown curls, he touched the eyelids, and
called him by name. And when the fragrance of
athelas stole through the
room, like the scent of orchards, and of heather in the sunshine full of bees,
suddenly Merry awoke, and he said:
'I am hungry. What is
the time?'
'Past supper-time now,' said Pippin, 'though I
daresay I could bring you something, if they will let
me.'
'They will indeed,' said Gandalf. 'And anything else
that this Rider of Rohan may desire, if it can be found in Minas Tirith, where
his name is in honour.'
'Good!' said Merry. 'Then I would
like supper first, and after that a pipe.' At that his face clouded. 'No, not a
pipe. I don't think I'll smoke again.'
'Why not?' said
Pippin.
'Well,' answered Merry slowly. 'He is dead. It has
brought it all back to me. He said he was sorry he had never had a chance of
talking herb-lore with me. Almost the last thing he ever said. I shan't ever be
able to smoke again without thinking of him, and that day, Pippin, when he rode
up to Isengard and was so polite.'
'Smoke then, and think
of him!' said Aragorn. 'For he was a gentle heart and a great king and kept his
oaths; and he rose out of the shadows to a last fair morning. Though your
service to him was brief, it should be a memory glad and honourable to the end
of your days.'
Merry smiled. 'Well then,' he said, 'if
Strider will provide what is needed, I will smoke and think. I had some of
Saruman's best in my pack, but what became of it in the battle, I am sure I
don't know.'
'Master Meriadoc,' said Aragorn, 'if you think
that I have passed through the mountains and the realm of Gondor with fire and
sword to bring herbs to a careless soldier who throws away his gear, you are
mistaken. If your pack has not been found, then you must send for the
herb-master of this House. And he will tell you that he did not know that the
herb you desire had any virtues, but that it is called
westmansweed by
the vulgar, and
galenas by the noble, and other names in other tongues
more learned, and after adding a few half-forgotten rhymes that he does not
understand, he will regretfully inform you that there is none in the House, and
he will leave you to reflect on the history of tongues. And so now must I. For I
have not slept in such a bed as this, since I rode from Dunharrow, nor eaten
since the dark before dawn.'
Merry seized his hand and
kissed it. 'I am frightfully sorry,' he said. 'Go at once! Ever since that night
at Bree we have been a nuisance to you. But it is the way of my people to use
light words at such times and say less than they mean. We fear to say too much.
It robs us of the right words when a jest is out of
place.'
'I know that well, or I would not deal with you in
the same way,' said Aragorn. 'May the Shire live for ever unwithered!' And
kissing Merry he went out, and Gandalf went with
him.
Pippin remained behind. 'Was there ever any one like
him?' he said. 'Except Gandalf, of course. I think they must be related. My dear
ass, your pack is lying by your bed, and you had it on your back when I met you.
He saw it all the time, of course. And anyway I have some stuff of my own. Come
on now! Longbottom Leaf it is. Fill up while I run and see about some food. And
then let's be easy for a bit. Dear me! We Tooks and Brandybucks, we can't live
long on the heights.'
'No,' said Merry. 'I can't. Not yet,
at any rate. But at least, Pippin, we can now see them, and honour them. It is
best to love first what you are fitted to love, I suppose: you must start
somewhere and have some roots, and the soil of the Shire is deep. Still there
are things deeper and higher; and not a gaffer could tend his garden in what he
calls peace but for them, whether he knows about them or not. I am glad that I
know about them, a little. But I don't know why I am talking like this. Where is
that leaf? And get my pipe out of my pack, if it isn't
broken.'
Aragorn and Gandalf went now to the Warden of the
Houses of Healing, and they counselled him that Faramir and Éowyn should remain
there and still be tended with care for many days.
'The
Lady Éowyn,' said Aragorn, 'will wish soon to rise and depart; but she should
not be permitted to do so, if you can in any way restrain her, until at least
ten days be passed.'
'As for Faramir,' said Gandalf, 'he
must soon learn that his father is dead. But the full tale of the madness of
Denethor should not be told to him, until he is quite healed and has duties to
do. See that Beregond and the
perian who were present do not speak to him
of these things yet!'
And the other
perian Meriadoc
who is under my care, what of him?' said the Warden.
'It is
likely that he will be fit to arise tomorrow, for a short while,' said Aragorn.
'Let him do so, if he wishes. He may walk a little in the care of his
friends.'
'They are a remarkable race,' said the Warden,
nodding his head. 'Very tough in the fibre, I deem.'
At the
doors of the Houses many were already gathered to see Aragorn, and they followed
after him; and when at last he had supped, men came and prayed that he would
heal their kinsmen or their friends whose lives were in peril through hurt or
wound, or who lay under the Black Shadow. And Aragorn arose and went out, and he
sent for the sons of Elrond, and together they laboured far into the night. And
word went through the City: 'The King is come again indeed.' And they named him
Elfstone, because of the green stone that he wore, and so the name which it was
foretold at his birth that he should bear was chosen for him by his own
people.
And when he could labour no more, he cast his cloak
about him, and slipped out of the City, and went to his tent just ere dawn and
slept for a little. And in the morning the banner of Dol Amroth, a white ship
like a swan upon blue water, floated from the Tower, and men looked up and
wondered if the coming of the King had been but a dream.
Chapter 9
The Last Debate
The morning came after the day of battle, and it was fair
with light clouds and the wind turning westward. Legolas and Gimli were early
abroad, and they begged leave to go up into the City; for they were eager to see
Merry and Pippin.
'It is good to learn that they are still
alive,' said Gimli, 'for they cost us great pains in our march over Rohan, and I
would not have such pains all wasted.'
Together the Elf and
the Dwarf entered Minas Tirith, and folk that saw them pass marvelled to see
such companions; for Legolas was fair of face beyond the measure of Men, and he
sang an elven-song in a clear voice as he walked in the morning; but Gimli
stalked beside him, stroking his beard and staring about
him.
'There is some good stone-work here,' he said as he
looked at the walls, 'but also some that is less good, and the streets could be
better contrived. When Aragorn comes into his own, I shall offer him the service
of stonewrights of the Mountain, and we will make this a town to be proud
of.'
'They need more gardens,' said Legolas. 'The houses
are dead, and there is too little here that grows and is glad. If Aragorn comes
into his own, the people of the Wood shall bring him birds that sing and trees
that do not die.'
At length they came to the Prince
Imrahil, and Legolas looked at him and bowed low; for he saw that here indeed
was one who had elven-blood in his veins. 'Hail, lord!' he said. 'It is long
since the people of Nimrodel left the woodlands of Lórien, and yet still one may
see that not all sailed from Amroth's haven west over
water.'
'So it is said in the lore of my land,' said the
Prince, 'yet never has one of the fair folk been seen there for years beyond
count. And I marvel to see one here now in the midst of sorrow and war. What do
you seek?'
'I am one of the Nine Companions who set out
with Mithrandir from Imladris,' said Legolas, 'and with this Dwarf, my friend, I
came with the Lord Aragorn. But now we wish to see our friends. Meriadoc and
Peregrin, who are in your keeping, we are told.'
'You will
find them in the Houses of Healing, and I will lead you thither,' said
Imrahil.
'It will be enough if you send one to guide us,
lord,' said Legolas. 'For Aragorn sends this message to you. He does not wish to
enter the City again at this time. Yet there is need for the captains to hold
council at once, and he prays that you and Éomer of Rohan will come down to his
tents, as soon as may be. Mithrandir is already there.'
'We
will come,' said Imrahil; and they parted with courteous
words.
'That is a fair lord and a great captain of men,'
said Legolas. 'If Gondor has such men still in these days of fading, great must
have been its glory in the days of its rising.'
'And
doubtless the good stone-work is the older and was wrought in the first
building,' said Gimli. 'It is ever so with the things that Men begin: there is a
frost in Spring, or a blight in Summer, and they fail of their
promise.'
'Yet seldom do they fail of their seed,' said
Legolas. 'And that will lie in the dust and rot to spring up again in times and
places unlooked-for. The deeds of Men will outlast us,
Gimli.'
'And yet come to naught in the end but
might-have-beens, I guess,' said the Dwarf.
'To that the
Elves know not the answer,' said Legolas.
With that the
servant of the Prince came and led them to the Houses of Healing; and there they
found their friends in the garden, and their meeting was a merry one. For a
while they walked and talked, rejoicing for a brief space in peace and rest
under the morning high up in the windy circles of the City. Then when Merry
became weary, they went and sat upon the wall with the greensward of the Houses
of Healing behind them; and away southward before them was the Anduin glittering
in the sun, as it flowed away, out of the sight even of Legolas, into the wide
flats and green haze of Lebennin and South Ithilien.
And
now Legolas fell silent, while the others talked, and he looked out against the
sun, and as he gazed he saw white sea-birds beating up the
River.
'Look!' he cried. 'Gulls! They are flying far
inland. A wonder they are to me and a trouble to my heart. Never in all my life
had I met them, until we came to Pelargir, and there I heard them crying in the
air as we rode to the battle of the ships. Then I stood still, forgetting war in
Middle-earth; for their wailing voices spoke to me of the Sea. The Sea! Alas! I
have not yet beheld it. But deep in the hearts of all my kindred lies the
sea-longing, which it is perilous to stir. Alas! for the gulls. No peace shall I
have again under beech or under elm.'
'Say not so!' said
Gimli. 'There are countless things still to see in Middle-earth, and great works
to do. But if all the fair folk take to the Havens, it will be a duller world
for those who are doomed to stay.'
'Dull and dreary
indeed!' said Merry. 'You must not go to the Havens, Legolas. There will always
be some folk, big or little, and even a few wise dwarves like Gimli, who need
you. At least I hope so. Though I feel somehow that the worst of this war is
still to come. How I wish it was all over, and well
over!'
'Don't be so gloomy!' cried Pippin. 'The Sun is
shining, and here we are together for a day or two at least. I want to hear more
about you all. Come, Gimli! You and Legolas have mentioned your strange journey
with Strider about a dozen times already this morning. But you haven't told me
anything about it.'
'The Sun may shine here,' said Gimli,
'but there are memories of that road that I do not wish to recall out of the
darkness. Had I known what was before me, I think that not for any friendship
would I have taken the Paths of the Dead.'
'The Paths of
the Dead?' said Pippin. 'I heard Aragorn say that and I wondered what he could
mean. Won't you tell us some more?'
'Not willingly,' said
Gimli. 'For upon that road I was put to shame: Gimli Glóin's son, who had deemed
himself more tough than Men, and hardier under earth than any Elf. But neither
did I prove; and I was held to the road only by the will of
Aragorn.'
'And by the love of him also,' said Legolas. 'For
all those who come to know him come to love him after his own fashion, even the
cold maiden of the Rohirrim. It was at early morn of the day ere you came there,
Merry, that we left Dunharrow, and such a fear was on all the folk that none
would look on our going, save the Lady Éowyn, who lies now hurt in the House
below. There was grief at that parting, and I was grieved to behold
it.'
'Alas! I had heart only for myself,' said Gimli. 'Nay!
I will not speak of that journey.'
He fell silent; but
Pippin and Merry were so eager for news that at last Legolas said: 'I will tell
you enough for your peace; for I felt not the horror, and I feared not the
shadows of Men, powerless and frail as I deemed
them.'
Swiftly then he told of the haunted road under the
mountains, and the dark tryst at Erech, and the great ride thence, ninety
leagues and three, to Pelargir on Anduin. 'Four days and nights, and on into a
fifth, we rode from the Black Stone,' he said. 'And lo! in the darkness of
Mordor my hope rose; for in that gloom the Shadow Host seemed to grow stronger
and more terrible to look upon. Some I saw riding, some striding, yet all moving
with the same great speed. Silent they were, but there was a gleam in their
eyes. In the uplands of Lamedon they overtook our horses, and swept round us,
and would have passed us by, if Aragorn had not forbidden
them.
'At his command they fell back. “Even the shades of
Men are obedient to his will,” I thought. “They may serve his needs yet!
“
'One day of light we rode, and then came the day without
dawn, and still we rode on, and Ciril and Ringlo we crossed; and on the third
day we came to Linhir above the mouth of Gilrain. And there men of Lamedon
contested the fords with fell folk of Umbar and Harad who had sailed up the
river. But defenders and foes alike gave up the battle and fled when we came,
crying out that the King of the Dead was upon them. Only Angbor, Lord of
Lamedon, had the heart to abide us; and Aragorn bade him gather his folk and
come behind, if they dared, when the Grey Host had
passed.
'“At Pelargir the Heir of Isildur will have need of
you,” he said.
'Thus we crossed over Gilrain, driving the
allies of Mordor in rout before us; and then we rested a while. But soon Aragorn
arose, saying: “Lo! already Minas Tirith is assailed. I fear that it will fall
ere we come to its aid.” So we mounted again before night had passed and went on
with all the speed that our horses could endure over the plains of
Lebennin.'
Legolas paused and sighed, and turning his eyes
southward softly he sang:
Silver flow the streams from Celos to Erui
In the green
fields of Lebennin!
Tall grows the grass there. In the wind from the
Sea
The white lilies sway,
And the golden bells are shaken of mallos and
alfirin
In the green fields of Lebennin,
In the wind from the
Sea!
'Green are those fields in the
songs of my people; but they were dark then, grey wastes in the blackness before
us. And over the wide land, trampling unheeded the grass and the flowers, we
hunted our foes through a day and a night, until we came at the bitter end to
the Great River at last.
'Then I thought in my heart that
we drew near to the Sea; for wide was the water in the darkness, and sea-birds
innumerable cried on its shores. Alas for the wailing of the gulls! Did not the
Lady tell me to beware of them? And now I cannot forget
them.'
'For my part I heeded them not,' said Gimli, 'for we
came then at last upon battle in earnest. There at Pelargir lay the main fleet
of Umbar, fifty great ships and smaller vessels beyond count. Many of those that
we pursued had reached the havens before us, and brought their fear with them;
and some of the ships had put off, seeking to escape down the River or to reach
the far shore; and many of the smaller craft were ablaze. But the Haradrim,
being now driven to the brink, turned at bay, and they were fierce in despair;
and they laughed when they looked on us, for they were a great army
still.
'But Aragorn halted and cried with a great voice:
“Now come! By the Black Stone I call you!“ And suddenly the Shadow Host that had
hung back at the last came up like a grey tide, sweeping all away before it.
Faint cries I heard, and dim horns blowing, and a murmur as of countless far
voices: it was like the echo of some forgotten battle in the Dark Years long
ago. Pale swords were drawn; but I know not whether their blades would still
bite, for the Dead needed no longer any weapon but fear. None would withstand
them.
'To every ship they came that was drawn up, and then
they passed over the water to those that were anchored; and all the mariners
were filled with a madness of terror and leaped overboard, save the slaves
chained to the oars. Reckless we rode among our fleeing foes, driving them like
leaves, until we came to the shore. And then to each of the great ships that
remained Aragorn sent one of the Dunedain, and they comforted the captives that
were aboard, and bade them put aside fear and be free.
'Ere
that dark day ended none of the enemy were left to resist us all were drowned,
or were flying south in the hope to find their own lands upon foot. Strange and
wonderful I thought it that the designs of Mordor should be overthrown by such
wraiths of fear and darkness. With its own weapons was it
worsted!'
'Strange indeed,' said Legolas. 'In that hour I
looked on Aragorn and thought how great and terrible a Lord he might have become
in the strength of his will, had he taken the Ring to himself. Not for naught
does Mordor fear him. But nobler is his spirit than the understanding of Sauron;
for is he not of the children of Lúthien? Never shall that line fail, though the
years may lengthen beyond count.'
'Beyond the eyes of the
Dwarves are such foretellings,' said Gimli. 'But mighty indeed was Aragorn that
day. Lo! all the black fleet was in his hands; and he chose the greatest ship to
be his own, and he went up into it. Then he let sound a great concourse of
trumpets taken from the enemy; and the Shadow Host withdrew to the shore. There
they stood silent, hardly to be seen, save for a red gleam in their eyes that
caught the glare of the ships that were burning. And Aragorn spoke in a loud
voice to the Dead Men, crying:
'“Hear now the words of the
Heir of Isildur! Your oath is fulfilled. Go back and trouble not the valleys
ever again! Depart and be at rest!“
'And thereupon the King
of the Dead stood out before the host and broke his spear and cast it down. Then
he bowed low and turned away; and swiftly the whole grey host drew off and
vanished like a mist that is driven back by a sudden wind; and it seemed to me
that I awoke from a dream.
'That night we rested while
others laboured. For there were many captives set free, and many slaves released
who had been folk of Gondor taken in raids; and soon also there was a great
gathering of men out of Lebennin and the Ethir, and Angbor of Lamedon came up
with all the horsemen that he could muster. Now that the fear of the Dead was
removed they came to aid us and to look on the Heir of Isildur; for the rumour
of that name had run like fire in the dark.
'And that is
near the end of our tale. For during that evening and night many ships were made
ready and manned; and in the morning the fleet set forth. Long past it now
seems, yet it was but the morn of the day ere yesterday, the sixth since we rode
from Dunharrow. But still Aragorn was driven by fear that time was too
short.
'“It is forty leagues and two from Pelargir to the
landings at the Harlond,” he said. “Yet to the Harlond we must come tomorrow or
fail utterly.”
'The oars were now wielded by free men, and
manfully they laboured; yet slowly we passed up the Great River, for we strove
against its stream, and though that is not swift down in the South, we had no
help of wind. Heavy would my heart have been, for all our victory at the havens,
if Legolas had not laughed suddenly.
'“Up with your beard,
Durin's son!“ he said. “For thus is it spoken:
Oft hope is born, when all is
forlorn.” But what hope he saw from afar he would not tell. When night came
it did but deepen the darkness, and our hearts were hot, for away in the North
we saw a red glow under the cloud, and Aragorn said: “Minas Tirith is
burning.”
'But at midnight hope was indeed born anew.
Sea-crafty men of the Ethir gazing southward spoke of a change coming with a
fresh wind from the Sea. Long ere day the masted ships hoisted sail; and our
speed grew, until dawn whitened the foam at our prows. And so it was, as you
know, that we came in the third hour of the morning with a fair wind and the Sun
unveiled, and we unfurled the great standard in battle. It was a great day and a
great hour, whatever may come after.'
'Follow what may,
great deeds are not lessened in worth,' said Legolas. 'Great deed was the riding
of the Paths of the Dead, and great it shall remain, though none be left in
Gondor to sing of it in the days that are to come.'
'And
that may well befall,' said Gimli. 'For the faces of Aragorn and Gandalf are
grave. Much I wonder what counsels they are taking in the tents there below. For
my part, like Merry, I wish that with our victory the war was now over. Yet
whatever is still to do, I hope to have a part in it, for the honour of the folk
of the Lonely Mountain.'
'And I for the folk of the Great
Wood,' said Legolas, 'and for the love of the Lord of the White
Tree.'
Then the companions fell silent, but a while they
sat there in the high place, each busy with his own thoughts, while the Captains
debated.
When the Prince Imrahil had parted from Legolas
and Gimli, at once he sent for Éomer; and he went down with him from the City,
and they came to the tents of Aragorn that were set up on the field not far from
the place where King Théoden had fallen. And there they took counsel together
with Gandalf and Aragorn and the sons of Elrond.
'My
lords,' said Gandalf, 'listen to the words of the Steward of Gondor before he
died:
You may triumph on the fields of the Pelennor for a day, but against
the Power that has now arisen there is no victory. I do not bid you despair,
as he did, but to ponder the truth in these words.
'The
Stones of Seeing do not lie, and not even the Lord of Barad-dur can make them do
so. He can, maybe, by his will choose what things shall be seen by weaker minds,
or cause them to mistake the meaning of what they see. Nonetheless it cannot be
doubted that when Denethor saw great forces arrayed against him in Mordor, and
more still being gathered, he saw that which truly
is.
'Hardly has our strength sufficed to beat off the first
great assault. The next will be greater. This war then is without final hope, as
Denethor perceived. Victory cannot be achieved by arms, whether you sit here to
endure siege after siege, or march out to be overwhelmed beyond the River. You
have only a choice of evils; and prudence would counsel you to strengthen such
strong places as you have, and there await the onset; for so shall the time
before your end be made a little longer.'
'Then you would
have us retreat to Minas Tirith, or Dol Amroth, or to Dunharrow, and there sit
like children on sand-castles when the tide is flowing?' said
Imrahil.
'That would be no new counsel,' said Gandalf.
'Have you not done this and little more in all the days of Denethor? But no! I
said this would be prudent. I do not counsel prudence. I said victory could not
be achieved by arms. I still hope for victory, but not by arms. For into the
midst of all these policies comes the Ring of Power, the foundation of
Barad-dur, and the hope of Sauron.
'Concerning this thing,
my lords, you now all know enough for the understanding of our plight, and of
Sauron's. If he regains it, your valour is vain, and his victory will be swift
and complete: so complete that none can foresee the end of it while this world
lasts. If it is destroyed, then he will fall; and his fall will be so low that
none can foresee his arising ever again. For he will lose the best part of the
strength that was native to him in his beginning, and all that was made or begun
with that power will crumble, and he will be maimed for ever, becoming a mere
spirit of malice that gnaws itself in the shadows, but cannot again grow or take
shape. And so a great evil of this world will be
removed.
'Other evils there are that may come; for Sauron
is himself but a servant or emissary. Yet it is not our part to master all the
tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succour of those years
wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know, so that those
who live after may have clean earth to till. What weather they shall have is not
ours to rule.
'Now Sauron knows all this, and he knows that
this precious thing which he lost has been found again; but he does not yet know
where it is, or so we hope. And therefore he is now in great doubt. For if we
have found this thing, there are some among us with strength enough to wield it.
That too he knows. For do I not guess rightly, Aragorn, that you have shown
yourself to him in the Stone of Orthanc?'
'I did so ere I
rode from the Hornburg,' answered Aragorn. 'I deemed that the time was ripe, and
that the Stone had come to me for just such a purpose. It was then ten days
since the Ring-bearer went east from Rauros, and the Eye of Sauron, I thought,
should be drawn out from his own land. Too seldom has he been challenged since
he returned to his Tower. Though if I had foreseen how swift would be his onset
in answer, maybe I should not have dared to show myself. Bare time was given me
to come to your aid.'
'But how is this?' asked Éomer. 'All
is vain, you say, if he has the Ring. Why should he think it not vain to assail
us, if we have it?'
'He is not yet sure,' said Gandalf,
'and he has not built up his power by waiting until his enemies are secure, as
we have done. Also we could not learn how to wield the full power all in a day.
Indeed it can be used only by one master alone, not by many; and he will look
for a time of strife, ere one of the great among us makes himself master and
puts down the others. In that time the Ring might aid him, if he were
sudden.
'He is watching. He sees much and hears much. His
Nazgûl are still abroad. They passed over this field ere the sunrise, though few
of the weary and sleeping were aware of them. He studies the signs: the Sword
that robbed him of his treasure re-made; the winds of fortune turning in our
favour, and the defeat unlooked-for of his first assault; the fall of his great
Captain.
'His doubt will be growing, even as we speak here.
His Eye is now straining towards us, blind almost to all else that is moving. So
we must keep it. Therein lies all our hope. This, then, is my counsel. We have
not the Ring. In wisdom or great folly it has been sent away to be destroyed,
lest it destroy us. Without it we cannot by force defeat his force. But we must
at all costs keep his Eye from his true peril. We cannot achieve victory by
arms, but by arms we can give the Ring-bearer his only chance, frail though it
be.
'As Aragorn has begun, so we must go on. We must push
Sauron to his last throw. We must call out his hidden strength, so that he shall
empty his land. We must march out to meet him at once. We must make ourselves
the bait, though his jaws should close on us. He will take that bait, in hope
and in greed, for he will think that in such rashness he sees the pride of the
new Ringlord; and he will say: “So! he pushes out his neck too soon and too far.
Let him come on, and behold! I will have him in a trap from which he cannot
escape. There I will crush him, and what he has taken in his insolence shall be
mine again for ever.”
'We must walk open-eyed into that
trap, with courage, but small hope for ourselves. For, my lords, it may well
prove that we ourselves shall perish utterly in a black battle far from the
living lands; so that even if Barad-dur be thrown down, we shall not live to see
a new age. But this, I deem, is our duty. And better so than to perish
nonetheless – as we surely shall, if we sit here – and know as we die that no
new age shall be.'
They were silent for a while. At length
Aragorn spoke. 'As I have begun, so I will go on. We come now to the very brink,
where hope and despair are akin. To waver is to fall. Let none now reject the
counsels of Gandalf, whose long labours against Sauron come at last to their
test. But for him all would long ago have been lost. Nonetheless I do not yet
claim to command any man. Let others choose as they
will.'
Then said Elrohir: 'From the North we came with this
purpose, and from Elrond our father we brought this very counsel. We will not
turn back.'
'As for myself,' said Éomer, 'I have little
knowledge of these deep matters; but I need it not. This I know, and it is
enough, that as my friend Aragorn succoured me and my people, so I will aid him
when he calls. I will go.'
'As for me,' said Imrahil, 'the
Lord Aragorn I hold to be my liege-lord, whether he claim it or no. His wish is
to me a command. I will go also. Yet for a while I stand in the place of the
Steward of Gondor, and it is mine to think first of its people. To prudence some
heed must still be given. For we must prepare against all chances, good as well
as evil. Now, it may be that we shall triumph, and while there is any hope of
this, Gondor must be protected. I would not have us return with victory to a
City in ruins and a land ravaged behind us. And yet we learn from the Rohirrim
that there is an army still unfought upon our northern
flank.'
'That is true,' said Gandalf. 'I do not counsel you
to leave the City all unmanned. Indeed the force that we lead east need not be
great enough for any assault in earnest upon Mordor, so long as it be great
enough to challenge battle. And it must move soon. Therefore I ask the Captains:
what force could we muster and lead out in two days' time at the latest? And
they must be hardy men that go willingly, knowing their
peril.'
'All are weary, and very many have wounds light or
grievous,' said Éomer, 'and we have suffered much loss of our horses, and that
is ill to bear. If we must ride soon, then I cannot hope to lead even two
thousands, and yet leave as many for the defence of the
City.'
'We have not only to reckon with those who fought on
this field,' said Aragorn. 'New strength is on the way from the southern fiefs,
now that the coasts have been rid. Four thousands I sent marching from Pelargir
through Lossarnach two days ago; and Angbor the fearless rides before them. If
we set out in two days more, they will draw nigh ere we depart. Moreover many
were bidden to follow me up the River in any craft they could gather; and with
this wind they will soon be at hand, indeed several ships have already come to
the Harlond. I judge that we could lead out seven thousands of horse and foot,
and yet leave the City in better defence than it was when the assault
began.'
'The Gate is destroyed,' said Imrahil, 'and where
now is the skill to rebuild it and set it up anew?'
'In
Erebor in the Kingdom of Dain there is such skill,' said Aragorn, 'and if all
our hopes do not perish, then in time I will send Gimli Glóin's son to ask for
wrights of the Mountain. But men are better than gates, and no gate will endure
against our Enemy if men desert it.'
This then was the end
of the debate of the lords: that they should set forth on the second morning
from that day with seven thousands, if these might be found; and the great part
of this force should be on foot, because of the evil lands into which they would
go. Aragorn should find some two thousands of those that he had gathered to him
in the South; but Imrahil should find three and a half thousands; and Éomer five
hundreds of the Rohirrim who were unhorsed but themselves warworthy, and he
himself should lead five hundreds of his best Riders on horse; and another
company of five hundred horse there should be, among which should ride the sons
of Elrond with the Dunedain and the knights of Dol Amroth: all told six thousand
foot and a thousand horse. But the main strength of the Rohirrim that remained
horsed and able to fight, some three thousand under the command of Elfhelm,
should waylay the West Road against the enemy that was in Anórien. And at once
swift riders were sent out to gather what news they could northwards; and
eastwards from Osgiliath and the road to Minas Morgul.
And
when they had reckoned up all their strength and taken thought for the journeys
they should make and the roads they should choose, Imrahil suddenly laughed
aloud.
'Surely,' he cried, 'this is the greatest jest in
all the history of Gondor: that we should ride with seven thousands, scarce as
many as the vanguard of its army in the days of its power, to assail the
mountains and the impenetrable gate of the Black Land! So might a child threaten
a mail-clad knight with a bow of string and green willow! If the Dark Lord knows
so much as you say, Mithrandir, will he not rather smile than fear, and with his
little finger crush us like a fly that tries to sting
him?'
'No, he will try to trap the fly and take the sting,'
said Gandalf. 'And there are names among us that are worth more than a thousand
mail-clad knights apiece. No, he will not smile.'
'Neither
shall we,' said Aragorn. 'If this be jest, then it is too bitter for laughter.
Nay, it is the last move in a great jeopardy, and for one side or the other it
will bring the end of the game.' Then he drew Anduril and held it up glittering
in the sun. 'You shall not be sheathed again until the last battle is fought,'
he said.
Chapter 1
The Tower of Cirith
Ungol
Sam roused himself painfully from the ground. For a
moment he wondered where he was, and then all the misery and despair returned to
him. He was in the deep dark outside the under-gate of the orcs' stronghold; its
brazen doors were shut. He must have fallen stunned when he hurled himself
against them; but how long he had lain there he did not know. Then he had been
on fire, desperate and furious; now he was shivering and cold. He crept to the
doors and pressed his ears against them.
Far within he
could hear faintly the voices of ores clamouring, but soon they stopped or
passed out of hearing, and all was still. His head ached and his eyes saw
phantom lights in the darkness, but he struggled to steady himself and think. It
was clear at any rate that he had no hope of getting into the orc-hold by that
gate; he might wait there for days before it was opened, and he could not wait:
time was desperately precious. He no longer had any doubt about his duty: he
must rescue his master or perish in the attempt.
'The
perishing is more likely, and will be a lot easier anyway,' he said grimly to
himself, as he sheathed Sting and turned from the brazen doors. Slowly he groped
his way back in the dark along the tunnel, not daring to use the elven-light;
and as he went he tried to fit together the events since Frodo and he had left
the Cross-roads. He wondered what the time was. Somewhere between one day and
the next, he supposed; but even of the days he had quite lost count. He was in a
land of darkness where the days of the world seemed forgotten, and where all who
entered were forgotten too.
'I wonder if they think of us
at all,' he said, 'and what is happening to them all away there.' He waved his
hand vaguely in the air before him; but he was in fact now facing southwards, as
he came back to Shelob's tunnel, not west. Out westward in the world it was
drawing to noon upon the fourteenth day of March in the Shire-reckoning. And
even now Aragorn was leading the black fleet from Pelargir, and Merry was riding
with the Rohirrim down the Stonewain Valley, while in Minas Tirith flames were
rising and Pippin watched the madness growing in the eyes of Denethor. Yet amid
all their cares and fear the thoughts of their friends turned constantly to
Frodo and Sam. They were not forgotten. But they were far beyond aid, and no
thought could yet bring any help to Samwise Hamfast's son; he was utterly
alone.
He came back at last to the stone door of the
orc-passage, and still unable to discover the catch or bolt that held it, he
scrambled over as before and dropped softly to the ground. Then he made his way
stealthily to the outlet of Shelob's tunnel, where the rags of her great web
were still blowing and swaying in the cold airs. For cold they seemed to Sam
after the noisome darkness behind; but the breath of them revived him. He crept
cautiously out.
All was ominously quiet. The light was no
more than that of dusk at a dark day's end. The vast vapours that arose in
Mordor and went streaming westward passed low overhead, a great welter of cloud
and smoke now lit again beneath with a sullen glow of
red.
Sam looked up towards the orc-tower, and suddenly from
its narrow windows lights stared out like small red eyes. He wondered if they
were some signal. His fear of the orcs, forgotten for a while in his wrath and
desperation, now returned. As far as he could see, there was only one possible
course for him to take: he must go on and try to find the main entrance to the
dreadful tower; but his knees felt weak, and he found that he was trembling.
Drawing his eyes down from the tower and the horns of the Cleft before him, he
forced his unwilling feet to obey him, and slowly, listening with all his ears,
peering into the dense shadows of the rocks beside the way, he retraced his
steps, past the place where Frodo fell, and still the stench of Shelob lingered,
and then on and up, until he stood again in the very cleft where he had put on
the Ring and seen Shagrat's company go by.
There he halted
and sat down. For the moment he could drive himself no further. He felt that if
once he went beyond the crown of the pass and took one step veritably down into
the land of Mordor, that step would be irrevocable. He could never come back.
Without any clear purpose he drew out the Ring and put it on again. Immediately
he felt the great burden of its weight, and felt afresh, but now more strong and
urgent than ever, the malice of the Eye of Mordor, searching, trying to pierce
the shadows that it had made for its own defence, but which now hindered it in
its unquiet and doubt.
As before, Sam found that his
hearing was sharpened, but that to his sight the things of this world seemed
thin and vague. The rocky walls of the path were pale, as if seen through a
mist, but still at a distance he heard the bubbling of Shelob in her misery: and
harsh and clear, and very close it seemed, he heard cries and the clash of
metal. He sprang to his feet, and pressed himself against the wall beside the
road. He was glad of the Ring, for here was yet another company of orcs on the
march. Or so at first he thought. Then suddenly he realized that it was not so,
his hearing had deceived him: the orc-cries came from the tower, whose topmost
horn was now right above him, on the left hand of the
Cleft.
Sam shuddered and tried to force himself to move.
There was plainly some devilry going on. Perhaps in spite of all orders the
cruelty of the orcs had mastered them, and they were tormenting Frodo, or even
savagely hacking him to pieces. He listened; and as he did a gleam of hope came
to him. There could not be much doubt: there was fighting in the tower, the orcs
must be at war among themselves, Shagrat and Gorbag had come to blows. Faint as
was the hope that his guess brought him, it was enough to rouse him. There might
be just a chance. His love for Frodo rose above all other thoughts, and
forgetting his peril he cried aloud: 'I'm coming, Mr.
Frodo!'
He ran forward to the climbing path, and over it.
At once the road turned left and plunged steeply down. Sam had crossed into
Mordor.
He took off the Ring, moved it may be by some deep
premonition of danger, though to himself he thought only that he wished to see
more clearly. 'Better have a look at the worst,' he muttered. 'No good
blundering about in a fog!'
Hard and cruel and bitter was
the land that met his gaze. Before his feet the highest ridge of the Ephel Duath
fell steeply in great cliffs down into a dark trough, on the further side of
which there rose another ridge, much lower, its edge notched and jagged with
crags like fangs that stood out black against the red light behind them: it was
the grim Morgai, the inner ring of the fences of the land. Far beyond it, but
almost straight ahead, across a wide lake of darkness dotted with tiny fires,
there was a great burning glow; and from it rose in huge columns a swirling
smoke, dusty red at the roots, black above where it merged into the billowing
canopy that roofed in all the accursed land.
Sam was
looking at Orodruin, the Mountain of Fire. Ever and anon the furnaces far below
its ashen cone would grow hot and with a great surging and throbbing pour forth
rivers of molten rock from chasms in its sides. Some would flow blazing towards
Barad-dur down great channels; some would wind their way into the stony plain,
until they cooled and lay like twisted dragon-shapes vomited from the tormented
earth. In such an hour of labour Sam beheld Mount Doom, and the light of it, cut
off by the high screen of the Ephel Duath from those who climbed up the path
from the West, now glared against the stark rock faces, so that they seemed to
be drenched with blood.
In that dreadful light Sam stood
aghast, for now, looking to his left, he could see the Tower of Cirith Ungol in
all its strength. The horn that he had seen from the other side was only its
topmost turret. Its eastern face stood up in three great tiers from a shelf in
the mountain-wall far below; its back was to a great cliff behind, from which it
jutted out in pointed bastions, one above the other, diminishing as they rose,
with sheer sides of cunning masonry that looked north-east and south-east. About
the lowest tier, two hundred feet below where Sam now stood, there was a
battlemented wall enclosing a narrow court. Its gate, upon the near
south-eastern side, opened on a broad road, the outer parapet of which ran upon
the brink of a precipice, until it turned southward and went winding down into
the darkness to join the road that came over the Morgul Pass. Then on it went
through a jagged rift in the Morgai out into the valley of Gorgoroth and away to
Barad-dur. The narrow upper way on which Sam stood leapt swiftly down by stair
and steep path to meet the main road under the frowning walls close to the
Tower-gate.

As he gazed at it suddenly Sam understood,
almost with a shock, that this stronghold had been built not to keep enemies out
of Mordor, but to keep them in. It was indeed one of the works of Gondor long
ago, an eastern outpost of the defences of Ithilien, made when, after the Last
Alliance, Men of Westernesse kept watch on the evil land of Sauron where his
creatures still lurked. But as with Narchost and Carchost, the Towers of the
Teeth, so here too the vigilance had failed, and treachery had yielded up the
Tower to the Lord of the Ringwraiths, and now for long years it had been held by
evil things. Since his return to Mordor, Sauron had found it useful; for he had
few servants but many slaves of fear, and still its chief purpose as of old was
to prevent escape from Mordor. Though if an enemy were so rash as to try to
enter that land secretly, then it was also a last unsleeping guard against any
that might pass the vigilance of Morgul and of Shelob.
Only
too clearly Sam saw how hopeless it would be for him to creep down under those
many-eyed walls and pass the watchful gate. And even if he did so, he could not
go far on the guarded road beyond: not even the black shadows, lying deep where
the red glow could not reach, would shield him long from the night-eyed orcs.
But desperate as that road might be, his task was now far worse: not to avoid
the gate and escape, but to enter it, alone.
His thought
turned to the Ring, but there was no comfort there, only dread and danger. No
sooner had he come in sight of Mount Doom, burning far away, than he was aware
of a change in his burden. As it drew near the great furnaces where, in the
deeps of time, it had been shaped and forged, the Ring's power grew, and it
became more fell, untameable save by some mighty will. As Sam stood there, even
though the Ring was not on him but hanging by its chain about his neck, he felt
himself enlarged, as if he were robed in a huge distorted shadow of himself, a
vast and ominous threat halted upon the walls of Mordor. He felt that he had
from now on only two choices: to forbear the Ring, though it would torment him;
or to claim it, and challenge the Power that sat in its dark hold beyond the
valley of shadows. Already the Ring tempted him, gnawing at his will and reason.
Wild fantasies arose in his mind; and he saw Samwise the Strong, Hero of the
Age, striding with a flaming sword across the darkened land, and armies flocking
to his call as he marched to the overthrow of Barad-dur. And then all the clouds
rolled away, and the white sun shone, and at his command the vale of Gorgoroth
became a garden of flowers and trees and brought forth fruit. He had only to put
on the Ring and claim it for his own, and all this could
be.
In that hour of trial it was the love of his master
that helped most to hold him firm; but also deep down in him lived still
unconquered his plain hobbit-sense: he knew in the core of his heart that he was
not large enough to bear such a burden, even if such visions were not a mere
cheat to betray him. The one small garden of a free gardener was all his need
and due, not a garden swollen to a realm; his own hands to use, not the hands of
others to command.
'And anyway all these notions are only a
trick,' he said to himself. 'He'd spot me and cow me, before I could so much as
shout out. He'd spot me, pretty quick, if I put the Ring on now, in Mordor.
Well, all I can say is: things look as hopeless as a frost in spring. Just when
being invisible would be really useful, I can't use the Ring! And if ever I get
any further, it's going to be nothing but a drag and a burden every step. So
what's to be done?'
He was not really in any doubt. He knew
that he must go down to the gate and not linger any more. With a shrug of his
shoulders, as if to shake off the shadow and dismiss the phantoms, he began
slowly to descend. With each step he seemed to diminish. He had not gone far
before he had shrunk again to a very small and frightened hobbit. He was now
passing under the very walls of the Tower, and the cries and sounds of fighting
could be heard with his unaided ears. At the moment the noise seemed to be
coming from the court behind the outer wall.
Sam was about
half way down the path when out of the dark gateway into the red glow there came
two orcs running. They did not turn towards him. They were making for the main
road; but even as they ran they stumbled and fell to the ground and lay still.
Sam had seen no arrows, but he guessed that the orcs had been shot down by
others on the battlements or hidden in the shadow of the gate. He went on,
hugging the wall on his left. One look upward had shown him that there was no
hope of climbing it. The stone-work rose thirty feet, without a crack or ledge,
to overhanging courses like inverted steps. The gate was the only
way.
He crept on; and as he went he wondered how many orcs
lived in the Tower with Shagrat, and how many Gorbag had, and what they were
quarrelling about, if that was what was happening. Shagrat's company had seemed
to be about forty, and Gorbag's more than twice as large; but of course
Shagrat's patrol had only been a part of his garrison. Almost certainly they
were quarrelling about Frodo, and the spoil. For a second Sam halted, for
suddenly things seemed clear to him, almost as if he had seen them with his
eyes. The mithril coat! Of course, Frodo was wearing it, and they would find it.
And from what Sam had heard Gorbag would covet it. But the orders of the Dark
Tower were at present Frodo's only protection, and if they were set aside, Frodo
might be killed out of hand at any moment.
'Come on, you
miserable sluggard!' Sam cried to himself. 'Now for it!' He drew Sting and ran
towards the open gate. But just as he was about to pass under its great arch he
felt a shock: as if he had run into some web like Shelob's, only invisible. He
could see no obstacle, but something too strong for his will to overcome barred
the way. He looked about, and then within the shadow of the gate he saw the Two
Watchers.
They were like great figures seated upon thrones.
Each had three joined bodies, and three heads facing outward, and inward, and
across the gateway. The heads had vulture-faces, and on their great knees were
laid clawlike hands. They seemed to be carved out of huge blocks of stone,
immovable, and yet they were aware: some dreadful spirit of evil vigilance abode
in them. They knew an enemy. Visible or invisible none could pass unheeded. They
would forbid his entry, or his escape.
Hardening his will
Sam thrust forward once again, and halted with a jerk, staggering as if from a
blow upon his breast and head. Then greatly daring, because he could think of
nothing else to do, answering a sudden thought that came to him, he drew slowly
out the phial of Galadriel and held it up. Its white light quickened swiftly,
and the shadows under the dark arch fled. The monstrous Watchers sat there cold
and still, revealed in all their hideous shape. For a moment Sam caught a
glitter in the black stones of their eyes, the very malice of which made him
quail; but slowly he felt their will waver and crumble into
fear.
He sprang past them; but even as he did so, thrusting
the phial back into his bosom, he was aware, as plainly as if a bar of steel had
snapped to behind him, that their vigilance was renewed. And from those evil
heads there came a high shrill cry that echoed in the towering walls before him.
Far up above, like an answering signal, a harsh bell clanged a single
stroke.
'That's done it!' said Sam. 'Now I've rung the
front-door bell! Well, come on somebody!' he cried. 'Tell Captain Shagrat that
the great Elf-warrior has called, with his elf-sword
too!'
There was no answer. Sam strode forward. Sting
glittered blue in his hand. The courtyard lay in deep shadow, but he could see
that the pavement was strewn with bodies. Right at his feet were two orc-archers
with knives sticking in their backs. Beyond lay many more shapes; some singly as
they had been hewn down or shot; others in pairs, still grappling one another,
dead in the very throes of stabbing, throttling, biting. The stones were
slippery with dark blood.
Two liveries Sam noticed, one
marked by the Red Eye, the other by a Moon disfigured with a ghastly face of
death; but he did not stop to look more closely. Across the court a great door
at the foot of the Tower stood half open, and a red light came through; a large
orc lay dead upon the threshold. Sam sprang over the body and went in; and then
he peered about at a loss.
A wide and echoing passage led
back from the door towards the mountain-side. It was dimly lit with torches
flaring in brackets on the walls, but its distant end was lost in gloom. Many
doors and openings could be seen on this side and that; but it was empty save
for two or three more bodies sprawling on the floor. From what he had heard of
the captains' talk Sam knew that, dead or alive, Frodo would most likely be
found in a chamber high up in the turret far above; but he might search for a
day before he found the way.
'It'll be near the back, I
guess,' Sam muttered. 'The whole Tower climbs backwards-like. And anyway I'd
better follow these lights.'
He advanced down the passage,
but slowly now, each step more reluctant. Terror was beginning to grip him
again. There was no sound save the rap of his feet, which seemed to grow to an
echoing noise, like the slapping of great hands upon the stones. The dead
bodies; the emptiness; the dank black walls that in the torchlight seemed to
drip with blood; the fear of sudden death lurking in doorway or shadow; and
behind all his mind the waiting watchful malice at the gate: it was almost more
than he could screw himself to face. He would have welcomed a fight - with not
too many enemies at a time – rather than this hideous brooding uncertainty. He
forced himself to think of Frodo, lying bound or in pain or dead somewhere in
this dreadful place. He went on.
He had passed beyond the
torchlight, almost to a great arched door at the end of the passage, the inner
side of the under gate, as he rightly guessed, when there came from high above a
dreadful choking shriek. He stopped short. Then he heard feet coming. Someone
was running in great haste down an echoing stairway
overhead.
His will was too weak and slow to restrain his
hand. It dragged at the chain and clutched the Ring. But Sam did not put it on;
for even as he clasped it to his breast, an orc came clattering down. Leaping
out of a dark opening at the right, it ran towards him. It was no more than six
paces from him when, lifting its head, it saw him; and Sam could hear its
gasping breath and see the glare in its bloodshot eyes. It stopped short aghast.
For what it saw was not a small frightened hobbit trying to hold a steady sword:
it saw a great silent shape, cloaked in a grey shadow, looming against the
wavering light behind; in one hand it held a sword, the very light of which was
a bitter pain, the other was clutched at its breast, but held concealed some
nameless menace of power and doom.
For a moment the orc
crouched, and then with a hideous yelp of fear it turned and fled back as it had
come. Never was any dog more heartened when its enemy turned tail than Sam at
this unexpected flight. With a shout he gave chase.
'Yes!
The Elf-warrior is loose!' he cried. 'I'm coming. Just you show me the way up,
or I'll skin you!'
But the orc was in its own haunts,
nimble and well-fed. Sam was a stranger, hungry and weary. The stairs were high
and steep and winding. Sam's breath began to come in gasps. The orc had soon
passed out of sight, and now only faintly could be heard the slapping of its
feet as it went on and up. Every now and again it gave a yell, and the echo ran
along the walls. But slowly all sound of it died away.
Sam
plodded on. He felt that he was on the right road, and his spirits had risen a
good deal. He thrust the Ring away and tightened his belt. 'Well, well!' he
said. 'If only they all take such a dislike to me and my Sting, this may turn
out better than I hoped. And anyway it looks as if Shagrat, Gorbag, and company
have done nearly all my job for me. Except for that little frightened rat, I do
believe there's nobody left alive in the place!'
And with
that he stopped, brought up hard, as if he had hit his head against the stone
wall. The full meaning of what he had said struck him like a blow. Nobody left
alive! Whose had been that horrible dying shriek? 'Frodo, Frodo! Master!' he
cried half sobbing. 'If they've killed you, what shall I do? Well, I'm coming at
last, right to the top, to see what I must.'
Up, up he
went. It was dark save for an occasional torch flaring at a turn, or beside some
opening that led into the higher levels of the Tower. Sam tried to count the
steps, but after two hundred he lost his reckoning. He was moving quietly now:
for he thought that he could hear the sound of voices talking, still some way
above. More than one rat remained alive, it seemed.
All at
once, when he felt that he could pump out no more breath, nor force his knees to
bend again, the stair ended. He stood still. The voices were now loud and near.
Sam peered about. He had climbed right to the flat roof of the third and highest
tier of the Tower: an open space, about twenty yards across, with a low parapet.
There the stair was covered by a small domed chamber in the midst of the roof,
with low doors facing east and west. Eastward Sam could see the plain of Mordor
vast and dark below, and the burning mountain far away. A fresh turmoil was
surging in its deep wells, and the rivers of fire blazed so fiercely that even
at this distance of many miles the light of them lit the tower-top with a red
glare. Westward the view was blocked by the base of the great turret that stood
at the back of this upper court and reared its horn high above the crest of the
encircling hills. Light gleamed in a window-slit. Its door was not ten yards
from where Sam stood. It was open but dark, and from just within its shadow the
voices came.
At first Sam did not listen; he took a pace
out of the eastward door and looked about. At once he saw that up here the
fighting had been fiercest. All the court was choked with dead orcs or their
severed and scattered heads and limbs. The place stank of death. A snarl
followed by a blow and a cry sent him darting back into hiding. An orc-voice
rose in anger, and he knew it again at once, harsh, brutal, cold. It was Shagrat
speaking, Captain of the Tower.
'You won't go again, you
say? Curse you, Snaga, you little maggot! If you think I'm so damaged that it's
safe to flout me, you're mistaken. Come here, and I'll squeeze your eyes out,
like I did to Radbug just now. And when some new lads come, I'll deal with you:
I'll send you to Shelob.'
'They won't come, not before
you're dead anyway,' answered Snaga surlily. 'I've told you twice that Gorbag's
swine got to the gate first, and none of ours got out. Lagduf and Muzgash ran
through, but they were shot. I saw it from a window, I tell you. And they were
the last.'
'Then you must go. I must stay here anyway. But
I'm hurt. The Black Pits take that filthy rebel Gorbag!' Shagrat's voice trailed
off into a string of foul names and curses. 'I gave him better than I got, but
he knifed me, the dung, before I throttled him. You must go, or I'll eat you.
News must get through to Lugburz, or we'll both be for the Black Pits. Yes, you
too. You won't escape by skulking here.'
'I'm not going
down those stairs again,' growled Snaga, 'be you captain or no. Nar! Keep your
hands off your knife, or I'll put an arrow in your guts. You won't be a captain
long when they hear about all these goings-on. I've fought for the Tower against
those stinking Morgul-rats, but a nice mess you two precious captains have made
of things, fighting over the swag.'
'That's enough from
you,' snarled Shagrat. 'I had my orders. It was Gorbag started it, trying to
pinch that pretty shirt.'
'Well, you put his back up, being
so high and mighty. And he had more sense than you anyway. He told you more than
once that the most dangerous of these spies was still loose, and you wouldn't
listen. And you won't listen now. Gorbag was right, I tell you. There's a great
fighter about, one of those bloody-handed Elves, or one of the filthy
tarks.
1 He's
coming here, I tell you. You heard the bell. He's got past the Watchers, and
that's
tark's work. He's on the stairs. And until he's off them, I'm not
going down. Not if you were a Nazgûl, I wouldn't.'
'So
that's it, is it?' yelled Shagrat. 'You'll do this, and you'll not do that? And
when he does come, you'll bolt and leave me? No, you won't! I'll put red
maggot-holes in your belly first.'
Out of the turret-door
the smaller orc came flying. Behind him came Shagrat, a large orc with long arms
that, as he ran crouching, reached to the ground. But one arm hung limp and
seemed to be bleeding; the other hugged a large black bundle. In the red glare
Sam, cowering behind the stair-door, caught a glimpse of his evil face as it
passed: it was scored as if by rending claws and smeared with blood; slaver
dripped from its protruding fangs; the mouth snarled like an
animal.
As far as Sam could see, Shagrat hunted Snaga round
the roof, until ducking and eluding him the smaller orc with a yelp darted back
into the turret and disappeared. Then Shagrat halted. Out of the eastward door
Sam could see him now by the parapet, panting, his left claw clenching and
unclenching feebly. He put the bundle on the floor and with his right claw drew
out a long red knife and spat on it. Going to the parapet he leaned over,
looking down into the outer court far below. Twice he shouted but no answer
came.
Suddenly, as Shagrat was stooped over the battlement,
his back to the roof-top, Sam to his amazement saw that one of the sprawling
bodies was moving. It was crawling. It put out a claw and clutched the bundle.
It staggered up. In its other hand it held a broad-headed spear with a short
broken haft. It was poised for a stabbing thrust. But at that very moment a hiss
escaped its teeth, a gasp of pain or hate. Quick as a snake Shagrat slipped
aside, twisted round, and drove his knife into his enemy's
throat.
'Got you, Gorbag!' he cried. 'Not quite dead, eh?
Well, I'll finish my job now.' He sprang on to the fallen body, and stamped and
trampled it in his fury, stooping now and again to stab and slash it with his
knife. Satisfied at last, he threw back his head and let out a horrible gurgling
yell of triumph. Then he licked his knife, and put it between his teeth, and
catching up the bundle he came loping towards the near door of the
stairs.
Sam had no time to think. He might have slipped out
of the other door, but hardly without being seen; and he could not have played
hide-and-seek with this hideous orc for long. He did what was probably the best
thing he could have done. He sprang out to meet Shagrat with a shout. He was no
longer holding the Ring, but it was there, a hidden power, a cowing menace to
the slaves of Mordor; and in his hand was Sting, and its light smote the eyes of
the orc like the glitter of cruel stars in the terrible elf-countries, the dream
of which was a cold fear to all his kind. And Shagrat could not both fight and
keep hold of his treasure. He stopped, growling, baring his fangs. Then once
more, orc-fashion, he leapt aside, and as Sam sprang at him, using the heavy
bundle as both shield and weapon, he thrust it hard into his enemy's face. Sam
staggered, and before he could recover, Shagrat darted past and down the
stairs.
Sam ran after him, cursing, but he did not go far.
Soon the thought of Frodo returned to him, and he remembered that the other orc
had gone back into the turret. Here was another dreadful choice, and he had no
time to ponder it. If Shagrat got away, he would soon get help and come back.
But if Sam pursued him, the other orc might do some horrible deed up there. And
anyway Sam might miss Shagrat or be killed by him. He turned quickly and ran
back up the stairs. 'Wrong again, I expect,' he sighed. 'But it's my job to go
right up to the top first, whatever happens
afterwards.'
Away below Shagrat went leaping down the
stairs and out over the court and through the gate, bearing his precious burden.
If Sam could have seen him and known the grief that his escape would bring, he
might have quailed. But now his mind was set on the last stage of his search. He
came cautiously to the turret-door and stepped inside. It opened into darkness.
But soon his staring eyes were aware of a dim light at his right hand. It came
from an opening that led to another stairway, dark and narrow: it appeared to go
winding up the turret along the inside of its round outer wall. A torch was
glimmering from somewhere up above.
Softly Sam began to
climb. He came to the guttering torch, fixed above a door on his left that faced
a window-slit looking out westward: one of the red eyes that he and Frodo had
seen from down below by the tunnel's mouth. Quickly Sam passed the door and
hurried on to the second storey, dreading at any moment to he attacked and to
feel throttling fingers seize his throat from behind. He came next to a window
looking east and another torch above the door to a passage through the middle of
the turret. The door was open, the passage dark save for the glimmer of the
torch and the red glare from outside filtering through the window-slit. But here
the stair stopped and climbed no further. Sam crept into the passage. On either
side there was a low door; both were closed and locked. There was no sound at
all.
'A dead end,' muttered Sam; 'and after all my climb!
This can't be the top of the tower. But what can I do
now?'
He ran back to the lower storey and tried the door.
It would not move. He ran up again, and sweat began to trickle down his face. He
felt that even minutes were precious, but one by one they escaped; and he could
do nothing. He cared no longer for Shagrat or Snaga or any other orc that was
ever spawned. He longed only for his master, for one sight of his face or one
touch of his hand.
At last, weary and feeling finally
defeated, he sat on a step below the level of the passage-floor and bowed his
head into his hands. It was quiet, horribly quiet. The torch, that was already
burning low when he arrived, sputtered and went out; and he felt the darkness
cover him like a tide. And then softly, to his own surprise, there at the vain
end of his long journey and his grief, moved by what thought in his heart he
could not tell, Sam began to sing.
His voice sounded thin
and quavering in the cold dark tower: the voice of a forlorn and weary hobbit
that no listening orc could possibly mistake for the clear song of an
Elven-lord. He murmured old childish tunes out of the Shire, and snatches of Mr.
Bilbo's rhymes that came into his mind like fleeting glimpses of the country of
his home. And then suddenly new strength rose in him, and his voice rang out,
while words of his own came unbidden to fit the simple tune.
In western lands beneath the Sun
the flowers may rise in
Spring,
the trees may bud, the waters run,
the merry finches sing.
Or
there maybe 'tis cloudless night
and swaying beeches bear
the
Elven-stars as jewels white
amid their branching
hair.
Though here at journey's end I lie
in
darkness buried deep,
beyond all towers strong and high,
beyond all
mountains steep,
above all shadows rides the Sun
and Stars for ever
dwell:
I will not say the Day is done,
nor bid the Stars
farewell.
'Beyond all towers strong
and high,' he began again, and then he stopped short. He thought that he had
heard a faint voice answering him. But now he could hear nothing. Yes, he could
hear something, but not a voice. Footsteps were approaching. Now a door was
being opened quietly in the passage above; the hinges creaked. Sam crouched down
listening. The door closed with a dull thud; and then a snarling orc-voice rang
out.
'Ho la! You up there, you dunghill rat! Stop your
squeaking, or I'll come and deal with you. D'you
hear?'
There was no answer.
'All
right,' growled Snaga. 'But I'll come and have a look at you all the same, and
see what you're up to.'
The hinges creaked again, and Sam,
now peering over the corner of the passage-threshold, saw a flicker of light in
an open doorway, and the dim shape of an orc coming out. He seemed to be
carrying a ladder. Suddenly the answer dawned on Sam: the topmost chamber was
reached by a trap-door in the roof of the passage. Snaga thrust the ladder
upwards, steadied it, and then clambered out of sight. Sam heard a bolt drawn
back. Then he heard the hideous voice speaking again.
'You
lie quiet, or you'll pay for it! You've not got long to live in peace, I guess;
but if you don't want the fun to begin right now, keep your trap shut, see?
There's a reminder for you!' There was a sound like the crack of a
whip.
At that rage blazed in Sam's heart to a sudden fury.
He sprang up, ran, and went up the ladder like a cat. His head came out in the
middle of the floor of a large round chamber. A red lamp hung from its roof; the
westward window-slit was high and dark. Something was lying on the floor by the
wall under the window, but over it a black orc-shape was straddled. It raised a
whip a second time, but the blow never fell.
With a cry Sam
leapt across the floor, Sting in hand. The orc wheeled round, but before it
could make a move Sam slashed its whip-hand from its arm. Howling with pain and
fear but desperate the orc charged head-down at him. Sam's next blow went wide,
and thrown off his balance he fell backwards, clutching at the orc as it
stumbled over him. Before he could scramble up he heard a cry and a thud. The
orc in its wild haste had tripped on the ladder-head and fallen through the open
trap-door. Sam gave no more thought to it. He ran to the figure huddled on the
floor. It was Frodo.
He was naked, lying as if in a swoon
on a heap of filthy rags: his arm was flung up, shielding his head, and across
his side there ran an ugly whip-weal.
'Frodo! Mr. Frodo, my
dear!' cried Sam, tears almost blinding him. 'It's Sam, I've come!' He half
lifted his master and hugged him to his breast. Frodo opened his
eyes.
'Am I still dreaming?' he muttered. 'But the other
dreams were horrible.'
'You're not dreaming at all,
Master,' said Sam. 'It's real. It's me. I've come.'
'I can
hardly believe it,' said Frodo, clutching him. 'There was an orc with a whip,
and then it turns into Sam! Then I wasn't dreaming after all when I heard that
singing down below, and I tried to answer? Was it you?'
'It
was indeed, Mr. Frodo. I'd given up hope, almost. I couldn't find
you.'
'Well, you have now, Sam, dear Sam,' said Frodo, and
he lay back in Sam's gentle arms, closing his eyes, like a child at rest when
night-fears are driven away by some loved voice or
hand.
Sam felt that he could sit like that in endless
happiness; but it was not allowed. It was not enough for him to find his master,
he had still to try and save him. He kissed Frodo's forehead. 'Come! Wake up Mr.
Frodo!' he said, trying to sound as cheerful as he had when he drew back the
curtains at Bag End on a summer's morning.
Frodo sighed and
sat up. 'Where are we? How did I get here?' he
asked.
'There's no time for tales till we get somewhere
else, Mr. Frodo,' said Sam. 'But you're in the top of that tower you and me saw
from away down by the tunnel before the orcs got you. How long ago that was I
don't know. More than a day, I guess.'
'Only that?' said
Frodo. 'It seems weeks. You must tell me all about it, if we get a chance.
Something hit me, didn't it? And I fell into darkness and foul dreams, and woke
and found that waking was worse. Orcs were all round me. I think they had just
been pouring some horrible burning drink down my throat. My head grew clear, but
I was aching and weary. They stripped me of everything; and then two great
brutes came and questioned me, questioned me until I thought I should go mad,
standing over me, gloating, fingering their knives. I'll never forget their
claws and eyes.'
'You won't, if you talk about them, Mr.
Frodo,' said Sam. 'And if we don't want to see them again, the sooner we get
going the better. Can you walk?'
'Yes, I can walk,' said
Frodo, getting up slowly. 'I am not hurt Sam. Only I feel very tired, and I've a
pain here.' He put his hand to the back of his neck above his left shoulder. He
stood up, and it looked to Sam as if he was clothed in flame: his naked skin was
scarlet in the light of the lamp above. Twice he paced across the
floor.
'That's better!' he said, his spirits rising a
little. 'I didn't dare to move when I was left alone, or one of the guards came.
Until the yelling and fighting began. The two big brutes: they quarrelled, I
think. Over me and my things. I lay here terrified. And then all went deadly
quiet, and that was worse.'
'Yes, they quarrelled,
seemingly,' said Sam. 'There must have been a couple of hundred of the dirty
creatures in this place. A bit of a tall order for Sam Gamgee, as you might say.
But they've done all the killing of themselves. That's lucky, but it's too long
to make a song about, till we're out of here. Now what's to be done? You can't
go walking in the Black Land in naught but your skin, Mr.
Frodo.'
'They've taken everything, Sam,' said Frodo.
'Everything I had. Do you understand?
Everything!' He cowered on the
floor again with bowed head, as his own words brought home to him the fullness
of the disaster, and despair overwhelmed him. 'The quest has failed Sam. Even if
we get out of here, we can't escape. Only Elves can escape. Away, away out of
Middle-earth, far away over the Sea. If even that is wide enough to keep the
Shadow out.'
'No,
not everything, Mr. Frodo. And it
hasn't failed, not yet. I took it, Mr. Frodo, begging your pardon. And I've kept
it safe. It's round my neck now, and a terrible burden it is, too.' Sam fumbled
for the Ring and its chain. 'But I suppose you must take it back.' Now it had
come to it, Sam felt reluctant to give up the Ring and burden his master with it
again.
'You've got it?' gasped Frodo. 'You've got it here?
Sam, you're a marvel!' Then quickly and strangely his tone changed. 'Give it to
me!' he cried, standing up, holding out a trembling hand. 'Give it me at once!
You can't have it!'
'All right, Mr. Frodo,' said Sam,
rather startled. 'Here it is!' Slowly he drew the Ring out and passed the chain
over his head. 'But you're in the land of Mordor now, sir; and when you get out,
you'll see the Fiery Mountain and all. You'll find the Ring very dangerous now,
and very hard to bear. If it's too hard a job, I could share it with you,
maybe?'
'No, no!' cried Frodo, snatching the Ring and chain
from Sam's hands. 'No you won't, you thief!' He panted, staring at Sam with eyes
wide with fear and enmity. Then suddenly, clasping the Ring in one clenched
fist, he stood aghast. A mist seemed to clear from his eyes, and he passed a
hand over his aching brow. The hideous vision had seemed so real to him, half
bemused as he was still with wound and fear. Sam had changed before his very
eyes into an orc again, leering and pawing at his treasure, a foul little
creature with greedy eyes and slobbering mouth. But now the vision had passed.
There was Sam kneeling before him, his face wrung with pain, as if he had been
stabbed in the heart; tears welled from his eyes.
'O Sam!'
cried Frodo. 'What have I said? What have I done? Forgive me! After all you have
done. It is the horrible power of the Ring. I wish it had never, never, been
found. But don't mind me, Sam. I must carry the burden to the end. It can't be
altered. You can't come between me and this doom.'
'That's
all right, Mr. Frodo,' said Sam, rubbing his sleeve across his eyes. 'I
understand. But I can still help, can't I? I've got to get you out of here. At
once, see! But first you want some clothes and gear and then some food. The
clothes will be the easiest part. As we're in Mordor, we'd, best dress up
Mordor-fashion; and anyway there isn't no choice. It'll have to be orc-stuff for
you, Mr. Frodo, I'm afraid. And for me too. If we go together, we'd best match.
Now put this round you!'
Sam unclasped his grey cloak and
cast it about Frodo's shoulders. Then unslinging his pack he laid it on the
floor. He drew Sting from its sheath. Hardly a flicker was to be seen upon its
blade. 'I was forgetting this, Mr. Frodo,' he said. 'No, they didn't get
everything! You lent me Sting, if you remember, and the Lady's glass. I've got
them both still. But lend them to me a little longer, Mr. Frodo. I must go and
see what I can find. You stay here. Walk about a bit and ease your legs. I
shan't be long. I shan't have to go far.'
'Take care, Sam!'
said Frodo. 'And be quick! There may be orcs still alive, lurking in
wait.'
'I've got to chance it,' said Sam. He stepped to the
trap-door and slipped down the ladder. In a minute his head reappeared. He threw
a long knife on the floor.
'There's something that might be
useful,' he said. 'He's dead: the one that whipped you. Broke his neck, it
seems, in his hurry. Now you draw up the ladder, if you can, Mr. Frodo; and
don't you let it down till you hear me call the password.
Elbereth I'll
call. What the Elves say. No orc would say that.'
Frodo sat
for a while and shivered, dreadful fears chasing one another through his mind.
Then he got up, drew the grey elven-cloak about him, and to keep his mind
occupied, began to walk to and fro, prying and peering into every corner of his
prison.
It was not very long, though fear made it seem an
hour at least, before he heard Sam's voice calling softly from below:
Elbereth, Elbereth. Frodo let down the light ladder. Up came Sam,
puffing, heaving a great bundle on his head. He let it fall with a
thud.
'Quick now, Mr. Frodo!' he said. 'I've had a bit of a
search to find anything small enough for the likes of us. We'll have to make do.
But we must hurry. I've met nothing alive, and I've seen nothing but I'm not
easy. I think this place is being watched. I can't explain it, but well, it
feels to me as if one of those foul flying Riders was about, up in the blackness
where he can't be seen.'
He opened the bundle. Frodo looked
in disgust at the contents, but there was nothing for it: he had to put the
things on, or go naked. There were long hairy breeches of some unclean
beast-fell, and a tunic of dirty leather. He drew them on. Over the tunic went a
coat of stout ring-mail, short for a full-sized orc, too long for Frodo and
heavy. About it he clasped a belt, at which there hung a short sheath holding a
broad-bladed stabbing-sword. Sam had brought several orc-helmets. One of them
fitted Frodo well enough, a black cap with iron rim, and iron hoops covered with
leather upon which the evil Eye was painted in red above the beaklike
nose-guard.
'The Morgul-stuff, Gorbag's gear, was a better
fit and better made,' said Sam; 'but it wouldn't do, I guess, to go carrying his
tokens into Mordor, not after this business here. Well, there you are, Mr.
Frodo. A perfect little orc, if I may make so bold - at least you would be, if
we could cover your face with a mask, give you longer arms, and make you
bow-legged. This will hide some of the tell-tales.' He put a large black cloak
round Frodo's shoulders. 'Now you're ready! You can pick up a shield as we
go.'
'What about you, Sam?' said Frodo. 'Aren't we going to
match?'
'Well, Mr. Frodo, I've been thinking,' said Sam.
'I'd best not leave any of my stuff behind, and we can't destroy it. And I can't
wear orc-mail over all my clothes, can I? I'll just have to cover
up.'
He knelt down and carefully folded his elven-cloak. It
went into a surprisingly small roll. This he put into his pack that lay on the
floor. Standing up, he slung it behind his back, put an orc-helm on his head,
and cast another black cloak about his shoulders. 'There!' he said. 'Now we
match, near enough. And now we must be off!'
'I can't go
all the way at a run, Sam,' said Frodo with a wry smile. 'I hope you've made
inquiries about inns along the road? Or have you forgotten about food and
drink?'
'Save me, but so I had!' said Sam. He whistled in
dismay. 'Bless me, Mr. Frodo, but you've gone and made me that hungry and
thirsty! I don't know when drop or morsel last passed my lips. I'd forgotten it,
trying to find you. But let me think! Last time I looked I'd got about enough of
that waybread, and of what Captain Faramir gave us, to keep me on my legs for a
couple of weeks at a pinch. But if there's a drop left in my bottle, there's no
more. That's not going to be enough for two, nohow. Don't orcs eat, and don't
they drink? Or do they just live on foul air and
poison?'
'No, they eat and drink, Sam. The Shadow that bred
them can only mock, it cannot make: not real new things of its own. I don't
think it gave life to the orcs, it only ruined them and twisted them; and if
they are to live at all, they have to live like other living creatures. Foul
waters and foul meats they'll take, if they can get no better, but not poison.
They've fed me, and so I'm better off than you. There must be food and water
somewhere in this place.'
'But there's no time to look for
them,' said Sam.
'Well, things are a bit better than you
think,' said Frodo. 'I have had a bit of luck while you were away. Indeed they
did not take everything. I've found my food-bag among some rags on the floor.
They've rummaged it, of course. But I guess they disliked the very look and
smell of the
lembas, worse than Gollum did. It's scattered about and some
of it is trampled and broken, but I've gathered it together. It's not far short
of what you've got. But they've taken Faramir's food, and they've slashed up my
water-bottle.'
'Well, there's no more to be said,' said
Sam. 'We've got enough to start on. But the water's going to be a bad business.
But come Mr. Frodo! Off we go, or a whole lake of it won't do us any
good!'
'Not till you've had a mouthful, Sam,' said Frodo.
'I won't budge. Here, take this elven-cake, and drink that last drop in your
bottle! The whole thing is quite hopeless, so it's no good worrying about
tomorrow. It probably won't come.'
At last they started.
Down the ladder they climbed, and then Sam took it and laid it in the passage
beside the huddled body of the fallen orc. The stair was dark, but on the
roof-top the glare of the Mountain could still be seen, though it was dying down
now to a sullen red. They picked up two shields to complete their disguise and
then went on.
Down the great stairway they plodded. The
high chamber of the turret behind, where they had met again, seemed almost
homely: they were out in the open again now, and terror ran along the walls. All
might be dead in the Tower of Cirith Ungol, but it was steeped in fear and evil
still.
At length they came to the door upon the outer
court, and they halted. Even from where they stood they felt the malice of the
Watchers beating on them, black silent shapes on either side of the gate through
which the glare of Mordor dimly showed. As they threaded their way among the
hideous bodies of the orcs each step became more difficult. Before they even
reached the archway they were brought to a stand. To move an inch further was a
pain and weariness to will and limb.
Frodo had no strength
for such a battle. He sank to the ground. 'I can't go on, Sam,' he murmured.
'I'm going to faint. I don't know what's come over me.'
'I
do, Mr. Frodo. Hold up now! It's the gate. There's some devilry there. But I got
through, and I'm going to get out. It can't be more dangerous than before. Now
for it!'
Sam drew out the elven-glass of Galadriel again.
As if to do honour to his hardihood, and to grace with splendour his faithful
brown hobbit-hand that had done such deeds, the phial blazed forth suddenly, so
that all the shadowy court was lit with a dazzling radiance like lightning; but
it remained steady and did not pass.
'
Gilthoniel, A
Elbereth!' Sam cried. For, why he did not know, his thought sprang back
suddenly to the Elves in the Shire, and the song that drove away the Black Rider
in the trees.
'
Aiya elenion ancalima!' cried Frodo
once again behind him.
The will of the Watchers was broken
with a suddenness like the snapping of a cord, and Frodo and Sam stumbled
forward. Then they ran. Through the gate and past the great seated figures with
their glittering eyes. There was a crack. The keystone of the arch crashed
almost on their heels, and the wall above crumbled, and fell in ruin. Only by a
hair did they escape. A bell clanged; and from the Watchers there went up a high
and dreadful wail. Far up above in the darkness it was answered. Out of the
black sky there came dropping like a bolt a winged shape, rending the clouds
with a ghastly shriek.
Chapter 2
The Land of
Shadow
Sam had just wits enough left to thrust the phial back
into his breast. 'Run, Mr. Frodo!' he cried. 'No, not that way! There's a sheer
drop over the wall. Follow me!'
Down the road from the gate
they fled. In fifty paces, with a swift bend round a jutting bastion of the
cliff, it took them out of sight from the Tower. They had escaped for the
moment. Cowering back against the rock they drew breath, and then they clutched
at their hearts. Perching now on the wall beside the ruined gate the Nazgûl sent
out its deadly cries. All the cliffs echoed.
In terror they stumbled on. Soon the road bent
sharply eastward again and exposed them for a dreadful moment to view from the
Tower. As they flitted across they glanced back and saw the great black shape
upon the battlement; then they plunged down between high rock-walls in a cutting
that fell steeply to join the Morgul-road. They came to the way-meeting. There
was still no sign of orcs, nor of an answer to the cry of the Nazgûl; but they
knew that the silence would not last long. At any moment now the hunt would
begin.
'This won't do, Sam,' said Frodo. 'If we were real
orcs, we ought to be dashing back to the Tower, not running away. The first
enemy we meet will know us. We must get off this road
somehow.'
'But we can't,' said Sam, 'not without
wings.'
The eastern faces of the Ephel Duath were sheer,
falling in cliff and precipice to the black trough that lay between them and the
inner ridge. A short way beyond the way-meeting, after another steep incline, a
flying bridge of stone leapt over the chasm and bore the road across into the
tumbled slopes and glens of the Morgai. With a desperate spurt Frodo and Sam
dashed along the bridge; but they had hardly reached its further end when they
heard the hue and cry begin. Away behind them, now high above on the
mountain-side, loomed the Tower of Cirith Ungol, its stones glowing dully.
Suddenly its harsh bell clanged again, and then broke into a shattering peal.
Horns sounded. And now from beyond the bridge-end came answering cries. Down in
the dark trough, cut off from the dying glare of Orodruin, Frodo and Sam could
not see ahead, but already they heard the tramp of iron-shod feet, and upon the
road there rang the swift clatter of hoofs.
'Quick, Sam!
Over we go!' cried Frodo. They scrambled on to the low parapet of the bridge.
Fortunately there was no longer any dreadful drop into the gulf, for the slopes
of the Morgai had already risen almost to the level of the road; but it was too
dark for them to guess the depth of the fall.
'Well, here
goes, Mr. Frodo,' said Sam. 'Good-bye!'
He let go. Frodo
followed. And even as they fell they heard the rush of horsemen sweeping over
the bridge and the rattle of orc-feet running up behind. But Sam would have
laughed, if he had dared. Half fearing a breaking plunge down on to unseen rocks
the hobbits landed, in a drop of no more than a dozen feet, with a thud and a
crunch into the last thing that they had expected: a tangle of thorny bushes.
There Sam lay still, softly sucking a scratched hand.
When
the sound of hoof and foot had passed he ventured a whisper. 'Bless me, Mr.
Frodo, but I didn't know as anything grew in Mordor! But if I had a'known, this
is just what I'd have looked for. These thorns must be a foot long by the feel
of them; they've stuck through everything I've got on. Wish I'd a'put that
mail-shirt on!'
'Orc-mail doesn't keep these thorns out,'
said Frodo. 'Not even a leather jerkin is any good.'
They
had a struggle to get out of the thicket. The thorns and briars were as tough as
wire and as clinging as claws. Their cloaks were rent and tattered before they
broke free at last.
'Now down we go, Sam,' Frodo whispered.
'Down into the valley quick, and then turn northward, as soon as ever we
can.'
Day was coming again in the world outside, and far
beyond the glooms of Mordor the Sun was climbing over the eastern rim of
Middle-earth; but here all was still dark as night. The Mountain smouldered and
its fires went out. The glare faded from the cliffs. The easterly wind that had
been blowing ever since they left Ithilien now seemed dead. Slowly and painfully
they clambered down, groping, stumbling, scrambling among rock and briar and
dead wood in the blind shadows, down and down until they could go no
further.
At length they stopped, and sat side by side,
their backs against a boulder. Both were sweating. 'If Shagrat himself was to
offer me a glass of water, I'd shake his hand,' said
Sam.
'Don't say such things!' said Frodo. 'It only makes it
worse.' Then he stretched himself out, dizzy and weary, and he spoke no more for
a while. At last with a struggle he got up again. To his amazement he found that
Sam was asleep. 'Wake up, Sam!' he said. 'Come on! It's time we made another
effort.'
Sam scrambled to his feet. 'Well I never!' he
said. 'I must have dropped off. It's a long time, Mr. Frodo, since I had a
proper sleep, and my eyes just closed down on their
own.'
Frodo now led the way, northward as near as he could
guess, among the stones and boulders lying thick at the bottom of the great
ravine. But presently he stopped again.
'It's no good,
Sam,' he said. 'I can't manage it. This mail-shirt, I mean. Not in my present
state. Even my mithril-coat seemed heavy when I was tired. This is far heavier.
And what's the use of it? We shan't win through by
fighting.'
'But we may have some to do,' said Sam. 'And
there's knives and stray arrows. That Gollum isn't dead, for one thing. I don't
like to think of you with naught but a bit of leather between you and a stab in
the dark.'
'Look here, Sam dear lad,' said Frodo, 'I am
tired, weary, I haven't a hope left. But I have to go on trying to get to the
Mountain, as long as I can move. The Ring is enough. This extra weight is
killing me. It must go. But don't think I'm ungrateful. I hate to think of the
foul work you must have had among the bodies to find it for
me.'
'Don't talk about it, Mr. Frodo. Bless you! I'd carry
you on my back, if I could. Let it go then!'
Frodo laid
aside his cloak and took off the orc-mail and flung it away. He shivered a
little. 'What I really need is something warm,' he said. 'It's gone cold, or
else I've caught a chill.'
'You can have my cloak, Mr.
Frodo,' said Sam. He unslung his pack and took out the elven-cloak. 'How's this,
Mr. Frodo?' he said. 'You wrap that orc-rag close round you, and put the belt
outside it. Then this can go over all. It don't look quite orc-fashion, but
it'll keep you warmer; and I daresay it'll keep you from harm better than any
other gear. It was made by the Lady.'
Frodo took the cloak
and fastened the brooch. 'That's better!' he said. 'I feel much lighter. I can
go on now. But this blind dark seems to be getting into my heart. As I lay in
prison, Sam. I tried to remember the Brandywine, and Woody End, and The Water
running through the mill at Hobbiton. But I can't see them
now.'
'There now, Mr. Frodo, it's you that's talking of
water this time!' said Sam. 'If only the Lady could see us or hear us, I'd say
to her: "Your Ladyship, all we want is light and water; just clean water and
plain daylight, better than any jewels, begging your pardon." But it's a long
way to Lórien.' Sam sighed and waved his hand towards the heights of the Ephel
Duath, now only to be guessed as a deeper blackness against the black
sky.
They started off again. They had not gone far when
Frodo paused. 'There's a Black Rider over us,' he said. 'I can feel it. We had
better keep still for a while.'
Crouched under a great
boulder they sat facing back westward and did not speak for some time. Then
Frodo breathed a sigh of relief. 'It's passed,' he said. They stood up, and then
they both stared in wonder. Away to their left, southward, against a sky that
was turning grey, the peaks and high ridges of the great range began to appear
dark and black, visible shapes. Light was growing behind them. Slowly it crept
towards the North. There was battle far above in the high spaces of the air. The
billowing clouds of Mordor were being driven back, their edges tattering as a
wind out of the living world came up and swept the fumes and smokes towards the
dark land of their home. Under the lifting skirts of the dreary canopy dim light
leaked into Mordor like pale morning through the grimed window of a
prison.
'Look at it, Mr. Frodo!' said Sam. 'Look at it! The
wind's changed. Something's happening. He's not having it all his own way. His
darkness is breaking up out in the world there. I wish I could see what is going
on!'
It was the morning of the fifteenth of March, and over
the Vale of Anduin the Sun was rising above the eastern shadow, and the
south-west wind was blowing. Théoden lay dying on the Pelennor
Fields.
As Frodo and Sam stood and gazed, the rim of light
spread all along the line of the Ephel Duath, and then they saw a shape, moving
at a great speed out of the West, at first only a black speck against the
glimmering strip above the mountain-tops, but growing, until it plunged like a
bolt into the dark canopy and passed high above them. As it went it sent out a
long shrill cry, the voice of a Nazgûl; but this cry no longer held any terror
for them: it was a cry of woe and dismay, ill tidings for the Dark Tower. The
Lord of the Ring-wraiths had met his doom.
'What did I tell
you? Something's happening!' cried Sam. '"The war's going well," said Shagrat;
but Gorbag he wasn't so sure. And he was right there too. Things are looking up,
Mr. Frodo. Haven't you got some hope now?'
'Well no, not
much, Sam,' Frodo sighed. 'That's away beyond the mountains. We're going east
not west. And I'm so tired. And the Ring is so heavy, Sam. And I begin to see it
in my mind all the time, like a great wheel of fire.'
Sam's
quick spirits sank again at once. He looked at his master anxiously, and he took
his hand. 'Come, Mr. Frodo!' he said. 'I've got one thing I wanted: a bit of
light. Enough to help us, and yet I guess it's dangerous too. Try a bit further,
and then we'll lie close and have a rest. But take a morsel to eat now, a bit of
the Elves' food; it may hearten you.'
Sharing a wafer of
lembas, and munching it as best they could with their parched mouths.
Frodo and Sam plodded on. The light, though no more than a grey dusk, was now
enough for them to see that they were deep in the valley between the mountains.
It sloped up gently northward, and at its bottom went the bed of a now dry and
withered stream. Beyond its stony course they saw a beaten path that wound its
way under the feet of the westward cliffs. Had they known, they could have
reached it quicker, for it was a track that left the main Morgul-road at the
western bridge-end and went down by a long stair cut in the rock to the valley's
bottom. It was used by patrols or by messengers going swiftly to lesser posts
and strongholds north-away, between Cirith Ungol and the narrows of Isenmouthe,
the iron jaws of Carach Angren.
It was perilous for the
hobbits to use such a path, but they needed speed, and Frodo felt that he could
not face the toil of scrambling among the boulders or in the trackless glens of
the Morgai. And he judged that northward was, maybe, the way that their hunters
would least expect them to take. The road east to the plain, or the pass back
westward, those they would first search most thoroughly. Only when he was well
north of the Tower did he mean to turn and seek for some way to take him east,
east on the last desperate stage of his journey. So now they crossed the stony
bed and took to the orc-path, and for some time they marched along it. The
cliffs at their left were overhung, and they could not be seen from above; but
the path made many bends, and at each bend they gripped their sword-hilts and
went forward cautiously.
The light grew no stronger, for
Orodruin was still belching forth a great fume that, beaten upwards by the
opposing airs, mounted higher and higher, until it reached a region above the
wind and spread in an immeasurable roof, whose central pillar rose out of the
shadows beyond their view. They had trudged for more than an hour when they
heard a sound that brought them to a halt. Unbelievable, but unmistakable. Water
trickling. Out of a gully on the left, so sharp and narrow that it looked as if
the black cliff had been cloven by some huge axe, water came dripping down: the
last remains, maybe, of some sweet rain gathered from sunlit seas, but ill-fated
to fall at last upon the walls of the Black Land and wander fruitless down into
the dust. Here it came out of the rock in a little falling streamlet, and flowed
across the path, and turning south ran away swiftly to be lost among the dead
stones.
Sam sprang towards it. 'If ever I see the Lady
again, I will tell her!' he cried. 'Light and now water!' Then he stopped. 'Let
me drink first Mr. Frodo,' he said.
'All right, but there's
room enough for two.'
'I didn't mean that,' said Sam. 'I
mean: if it's poisonous, or something that will show its badness quick, well,
better me than you, master, if you understand me.'
'I do.
But I think we'll trust our luck together, Sam; or our blessing. Still, be
careful now, if it's very cold!'
The water was cool but not
icy, and it had an unpleasant taste, at once bitter and oily, or so they would
have said at home. Here it seemed beyond all praise, and beyond fear or
prudence. They drank their fill, and Sam replenished his water-bottle. After
that Frodo felt easier, and they went on for several miles, until the broadening
of the road and the beginnings of a rough wall along its edge warned them that
they were drawing near to another orc-hold.
'This is where
we turn aside, Sam,' said Frodo. 'And we must turn east.' He sighed as he looked
at the gloomy ridges across the valley. 'I have just about enough strength left
to find some hole away up there. And then I must rest a
little.'
The river-bed was now some way below the path.
They scrambled down to it, and began to cross it. To their surprise they came
upon dark pools fed by threads of water trickling down from some source higher
up the valley. Upon its outer marges under the westward mountains Mordor was a
dying land, but it was not yet dead. And here things still grew, harsh, twisted,
bitter, struggling for life. In the glens of the Morgai on the other side of the
valley low scrubby trees lurked and clung, coarse grey grass-tussocks fought
with the stones, and withered mosses crawled on them; and everywhere great
writhing, tangled brambles sprawled. Some had long stabbing thorns, some hooked
barbs that rent like knives. The sullen shrivelled leaves of a past year hung on
them, grating and rattling in the sad airs, but their maggot-ridden buds were
only just opening. Flies, dun or grey, or black, marked like orcs with a red
eye-shaped blotch, buzzed and stung; and above the briar-thickets clouds of
hungry midges danced and reeled.
'Orc-gear's no good,' said
Sam, waving his arms. 'I wish I'd got an orc's hide!'
At
last Frodo could go no further. They had climbed up a narrow shelving ravine,
but they still had a long way to go before they could even come in sight of the
last craggy ridge. 'I must rest now, Sam, and sleep if I can.' said Frodo. He
looked about, but there seemed nowhere even for an animal to crawl into in this
dismal country. At length, tired out, they slunk under a curtain of brambles
that hung down like a mat over a low rock-face.
There they
sat and made such a meal as they could. Keeping back the precious
lembas
for the evil days ahead, they ate the half of what remained in Sam's bag of
Faramir's provision: some dried fruit, and a small slip of cured meat; and they
sipped some water. They had drunk again from the pools in the valley, but they
were very thirsty again. There was a bitter tang in the air of Mordor that dried
the mouth. When Sam thought of water even his hopeful spirit quailed. Beyond the
Morgai there was the dreadful plain of Gorgoroth to
cross.
'Now you go to sleep first, Mr. Frodo,' he said.
'It's getting dark again. I reckon this day is nearly
over.'
Frodo sighed and was asleep almost before the words
were spoken. Sam struggled with his own weariness, and he took Frodo's hand; and
there he sat silent till deep night fell. Then at last, to keep himself awake,
he crawled from the hiding-place and looked out. The land seemed full of
creaking and cracking and sly noises, but there was no sound of voice or of
foot. Far above the Ephel Duath in the West the night-sky was still dim and
pale. There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the
mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his
heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For
like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow
was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty for ever
beyond its reach. His song in the Tower had been defiance rather than hope; for
then he was thinking of himself. Now, for a moment, his own fate, and even his
masters, ceased to trouble him. He crawled back into the brambles and laid
himself by Frodo's side, and putting away all fear he cast himself into a deep
untroubled sleep.
They woke together, hand in hand. Sam was
almost fresh, ready for another day; but Frodo sighed. His sleep had been
uneasy, full of dreams of fire, and waking brought him no comfort. Still his
sleep had not been without all healing virtue: he was stronger, more able to
bear his burden one stage further. They did not know the time, nor how long they
had slept; but after a morsel of food and a sip of water they went on up the
ravine, until it ended in a sharp slope of screes and sliding stones. There the
last living things gave up their struggle; the tops of the Morgai were
grassless, bare, jagged, barren as a slate.
After much
wandering and search they found a way that they could climb, and with a last
hundred feet of clawing scramble they were up. They came to a cleft between two
dark crags, and passing through found themselves on the very edge of the last
fence of Mordor. Below them, at the bottom of a fall of some fifteen hundred
feet, lay the inner plain stretching away into a formless gloom beyond their
sight. The wind of the world blew now from the West, and the great clouds were
lifted high, floating away eastward; but still only a grey light came to the
dreary fields of Gorgoroth. There smokes trailed on the ground and lurked in
hollows, and fumes leaked from fissures in the earth.
Still
far away, forty miles at least, they saw Mount Doom, its feet founded in ashen
ruin, its huge cone rising to a great height, where its reeking head was swathed
in cloud. Its fires were now dimmed, and it stood in smouldering slumber, as
threatening and dangerous as a sleeping beast. Behind it there hung a vast
shadow, ominous as a thunder-cloud, the veils of Barad-dur that was reared far
way upon a long spur of the Ashen Mountains thrust down from the North. The Dark
Power was deep in thought, and the Eye turned inward, pondering tidings of doubt
and danger: a bright sword, and a stern and kingly face it saw, and for a while
it gave little thought to other things; and all its great stronghold, gate on
gate, and tower on tower, was wrapped in a brooding
gloom.
Frodo and Sam gazed out in mingled loathing and
wonder on this hateful land. Between them and the smoking mountain, and about it
north and south, all seemed ruinous and dead, a desert burned and choked. They
wondered how the Lord of this realm maintained and fed his slaves and his
armies. Yet armies he had. As far as their eyes could reach, along the skirts of
the Morgai and away southward, there were camps, some of tents, some ordered
like small towns. One of the largest of these was right below them. Barely a
mile out into the plain it clustered like some huge nest of insects, with
straight dreary streets of huts and long low drab buildings. About it the ground
was busy with folk going to and fro; a wide road ran from it south-east to join
the Morgul-way, and along it many lines of small black shapes were
hurrying.
'I don't like the look of things at all,' said
Sam. 'Pretty hopeless, I call it – saving that where there's such a lot of folk
there must be wells or water, not to mention food. And these are Men not Orcs,
or my eyes are all wrong.'
Neither he nor Frodo knew
anything of the great slave-worked fields away south in this wide realm, beyond
the fumes of the Mountain by the dark sad waters of Lake Nurnen; nor of the
great roads that ran away east and south to tributary lands, from which the
soldiers of the Tower brought long waggon-trains of goods and booty and fresh
slaves. Here in the northward regions were the mines and forges, and the
musterings of long-planned war; and here the Dark Power, moving its armies like
pieces on the board, was gathering them together. Its first moves, the first
feelers of its strength, had been checked upon its western line, southward and
northward. For the moment it withdrew them, and brought up new forces, massing
them about Cirith Gorgor for an avenging stroke. And if it had also been its
purpose to defend the Mountain against all approach, it could scarcely have done
more.
'Well!' Sam went on. 'Whatever they have to eat and
drink, we can't get it. There's no way down that I can see. And we couldn't
cross all that open country crawling with enemies, even if we did get
down.'
'Still we shall have to try,' said Frodo. 'It's no
worse than I expected. I never hoped to get across. I can't see any hope of it
now. But I've still got to do the best I can. At present that is to avoid being
captured as long as possible. So we must still go northwards, I think, and see
what it is like where the open plain is narrower.'
'I guess
what it'll be like,' said Sam. 'Where it's narrower the Orcs and Men will just
be packed closer. You'll see, Mr. Frodo.'
'I dare say I
shall, if we ever get so far,' said Frodo and turned
away.
They soon found that it was impossible to make their
way along the crest of the Morgai, or anywhere along its higher levels, pathless
as they were and scored with deep ghylls. In the end they were forced to go back
down the ravine that they had climbed and seek for a way along the valley. It
was rough going, for they dared not cross over to the path on the westward side.
After a mile or more they saw, huddled in a hollow at the cliff's foot, the
orc-hold that they had guessed was near at hand: a wall and a cluster of stone
huts set about the dark mouth of a cave. There was no movement to be seen, but
the hobbits crept by cautiously, keeping as much as they could to the
thorn-brakes that grew thickly at this point along both sides of the old
water-course.
They went two or three miles further, and the
orc-hold was hidden from sight behind them; but they had hardly begun to breathe
more freely again when harsh and loud they heard orc-voices. Quickly they slunk
out of sight behind a brown and stunted bush. The voices drew nearer. Presently
two orcs came into view. One was clad in ragged brown and was armed with a bow
of horn; it was of a small breed, black-skinned, with wide and snuffling
nostrils: evidently a tracker of some kind. The other was a big fighting-orc,
like those of Shagrat's company, bearing the token of the Eye. He also had a bow
at his back and carried a short broad-headed spear. As usual they were
quarrelling, and being of different breeds they used the Common Speech after
their fashion.

Hardly twenty paces from where the hobbits
lurked the small orc stopped. 'Nar!' it snarled. 'I'm going home.' It pointed
across the valley to the orc-hold. 'No good wearing my nose out on stones any
more. There's not a trace left, I say. I've lost the scent through giving way to
you. It went up into the hills, not along the valley, I tell
you.'
'Not much use are you, you little snufflers?' said
the big orc. 'I reckon eyes are better than your snotty
noses.'
'Then what have you seen with them?' snarled the
other. 'Garn! You don't even know what you're looking
for.'
'Whose blame's that?' said the soldier. 'Not mine.
That comes from Higher Up. First they say it's a great Elf in bright armour,
then it's a sort of small dwarf-man, then it must be a pack of rebel Uruk-hai;
or maybe it's all the lot together.'
'Ar!' said the
tracker. 'They've lost their heads, that's what it is. And some of the bosses
are going to lose their skins too, I guess, if what I hear is true: Tower raided
and all, and hundreds of your lads done in, and prisoner got away. If that's the
way you fighters go on, small wonder there's bad news from the
battles.'
'Who says there's bad news?' shouted the
soldier.
'Ar! Who says there
isn't?'
'That's cursed rebel-talk, and I'll stick you, if
you don't shut it down, see?'
'All right, all right!' said
the tracker. 'I'll say no more and go on thinking. But what's the black sneak
got to do with it all? That gobbler with the flapping
hands?'
'I don't know. Nothing, maybe. But he's up to no
good, nosing around, I'll wager. Curse him! No sooner had he slipped us and run
off than word came he's wanted alive, wanted quick.'
'Well,
I hope they get him and put him through it,' growled the tracker. 'He messed up
the scent back there, pinching that cast-off mail-shirt that he found, and
paddling all round the place before I could get there.'
'It
saved his life anyhow,' said the soldier. 'Why, before I knew he was wanted I
shot him, as neat as neat, at fifty paces right in the back; but he ran
on.'
'Garn! You missed him,' said the tracker. 'First you
shoot wild, then you run too slow, and then you send for the poor trackers. I've
had enough of you.' He loped off.
'You come back,' shouted
the soldier, 'or I'll report you!'
'Who to? Not to your
precious Shagrat. He won't be captain any more.'
'I'll give
your name and number to the Nazgûl,' said the soldier lowering his voice to a
hiss. 'One of
them's in charge at the Tower
now.'
The other halted, and his voice was full of fear and
rage. 'You cursed peaching sneakthief!' he yelled. 'You can't do your job, and
you can't even stick by your own folk. Go to your filthy Shriekers, and may they
freeze the flesh off you! If the enemy doesn't get them first. They've done in
Number One, I've heard, and I hope it's true!'
The big orc,
spear in hand, leapt after him. But the tracker, springing behind a stone, put
an arrow in his eye as he ran up, and he fell with a crash. The other ran off
across the valley and disappeared.
For a while the hobbits
sat in silence. At length Sam stirred. 'Well I call that neat as neat,' he said.
'If this nice friendliness would spread about in Mordor, half our trouble would
be over.'
'Quietly, Sam,' Frodo whispered. 'There may be
others about. We have evidently had a very narrow escape, and the hunt was
hotter on our tracks than we guessed. But that is the spirit of Mordor, Sam; and
it has spread to every corner of it. Orcs have always behaved like that, or so
all tales say, when they are on their own. But you can't get much hope out of
it. They hate us far more, altogether and all the time. If those two had seen
us, they would have dropped all their quarrel until we were
dead.'
There was another long silence. Sam broke it again,
but with a whisper this time. 'Did you hear what they said about
that
gobbler, Mr. Frodo? I told you Gollum wasn't dead yet, didn't
I?'
'Yes, I remember. And I wondered how you knew,' said
Frodo. 'Well come now! I think we had better not move out from here again, until
it has gone quite dark. So you shall tell me how you know, and all about what
happened. If you can do it quietly.'
'I'll try,' said Sam,
'but when I think of that Stinker I get so hot l could
shout.'
There the hobbits sat under the cover of the thorny
bush, while the drear light of Mordor faded slowly into a deep and starless
night; and Sam spoke into Frodo's ear all that he could find words for of
Gollum's treacherous attack, the horror of Shelob, and his own adventures with
the orcs. When he had finished, Frodo said nothing but took Sam's hand and
pressed it. At length he stirred.
'Well, I suppose we must
be going on again,' he said. 'I wonder how long it will be before we really are
caught and all the toiling and the slinking will be over, and in vain.' He stood
up. 'It's dark, and we cannot use the Lady's glass. Keep it safe for me, Sam. I
have nowhere to keep it now, except in my hand, and I shall need both hands in
the blind night. But Sting I give to you. I have got an orc-blade, but I do not
think it will be my part to strike any blow again.'
It was
difficult and dangerous moving in the night in the pathless land; but slowly and
with much stumbling the two hobbits toiled on hour by hour northward along the
eastern edge of the stony valley. When a grey light crept back over the western
heights, long after day had opened in the lands beyond, they went into hiding
again and slept a little, turn by turn. In his times of waking Sam was busy with
thoughts of food. At last when Frodo roused himself and spoke of eating and
making ready for yet another effort, he asked the question that was troubling
him most.
'Begging your pardon, Mr. Frodo,' he said, 'but
have you any notion how far there is still to go?'
'No, not
any clear notion, Sam,' Frodo answered. 'In Rivendell before I set out I was
shown a map of Mordor that was made before the Enemy came back here; but I only
remember it vaguely. I remember clearest that there was a place in the north
where the western range and the northern range send out spurs that nearly meet.
That must be twenty leagues at least from the bridge back by the Tower. It might
be a good point at which to cross. But of course, if we get there, we shall be
further than we were from the Mountain, sixty miles from it, I should think. I
guess that we have gone about twelve leagues north from the bridge now. Even if
all goes well, I could hardly reach the Mountain in a week. I am afraid, Sam,
that the burden will get very heavy, and I shall go still slower as we get
nearer.'
Sam sighed. 'That's just as I feared,' he said.
'Well, to say nothing of water, we've got to eat less, Mr. Frodo, or else move a
bit quicker, at any rate while we're still in this valley. One more bite and all
the food's ended, save the Elves' waybread.'
'I'll try and
be a bit quicker, Sam,' said Frodo, drawing a deep breath. 'Come on then! Let's
start another march!'
It was not yet quite dark again. They
plodded along, on into the night. The hours passed in a weary stumbling trudge
with a few brief halts. At the first hint of grey light under the skirts of the
canopy of shadow they hid themselves again in a dark hollow under an overhanging
stone.
Slowly the light grew, until it was clearer than it
yet had been. A strong wind from the West was now driving the fumes of Mordor
from the upper airs. Before long the hobbits could make out the shape of the
land for some miles about them. The trough between the mountains and the Morgai
had steadily dwindled as it climbed upwards, and the inner ridge was now no more
than a shelf in the steep faces of the Ephel Duath; but to the east it fell as
sheerly as ever down into Gorgoroth. Ahead the water-course came to an end in
broken steps of rock; for out from the main range there sprang a high barren
spur, thrusting eastward like a wall. To meet it there stretched out from the
grey and misty northern range of Ered Lithui a long jutting arm; and between the
ends there was a narrow gap: Carach Angren, the Isenmouthe, beyond which lay the
deep dale of Udun. In that dale behind the Morannon were the tunnels and deep
armouries that the servants of Mordor had made for the defence of the Black Gate
of their land; and there now their Lord was gathering in haste great forces to
meet the onslaught of the Captains of the West. Upon the out-thrust spurs forts
and towers were built, and watch-fires burned; and all across the gap an
earth-wall had been raised, and a deep trench delved that could be crossed only
by a single bridge.
A few miles north, high up in the angle
where the western spur branched away from the main range, stood the old castle
of Durthang, now one of the many orc-holds that clustered about the dale of
Udun. A road, already visible in the growing light, came winding down from it,
until only a mile or two from where the hobbits lay it turned east and ran along
a shelf cut in the side of the spur, and so went down into the plain, and on to
the Isenmouthe.
To the hobbits as they looked out it seemed
that all their journey north had been useless. The plain to their right was dim
and smoky, and they could see there neither camps nor troops moving; but all
that region was under the vigilance of the forts of Carach
Angren.
'We have come to a dead end, Sam,' said Frodo. 'If
we go on, we shall only come up to that orc-tower, but the only road to take is
that road that comes down from it – unless we go back. We can't climb up
westward, or climb down eastward.'
'Then we must take the
road, Mr. Frodo,' said Sam. 'We must take it and chance our luck, if there is
any luck in Mordor. We might as well give ourselves up as wander about any more,
or try to go back. Our food won't last. We've got to make a dash for
it!'
'All right, Sam,' said Frodo. 'Lead me! As long as
you've got any hope left. Mine is gone. But I can't dash, Sam. I'll just plod
along after you.'
'Before you start any more plodding, you
need sleep and food, Mr. Frodo. Come and take what you can get of
them!'
He gave Frodo water and an additional wafer of the
waybread, and he made a pillow of his cloak for his master's head. Frodo was too
weary to debate the matter, and Sam did not tell him that he had drunk the last
drop of their water, and eaten Sam's share of the food as well as his own. When
Frodo was asleep Sam bent over him and listened to his breathing and scanned his
face. It was lined and thin, and yet in sleep it looked content and unafraid.
'Well, here goes, Master!' Sam muttered to himself. 'I'll have to leave you for
a bit and trust to luck. Water we must have, or we'll get no
further.'
Sam crept out, and flitting from stone to stone
with more than hobbit-care, he went down to the water-course, and then followed
it for some way as it climbed north, until he came to the rock-steps where long
ago, no doubt, its spring had come gushing down in a little waterfall. All now
seemed dry and silent; but refusing to despair Sam stooped and listened, and to
his delight he caught the sound of trickling. Clambering a few steps up he found
a tiny stream of dark water that came out from the hill-side and filled a little
bare pool, from which again it spilled, and vanished then under the barren
stones.
Sam tasted the water, and it seemed good enough.
Then he drank deeply, refilled the bottle, and turned to go back. At that moment
he caught a glimpse of a black form or shadow flitting among the rocks away near
Frodo's hiding-place. Biting back a cry, he leapt down from the spring and ran,
jumping from stone to stone. It was a wary creature, difficult to see, but Sam
had little doubt about it: he longed to get his hands on its neck. But it heard
him coming and slipped quickly away. Sam thought he saw a last fleeting glimpse
of it, peering back over the edge of the eastward precipice, before it ducked
and disappeared.
'Well, luck did not let me down,' muttered
Sam, 'but that was a near thing! Isn't it enough to have orcs by the thousand
without that stinking villain coming nosing round? I wish he had been shot!' He
sat down by Frodo and did not rouse him; but he did not dare to go to sleep
himself. At last when he felt his eyes closing and knew that his struggle to
keep awake could not go on much longer, he wakened Frodo
gently.
'That Gollum's about again, I'm afraid, Mr. Frodo,'
he said. 'Leastways, if it wasn't him, then there's two of him. I went away to
find some water and spied him nosing round just as I turned back. I reckon it
isn't safe for us both to sleep together, and begging your pardon, but I can't
hold up my lids much longer.'
'Bless you, Sam!' said Frodo.
'Lie down and take your proper turn! But I'd rather have Gollum than orcs. At
any rate he won't give us away to them – not unless he's caught
himself.'
'But he might do a bit of robbery and murder on
his own,' growled Sam. 'Keep your eyes open, Mr. Frodo! There's a bottle full of
water. Drink up. We can fill it again when we go on.' With that Sam plunged into
sleep.
Light was fading when he woke. Frodo sat propped
against the rock behind, but he had fallen asleep. The water-bottle was empty.
There was no sign of Gollum.
Mordor-dark had returned, and
the watch-fires on the heights burned fierce and red, when the hobbits set out
again on the most dangerous stage of all their journey. They went first to the
little spring, and then climbing warily up they came to the road at the point
where it swung east towards the Isenmouthe twenty miles away. It was not a broad
road, and it had no wall or parapet along the edge and as it ran on the sheer
drop from its brink became deeper and deeper. The hobbits could hear no
movements, and after listening for a while they set off eastward at a steady
pace.
After doing some twelve miles, they halted. A short
way back the road had bent a little northward and the stretch that they had
passed over was now screened from sight. This proved disastrous. They rested for
some minutes and then went on; but they had not taken many steps when suddenly
in the stillness of the night they heard the sound that all along they had
secretly dreaded: the noise of marching feet. It was still some way behind them,
but looking back they could see the twinkle of torches coming round the bend
less than a mile away, and they were moving fast: too fast for Frodo to escape
by flight along the road ahead.
'I feared it, Sam,' said
Frodo. 'We've trusted to luck, and it has failed us. We're trapped.' He looked
wildly up at the frowning wall, where the road-builders of old had cut the rock
sheer for many fathoms above their heads. He ran to the other side and looked
over the brink into a dark pit of gloom. 'We're trapped at last!' he said. He
sank to the ground beneath the wall of rock and bowed his
head.
'Seems so,' said Sam. 'Well, we can but wait and
see.' And with that he sat down beside Frodo under the shadow of the
cliff.
They did not have to wait long. The orcs were going
at a great pace. Those in the foremost files bore torches. On they came, red
flames in the dark, swiftly growing. Now Sam too bowed his head, hoping that it
would hide his face when the torches reached them; and he set their shields
before their knees to hide their feet.
'If only they are in
a hurry and will let a couple of tired soldiers alone and pass on!' he
thought.
And so it seemed that they would. The leading orcs
came loping along, panting, holding their heads down. They were a gang of the
smaller breeds being driven unwilling to their Dark Lord's wars; all they cared
for was to get the march over and escape the whip. Beside them, running up and
down the line, went two of the large fierce
uruks, cracking lashes and
shouting. File after file passed, and the tell-tale torchlight was already some
way ahead. Sam held his breath. Now more than half the line had gone by. Then
suddenly one of the slave-drivers spied the two figures by the road-side. He
flicked a whip at them and yelled: 'Hi, you! Get up!' They did not answer, and
with a shout he halted the whole company.
'Come on, you
slugs!' he cried. 'This is no time for slouching.' He took a step towards them,
and even in the gloom he recognized the devices on their shields. 'Deserting,
eh?' he snarled. 'Or thinking of it? All your folk should have been inside Udun
before yesterday evening. You know that. Up you get and fall in, or I'll have
your numbers and report you.'
They struggled to their feet,
and keeping bent, limping like footsore soldiers, they shuffled back towards the
rear of the line. 'No, not at the rear!' the slave-driver shouted. 'Three files
up. And stay there, or you'll know it, when I come down the line!' He sent his
long whip-lash cracking over their heads; then with another crack and a yell he
started the company off again at a brisk trot.
It was hard
enough for poor Sam, tired as he was; but for Frodo it was a torment, and soon a
nightmare. He set his teeth and tried to stop his mind from thinking, and he
struggled on. The stench of the sweating orcs about him was stifling, and he
began to gasp with thirst. On, on they went, and he bent all his will to draw
his breath and to make his legs keep going; and yet to what evil end he toiled
and endured he did not dare to think. There was no hope of falling out unseen:
Now and again the orc-driver fell back and jeered at
them.
'There now!' he laughed, flicking at their legs.
'Where there's a whip there's a will, my slugs. Hold up! I'd give you a nice
freshener now, only you'll get as much lash as your skins will carry when you
come in late to your camp. Do you good. Don't you know we're at
war?'
They had gone some miles, and the road was at last
running down a long slope into the plain, when Frodo's strength began to give
out and his will wavered. He lurched and stumbled. Desperately Sam tried to help
him and hold him up, though he felt that he could himself hardly stay the pace
much longer. At any moment now he knew that the end would come: his master would
faint or fall, and all would be discovered, and their bitter efforts be in vain.
'I'll have that big slave-driving devil anyway,' he
thought.
Then just as he was putting his hand to the hilt
of his sword, there came an unexpected relief. They were out on the plain now
and drawing near the entrance to Udun. Some way in front of it, before the gate
at the bridge-end, the road from the west converged with others coming from the
south, and from Barad-dur. Along all the roads troops were moving; for the
Captains of the West were advancing and the Dark Lord was speeding his forces
north. So it chanced that several companies came together at the road-meeting,
in the dark beyond the light of the watch-fires on the wall. At once there was
great jostling and cursing as each troop tried to get first to the gate and the
ending of their march. Though the drivers yelled and plied their whips, scuffles
broke out and some blades were drawn. A troop of heavy-armed
uruks from
Barad-dur charged into the Durthang line and threw them into
confusion.
Dazed as he was with pain and weariness, Sam
woke up, grasped quickly at his chance, and threw himself to the ground,
dragging Frodo down with him. Orcs fell over them, snarling and cursing. Slowly
on hand and knee the hobbits crawled away out of the turmoil, until at last
unnoticed they dropped over the further edge of the road. It had a high kerb by
which troop-leaders could guide themselves in black night or fog, and it was
banked up some feet above the level of the open land.
They
lay still for a while. It was too dark to seek for cover, if indeed there was
any to find; but Sam felt that they ought at least to get further away from the
highways and out of the range of torch-light.
'Come on, Mr.
Frodo!' he whispered. 'One more crawl, and then you can lie
still.'
With a last despairing effort Frodo raised himself
on his hands, and struggled on for maybe twenty yards. Then he pitched down into
a shallow pit that opened unexpectedly before them, and there he lay like a dead
thing.
Chapter 3
Mount Doom
Sam put his ragged orc-cloak under his master's head, and
covered them both with the grey robe of Lórien; and as he did so his thoughts
went out to that fair land, and to the Elves, and he hoped that the cloth woven
by their hands might have some virtue to keep them hidden beyond all hope in
this wilderness of fear. He heard the scuffling and cries die down as the troops
passed on through the Isenmouthe. It seemed that in the confusion and the
mingling of many companies of various kinds they had not been missed, not yet at
any rate.
Sam took a sip of water, but pressed Frodo to
drink, and when his master had recovered a little he gave him a whole wafer of
their precious waybread and made him eat it. Then, too worn out even to feel
much fear, they stretched themselves out. They slept a little in uneasy fits;
for their sweat grew chill on them, and the hard stones bit them, and they
shivered. Out of the north from the Black Gate through Cirith Gorgor there
flowed whispering along the ground a thin cold air.
In the
morning a grey light came again, for in the high regions the West Wind still
blew, but down on the stones behind the fences of the Black Land the air seemed
almost dead, chill and yet stifling. Sam looked up out of the hollow. The land
all about was dreary, flat and drab-hued. On the roads nearby nothing was moving
now; but Sam feared the watchful eyes on the wall of the Isenmouthe, no more
than a furlong away northward. South-eastward, far off like a dark standing
shadow, loomed the Mountain. Smokes were pouring from it and while those that
rose into the upper air trailed away eastward, great rolling clouds floated down
its sides and spread over the land. A few miles to the north-east the foothills
of the Ashen Mountains stood like sombre grey ghosts, behind which the misty
northern heights rose like a line of distant cloud hardly darker than the
lowering sky.
Sam tried to guess the distances and to
decide what way they ought to take. It looks every step of fifty miles,' he
muttered gloomily staring at the threatening mountain, 'and that'll take a week,
if it takes a day, with Mr. Frodo as he is.' He shook his head, and as he worked
things out, slowly a new dark thought grew in his mind. Never for long had hope
died in his staunch heart, and always until now he had taken some thought for
their return. But the bitter truth came home to him at last: at best their
provision would take them to their goal; and when the task was done, there they
would come to an end, alone, houseless, foodless in the midst of a terrible
desert. There could be no return.
'So that was the job I
felt I had to do when I started,' thought Sam, 'to help Mr. Frodo to the last
step and then die with him? Well, if that is the job then I must do it. But I
would dearly like to see Bywater again, and Rosie Cotton and her brothers, and
the Gaffer and Marigold and all. I can't think somehow that Gandalf would have
sent Mr. Frodo on this errand if there hadn't a'been any hope of his ever coming
back at all. Things all went wrong when he went down in Moria. I wish he hadn't.
He would have done something.'
But even as hope died in
Sam, or seemed to die, it was turned to a new strength. Sam's plain hobbit-face
grew stern, almost grim, as the will hardened in him, and he felt through all
his limbs a thrill, as if he was turning into some creature of stone and steel
that neither despair nor weariness nor endless barren miles could
subdue.
With a new sense of responsibility he brought his
eyes back to the ground near at hand, studying the next move. As the light grew
a little he saw to his surprise that what from a distance had seemed wide and
featureless flats were in fact all broken and tumbled. Indeed the whole surface
of the plains of Gorgoroth was pocked with great holes, as if, while it was
still a waste of soft mud, it had been smitten with a shower of bolts and huge
slingstones. The largest of these holes were rimmed with ridges of broken rock,
and broad fissures ran out from them in all directions. It was a land in which
it would be possible to creep from hiding to hiding, unseen by all but the most
watchful eyes: possible at least for one who was strong and had no need for
speed. For the hungry and worn, who had far to go before life failed, it had an
evil look.
Thinking of all these things Sam went back to
his master. He had no need to rouse him. Frodo was lying on his back with eyes
open, staring at the cloudy sky. 'Well, Mr. Frodo,' said Sam, 'I've been having
a look round and thinking a bit. There's nothing on the roads, and we'd best be
getting away while there's a chance. Can you manage it?'
'I
can manage it,' said Frodo. 'I must.'
Once more they
started, crawling from hollow to hollow, flitting behind such cover as they
could find, but moving always in a slant towards the foothills of the northern
range. But as they went the most easterly of the roads followed them, until it
ran off, hugging the skirts of the mountains, away into a wall of black shadow
far ahead. Neither man nor orc now moved along its flat grey stretches; for the
Dark Lord had almost completed the movement of his forces, and even in the
fastness of his own realm he sought the secrecy of night, fearing the winds of
the world that had turned against him, tearing aside his veils, and troubled
with tidings of bold spies that had passed through his
fences.
The hobbits had gone a few weary miles when they
halted. Frodo seemed nearly spent. Sam saw that he could not go much further in
this fashion, crawling, stooping, now picking a doubtful way very slowly, now
hurrying at a stumbling run.
'I'm going back on to the road
while the light lasts, Mr. Frodo,' he said. 'Trust to luck again! It nearly
failed us last time, but it didn't quite. A steady pace for a few more miles,
and then a rest.'
He was taking a far greater risk than he
knew; but Frodo was too much occupied with his burden and with the struggle in
his mind to debate, and almost too hopeless to care. They climbed on to the
causeway and trudged along, down the hard cruel road that led to the Dark Tower
itself. But their luck held, and for the rest of that day they met no living or
moving thing; and when night fell they vanished into the darkness of Mordor. All
the land now brooded as at the coming of a great storm: for the Captains of the
West had passed the Cross-roads and set flames in the deadly fields of Imlad
Morgul.
So the desperate journey went on, as the Ring went
south and the banners of the kings rode north. For the hobbits each day, each
mile, was more bitter than the one before, as their strength lessened and the
land became more evil. They met no enemies by day. At times by night, as they
cowered or drowsed uneasily in some hiding beside the road, they heard cries and
the noise of many feet or the swift passing of some cruelly ridden steed. But
far worse than all such perils was the ever-approaching threat that beat upon
them as they went: the dreadful menace of the Power that waited, brooding in
deep thought and sleepless malice behind the dark veil about its Throne. Nearer
and nearer it drew, looming blacker, like the oncoming of a wall of night at the
last end of the world.
There came at last a dreadful
nightfall; and even as the Captains of the West drew near to the end of the
living lands, the two wanderers came to an hour of blank despair. Four days had
passed since they had escaped from the orcs, but the time lay behind them like
an ever-darkening dream. All this last day Frodo had not spoken, but had walked
half-bowed, often stumbling, as if his eyes no longer saw the way before his
feet. Sam guessed that among all their pains he bore the worst, the growing
weight of the Ring, a burden on the body and a torment to his mind. Anxiously
Sam had noted how his master's left hand would often be raised as if to ward on
a blow, or to screen his shrinking eyes from a dreadful Eye that sought to look
in them. And sometimes his right hand would creep to his breast, clutching, and
then slowly, as the will recovered mastery, it would be
withdrawn.
Now as the blackness of night returned Frodo
sat, his head between his knees, his arms hanging wearily to the ground where
his hands lay feebly twitching. Sam watched him, till night covered them both
and hid them from one another. He could no longer find any words to say; and he
turned to his own dark thoughts. As for himself, though weary and under a shadow
of fear, he still had some strength left. The
lembas had a virtue without
which they would long ago have lain down to die. It did not satisfy desire, and
at times Sam's mind was filled with the memories of food, and the longing for
simple bread and meats. And yet this waybread of the Elves had a potency that
increased as travellers relied on it alone and did not mingle it with other
foods. It fed the will, and it gave strength to endure, and to master sinew and
limb beyond the measure of mortal kind. But now a new decision must be made.
They could not follow this road any longer; for it went on eastward into the
great Shadow, but the Mountain now loomed upon their right, almost due south,
and they must turn towards it. Yet still before it there stretched a wide region
of fuming, barren, ash-ridden land.
'Water, water!'
muttered Sam. He had stinted himself, and in his parched mouth his tongue seemed
thick and swollen; but for all his care they now had very little left, perhaps
half his bottle, and maybe there were still days to go. All would long ago have
been spent, if they had not dared to follow the orc-road. For at long intervals
on that highway cisterns had been built for the use of troops sent in haste
through the waterless regions. In one Sam had found some water left, stale,
muddied by the orcs, but still sufficient for their desperate case. Yet that was
now a day ago. There was no hope of any more.
At last
wearied with his cares Sam drowsed, leaving the morrow till it came; he could do
no more. Dream and waking mingled uneasily. He saw lights like gloating yes, and
dark creeping shapes, and he heard noises as of wild beasts or the dreadful
cries of tortured things; and he would start up to find the world all dark and
only empty blackness all about him. Once only, as he stood and stared wildly
round, did it seem that, though now awake, he could still see pale lights like
eyes; but soon they flickered and vanished.
The hateful
night passed slowly and reluctantly. Such daylight as followed was dim; for here
as the Mountain drew near the air was ever mirky, while out from the Dark Tower
there crept the veils of Shadow that Sauron wove about himself. Frodo was lying
on his back not moving. Sam stood beside him, reluctant to speak, and yet
knowing that the word now lay with him: he must set his master's will to work
for another effort. At length, stooping and caressing Frodo's brow, he spoke in
his ear.
'Wake up, Master!' he said. 'Time for another
start.'
As if roused by a sudden bell, Frodo rose quickly,
and stood up and looked away southwards; but when his eyes beheld the Mountain
and the desert he quailed again.
'I can't manage it, Sam,'
he said. 'It is such a weight to carry, such a weight.'
Sam
knew before he spoke, that it was vain, and that such words might do more harm
than good, but in his pity he could not keep silent. 'Then let me carry it a bit
for you, Master,' he said. 'You know I would, and gladly, as long as I have any
strength.'
A wild light came into Frodo's eyes. 'Stand
away! Don't touch me!' he cried. 'It is mine, I say. Be off!' His hand strayed
to his sword-hilt. But then quickly his voice changed. 'No, no, Sam,' he said
sadly. 'But you must understand. It is my burden, and no one else can bear it.
It is too late now, Sam dear. You can't help me in that way again. I am almost
in its power now. I could not give it up, and if you tried to take it I should
go mad.'
Sam nodded. 'I understand,' he said. 'But I've
been thinking, Mr. Frodo, there's other things we might do without. Why not
lighten the load a bit? We're going that way now, as straight as we can make
it.' He pointed to the Mountain. 'It's no good taking anything we're not sure to
need.'
Frodo looked again towards the Mountain. 'No,' he
said, 'we shan't need much on that road. And at its end nothing.' Picking up his
orc-shield he flung it away and threw his helmet after it. Then pulling off the
grey cloak he undid the heavy belt and let it fall to the ground, and the
sheathed sword with it. The shreds of the black cloak he tore off and
scattered.
'There, I'll be an orc no more,' he cried, 'and
I'll bear no weapon fair or foul. Let them take me, if they
will!'
Sam did likewise, and put aside his orc-gear; and he
took out all the things in his pack. Somehow each of them had become dear to
him, if only because he had borne them so far with so much toil. Hardest of all
it was to part with his cooking-gear. Tears welled in his eyes at the thought of
casting it away.
'Do you remember that bit of rabbit, Mr.
Frodo?' he said. 'And our place under the warm bank in Captain Faramir's
country, the day I saw an oliphaunt?'
'No, I am afraid not,
Sam,' said Frodo. 'At least, I know that such things happened, but I cannot see
them. No taste of food, no feel of water, no sound of wind, no memory of tree or
grass or flower, no image of moon or star are left to me. I am naked in the
dark. Sam, and there is no veil between me and the wheel of fire. I begin to see
it even with my waking eyes, and all else fades.'
Sam went
to him and kissed his hand. 'Then the sooner we're rid of it, the sooner to
rest,' he said haltingly, finding no better words to say. 'Talking won't mend
nothing,' he muttered to himself, as he gathered up all the things that they had
chosen to cast away. He was not willing to leave them lying open in the
wilderness for any eyes to see. 'Stinker picked up that orc-shirt, seemingly,
and he isn't going to add a sword to it. His hands are bad enough when empty.
And he isn't going to mess with my pans!' With that he carried all the gear away
to one of the many gaping fissures that scored the land and threw them in. The
clatter of his precious pans as they fell down into the dark was like a
death-knell to his heart.
He came back to Frodo, and then
of his elven-rope he cut a short piece to serve his master as a girdle and bind
the grey cloak close about his waist. The rest he carefully coiled and put back
in his pack. Beside that he kept only the remnants of their waybread and the
water-bottle, and Sting still hanging by his belt; and hidden away in a pocket
of his tunic next his breast the phial of Galadriel and the little box that she
gave him for his own.
Now at last they turned their faces
to the Mountain and set out, thinking no more of concealment, bending their
weariness and failing wills only to the one task of going on. In the dimness of
its dreary day few things even in that land of vigilance could have espied them,
save from close at hand. Of all the slaves of the Dark Lord, only the Nazgûl
could have warned him of the peril that crept, small but indomitable, into the
very heart of his guarded realm. But the Nazgûl and their black wings were
abroad on another errand: they were gathered far away, shadowing the march of
the Captains of the West, and thither the thought of the Dark Tower was
turned.
That day it seemed to Sam that his master had found
some new strength, more than could be explained by the small lightening of the
load that he had to carry. In the first marches they went further and faster
than he had hoped. The land was rough and hostile, and yet they made much
progress, and ever the Mountain drew nearer. But as the day wore on and all too
soon the dim light began to fail, Frodo stooped again, and began to stagger, as
if the renewed effort had squandered his remaining
strength.
At their last halt he sank down and said: 'I'm
thirsty, Sam,' and did not speak again. Sam gave him a mouthful of water; only
one more mouthful remained. He went without himself; and now as once more the
night of Mordor closed over them, through all his thoughts there came the memory
of water; and every brook or stream or fount that he had ever seen, under green
willow-shades or twinkling in the sun, danced and rippled for his torment behind
the blindness of his eyes. He felt the cool mud about his toes as he paddled in
the Pool at Bywater with Jolly Cotton and Tom and Nibs, and their sister Rosie.
'But that was years ago,' he sighed, 'and far away. The way back, if there is
one, goes past the Mountain.'
He could not sleep and he
held a debate with himself. 'Well, come now, we've done better than you hoped,'
he said sturdily. 'Began well anyway. I reckon we crossed half the distance
before we stopped. One more day will do it.' And then he
paused.
'Don't be a fool, Sam Gamgee,' came an answer in
his own voice. 'He won't go another day like that, if he moves at all. And you
can't go on much longer giving him all the water and most of the
food.'
'I can go on a good way though, and I
will.'
'Where to?'
'To the Mountain,
of course.'
'But what then, Sam Gamgee, what then? When you
get there, what are you going to do? He won't be able to do anything for
himself.'
To his dismay Sam realized that he had not got an
answer to this. He had no clear idea at all. Frodo had not spoken much to him of
his errand, and Sam only knew vaguely that the Ring had somehow to be put into
the fire. 'The Cracks of Doom,' he muttered, the old name rising to his mind.
'Well, if Master knows how to find them, I don't.'
'There
you are!' came the answer. 'It's all quite useless. He said so himself. You are
the fool, going on hoping and toiling. You could have lain down and gone to
sleep together days ago, if you hadn't been so dogged. But you'll die just the
same, or worse. You might just as well lie down now and give it up. You'll never
get to the top anyway.'
'I'll get there, if I leave
everything but my bones behind,' said Sam. 'And I'll carry Mr. Frodo up myself,
if it breaks my back and heart. So stop arguing!'
At that
moment Sam felt a tremor in the ground beneath him, and he heard or sensed a
deep remote rumble as of thunder imprisoned under the earth. There was a brief
red flame that flickered under the clouds and died away. The Mountain too slept
uneasily.
The last stage of their journey to Orodruin came,
and it was a torment greater than Sam had ever thought that he could bear. He
was in pain, and so parched that he could no longer swallow even a mouthful of
food. It remained dark, not only because of the smokes of the Mountain: there
seemed to be a storm coming up, and away to the south-east there was a shimmer
of lightnings under the black skies. Worst of all, the air was full of fumes;
breathing was painful and difficult, and a dizziness came on them, so that they
staggered and often fell. And yet their wills did not yield, and they struggled
on.
The Mountain crept up ever nearer, until, if they
lifted their heavy heads, it filled all their sight, looming vast before them: a
huge mass of ash and slag and burned stone, out of which a sheer-sided cone was
raised into the clouds. Before the daylong dusk ended and true night came again
they had crawled and stumbled to its very feet.
With a gasp
Frodo cast himself on the ground. Sam sat by him. To his surprise he felt tired
but lighter, and his head seemed clear again. No more debates disturbed his
mind. He knew all the arguments of despair and would not listen to them. His
will was set, and only death would break it. He felt no longer either desire or
need of sleep, but rather of watchfulness. He knew that all the hazards and
perils were now drawing together to a point: the next day would be a day of
doom, the day of final effort or disaster, the last
gasp.
But when would it come? The night seemed endless and
timeless, minute after minute falling dead and adding up to no passing hour,
bringing no change. Sam began to wonder if a second darkness had begun and no
day would ever reappear. At last he groped for Frodo's hand. It was cold and
trembling. His master was shivering.
'I didn't ought to
have left my blanket behind,' muttered Sam; and lying down he tried to comfort
Frodo with his arms and body. Then sleep took him, and the dim light of the last
day of their quest found them side by side. The wind had fallen the day before
as it shifted from the West, and now it came from the North and began to rise;
and slowly the light of the unseen Sun filtered down into the shadows where the
hobbits lay.
'Now for it! Now for the last gasp!' said Sam
as he struggled to his feet. He bent over Frodo, rousing him gently. Frodo
groaned; but with a great effort of will he staggered up; and then he fell upon
his knees again. He raised his eyes with difficulty to the dark slopes of Mount
Doom towering above him, and then pitifully he began to crawl forward on his
hands.
Sam looked at him and wept in his heart, but no
tears came to his dry and stinging eyes. 'I said I'd carry him, if it broke my
back,' he muttered, 'and I will!'
'Come, Mr. Frodo!' he
cried. 'I can't carry it for you, but I can carry you and it as well. So up you
get! Come on, Mr. Frodo dear! Sam will give you a ride. Just tell him where to
go, and he'll go.'
As Frodo clung upon his back, arms
loosely about his neck, legs clasped firmly under his arms, Sam staggered to his
feet; and then to his amazement he felt the burden light. He had feared that he
would have barely strength to lift his master alone, and beyond that he had
expected to share in the dreadful dragging weight of the accursed Ring. But it
was not so. Whether because Frodo was so worn by his long pains, wound of knife,
and venomous sting, and sorrow, fear, and homeless wandering, or because some
gift of final strength was given to him, Sam lifted Frodo with no more
difficulty than if he were carrying a hobbit-child pig-a-back in some romp on
the lawns or hayfields of the Shire. He took a deep breath and started
off.
They had reached the Mountain's foot on its northern
side, and a little to the westward; there its long grey slopes, though broken,
were not sheer. Frodo did not speak, and so Sam struggled on as best he could,
having no guidance but the will to climb as high as might be before his strength
gave out and his will broke. On he toiled, up and up, turning this way and that
to lessen the slope, often stumbling forward, and at the last crawling like a
snail with a heavy burden on its back. When his will could drive him no further,
and his limbs gave way, he stopped and laid his master gently
down.
Frodo opened his eyes and drew a breath. It was
easier to breathe up here above the reeks that coiled and drifted down below.
'Thank you, Sam,' he said in a cracked whisper. 'How far is there to
go?'
'I don't know,' said Sam, 'because I don't know where
we're going.'
He looked back, and then he looked up; and he
was amazed to see how far his last effort had brought him. The Mountain standing
ominous and alone had looked taller than it was. Sam saw now that it was less
lofty than the high passes of the Ephel Duath which he and Frodo had scaled. The
confused and tumbled shoulders of its great base rose for maybe three thousand
feet above the plain, and above them was reared half as high again its tall
central cone, like a vast oast or chimney capped with a jagged crater. But
already Sam was more than half way up the base, and the plain of Gorgoroth was
dim below him, wrapped in fume and shadow. As he looked up he would have given a
shout. if his parched throat had allowed him; for amid the rugged humps and
shoulders above him he saw plainly a path or road. It climbed like a rising
girdle from the west and wound snakelike about the Mountain, until before it
went round out of view it reached the foot of the cone upon its eastern
side.

Sam could not see the course immediately above
him, where it was lowest, for a steep slope went up from where he stood; but he
guessed that if he could only struggle on just a little way further up, they
would strike this path. A gleam of hope returned to him. They might conquer the
Mountain yet. 'Why, it might have been put there a-purpose!' he said to himself.
'If it wasn't there, I'd have to say I was beaten in the
end.'
The path was not put there for the purposes of Sam.
He did not know it, but he was looking at Sauron's Road from Barad-dur to the
Sammath Naur, the Chambers of Fire. Out from the Dark Tower's huge western gate
it came over a deep abyss by a vast bridge of iron, and then passing into the
plain it ran for a league between two smoking chasms, and so reached a long
sloping causeway that led up on to the Mountain's eastern side. Thence, turning
and encircling all its wide girth from south to north, it climbed at last, high
in the upper cone, but still far from the reeking summit, to a dark entrance
that gazed back east straight to the Window of the Eye in Sauron's
shadow-mantled fortress. Often blocked or destroyed by the tumults of the
Mountain's furnaces, always that road was repaired and cleaned again by the
labours of countless orcs.
Sam drew a deep breath. There
was a path, but how he was to get up the slope to it he did not know. First he
must ease his aching back. He lay flat beside Frodo for a while. Neither spoke.
Slowly the light grew. Suddenly a sense of urgency which he did not understand
came to Sam. It was almost as if he had been called: 'Now, now, or it will be
too late!' He braced himself and got up. Frodo also seemed to have felt the
call. He struggled to his knees.
'I'll crawl, Sam,' he
gasped.
So foot by foot, like small grey insects, they
crept up the slope. They came to the path and found that it was broad, paved
with broken rubble and beaten ash. Frodo clambered on to it, and then moved as
if by some compulsion he turned slowly to face the East. Far off the shadows of
Sauron hung; but torn by some gust of wind out of the world, or else moved by
some great disquiet within, the mantling clouds swirled, and for a moment drew
aside; and then he saw, rising black, blacker and darker than the vast shades
amid which it stood, the cruel pinnacles and iron crown of the topmost tower of
Barad-dur. One moment only it stared out, but as from some great window
immeasurably high there stabbed northward a flame of red, the flicker of a
piercing Eye; and then the shadows were furled again and the terrible vision was
removed. The Eye was not turned to them: it was gazing north to where the
Captains of the West stood at bay, and thither all its malice was now bent, as
the Power moved to strike its deadly blow; but Frodo at that dreadful glimpse
fell as one stricken mortally. His hand sought the chain about his neck.

Sam knelt by him. Faint, almost
inaudibly, he heard Frodo whispering: 'Help me, Sam! Help me, Sam! Hold my hand!
I can't stop it.' Sam took his master's hands and laid them together, palm to
palm, and kissed them; and then he held them gently between his own. The thought
came suddenly to him: 'He's spotted us! It's all up, or it soon will be. Now,
Sam Gamgee, this is the end of ends.'
Again he lifted Frodo
and drew his hands down to his own breast. letting his master's legs dangle.
Then he bowed his head and struggled off along the climbing road. It was not as
easy a way to take as it had looked at first. By fortune the fires that had
poured forth in the great turmoils when Sam stood upon Cirith Ungol had flowed
down mainly on the southern and western slopes, and the road on this side was
not blocked. Yet in many places it had crumbled away or was crossed by gaping
rents. After climbing eastward for some time it bent back upon itself at a sharp
angle and went westward for a space. There at the bend it was cut deep through a
crag of old weathered stone once long ago vomited from the Mountain's furnaces.
Panting under his load Sam turned the bend; and even as he did so, out of the
corner of his eye, he had a glimpse of something falling from the crag, like a
small piece of black stone that had toppled off as he
passed.
A sudden weight smote him and he crashed forward,
tearing the backs of his hands that still clasped his master's. Then he knew
what had happened, for above him as he lay he heard a hated
voice.
'Wicked masster!' it hissed. 'Wicked masster cheats
us; cheats Sméagol,
gollum. He musstn't go that way. He musstn't hurt
Preciouss. Give it to Sméagol, yess, give it to us! Give it to
uss!'
With a violent heave Sam rose up. At once he drew his
sword; but he could do nothing. Gollum and Frodo were locked together. Gollum
was tearing at his master, trying to get at the chain and the Ring. This was
probably the only thing that could have roused the dying embers of Frodo's heart
and will: an attack, an attempt to wrest his treasure from him by force. He
fought back with a sudden fury that amazed Sam, and Gollum also. Even so things
might have gone far otherwise, if Gollum himself had remained unchanged; but
whatever dreadful paths, lonely and hungry and waterless, he had trodden, driven
by a devouring desire and a terrible fear, they had left grievous marks on him.
He was a lean, starved, haggard thing, all bones and tight-drawn sallow skin. A
wild light flamed in his eyes, but his malice was no longer matched by his old
griping strength. Frodo flung him off and rose up
quivering.
'Down, down!' he gasped, clutching his hand to
his breast, so that beneath the cover of his leather shirt he clasped the Ring.
'Down you creeping thing, and out of my path! Your time is at an end. You cannot
betray me or slay me now.'
Then suddenly, as before under
the eaves of the Emyn Muil, Sam saw these two rivals with other vision. A
crouching shape, scarcely more than the shadow of a living thing, a creature now
wholly ruined and defeated, yet filled with a hideous lust and rage; and before
it stood stern, untouchable now by pity, a figure robed in white, but at its
breast it held a wheel of fire. Out of the fire there spoke a commanding
voice.
'Begone, and trouble me no more! If you touch me
ever again, you shall be cast yourself into the Fire of
Doom.'
The crouching shape backed away, terror in its
blinking eyes, and yet at the same time insatiable
desire.
Then the vision passed and Sam saw Frodo standing,
hand on breast, his breath coming in great gasps, and Gollum at his feet,
resting on his knees with his wide-splayed hands upon the
ground.
'Look out!' cried Sam. 'He'll spring!' He stepped
forward, brandishing his sword. 'Quick, Master!' he gasped. 'Go on! Go on! No
time to lose. I'll deal with him. Go on!'
Frodo looked at
him as if at one now far away. 'Yes, I must go on,' he said. 'Farewell, Sam!
This is the end at last. On Mount Doom doom shall fall. Farewell!' He turned and
went on, walking slowly but erect up the climbing
path.
'Now!' said Sam. 'At last I can deal with you!' He
leaped forward with drawn blade ready for battle. But Gollum did not spring. He
fell flat upon the ground and whimpered.
'Don't kill us,'
he wept. 'Don't hurt us with nassty cruel steel! Let us live, yes, live just a
little longer. Lost, lost! We're lost. And when Precious goes we'll die, yes,
die into the dust.' He clawed up the ashes of the path with his long fleshless
fingers. 'Dusst!' he hissed.
Sam's hand wavered. His mind
was hot with wrath and the memory of evil. It would be just to slay this
treacherous, murderous creature, just and many times deserved; and also it
seemed the only safe thing to do. But deep in his heart there was something that
restrained him: he could not strike this thing lying in the dust, forlorn,
ruinous, utterly wretched. He himself, though only for a little while, had borne
the Ring, and now dimly he guessed the agony of Gollum's shrivelled mind and
body, enslaved to that Ring, unable to find peace or relief ever in life again.
But Sam had no words to express what he felt.
'Oh, curse
you, you stinking thing!' he said. 'Go away! Be off! I don't trust you, not as
far as I could kick you; but be off. Or I
shall hurt you, yes, with nasty
cruel steel.'
Gollum got up on all fours, and backed away
for several paces, and then he turned, and as Sam aimed a kick at him he fled
away down the path. Sam gave no more heed to him. He suddenly remembered his
master. He looked up the path and could not see him. As fast as he could he
trudged up the road. If he had looked back, he might have seen not far below
Gollum turn again, and then with a wild light of madness glaring in his eyes
come, swiftly but warily, creeping on behind, a slinking shadow among the
stones.
The path climbed on. Soon it bent again and with a
last eastward course passed in a cutting along the face of the cone and came to
the dark door in the Mountain's side, the door of the Sammath Naur. Far away now
rising towards the South the sun, piercing the smokes and haze, burned ominous,
a dull bleared disc of red; but all Mordor lay about the Mountain like a dead
land, silent, shadow-folded, waiting for some dreadful
stroke.
Sam came to the gaping mouth and peered in. It was
dark and hot, and a deep rumbling shook the air. 'Frodo! Master!' he called.
There was no answer. For a moment he stood, his heart beating with wild fears,
and then he plunged in. A shadow followed him.
At first he
could see nothing. In his great need he drew out once more the phial of
Galadriel, but it was pale and cold in his trembling hand and threw no light
into that stifling dark. He was come to the heart of the realm of Sauron and the
forges of his ancient might, greatest in Middle-earth; all other powers were
here subdued. Fearfully he took a few uncertain steps in the dark, and then all
at once there came a flash of red that leaped upward, and smote the high black
roof. Then Sam saw that he was in a long cave or tunnel that bored into the
Mountain's smoking cone. But only a short way ahead its floor and the walls on
either side were cloven by a great fissure, out of which the red glare came, now
leaping up, now dying down into darkness; and all the while far below there was
a rumour and a trouble as of great engines throbbing and
labouring.
The light sprang up again, and there on the
brink of the chasm, at the very Crack of Doom, stood Frodo, black against the
glare, tense, erect, but still as if he had been turned to
stone.
'Master!' cried Sam.
Then Frodo
stirred and spoke with a clear voice, indeed with a voice clearer and more
powerful than Sam had ever heard him use, and it rose above the throb and
turmoil of Mount Doom, ringing in the roof and walls.
'I
have come,' he said. 'But I do not choose now to do what I came to do. I will
not do this deed. The Ring is mine!' And suddenly, as he set it on his finger,
he vanished from Sam's sight. Sam gasped, but he had no chance to cry out, for
at that moment many things happened.
Something struck Sam
violently in the back, his legs were knocked from under him and he was flung
aside, striking his head against the stony floor, as a dark shape sprang over
him. He lay still and for a moment all went black.
And far
away, as Frodo put on the Ring and claimed it for his own, even in Sammath Naur
the very heart of his realm, the Power in Barad-dur was shaken, and the Tower
trembled from its foundations to its proud and bitter crown. The Dark Lord was
suddenly aware of him, and his Eye piercing all shadows looked across the plain
to the door that he had made; and the magnitude of his own folly was revealed to
him in a blinding flash, and all the devices of his enemies were at last laid
bare. Then his wrath blazed in consuming flame, but his fear rose like a vast
black smoke to choke him. For he knew his deadly peril and the thread upon which
his doom now hung.
From all his policies and webs of fear
and treachery, from all his stratagems and wars his mind shook free; and
throughout his realm a tremor ran, his slaves quailed, and his armies halted,
and his captains suddenly steerless, bereft of will, wavered and despaired. For
they were forgotten. The whole mind and purpose of the Power that wielded them
was now bent with overwhelming force upon the Mountain. At his summons, wheeling
with a rending cry, in a last desperate race there flew, faster than the winds,
the Nazgûl the Ringwraiths, and with a storm of wings they hurtled southwards to
Mount Doom.
Sam got up. He was dazed, and blood streaming
from his head dripped in his eyes. He groped forward, and then he saw a strange
and terrible thing. Gollum on the edge of the abyss was fighting like a mad
thing with an unseen foe. To and fro he swayed, now so near the brink that
almost he tumbled in, now dragging back, falling to the ground, rising, and
falling again. And all the while he hissed but spoke no
words.
The fires below awoke in anger, the red light
blazed, and all the cavern was filled with a great glare and heat. Suddenly Sam
saw Gollum's long hands draw upwards to his mouth; his white fangs gleamed, and
then snapped as they bit. Frodo gave a cry, and there he was, fallen upon his
knees at the chasm's edge. But Gollum, dancing like a mad thing, held aloft the
ring, a finger still thrust within its circle. It shone now as if verily it was
wrought of living fire.
'Precious, precious, precious!'
Gollum cried. 'My Precious! O my Precious!' And with that, even as his eyes were
lifted up to gloat on his prize, he stepped too far, toppled, wavered for a
moment on the brink, and then with a shriek he fell. Out of the depths came his
last wail
Precious, and he was gone.
There was a
roar and a great confusion of noise. Fires leaped up and licked the roof. The
throbbing grew to a great tumult, and the Mountain shook. Sam ran to Frodo and
picked him up and carried him out to the door. And there upon the dark threshold
of the Sammath Naur, high above the plains of Mordor, such wonder and terror
came on him that he stood still forgetting all else, and gazed as one turned to
stone.
A brief vision he had of swirling cloud, and in the
midst of it towers and battlements, tall as hills, founded upon a mighty
mountain-throne above immeasurable pits; great courts and dungeons, eyeless
prisons sheer as cliffs, and gaping gates of steel and adamant: and then all
passed. Towers fell and mountains slid; walls crumbled and melted, crashing
down; vast spires of smoke and spouting steams went billowing up, up, until they
toppled like an overwhelming wave, and its wild crest curled and came foaming
down upon the land. And then at last over the miles between there came a rumble,
rising to a deafening crash and roar; the earth shook, the plain heaved and
cracked, and Orodruin reeled. Fire belched from its riven summit. The skies
burst into thunder seared with lightning. Down like lashing whips fell a torrent
of black rain. And into the heart of the storm, with a cry that pierced all
other sounds, tearing the clouds asunder, the Nazgûl came, shooting like flaming
bolts, as caught in the fiery ruin of hill and sky they crackled, withered, and
went out.
'Well, this is the end, Sam Gamgee,' said a voice
by his side. And there was Frodo, pale and worn, and yet himself again; and in
his eyes there was peace now, neither strain of will, nor madness, nor any fear.
His burden was taken away. There was the dear master of the sweet days in the
Shire.
'Master!' cried Sam and fell upon his knees. In all
that ruin of the world for the moment he felt only joy, great joy. The burden
was gone. His master had been saved; he was himself again, he was free. And then
Sam caught sight of the maimed and bleeding hand.
'Your
poor hand!' he said. 'And I have nothing to bind it with, or comfort it. I would
have spared him a whole hand of mine rather. But he's gone now beyond recall,
gone for ever.'
'Yes,' said Frodo. 'But do you remember
Gandalf's words:
Even Gollum may have something yet to do? But for him,
Sam, I could not have destroyed the Ring. The Quest would have been in vain,
even at the bitter end. So let us forgive him! For the Quest is achieved, and
now all is over. I am glad you are here with me. Here at the end of all things,
Sam.'
Chapter 4
The Field of
Cormallen
All about the hills the hosts of Mordor raged. The
Captains of the West were foundering in a gathering sea. The sun gleamed red,
and under the wings of the Nazgûl the shadows of death fell dark upon the earth.
Aragorn stood beneath his banner, silent and stern, as one lost in thought of
things long past or far away; but his eyes gleamed like stars that shine the
brighter as the night deepens. Upon the hill-top stood Gandalf, and he was white
and cold and no shadow fell on him. The onslaught of Mordor broke like a wave on
the beleaguered hills, voices roaring like a tide amid the wreck and crash of
arms.
As if to his eyes some sudden vision had been given,
Gandalf stirred; and he turned, looking back north where the skies were pale and
clear. Then he lifted up his hands and cried in a loud voice ringing above the
din:
The Eagles are coming! And many voices answered crying:
The
Eagles are coming! The Eagles are coming! The hosts of Mordor looked up and
wondered what this sign might mean.
There came Gwaihir the
Windlord, and Landroval his brother, greatest of all the Eagles of the North,
mightiest of the descendants of old Thorondor, who built his eyries in the
inaccessible peaks of the Encircling Mountains when Middle-earth was young.
Behind them in long swift lines came all their vassals from the northern
mountains, speeding on a gathering wind. Straight down upon the Nazgûl they
bore, stooping suddenly out of the high airs, and the rush of their wide wings
as they passed over was like a gale.
But the Nazgûl turned
and fled, and vanished into Mordor's shadows, hearing a sudden terrible call out
of the Dark Tower; and even at that moment all the hosts of Mordor trembled,
doubt clutched their hearts, their laughter failed, their hands shook and their
limbs were loosed. The Power that drove them on and filled them with hate and
fury was wavering, its will was removed from them; and now looking in the eyes
of their enemies they saw a deadly light and were
afraid.
Then all the Captains of the West cried aloud, for
their hearts were filled with a new hope in the midst of darkness. Out from the
beleaguered hills knights of Gondor, Riders of Rohan, Dunedain of the North,
close-serried companies, drove against their wavering foes, piercing the press
with the thrust of bitter spears. But Gandalf lifted up his arms and called once
more in a clear voice:
'Stand, Men of the West! Stand and
wait! This is the hour of doom.'
And even as he spoke the
earth rocked beneath their feet. Then rising swiftly up, far above the Towers of
the Black Gate, high above the mountains, a vast soaring darkness sprang into
the sky, flickering with fire. The earth groaned and quaked. The Towers of the
Teeth swayed, tottered, and fell down; the mighty rampart crumbled; the Black
Gate was hurled in ruin; and from far away, now dim, now growing, now mounting
to the clouds, there came a drumming rumble, a roar, a long echoing roll of
ruinous noise.
'The realm of Sauron is ended!' said
Gandalf. 'The Ring-bearer has fulfilled his Quest.' And as the Captains gazed
south to the Land of Mordor, it seemed to them that, black against the pall of
cloud, there rose a huge shape of shadow, impenetrable, lightning-crowned,
filling all the sky. Enormous it reared above the world, and stretched out
towards them a vast threatening hand, terrible but impotent: for even as it
leaned over them, a great wind took it, and it was all blown away, and passed;
and then a hush fell.
The Captains bowed their heads; and
when they looked up again, behold! their enemies were flying and the power of
Mordor was scattering like dust in the wind. As when death smites the swollen
brooding thing that inhabits their crawling hill and holds them all in sway,
ants will wander witless and purposeless and then feebly die, so the creatures
of Sauron, orc or troll or beast spell-enslaved, ran hither and thither
mindless; and some slew themselves, or cast themselves in pits, or fled wailing
back to hide in holes and dark lightless places far from hope. But the Men of
Rhun and of Harad, Easterling and Southron, saw the ruin of their war and the
great majesty and glory of the Captains of the West. And those that were deepest
and longest in evil servitude, hating the West, and yet were men proud and bold,
in their turn now gathered themselves for a last stand of desperate battle. But
the most part fled eastward as they could; and some cast their weapons down and
sued for mercy.
Then Gandalf, leaving all such matters of
battle and command to Aragorn and the other lords, stood upon the hill-top and
called; and down to him came the great eagle, Gwaihir the Windlord, and stood
before him.
'Twice you have borne me, Gwaihir my friend,'
said Gandalf. 'Thrice shall pay for all, if you are willing. You will not find
me a burden much greater than when you bore me from Zirak-zigil, where my old
life burned away.'
'I would bear you,' answered Gwaihir,
'whither you will, even were you made of stone.'
'Then
come, and let your brother go with us, and some other of your folk who is most
swift! For we have need of speed greater than any wind, outmatching the wings of
the Nazgûl.'
'The North Wind blows, but we shall outfly
it,' said Gwaihir. And he lifted up Gandalf and sped away south, and with him
went Landroval, and Meneldor young and swift. And they passed over Udun and
Gorgoroth and saw all the land in ruin and tumult beneath them, and before them
Mount Doom blazing, pouring out its fire.
'I am glad that
you are here with me,' said Frodo. 'Here at the end of all things,
Sam.'
'Yes, I am with you, Master,' said Sam, laying
Frodo's wounded hand gently to his breast. 'And you're with me. And the
journey's finished. But after coming all that way I don't want to give up yet.
It's not like me, somehow, if you understand.'
'Maybe not,
Sam,' said Frodo, 'but it's like things are in the world. Hopes fail. An end
comes. We have only a little time to wait now. We are lost in ruin and downfall,
and there is no escape.'
'Well, Master, we could at least
go further from this dangerous place here, from this Crack of Doom, if that's
its name. Now couldn't we? Come, Mr. Frodo, let's go down the path at any
rate!'
'Very well, Sam. If you wish to go, I'll come,' said
Frodo; and they rose and went slowly down the winding road; and even as they
passed towards the Mountain's quaking feet, a great smoke and steam belched from
the Sammath Naur, and the side of the cone was riven open, and a huge fiery
vomit rolled in slow thunderous cascade down the eastern
mountain-side.
Frodo and Sam could go no further. Their
last strength of mind and body was swiftly ebbing. They had reached a low ashen
hill piled at the Mountain's foot; but from it there was no more escape. It was
an island now, not long to endure, amid the torment of Orodruin. All about it
the earth gaped, and from deep rifts and pits smoke and fumes leaped up. Behind
them the Mountain was convulsed. Great rents opened in its side. Slow rivers of
fire came down the long slopes towards them. Soon they would be engulfed. A rain
of hot ash was falling.
They stood now; and Sam still
holding his master's hand caressed it. He sighed. 'What a tale we have been in,
Mr. Frodo, haven't we?' he said. 'I wish I could hear it told! Do you think
they'll say:
Now comes the story of Nine-fingered Frodo and the Ring of
Doom? And then everyone will hush, like we did, when in Rivendell they told
us the tale of Beren One-hand and the Great Jewel. I wish I could hear it! And I
wonder how it will go on after our part.'
But even while he
spoke so, to keep fear away until the very last, his eyes still strayed north,
north into the eye of the wind, to where the sky far off was clear, as the cold
blast, rising to a gale, drove back the darkness and the ruin of the
clouds.
And so it was that Gwaihir saw them with his keen
far-seeing eyes, as down the wild wind he came, and daring the great peril of
the skies he circled in the air: two small dark figures, forlorn, hand in hand
upon a little hill, while the world shook under them, and gasped, and rivers of
fire drew near. And even as he espied them and came swooping down, he saw them
fall, worn out, or choked with fumes and heat, or stricken down by despair at
last, hiding their eyes from death.
Side by side they lay;
and down swept Gwaihir, and down came Landroval and Meneldor the swift; and in a
dream, not knowing what fate had befallen them, the wanderers were lifted up and
borne far away out of the darkness and the fire.
When Sam
awoke, he found that he was lying on some soft bed, but over him gently swayed
wide beechen boughs, and through their young leaves sunlight glimmered, green
and gold. All the air was full of a sweet mingled scent.
He
remembered that smell: the fragrance of Ithilien. 'Bless me!' he mused. 'How
long have I been asleep?' For the scent had borne him back to the day when he
had lit his little fire under the sunny bank; and for a moment all else between
was out of waking memory. He stretched and drew a deep breath. 'Why, what a
dream I've had!' he muttered. 'I am glad to wake!' He sat up and then he saw
that Frodo was lying beside him, and slept peacefully, one hand behind his head,
and the other resting upon the coverlet. It was the right hand, and the third
finger was missing.
Full memory flooded back, and Sam cried
aloud: 'It wasn't a dream! Then where are we?'
And a voice
spoke softly behind: 'In the land of Ithilien, and in the keeping of the King;
and he awaits you.' With that Gandalf stood before him, robed in white, his
beard now gleaming like pure snow in the twinkling of the leafy sunlight. 'Well,
Master Samwise, how do you feel?' he said.
But Sam lay
back, and stared with open mouth, and for a moment, between bewilderment and
great joy, he could not answer. At last he gasped: 'Gandalf! I thought you were
dead! But then I thought I was dead myself. Is everything sad going to come
untrue? What's happened to the world?'
'A great Shadow has
departed,' said Gandalf, and then he laughed and the sound was like music, or
like water in a parched land; and as he listened the thought came to Sam that he
had not heard laughter, the pure sound of merriment, for days upon days without
count. It fell upon his ears like the echo of all the joys he had ever known.
But he himself burst into tears. Then, as a sweet rain will pass down a wind of
spring and the sun will shine out the clearer, his tears ceased, and his
laughter welled up, and laughing he sprang from his
bed.
'How do I feel?' he cried. 'Well, I don't know how to
say it. I feel, I feel' – he waved his arms in the air – 'I feel like spring
after winter, and sun on the leaves; and like trumpets and harps and all the
songs I have ever heard!' He stopped and he turned towards his master. 'But
how's Mr. Frodo?' he said. 'Isn't it a shame about his poor hand? But I hope
he's all right otherwise. He's had a cruel time.'
'Yes, I
am all right otherwise,' said Frodo, sitting up and laughing in his turn. I fell
asleep again waiting for you, Sam, you sleepyhead. I was awake early this
morning, and now it must be nearly noon.'
'Noon?' said Sam,
trying to calculate. 'Noon of what day?'
'The fourteenth of
the New Year,' said Gandalf, 'or if you like, the eighth day of April in the
Shire reckoning
2. But
in Gondor the New Year will always now begin upon the twenty-fifth of March when
Sauron fell, and when you were brought out of the fire to the King. He has
tended you, and now he awaits you. You shall eat and drink with him. When you
are ready I will lead you to him.'
'The King?' said Sam.
'What king, and who is he?'
'The King of Gondor and Lord of
the Western Lands,' said Gandalf 'and he has taken back all his ancient realm.
He will ride soon to his crowning, but he waits for
you.'
'What shall we wear?' said Sam; for all he could see
was the old and tattered clothes that they had journeyed in, lying folded on the
ground beside their beds.
'The clothes that you wore on
your way to Mordor,' said Gandalf. 'Even the orc-rags that you bore in the black
land, Frodo, shall be preserved. No silks and linens, nor any armour or heraldry
could be more honourable. But later I will find some other clothes,
perhaps.'
Then he held out his hands to them, and they saw
that one shone with light. 'What have you got there?' Frodo cried. 'Can it be –
?'
'Yes, I have brought your two treasures. They were found
on Sam when you were rescued. The Lady Galadriel's gifts: your glass, Frodo, and
your box, Sam. You will be glad to have these safe
again.'
When they were washed and clad, and had eaten a
light meal, the Hobbits followed Gandalf. They stepped out of the beech-grove in
which they had lain, and passed on to a long green lawn, glowing in sunshine,
bordered by stately dark-leaved trees laden with scarlet blossom. Behind them
they could hear the sound of falling water, and a stream ran down before them
between flowering banks, until it came to a greenwood at the lawn's foot and
passed then on under an archway of trees, through which they saw the shimmer of
water far away.
As they came to the opening in the wood,
they were surprised to see knights in bright mail and tall guards in silver and
black standing there, who greeted them with honour and bowed before them. And
then one blew a long trumpet, and they went on through the aisle of trees beside
the singing stream. So they came to a wide green land, and beyond it was a broad
river in a silver haze, out of which rose a long wooded isle, and many ships lay
by its shores. But on the field where they now stood a great host was drawn up,
in ranks and companies glittering in the sun. And as the Hobbits approached
swords were unsheathed, and spears were shaken, and horns and trumpets sang, and
men cried with many voices and in many tongues:
'Long live the Halflings! Praise them with great
praise!
Cuio i Pheriain anann! Aglar'ni Pheriannath!
Praise them with
great praise, Frodo and Samwise!
Daur a Berhael, Conin en Annun!
Eglerio!
Praise them!
Eglerio!
A laita te, laita te! Andave
laituvalmet!
Praise them!
Cormacolindor, a laita tárienna!
Praise
them! The Ring-bearers, praise them with great
praise!'
And so the red blood
blushing in their faces and their eyes shining with wonder, Frodo and Sam went
forward and saw that amidst the clamorous host were set three high-seats built
of green turves. Behind the seat upon the right floated, white on green, a great
horse running free; upon the left was a banner, silver upon blue, a ship
swan-prowed faring on the sea; but behind the highest throne in the midst of all
a great standard was spread in the breeze, and there a white tree flowered upon
a sable field beneath a shining crown and seven glittering stars. On the throne
sat a mail-clad man, a great sword was laid across his knees, but he wore no
helm. As they drew near he rose. And then they knew him, changed as he was, so
high and glad of face, kingly, lord of Men, dark-haired with eyes of
grey.
Frodo ran to meet him, and Sam followed close behind.
'Well, if that isn't the crown of all!' he said. 'Strider, or I'm still
asleep!'
'Yes, Sam, Strider,' said Aragorn. 'It is a long
way, is it not, from Bree, where you did not like the look of me? A long way for
us all but yours has been the darkest road.'
And then to
Sam's surprise and utter confusion he bowed his knee before them; and taking
them by the hand, Frodo upon his right and Sam upon his left, he led them to the
throne, and setting them upon it, he turned to the men and captains who stood by
and spoke, so that his voice rang over all the host,
crying:
'Praise them with great
praise!'
And when the glad shout had swelled up and died
away again, to Sam's final and complete satisfaction and pure joy, a minstrel of
Gondor stood forth, and knelt, and begged leave to sing. And behold! he
said:
'Lo! lords and knights and men of valour unashamed,
kings and princes, and fair people of Gondor, and Riders of Rohan, and ye sons
of Elrond, and Dunedain of the North, and Elf and Dwarf, and greathearts of the
Shire, and all free folk of the West, now listen to my lay. For I will sing to
you of Frodo of the Nine Fingers and the Ring of Doom.'
And
when Sam heard that he laughed aloud for sheer delight, and he stood up and
cried: 'O great glory and splendour! And all my wishes have come true!' And then
he wept.
And all the host laughed and wept, and in the
midst of their merriment and tears the clear voice of the minstrel rose like
silver and gold, and all men were hushed. And he sang to them, now in the
Elven-tongue, now in the speech of the West, until their hearts, wounded with
sweet words, overflowed, and their joy was like swords, and they passed in
thought out to regions where pain and delight flow together and tears are the
very wine of blessedness.
And at the last, as the Sun fell
from the noon and the shadows of the trees lengthened, he ended. 'Praise them
with great praise!' he said and knelt. And then Aragorn stood up, and all the
host arose, and they passed to pavilions made ready, to eat and drink and make
merry while the day lasted.
Frodo and Sam were led apart
and brought to a tent, and there their old raiment was taken off, but folded and
set aside with honour; and clean linen was given to them. Then Gandalf came and
in his arms, to the wonder of Frodo, he bore the sword and the elven-cloak and
the mithril-coat that had been taken from him in Mordor. For Sam he brought a
coat of gilded mail, and his elven-cloak all healed of the soils and hurts that
it had suffered; and then he laid before them two
swords.
'I do not wish for any sword,' said
Frodo.
'Tonight at least you should wear one,' said
Gandalf.
Then Frodo took the small sword that had belonged
to Sam, and had been laid at his side in Cirith Ungol. 'Sting I gave to you
Sam,' he said.
'No, master! Mr. Bilbo gave it to you, and
it goes with his silver coat; he would not wish anyone else to wear it
now.'
Frodo gave way; and Gandalf, as if he were their
esquire, knelt and girt the sword-belts about them, and then rising he set
circlets of silver upon their heads. And when they were arrayed they went to the
great feast; and they sat at the King's table with Gandalf, and King Éomer of
Rohan, and the Prince Imrahil and all the chief captains; and there also were
Gimli and Legolas.
But when, after the Standing Silence,
wine was brought there came in two esquires to serve the kings; or so they
seemed to be: one was clad in the silver and sable of the Guards of Minas
Tirith, and the other in white and green. But Sam wondered what such young boys
were doing in an army of mighty men. Then suddenly as they drew near and he
could see them plainly, he exclaimed:
'Why, look Mr. Frodo!
Look here! Well, if it isn't Pippin. Mr. Peregrin Took I should say, and Mr.
Merry! How they have grown! Bless me! But I can see there's more tales to tell
than ours.'
'There are indeed,' said Pippin turning towards
him. 'And we'll begin telling them, as soon as this feast is ended. In the
meantime you can try Gandalf. He's not so close as he used to be, though he
laughs now more than he talks. For the present Merry and I are busy. We are
knights of the City and of the Mark, as I hope you
observe.'
At last the glad day ended; and when the Sun was
gone and the round Moon rode slowly above the mists of Anduin and flickered
through the fluttering leaves, Frodo and Sam sat under the whispering trees amid
the fragrance of fair Ithilien; and they talked deep into the night with Merry
and Pippin and Gandalf, and after a while Legolas and Gimli joined them. There
Frodo and Sam learned much of all that had happened to the Company after their
fellowship was broken on the evil day at Parth Galen by Rauros Falls; and still
there was always more to ask and more to tell.
Orcs, and
talking trees, and leagues of grass, and galloping riders, and glittering caves,
and white towers and golden halls, and battles, and tall ships sailing, all
these passed before Sam's mind until he felt bewildered. But amidst all these
wonders he returned always to his astonishment at the size of Merry and Pippin;
and he made them stand back to back with Frodo and himself. He scratched his
head. 'Can't understand it at your age!' he said. 'But there it is: you're three
inches taller than you ought to he, or I'm a dwarf.'
'That
you certainly are not,' said Gimli. 'But what did I say? Mortals cannot go
drinking ent-draughts and expect no more to come of them than of a pot of
beer.'
'Ent-draughts?' said Sam. 'There you go about Ents
again; but what they are beats me. Why, it will take weeks before we get all
these things sized up!'
'Weeks indeed,' said Pippin. 'And
then Frodo will have to be locked up in a tower in Minas Tirith and write it all
down. Otherwise he will forget half of it, and poor old Bilbo will be dreadfully
disappointed.'
At length Gandalf rose. 'The hands of the
King are hands of healing, dear friends,' he said. 'But you went to the very
brink of death ere he recalled you, putting forth all his power, and sent you
into the sweet forgetfulness of sleep. And though you have indeed slept long and
blessedly, still it is now time to sleep again.'
And not
only Sam and Frodo here, said Gimli, but you too, Pippin. I love you, if only
because of the pains you have cost me, which I shall never forget. Nor shall I
forget finding you on the hill of the last battle. But for Gimli the Dwarf you
would have been lost then. But at least I know now the look of a hobbit's foot,
though it be all that can be seen under a heap of bodies. And when I heaved that
great carcase off you, I made sure you were dead. I could have torn out my
beard. And it is only a day yet since you were first up and abroad again. To bed
now you go. And so shall I.'
'And I,' said Legolas, 'shall
walk in the woods of this fair land, which is rest enough. In days to come, if
my Elven-lord allows, some of our folk shall remove hither; and when we come it
shall be blessed, for a while. For a while: a month, a life, a hundred years of
Men. But Anduin is near, and Anduin leads down to the Sea. To the Sea!
To the Sea, to the Sea! The white gulls are crying,
The
wind is blowing, and the white foam is flying.
West, west away, the round
sun is falling.
Grey ship, grey ship, do you hear them calling.
The
voices of my people that have gone before me?
I will leave, I will leave
the woods that bore me;
For our days are ending and our years failing.
I
will pass the wide waters lonely sailing.
Long are the waves on the Last
Shore falling,
Sweet are the voices in the Lost Isle calling,
In
Eressea, in Elvenhome that no man can discover,
Where the leaves fall not:
land of my people for ever!'
And so
singing Legolas went away down the hill.
Then the others
also departed, and Frodo and Sam went to their beds and slept. And in the
morning they rose again in hope and peace; and they spent many days in Ithilien.
For the Field of Cormallen, where the host was now encamped was near to Henneth
Annun, and the stream that flowed from its falls could be heard in the night as
it rushed down through its rocky gate, and passed through the flowery meads into
the tides of Anduin by the Isle of Cair Andros. The hobbits wandered here and
there visiting again the places that they had passed before; and Sam hoped
always in some shadow of the woods or secret glade to catch, maybe, a glimpse of
the great Oliphaunt. And when he learned that at the siege of Gondor there had
been a great number of these beasts but that they were all destroyed, he thought
it a sad loss.
'Well, one can't be everywhere at once, I
suppose,' he said. 'But I missed a lot, seemingly.'
In the
meanwhile the host made ready for the return to Minas Tirith. The weary rested
and the hurt were healed. For some had laboured and fought much with the
remnants of the Easterlings and Southrons, until all were subdued. And, latest
of all, those returned who had passed into Mordor and destroyed the fortresses
in the north of the land.
But at the last when the month of
May was drawing near the Captains of the West set out again; and they went
aboard ship with all their men, and they sailed from Cair Andros down Anduin to
Osgiliath; and there they remained for one day; and the day after they came to
the green fields of the Pelennor and saw again the white towers under tall
Mindolluin, the City of the Men of Gondor, last memory of Westernesse, that had
passed through the darkness and fire to a new day.
And
there in the midst of the fields they set up their pavilions and awaited the
morning; for it was the Eve of May, and the King would enter his gates with the
rising of the Sun.
Chapter 5
The Steward and the
King
Over the city of Gondor doubt and great dread had hung.
Fair weather and clear sun had seemed but a mockery to men whose days held
little hope, and who looked each morning for news of doom. Their lord was dead
and burned, dead lay the King of Rohan in their citadel, and the new king that
had come to them in the night was gone again to a war with powers too dark and
terrible for any might or valour to conquer. And no news came. After the host
left Morgul Vale and took the northward road beneath the shadow of the mountains
no messenger had returned nor any rumour of what was passing in the brooding
East.
When the Captains were but two days gone, the Lady
Éowyn bade the women who tended her to bring her raiment, and she would not be
gainsaid, but rose; and when they had clothed her and set her arm in a sling of
linen, she went to the Warden of the Houses of
Healing.
'Sir,' she said, 'I am in great unrest, and I
cannot lie longer in sloth.'
'Lady,' he answered, 'you are
not yet healed, and I was commanded to tend you with especial care. You should
not have risen from your bed for seven days yet, or so I was bidden. I beg you
to go back.'
'I am healed,' she said, 'healed at least in
body, save my left arm only, and that is at ease. But I shall sicken anew, if
there is naught that I can do. Are there no tidings of war? The women can tell
me nothing.'
'There are no tidings,' said the Warden, 'save
that the Lords have ridden to Morgul Vale; and men say that the new captain out
of the North is their chief. A great lord is that, and a healer; and it is a
thing passing strange to me that the healing hand should also wield the sword.
It is not thus in Gondor now, though once it was so, if old tales be true. But
for long years we healers have only sought to patch the rents made by the men of
swords. Though we should still have enough to do without them: the world is full
enough of hurts and mischances without wars to multiply
them.'
'It needs but one foe to breed a war, not two,
Master Warden,' answered Éowyn. 'And those who have not swords can still die
upon them. Would you have the folk of Gondor gather you herbs only, when the
Dark Lord gathers armies? And it is not always good to be healed in body. Nor is
it always evil to die in battle, even in bitter pain. Were I permitted, in this
dark hour I would choose the latter.'
The Warden looked at
her. Tall she stood there, her eyes bright in her white face, her hand clenched
as she turned and gazed out of his window that opened to the East. He sighed and
shook his head. After a pause she turned to him again.
'Is
there no deed to do?' she said. 'Who commands in this
City?'
'I do not rightly know,' he answered. 'Such things
are not my care. There is a marshal over the Riders of Rohan; and the Lord
Hurin, I am told, commands the men of Gondor. But the Lord Faramir is by right
the Steward of the City.'
'Where can I find
him?'
'In this house, lady. He was sorely hurt, but is now
set again on the way to health. But I do not know—'
'Will
you not bring me to him? Then you will know.'
The Lord
Faramir was walking alone in the garden of the Houses of Healing, and the
sunlight warmed him, and he felt life run new in his veins; but his heart was
heavy, and he looked out over the walls eastward. And coming, the Warden spoke
his name, and he turned and saw the Lady Éowyn of Rohan; and he was moved with
pity, for he saw that she was hurt, and his clear sight perceived her sorrow and
unrest.
'My lord,' said the Warden, 'here is the Lady Éowyn
of Rohan. She rode with the king and was sorely hurt, and dwells now in my
keeping. But she is not content, and she wishes to speak to the Steward of the
City.'
'Do not misunderstand him, lord,' said Éowyn. 'It is
not lack of care that grieves me. No houses could be fairer, for those who
desire to be healed. But I cannot lie in sloth, idle, caged. I looked for death
in battle. But I have not died, and battle still goes
on.'
At a sign from Faramir, the Warden bowed and departed.
'What would you have me do, lady?' said Faramir. 'I also am a prisoner of the
healers.' He looked at her, and being a man whom pity deeply stirred, it seemed
to him that her loveliness amid her grief would pierce his heart. And she looked
at him and saw the grave tenderness in his eyes, and yet knew, for she was bred
among men of war, that here was one whom no Rider of the Mark would outmatch in
battle.
'What do you wish?' he said again. 'If it lies in
my power, I will do it.'
'I would have you command this
Warden, and bid him let me go,' she said; but though her words were still proud,
her heart faltered, and for the first time she doubted herself. She guessed that
this tall man, both stern and gentle, might think her merely wayward, like a
child that has not the firmness of mind to go on with a dull task to the
end.
'I myself am in the Warden's keeping,' answered
Faramir. 'Nor have I yet taken up my authority in the City. But had I done so, I
should still listen to his counsel, and should not cross his will in matters of
his craft, unless in some great need.'
'But I do not desire
healing,' she said. 'I wish to ride to war like my brother Éomer, or better like
Théoden the king, for he died and has both honour and
peace.'
'It is too late, lady, to follow the Captains, even
if you had the strength,' said Faramir. 'But death in battle may come to us all
yet, willing or unwilling. You will be better prepared to face it in your own
manner, if while there is still time you do as the Healer commanded. You and I,
we must endure with patience the hours of waiting.'
She did
not answer, but as he looked at her it seemed to him that something in her
softened, as though a bitter frost were yielding at the first faint presage of
Spring. A tear sprang in her eye and fell down her cheek, like a glistening
rain-drop. Her proud head drooped a little. Then quietly, more as if speaking to
herself than to him: 'But the healers would have me lie abed seven days yet,'
she said. 'And my window does not look eastward.' Her voice was now that of a
maiden young and sad.
Faramir smiled, though his heart was
filled with pity. 'Your window does not look eastward?' he said. 'That can be
amended. In this I will command the Warden. If you will stay in this house in
our care, lady, and take your rest, then you shall walk in this garden in the
sun, as you will; and you shall look east, whither all our hopes have gone. And
here you will find me, walking and waiting, and also looking east. It would ease
my care, if you would speak to me, or walk at whiles with
me.'
Then she raised her head and looked him in the eyes
again; and a colour came in her pale face. 'How should I ease your care, my
lord?' she said. 'And I do not desire the speech of living
men.'
'Would you have my plain answer?' he
said.
'I would.'
'Then, Éowyn of
Rohan, I say to you that you are beautiful. In the valleys of our hills there
are flowers fair and bright, and maidens fairer still; but neither flower nor
lady have I seen till now in Gondor so lovely, and so sorrowful. It may be that
only a few days are left ere darkness falls upon our world, and when it comes I
hope to face it steadily; but it would ease my heart, if while the Sun yet
shines, I could see you still. For you and I have both passed under the wings of
the Shadow, and the same hand drew us back.'
'Alas, not me,
lord!' she said. 'Shadow lies on me still. Look not to me for healing! I am a
shieldmaiden and my hand is ungentle. But I thank you for this at least, that I
need not keep to my chamber. I will walk abroad by the grace of the Steward of
the City.' And she did him a courtesy and walked back to the house. But Faramir
for a long while walked alone in the garden, and his glance now strayed rather
to the house than to the eastward walls.
When he returned
to his chamber he called for the Warden, and heard all that he could tell of the
Lady of Rohan.
'But I doubt not, lord,' said the Warden,
'that you would learn more from the Halfling that is with us; for he was in the
riding of the king, and with the Lady at the end, they
say.'
And so Merry was sent to Faramir, and while that day
lasted they talked long together, and Faramir learned much, more even than Merry
put into words; and he thought that he understood now something of the grief and
unrest of Éowyn of Rohan. And in the fair evening Faramir and Merry walked in
the garden, but she did not come.
But in the morning, as
Faramir came from the Houses, he saw her, as she stood upon the walls; and she
was clad all in white, and gleamed in the sun. And he called to her, and she
came down, and they walked on the grass or sat under a green tree together, now
in silence, now in speech. And each day after they did likewise. And the Warden
looking from his window was glad in heart, for he was a healer, and his care was
lightened; and certain it was that, heavy as was the dread and foreboding of
those days upon the hearts of men, still these two of his charges prospered and
grew daily in strength.
And so the fifth day came since the
Lady Éowyn went first to Faramir; and they stood now together once more upon the
walls of the City and looked out. No tidings had yet come, and all hearts were
darkened. The weather, too, was bright no longer. It was cold. A wind that had
sprung up in the night was blowing now keenly from the North, and it was rising;
but the lands about looked grey and drear.
They were clad
in warm raiment and heavy cloaks, and over all the Lady Éowyn wore a great blue
mantle of the colour of deep summer-night, and it was set with silver stars
about hem and throat. Faramir had sent for this robe and had wrapped it about
her; and he thought that she looked fair and queenly indeed as she stood there
at his side. The mantle was wrought for his mother, Finduilas of Amroth, who
died untimely, and was to him but a memory of loveliness in far days and of his
first grief; and her robe seemed to him raiment fitting for the beauty and
sadness of Éowyn.
But she now shivered beneath the starry
mantle, and she looked northward, above the grey hither lands, into the eye of
the cold wind where far away the sky was hard and
clear.
'What do you look for, Éowyn?' said
Faramir.
'Does not the Black Gate lie yonder?' said she.
'And must he not now be come thither? It is seven days since he rode
away.'
'Seven days,' said Faramir. 'But think not ill of
me, if I say to you: they have brought me both a joy and a pain that I never
thought to know. Joy to see you; but pain, because now the fear and doubt of
this evil time are grown dark indeed. Éowyn, I would not have this world end
now, or lose so soon what I have found.'
'Lose what you
have found, lord?' she answered; but she looked at him gravely and her eyes were
kind. 'I know not what in these days you have found that you could lose. But
come, my friend, let us not speak of it! Let us not speak at all! I stand upon
some dreadful brink, and it is utterly dark in the abyss before my feet, but
whether there is any light behind me I cannot tell, for I cannot turn yet. I
wait for some stroke of doom.'
'Yes, we wait for the stroke
of doom,' said Faramir. And they said no more; and it seemed to them as they
stood upon the wall that the wind died, and the light failed, and the Sun was
bleared, and all sounds in the City or in the lands about were hushed: neither
wind, nor voice, nor bird-call, nor rustle of leaf, nor their own breath could
be heard; the very beating of their hearts was stilled. Time
halted.
And as they stood so, their hands met and clasped,
though they did not know it. And still they waited for they knew not what. Then
presently it seemed to them that above the ridges of the distant mountains
another vast mountain of darkness rose, towering up like a wave that should
engulf the world, and about it lightnings flickered; and then a tremor ran
through the earth, and they felt the walls of the City quiver. A sound like a
sigh went up from all the lands about them; and their hearts beat suddenly
again.
'It reminds me of Númenor,' said Faramir, and
wondered to hear himself speak.
'Of Númenor?' said
Éowyn.
'Yes,' said Faramir, 'of the land of Westernesse
that foundered and of the great dark wave climbing over the green lands and
above the hills, and coming on, darkness unescapable. I often dream of
it.'
'Then you think that the Darkness is coming?' said
Éowyn. 'Darkness Unescapable?' And suddenly she drew close to
him.
'No,' said Faramir, looking into her face. 'It was but
a picture in the mind. I do not know what is happening. The reason of my waking
mind tells me that great evil has befallen and we stand at the end of days. But
my heart says nay; and all my limbs are light, and a hope and joy are come to me
that no reason can deny. Éowyn, Éowyn, White Lady of Rohan, in this hour I do
not believe that any darkness will endure!' And he stooped and kissed her
brow.
And so they stood on the walls of the City of Gondor,
and a great wind rose and blew, and their hair, raven and golden, streamed out
mingling in the air. And the Shadow departed, and the Sun was unveiled, and
light leaped forth; and the waters of Anduin shone like silver, and in all the
houses of the City men sang for the joy that welled up in their hearts from what
source they could not tell.
And before the Sun had fallen
far from the noon out of the East there came a great Eagle flying, and he bore
tidings beyond hope from the Lords of the West, crying:
Sing now, ye people of the Tower of Anor,
for the Realm of
Sauron is ended for ever,
and the Dark Tower is thrown
down.
Sing and rejoice, ye people of the Tower of
Guard,
for your watch hath not been in vain,
and the Black Gate is
broken,
and your King hath passed through,
and he is
victorious.
Sing and be glad, all ye children of
the West,
for your King shall come again,
and he shall dwell among
you
all the days of your life.
And the Tree
that was withered shall be renewed,
and he shall plant it in the high
places,
and the City shall be blessed.
Sing all ye
people!
And the people sang in all
the ways of the City.
The days that followed were golden,
and Spring and Summer joined and made revel together in the fields of Gondor.
And tidings now came by swift riders from Cair Andros of all that was done, and
the City made ready for the coming of the King. Merry was summoned and rode away
with the wains that took store of goods to Osgiliath and thence by ship to Cair
Andros; but Faramir did not go, for now being healed he took upon him his
authority and the Stewardship, although it was only for a little while, and his
duty was to prepare for one who should replace him.
And
Éowyn did not go, though her brother sent word begging her to come to the field
of Cormallen. And Faramir wondered at this, but he saw her seldom, being busy
with many matters; and she dwelt still in the Houses of Healing and walked alone
in the garden, and her face grew pale again, and it seemed that in all the City
she only was ailing and sorrowful. And the Warden of the Houses was troubled,
and he spoke to Faramir.
Then Faramir came and sought her,
and once more they stood on the walls together; and he said to her: 'Éowyn, why
do you tarry here, and do not go to the rejoicing in Cormallen beyond Cair
Andros, where your brother awaits you?'
And she said: 'Do
you not know?'
But he answered: 'Two reasons there may be,
but which is true, l do not know.'
And she said: 'I do not
wish to play at riddles. Speak plainer!'
'Then if you will
have it so, lady,' he said, 'you do not go, because only your brother called for
you, and to look on the Lord Aragorn, Elendil's heir, in his triumph would now
bring you no joy. Or because I do not go, and you desire still to be near me.
And maybe for both these reasons, and you yourself cannot choose between them.
Éowyn, do you not love me, or will you not?'
'I wished to
be loved by another,' she answered. 'But I desire no man's
pity.'
'That I know,' he said. 'You desired to have the
love of the Lord Aragorn. Because he was high and puissant, and you wished to
have renown and glory and to be lifted far above the mean things that crawl on
the earth. And as a great captain may to a young soldier he seemed to you
admirable. For so he is, a lord among men, the greatest that now is. But when he
gave you only understanding and pity, then you desired to have nothing, unless a
brave death in battle. Look at me, Éowyn!'
And Éowyn looked
at Faramir long and steadily; and Faramir said: 'Do not scorn pity that is the
gift of a gentle heart, Éowyn! But I do not offer you my pity. For you are a
lady high and valiant and have yourself won renown that shall not be forgotten;
and you are a lady beautiful, I deem, beyond even the words of the Elven-tongue
to tell. And I love you. Once I pitied your sorrow. But now, were you
sorrowless, without fear or any lack, were you the blissful Queen of Gondor,
still I would love you. Éowyn, do you not love me?'
Then
the heart of Éowyn changed, or else at last she understood it. And suddenly her
winter passed, and the sun shone on her.
'I stand in Minas
Anor, the Tower of the Sun,' she said; 'and behold the Shadow has departed! I
will be a shieldmaiden no longer, nor vie with the great Riders, nor take joy
only in the songs of slaying. I will be a healer, and love all things that grow
and are not barren.' And again she looked at Faramir. 'No longer do I desire to
be a queen,' she said.
Then Faramir laughed merrily. 'That
is well,' he said, 'for I am not a king. Yet I will wed with the White Lady of
Rohan, if it be her will. And if she will, then let us cross the River and in
happier days let us dwell in fair Ithilien and there make a garden. All things
will grow with joy there, if the White Lady comes.'
'Then
must I leave my own people, man of Gondor?' she said. 'And would you have your
proud folk say of you: "There goes a lord who tamed a wild shieldmaiden of the
North! Was there no woman of the race of Númenor to
choose?"'
'I would,' said Faramir. And he took her in his
arms and kissed her under the sunlit sky, and he cared not that they stood high
upon the walls in the sight of many. And many indeed saw them and the light that
shone about them as they came down from the walls and went hand in hand to the
Houses of Healing.
And to the Warden of the Houses Faramir
said: 'Here is the Lady Éowyn of Rohan, and now she is
healed.'
And the Warden said: 'Then I release her from my
charge and bid her farewell, and may she suffer never hurt nor sickness again. I
commend her to the care of the Steward of the City, until her brother
returns.'
But Éowyn said: 'Yet now that I have leave to
depart, I would remain. For this House has become to me of all dwellings the
most blessed.' And she remained there until King Éomer
came.
All things were now made ready in the City; and there
was great concourse of people, for the tidings had gone out into all parts of
Gondor, from Min-Rimmon even to Pinnath Gelin and the far coasts of the sea; and
all that could come to the City made haste to come. And the City was filled
again with women and fair children that returned to their homes laden with
flowers; and from Dol Amroth came the harpers that harped most skilfully in all
the land; and there were players upon viols and upon flutes and upon horns of
silver, and clear-voiced singers from the vales of
Lebennin.
At last an evening came when from the walls the
pavilions could be seen upon the field, and all night lights were burning as men
watched for the dawn. And when the sun rose in the clear morning above the
mountains in the East, upon which shadows lay no more, then all the bells rang,
and all the banners broke and flowed in the wind; and upon the White Tower of
the citadel the standard of the Stewards, bright argent like snow in the sun,
bearing no charge nor device, was raised over Gondor for the last
time.
Now the Captains of the West led their host towards
the City, and folk saw them advance in line upon line, flashing and glinting in
the sunrise and rippling like silver. And so they came before the Gateway and
halted a furlong from the walls. As yet no gates had been set up again, but a
barrier was laid across the entrance to the City, and there stood men at arms in
silver and black with long swords drawn. Before the barrier stood Faramir the
Steward, and Hurin Warden of the Keys, and other captains of Gondor, and the
Lady Éowyn of Rohan with Elfhelm the Marshal and many knights of the Mark; and
upon either side of the Gate was a great press of fair people in raiment of many
colours and garlands of flowers.
So now there was a wide
space before the walls of Minas Tirith, and it was hemmed in upon all sides by
the knights and the soldiers of Gondor and of Rohan, and by the people of the
City and of all parts of the land. A hush fell upon all as out from the host
stepped the Dunedain in silver and grey; and before them came walking slow the
Lord Aragorn. He was clad in black mail girt with silver, and he wore a long
mantle of pure white clasped at the throat with a great jewel of green that
shone from afar; but his head was bare save for a star upon his forehead bound
by a slender fillet of silver. With him were Éomer of Rohan, and the Prince
Imrahil, and Gandalf robed all in white, and four small figures that many men
marvelled to see.
'Nay, cousin! they are not boys,' said
Ioreth to her kinswoman from Imloth Melui, who stood beside her. 'Those are
Periain, out of the far country of the Halflings, where they are princes
of great fame, it is said. I should know, for I had one to tend in the Houses.
They are small, but they are valiant. Why, cousin, one of them went with only
his esquire into the Black Country and fought with the Dark Lord all by himself,
and set fire to his Tower, if you can believe it. At least that is the tale in
the City. That will be the one that walks with our Elfstone. They are dear
friends, I hear. Now he is a marvel, the Lord Elfstone: not too soft in his
speech, mind you, but he has a golden heart, as the saying is; and he has the
healing hands. "The hands of the king are the hands of a healer", I said; and
that was how it was all discovered. And Mithrandir, he said to me: "Ioreth, men
will long remember your words", and—'
But Ioreth was not
permitted to continue the instruction of her kinswoman from the country, for a
single trumpet rang, and a dead silence followed. Then forth from the Gate went
Faramir with Hurin of the Keys, and no others, save that behind them walked four
men in the high helms and armour of the Citadel, and they bore a great casket of
black
lebethron bound with silver.
Faramir met
Aragorn in the midst of those there assembled, and he knelt, and said: 'The last
Steward of Gondor begs leave to surrender his office.' And he held out a white
rod; but Aragorn took the rod and gave it back, saying: 'That office is not
ended, and it shall be thine and thy heirs' as long as my line shall last. Do
now thy office!'
Then Faramir stood up and spoke in a clear
voice: 'Men of Gondor hear now the Steward of this Realm! Behold! one has come
to claim the kingship again at last. Here is Aragorn son of Arathorn, chieftain
of the Dunedain of Arnor, Captain of the Host of the West, bearer of the Star of
the North, wielder of the Sword Reforged, victorious in battle, whose hands
bring healing, the Elfstone, Elessar of the line of Valandil, Isildur's son,
Elendil's son of Númenor. Shall he be king and enter into the City and dwell
there?'
And all the host and all the people cried
yea with one voice.
And Ioreth said to her
kinswoman: 'This is just a ceremony such as we have in the City, cousin; for he
has already entered, as I was telling you; and he said to me—' And then again
she was obliged to silence, for Faramir spoke again.
'Men
of Gondor, the loremasters tell that it was the custom of old that the king
should receive the crown from his father ere he died; or if that might not be,
that he should go alone and take it from the hands of his father in the tomb
where he was laid. But since things must now be done otherwise, using the
authority of the Steward, I have today brought hither from Rath Dínen the crown
of Earnur the last king, whose days passed in the time of our longfathers of
old.'
Then the guards stepped forward, and Faramir opened
the casket, and he held up an ancient crown. It was shaped like the helms of the
Guards of the Citadel, save that it was loftier, and it was all white, and the
wings at either side were wrought of pearl and silver in the likeness of the
wings of a sea-bird, for it was the emblem of kings who came over the Sea; and
seven gems of adamant were set in the circlet, and upon its summit was set a
single jewel the light of which went up like a flame.
Then
Aragorn took the crown and held it up and said:
Et
Eärello Endorenna utúlien. Sinome maruvan ar Hildinyar tenn'
Ambar-metta! And those were the words that Elendil
spoke when he came up out of the Sea on the wings of the wind: 'Out of the Great
Sea to Middle-earth I am come. In this place will I abide, and my heirs, unto
the ending of the world.'
Then to the wonder of many
Aragorn did not put the crown upon his head, but gave it back to Faramir, and
said: 'By the labour and valour of many I have come into my inheritance. In
token of this I would have the Ring-bearer bring the crown to me, and let
Mithrandir set it upon my head, if he will; for he has been the mover of all
that has been accomplished, and this is his victory.'
Then
Frodo came forward and took the crown from Faramir and bore it to Gandalf; and
Aragorn knelt, and Gandalf set the White Crown upon his head, and
said:
'Now come the days of the King, and may they be
blessed while the thrones of the Valar endure!'
But when
Aragorn arose all that beheld him gazed in silence, for it seemed to them that
he was revealed to them now for the first time. Tall as the sea-kings of old, he
stood above all that were near; ancient of days he seemed and yet in the flower
of manhood; and wisdom sat upon his brow, and strength and healing were in his
hands, and a light was about him. And then Faramir
cried:
'Behold the King!'
And in that
moment all the trumpets were blown, and the King Elessar went forth and came to
the barrier, and Hurin of the Keys thrust it back; and amid the music of harp
and of viol and of flute and the singing of clear voices the King passed through
the flower-laden streets, and came to the Citadel, and entered in; and the
banner of the Tree and the Stars was unfurled upon the topmost tower, and the
reign of King Elessar began, of which many songs have
told.
In his time the City was made more fair than it had
ever been, even in the days of its first glory; and it was filled with trees and
with fountains, and its gates were wrought of mithril and steel, and its streets
were paved with white marble; and the Folk of the Mountain laboured in it, and
the Folk of the Wood rejoiced to come there; and all was healed and made good,
and the houses were filled with men and women and the laughter of children, and
no window was blind nor any courtyard empty; and after the ending of the Third
Age of the world into the new age it preserved the memory and the glory of the
years that were gone.
In the days that followed his
crowning the King sat on his throne in the Hall of the Kings and pronounced his
judgements. And embassies came from many lands and peoples, from the East and
the South, and from the borders of Mirkwood, and from Dunland in the west. And
the King pardoned the Easterlings that had given themselves up, and sent them
away free, and he made peace with the peoples of Harad; and the slaves of Mordor
he released and gave to them all the lands about Lake Nurnen to be their own.
And there were brought before him many to receive his praise and reward for
their valour; and last the captain of the Guard brought to him Beregond to be
judged.
And the King said to Beregond: 'Beregond, by your
sword blood was spilled in the Hallows, where that is forbidden. Also you left
your post without leave of Lord or of Captain. For these things, of old, death
was the penalty. Now therefore I must pronounce your
doom.
'All penalty is remitted for your valour in battle,
and still more because all that you did was for the love of the Lord Faramir.
Nonetheless you must leave the Guard of the Citadel, and you must go forth from
the City of Minas Tirith.'
Then the blood left Beregond's
face, and he was stricken to the heart and bowed his head. But the King
said:
'So it must be, for you are appointed to the White
Company, the Guard of Faramir, Prince of Ithilien, and you shall be its captain
and dwell in Emyn Arnen in honour and peace, and in the service of him for whom
you risked all, to save him from death.'
And then Beregond,
perceiving the mercy and justice of the King, was glad, and kneeling kissed his
hand, and departed in joy and content. And Aragorn gave to Faramir Ithilien to
be his princedom, and bade him dwell in the hills of Emyn Arnen within sight of
the City.
'For,' said he, 'Minas Ithil in Morgul Vale shall
be utterly destroyed, and though it may in time to come be made clean, no man
may dwell there for many long years.'
And last of all
Aragorn greeted Éomer of Rohan, and they embraced, and Aragorn said: 'Between us
there can be no word of giving or taking, nor of reward; for we are brethren. In
happy hour did Eorl ride from the North, and never has any league of peoples
been more blessed, so that neither has ever failed the other, nor shall fail.
Now, as you know, we have laid Théoden the Renowned in a tomb in the Hallows,
and there he shall lie for ever among the Kings of Gondor, if you will. Or if
you desire it, we will come to Rohan and bring him back to rest with his own
people.'
And Éomer answered: 'Since the day when you rose
before me out of the green grass of the downs I have loved you, and that love
shall not fail. But now I must depart for a while to my own realm, where there
is much to heal and set in order. But as for the Fallen, when all is made ready
we will return for him; but here let him sleep a
while.'
And Éowyn said to Faramir: 'Now I must go back to
my own land and look on it once again, and help my brother in his labour; but
when one whom I long loved as father is laid at last to rest, I will
return.'
So the glad days passed; and on the eighth day of
May the Riders of Rohan made ready, and rode off by the North-way, and with them
went the sons of Elrond. All the road was lined with people to do them honour
and praise them, from the Gate of the City to the walls of the Pelennor. Then
all others that dwelt afar went back to their homes rejoicing; but in the City
there was labour of many willing hands to rebuild and renew and to remove all
the scars of war and the memory of the darkness.
The
hobbits still remained in Minas Tirith, with Legolas and Gimli; for Aragorn was
loth for the fellowship to be dissolved. 'At last all such things must end,' he
said, 'but I would have you wait a little while longer: for the end of the deeds
that you have shared in has not yet come. A day draws near that I have looked
for in all the years of my manhood, and when it comes I would have my friends
beside me.' But of that day he would say no more.
In those
days the Companions of the Ring dwelt together in a fair house with Gandalf, and
they went to and fro as they wished. And Frodo said to Gandalf: 'Do you know
what this day is that Aragorn speaks of? For we are happy here, and I don't wish
to go; but the days are running away, and Bilbo is waiting; and the Shire is my
home.'
'As for Bilbo,' said Gandalf, 'he is waiting for the
same day, and he knows what keeps you. And as for the passing of the days, it is
now only May and high summer is not yet in; and though all things may seem
changed, as if an age of the world had gone by, yet to the trees and the grass
it is less than a year since you set out.'
'Pippin,' said
Frodo, 'didn't you say that Gandalf was less close than of old? He was weary of
his labours then, I think. Now he is recovering.'
And
Gandalf said: 'Many folk like to know beforehand what is to be set on the table;
but those who have laboured to prepare the feast like to keep their secret; for
wonder makes the words of praise louder. And Aragorn himself waits for a
sign.'
There came a day when Gandalf could not be found,
and the Companions wondered what was going forward. But Gandalf took Aragorn out
from the City by night, and he brought him to the southern feet of Mount
Mindolluin; and there they found a path made in ages past that few now dared to
tread. For it led up on to the mountain to a high hallow where only the kings
had been wont to go. And they went up by steep ways, until they came to a high
field below the snows that clad the lofty peaks, and it looked down over the
precipice that stood behind the City. And standing there they surveyed the
lands, for the morning was come; and they saw the towers of the City far below
them like white pencils touched by the sunlight, and all the Vale of Anduin was
like a garden, and the Mountains of Shadow were veiled in a golden mist. Upon
the one side their sight reached to the grey Emyn Muil, and the glint of Rauros
was like a star twinkling far off; and upon the other side they saw the River
like a ribbon laid down to Pelargir, and beyond that was a light on the hem of
the sky that spoke of the Sea.
And Gandalf said: 'This is
your realm, and the heart of the greater realm that shall be. The Third Age of
the world is ended, and the new age is begun; and it is your task to order its
beginning and to preserve what may be preserved. For though much has been saved,
much must now pass away; and the power of the Three Rings also is ended. And all
the lands that you see, and those that lie round about them, shall be dwellings
of Men. For the time comes of the Dominion of Men, and the Elder Kindred shall
fade or depart.'
'I know it well, dear friend,' said
Aragorn, 'but I would still have your counsel.'
'Not for
long now,' said Gandalf. 'The Third Age was my age. I was the Enemy of Sauron;
and my work is finished. I shall go soon. The burden must lie now upon you and
your kindred.'
'But I shall die,' said Aragorn. 'For I am a
mortal man, and though being what I am and of the race of the West unmingled, I
shall have life far longer than other men, yet that is but a little while; and
when those who are now in the wombs of women are born and have grown old, I too
shall grow old. And who then shall govern Gondor and those who look to this City
as to their queen, if my desire be not granted? The Tree in the Court of the
Fountain is still withered and barren. When shall I see a sign that it will ever
be otherwise?'
'Turn your face from the green world, and
look where all seems barren and cold!' said Gandalf.
Then
Aragorn turned, and there was a stony slope behind him running down from the
skirts of the snow; and as he looked he was aware that alone there in the waste
a growing thing stood. And he climbed to it, and saw that out of the very edge
of the snow there sprang a sapling tree no more than three foot high. Already it
had put forth young leaves long and shapely, dark above and silver beneath, and
upon its slender crown it bore one small cluster of flowers whose white petals
shone like the sunlit snow.
Then Aragorn cried: '
Yé!
utúvienyes! I have found it! Lo! here is a scion of the Eldest of Trees! But
how comes it here? For it is not itself yet seven years
old.'
And Gandalf coming looked at it, and said: 'Verily
this is a sapling of the line of Nimloth the fair; and that was a seedling of
Galathilion, and that a fruit of Telperion of many names, Eldest of Trees. Who
shall say how it comes here in the appointed hour? But this is an ancient
hallow, and ere the kings failed or the Tree withered in the court, a fruit must
have been set here. For it is said that, though the fruit of the Tree comes
seldom to ripeness, yet the life within may then lie sleeping through many long
years, and none can foretell the time in which it will awake. Remember this. For
if ever a fruit ripens, it should be planted, lest the line die out of the
world. Here it has lain, hidden on the mountain, even as the race of Elendil lay
hidden in the wastes of the North. Yet the line of Nimloth is older far than
your line, King Elessar.'
Then Aragorn laid his hand gently
to the sapling, and lo! it seemed to hold only lightly to the earth, and it was
removed without hurt; and Aragorn bore it back to the Citadel. Then the withered
tree was uprooted, but with reverence; and they did not burn it, but laid it to
rest in the silence of Rath Dínen. And Aragorn planted the new tree in the court
by the fountain, and swiftly and gladly it began to grow; and when the month of
June entered in it was laden with blossom.
'The sign has been given,' said Aragorn, 'and
the day is not far off.' And he set watchmen upon the
walls.
It was the day before Midsummer when messengers came
from Amon Dín to the City, and they said that there was a riding of fair folk
out of the North, and they drew near now to the walls of the Pelennor. And the
King said: 'At last they have come. Let all the City be made
ready!'
Upon the very Eve of Midsummer, when the sky was
blue as sapphire and white stars opened in the East, but the West was still
golden and the air was cool and fragrant, the riders came down the North-way to
the gates of Minas Tirith. First rode Elrohir and Elladan with a banner of
silver, and then came Glorfindel and Erestor and all the household of Rivendell,
and after them came the Lady Galadriel and Celeborn, Lord of Lothlórien, riding
upon white steeds and with them many fair folk of their land, grey-cloaked with
white gems in their hair; and last came Master Elrond, mighty among Elves and
Men, bearing the sceptre of Annuminas, and beside him upon a grey palfrey rode
Arwen his daughter, Evenstar of her people.
And Frodo when
he saw her come glimmering in the evening, with stars on her brow and a sweet
fragrance about her, was moved with great wonder, and he said to Gandalf: 'At
last I understand why we have waited! This is the ending. Now not day only shall
be beloved, but night too shall be beautiful and blessed and all its fear pass
away!'
Then the King welcomed his guests, and they
alighted; and Elrond surrendered the sceptre, and laid the hand of his daughter
in the hand of the King, and together they went up into the High City, and all
the stars flowered in the sky. And Aragorn the King Elessar wedded Arwen
Undómiel in the City of the Kings upon the day of Midsummer, and the tale of
their long waiting and labours was come to fulfilment.
Chapter 6
Many Partings
When the days of rejoicing were over at last the
Companions thought of returning to their own homes. And Frodo went to the King
as he was sitting with the Queen Arwen by the fountain, and she sang a song of
Valinor, while the Tree grew and blossomed. They welcomed Frodo and rose to
greet him; and Aragorn said:
'I know what you have come to
say, Frodo: you wish to return to your own home. Well, dearest friend, the tree
grows best in the land of its sires; but for you in all the lands of the West
there will ever be a welcome. And though your people have had little fame in the
legends of the great, they will now have more renown than any wide realms that
are no more.'
'It is true that I wish to go back to the
Shire,' said Frodo. 'But first I must go to Rivendell. For if there could be
anything wanting in a time so blessed, I missed Bilbo; and I was grieved when
among all the household of Elrond I saw that he was not
come.'
'Do you wonder at that, Ring-bearer?' said Arwen.
'For you know the power of that thing which is now destroyed; and all that was
done by that power is now passing away. But your kinsman possessed this thing
longer than you. He is ancient in years now, according to his kind; and he
awaits you, for he will not again make any long journey save
one.'
'Then I beg leave to depart soon,' said
Frodo.
'In seven days we will go,' said Aragorn. 'For we
shall ride with you far on the road, even as far as the country of Rohan. In
three days now Éomer will return hither to bear Théoden back to rest in the
Mark, and we shall ride with him to honour the fallen. But now before you go I
will confirm the words that Faramir spoke to you, and you are made free for ever
of the realm of Gondor; and all your companions likewise. And if there were any
gifts that I could give to match with your deeds you should have them; but
whatever you desire you shall take with you, and you shall ride in honour and
arrayed as princes of the land.'
But the Queen Arwen said:
'A gift I will give you. For I am the daughter of Elrond. I shall not go with
him now when he departs to the Havens; for mine is the choice of Lúthien, and as
she so have I chosen, both the sweet and the bitter. But in my stead you shall
go, Ring-bearer, when the time comes, and if you then desire it. If your hurts
grieve you still and the memory of your burden is heavy, then you may pass into
the West, until all your wounds and weariness are healed. But wear this now in
memory of Elfstone and Evenstar with whom your life has been
woven!'
And she took a white gem like a star that lay upon
her breast hanging upon a silver chain, and she set the chain about Frodo's
neck. 'When the memory of the fear and the darkness troubles you,' she said,
'this will bring you aid.'
In three days, as the King had
said, Éomer of Rohan came riding to the City, and with him came an
éored
of the fairest knights of the Mark. He was welcomed; and when they sat all at
table in Merethrond, the Great Hall of Feasts, he beheld the beauty of the
ladies that he saw and was filled with great wonder. And before he went to his
rest he sent for Gimli the Dwarf, and he said to him: 'Gimli Glóin's son, have
you your axe ready?'
'Nay, lord,' said Gimli, 'but I can
speedily fetch it, if there be need.'
'You shall judge,'
said Éomer. 'For there are certain rash words concerning the Lady in the Golden
Wood that lie still between us. And now I have seen her with my
eyes.'
'Well, lord,' said Gimli, 'and what say you
now?'
'Alas!' said Éomer. 'I will not say that she is the
fairest lady that lives.'
'Then I must go for my axe,' said
Gimli.
'But first I will plead this excuse,' said Éomer.
'Had I seen her in other company, I would have said all that you could wish. But
now I will put Queen Arwen Evenstar first, and I am ready to do battle on my own
part with any who deny me. Shall I call for my sword?'
Then
Gimli bowed low. 'Nay, you are excused for my part, lord,' he said. 'You have
chosen the Evening; but my love is given to the Morning. And my heart forebodes
that soon it will past away for ever.'
At last the day of
departure came, and a great and fair company made ready to ride north from the
City. Then the kings of Gondor and Rohan went to the Hallows and they came to
the tombs in Rath Dínen, and they bore away King Théoden upon a golden bier, and
passed through the City in silence. Then they laid the bier upon a great wain
with Riders of Rohan all about it and his banner borne before; and Merry being
Théoden's esquire rode upon the wain and kept the arms of the
king.
For the other Companions steeds were furnished
according to their stature; and Frodo and Samwise rode at Aragorn's side, and
Gandalf rode upon Shadowfax, and Pippin rode with the knights of Gondor; and
Legolas and Gimli as ever rode together upon Arod.
In that
riding went also Queen Arwen, and Celeborn and Galadriel with their folk, and
Elrond and his sons; and the princes of Dol Amroth and of Ithilien, and many
captains and knights. Never had any king of the Mark such company upon the road
as went with Théoden Thengel's son to the land of his
home.
Without haste and at peace they passed into Anórien,
and they came to the Grey Wood under Amon Dín; and there they heard a sound as
of drums beating in the hills, though no living thing could be seen. Then
Aragorn let the trumpets be blown; and heralds
cried:
'Behold the King Elessar is come! The Forest of
Druadan he gives to Ghan-buri-ghan and to his folk, to be their own for ever;
and hereafter let no man enter it without their
leave!'
Then the drums rolled loudly, and were
silent.
At length after fifteen days of journey the wain of
King Théoden passed through the green fields of Rohan and came to Edoras; and
there they all rested. The Golden Hall was arrayed with fair hangings and it was
filled with light, and there was held the highest feast that it had known since
the days of its building. For after three days the Men of the Mark prepared the
funeral of Théoden; and he was laid in a house of stone with his arms and many
other fair things that he had possessed, and over him was raised a great mound,
covered with green turves of grass and of white evermind. And now there were
eight mounds on the east-side of the Barrowfield.
Then the
Riders of the King's House upon white horses rode round about the barrow and
sang together a song of Théoden Thengel's son that Gleowine his minstrel made,
and he made no other song after. The slow voices of the Riders stirred the
hearts even of those who did not know the speech of that people; but the words
of the song brought a light to the eyes of the folk of the Mark as they heard
again afar the thunder of the hooves of the North and the voice of Eorl crying
above the battle upon the Field of Celebrant; and the tale of the kings rolled
on, and the horn of Helm was loud in the mountains, until the Darkness came and
King Théoden arose and rode through the Shadow to the fire, and died in
splendour, even as the Sun, returning beyond hope, gleamed upon Mindolluin in
the morning.
Out of doubt, out of dark, to the day's rising
he rode
singing in the sun, sword unsheathing.
Hope he rekindled, and in hope
ended;
over death, over dread, over doom lifted
out of loss, out of
life, unto long glory.
But Merry
stood at the foot of the green mound, and he wept, and when the song was ended
he arose and cried:
'Théoden King, Théoden King! Farewell!
As a father you were to me. for a little while.
Farewell!'
When the burial was over and the weeping of
women was stilled, and Théoden was left at last alone in his barrow, then folk
gathered to the Golden Hall for the great feast and put away sorrow; for Théoden
had lived to full years and ended in honour no less than the greatest of his
sires. And when the time came that in the custom of the Mark they should drink
to the memory of the kings, Éowyn Lady of Rohan came forth, golden as the sun
and white as snow, and she bore a filled cup to Éomer.
Then
a minstrel and loremaster stood up and named all the names of the Lords of the
Mark in their order: Eorl the Young; and Brego builder of the Hall; and Aldor
brother of Baldor the hapless; and Frea, and Freawine, and Goldwine, and Deor,
and Gram; and Helm who lay hid in Helm's Deep when the Mark was overrun; and so
ended the nine mounds of the west-side, for in that time the line was broken,
and after came the mounds of the east-side: Fréaláf, Helm s sister-son, and
Leofa, and Walda, and Folca, and Folcwine, and Fengel, and Thengel, and Théoden
the latest. And when Théoden was named Éomer drained the cup. Then Éowyn bade
those that served to fill the cups, and all there assembled rose and drank to
the new king, crying: 'Hail, Éomer, King of the Mark!'
At
the last when the feast drew to an end Éomer arose and said: 'Now this is the
funeral feast of Théoden the King; but I will speak ere we go of tidings of joy,
for he would not grudge that I should do so, since he was ever a father of Éowyn
my sister. Hear then all my guests, fair folk of many realms, such as have never
before been gathered in this hall! Faramir, Steward of Gondor, and Prince of
Ithilien, asks that Éowyn Lady of Rohan should be his wife, and she grants it
full willing. Therefore they shall be trothplighted before you
all.'
And Faramir and Éowyn stood forth and set hand in
hand; and all there drank to them and were glad. 'Thus,' said Éomer, 'is the
friendship of the Mark and of Gondor bound with a new bond, and the more do I
rejoice.'
'No niggard are you, Éomer,' said Aragorn, 'to
give thus to Gondor the fairest thing in your realm!'
Then
Éowyn looked in the eyes of Aragorn, and she said: 'Wish me joy, my liege-lord
and healer!'
And he answered: 'I have wished thee joy ever
since first I saw thee. It heals my heart to see thee now in
bliss.'
When the feast was over, those who were to go took
leave of King Éomer. Aragorn and his knights, and the people of Lórien and of
Rivendell, made ready to ride; but Faramir and Imrahil remained at Edoras; and
Arwen Evenstar remained also, and she said farewell to her brethren. None saw
her last meeting with Elrond her father, for they went up into the hills and
there spoke long together, and bitter was their parting that should endure
beyond the ends of the world.
At the last before the guests
set oat Éomer and Éowyn came to Merry, and they said: 'Farewell now, Meriadoc of
the Shire and Holdwine of the Mark! Ride to good fortune, and ride back soon to
our welcome!'
And Éomer said: 'Kings of old would have
laden you with gifts that a wain could not bear for your deeds upon the fields
of Mundburg; and yet you will take naught, you say, but the arms that were given
to you. This I suffer, for indeed I have no gift that is worthy; but my sister
begs you to receive this small thing, as a memorial of Dernhelm and of the horns
of the Mark at the coming of the morning.'
Then Éowyn gave
to Merry an ancient horn, small but cunningly wrought all of fair silver with a
baldric of green; and wrights had engraven upon it swift horsemen riding in a
line that wound about it from the tip to the mouth; and there were set runes of
great virtue.
'This is an heirloom of our house,' said
Éowyn. 'It was made by the Dwarves, and came from the hoard of Scatha the Worm.
Eorl the Young brought it from the North. He that blows it at need shall set
fear in the hearts of his enemies and joy in the hearts of his friends, and they
shall hear him and come to him.'
Then Merry took the horn,
for it could not be refused, and he kissed Éowyn's hand; and they embraced him,
and so they parted for that time.
Now the guests were
ready, and they drank the stirrup-cup, and with great praise and friendship they
departed, and came at length to Helm's Deep, and there they rested two days.
Then Legolas repaid his promise to Gimli and went with him to the Glittering
Caves; and when they returned he was silent, and would say only that Gimli alone
could find fit words to speak of them. 'And never before has a Dwarf claimed a
victory over an Elf in a contest of words,' said he. 'Now therefore let us go to
Fangorn and set the score right!'
From Deeping-coomb they
rode to Isengard, and saw how the Ents had busied themselves. All the
stone-circle had been thrown down and removed, and the land within was made into
a garden filled with orchards and trees, and a stream ran through it; but in the
midst of all there was a lake of clear water, and out of it the Tower of Orthanc
rose still, tall and impregnable, and its black rock was mirrored in the
pool.
For a while the travellers sat where once the old
gates of Isengard had stood, and there were now two tall trees like sentinels at
the beginning of a green-bordered path that ran towards Orthanc; and they looked
in wonder at the work that had been done, but no living thing could they see far
or near. But presently they heard a voice calling
hoom-hom,
hoom-hom; and there came Treebeard striding down the path to greet them
with Quickbeam at his side.
'Welcome to the Treegarth of
Orthanc!' he said. 'I knew that you were coming, but I was at work up the
valley; there is much still to be done. But you have not been idle either away
in the south and the east, I hear; and all that I hear is good, very good.' Then
Treebeard praised all their deeds, of which he seemed to have full knowledge;
and at last he stopped and looked long at Gandalf.
'Well,
come now!' he said. 'You have proved mightiest, and all your labours have gone
well. Where now would you be going? And why do you come
here?'
'To see how your work goes, my friend,' said
Gandalf, 'and to thank you for your aid in all that has been
achieved.'
'Hoom, well, that is fair enough,' said
Treebeard, 'for to be sure Ents have played their part. And not only in dealing
with that,
hoom, that accursed tree-slayer that dwelt here. For there was
a great inrush of those,
burarum, those evileyed – blackhanded –
bowlegged – flinthearted – clawfingered – foulbellied – bloodthirsty,
morimaite – sincahonda,
hoom, well, since you are hasty folk and
their full name is as long as years of torment, those vermin of orcs; and they
came over the River and down from the North and all round the wood of
Laurelindórenan, which they could not get into, thanks to the Great ones who are
here.' He bowed to the Lord and Lady of Lórien.
'And these
same foul creatures were more than surprised to meet us out on the Wold, for
they had not heard of us before; though that might be said also of better folk.
And not many will remember us, for not many escaped us alive, and the River had
most of those. But it was well for you, for if they had not met us, then the
king of the grassland would not have ridden far, and if he had there would have
been no home to return to.'
'We know it well,' said
Aragorn, 'and never shall it be forgotten in Minas Tirith or in
Edoras.'
'
Never is too long a word even for me,'
said Treebeard. 'Not while your kingdoms last, you mean; but they will have to
last long indeed to seem long to Ents.'
'The New Age
begins,' said Gandalf, 'and in this age it may well prove that the kingdoms of
Men shall outlast you, Fangorn my friend. But now come tell me: what of the task
that I set you? How is Saruman? Is he not weary of Orthanc yet? For I do not
suppose that he will think you have improved the view from his
windows.'
Treebeard gave Gandalf a long look, a most
cunning look, Merry thought. 'Ah!' he said. 'I thought you would come to that.
Weary of Orthanc? Very weary at last; but not so weary of his tower as he was
weary of my voice.
Hoom! I gave him some long tales, or at least what
might be thought long in your speech.'
'Then why did he
stay to listen? Did you go into Orthanc?' asked
Gandalf.
'Hoom, no, not into Orthanc!' said
Treebeard. 'But he came to his window and listened, because he could not get
news in any other way, and though he hated the news, he was greedy to have it;
and I saw that he heard it all. But I added a great many things to the news that
it was good for him to think of. He grew very weary. He always was hasty. That
was his ruin.'
'l observe, my good Fangorn,' said Gandalf,
'that with great care you say
dwelt,
was,
grew. What about
is? Is he dead?'
'No, not dead, so far as I know,'
said Treebeard. 'But he is gone. Yes, he is gone seven days. I let him go. There
was little left of him when he crawled out, and as for that worm-creature of
his, he was like a pale shadow. Now do not tell me, Gandalf, that I promised to
keep him safe; for I know it. But things have changed since then. And I kept him
until he was safe, safe from doing any more harm. You should know that above all
I hate the caging of live things, and I will not keep even such creatures as
these caged beyond great need. A snake without fangs may crawl where he
will.'
'You may be right,' said Gandalf, 'but this snake
had still one tooth left, I think. He had the poison of his voice, and I guess
that he persuaded you, even you Treebeard, knowing the soft spot in your heart.
Well, he is gone, and there is no more to be said. But the Tower of Orthanc now
goes back to the King, to whom it belongs. Though maybe he will not need
it.'
'That will be seen later,' said Aragorn. 'But I will
give to Ents all this valley to do with as they will, so long as they keep a
watch upon Orthanc and see that none enter it without my
leave.'
'It is locked,' said Treebeard. 'I made Saruman
lock it and give me the keys. Quickbeam has
them.'
Quickbeam bowed like a tree bending in the wind and
handed to Aragorn two great black keys of intricate shape, joined by a ring of
steel. 'Now I thank you once more,' said Aragorn, 'and I bid you farewell. May
your forest grow again in peace. When this valley is filled there is room and to
spare west of the mountains, where once you walked long
ago.'
Treebeard's face became sad. 'Forests may grow,' he
said. 'Woods may spread. But not Ents. There are no
Entings.'
'Yet maybe there is now more hope in your
search,' said Aragorn. 'Lands will lie open to you eastward that have long been
closed.'
But Treebeard shook his head and said: 'It is far
to go. And there are too many Men there in these days. But I am forgetting my
manners! Will you stay here and rest a while? And maybe there are some that
would be pleased to pass through Fangorn Forest and so shorten their road home?'
He looked at Celeborn and Galadriel.
But all save Legolas
said that they must now take their leave and depart, either south or west.
'Come, Gimli!' said Legolas. 'Now by Fangorn's leave I will visit the deep
places of the Entwood and see such trees as are nowhere else to be found in
Middle-earth. You shall come with me and keep your word; and thus we will
journey on together to our own lands in Mirkwood and beyond.' To this Gimli
agreed, though with no great delight, it seemed.
'Here then
at last comes the ending of the Fellowship of the Ring,' said Aragorn. 'Yet I
hope that ere long you will return to my land with the help that you
promised.'
'We will come, if our own lords allow it,' said
Gimli. 'Well, farewell. my hobbits! You should come safe to your own homes now,
and I shall not be kept awake for fear of your peril. We will send word when we
may, and some of us may yet meet at times; but I fear that we shall not all be
gathered together ever again.'
Then Treebeard said farewell
to each of them in turn, and he bowed three times slowly and with great
reverence to Celeborn and Galadriel. 'It is long, long since we met by stock or
by stone,
A vanimar,
vanimalionnostari!' he said. 'It is
sad that we should meet only thus at the ending. For the world is changing: I
feel it in the water, I feel it in the earth, and I smell it in the air. I do
not think we shall meet again.'
And Celeborn said: 'I do
not know, Eldest.' But Galadriel said: 'Not in Middle-earth, nor until the lands
that lie under the wave are lifted up again. Then in the willow-meads of
Tasarinan we may meet in the Spring. Farewell!'
Last of all
Merry and Pippin said good-bye to the old Ent, and he grew gayer as he looked at
them. 'Well, my merry folk,' he said, 'will you drink another draught with me
before you go?'
'Indeed we will,' they said, and he took
them aside into the shade of one of the trees, and there they saw that a great
stone jar had been set. And Treebeard filled three bowls, and they drank; and
they saw his strange eyes looking at them over the rim of his bowl. 'Take care
take care!' he said. 'For you have already grown since I saw you last.' And they
laughed and drained their bowls.
'Well, good-bye!' he said.
'And don't forget that if you hear any news of the Entwives in your land, you
will send word to me.' Then he waved his great hands to all the company and went
off into the trees.
The travellers now rode with more
speed, and they made their way towards the Gap of Rohan; and Aragorn took leave
of them at last close to that very place where Pippin had looked into the Stone
of Orthanc. The Hobbits were grieved at this parting; for Aragorn had never
failed them and he had been their guide through many
perils.
'I wish we could have a Stone that we could see all
our friends in,' said Pippin, 'and that we could speak to them from far
away!'
'Only one now remains that you could use,' answered
Aragorn for you would not wish to see what the Stone of Minas Tirith would show
you. But the Palantír of Orthanc the King will keep, to see what is passing in
his realm, and what his servants are doing. For do not forget, Peregrin Took,
that you are a knight of Gondor, and I do not release you from your service. You
are going now on leave, but I may recall you. And remember, dear friends of the
Shire, that my realm lies also in the North, and I shall come there one
day.'
Then Aragorn took leave of Celeborn and Galadriel;
and the Lady said to him: 'Elfstone, through darkness you have come to your
hope, and have now all your desire. Use well the days!'
But
Celeborn said: 'Kinsman, farewell! May your doom be other than mine, and your
treasure remain with you to the end!'
With that they
parted, and it was then the time of sunset; and when after a while they turned
and looked back, they saw the King of the West sitting upon his horse with his
knights about him; and the falling Sun shone upon them and made all their
harness to gleam like red gold, and the white mantle of Aragorn was turned to a
flame. Then Aragorn took the green stone and held it up, and there came a green
fire from his hand.
Soon the dwindling company, following
the Isen, turned west and rode through the Gap into the waste lands beyond, and
then they turned northwards, and passed over the borders of Dunland. The
Dunlendings fled and hid themselves, for they were afraid of Elvish Folk, though
few indeed ever came to their country; but the travellers did not heed them, for
they were still a great company and were well provided with all that they
needed; and they went on their way at their leisure, setting up their tents when
they would.
On the sixth day since their parting from the
King they journeyed through a wood climbing down from the hills at the feet of
the Misty Mountains that now marched on their right hand. As they came out again
into the open country at sundown they overtook an old man leaning on a staff,
and he was clothed in rags of grey or dirty white, and at his heels went another
beggar, slouching and whining.
'Well Saruman!' said
Gandalf. 'Where are you going?'
'What is that to you?' he
answered. 'Will you still order my goings, and are you not content with my
ruin?'
'You know the answers,' said Gandalf, 'no and no.
But in any case the time of my labours now draws to an end. The King has taken
on the burden. If you had waited at Orthanc, you would have seen him, and he
would have shown you wisdom and mercy.'
'Then all the A
more reason to have left sooner,' said Saruman, 'for I desire neither of him.
Indeed if you wish for an answer to your first question, I am seeking a way out
of his realm.'
'Then once more you are going the wrong
way,' said Gandalf, 'and I see no hope in your journey. But will you scorn our
help? For we offer it to you.'
'To me?' said Saruman. 'Nay,
pray do not smile at me! I prefer your frowns. And as for the Lady here, I do
not trust her: she always hated me, and schemed for your part. I do not doubt
that she has brought you this way to have the pleasure of gloating over my
poverty. Had I been warned of your pursuit, I would have denied you the
pleasure.'
'Saruman,' said Galadriel, 'we have other
errands and other cares that seem to us more urgent than hunting for you. Say
rather that you are overtaken by good fortune; for now you have a last
chance.'
'If it be truly the last, I am glad,' said
Saruman, 'for I shall be spared the trouble of refusing it again. All my hopes
are ruined, but I would not share yours. If you have
any.'
For a moment his eyes kindled. 'Go!' he said. 'I did
not spend long study on these matters for naught. You have doomed yourselves,
and you know it. And it will afford me some comfort as I wander to think that
you pulled down your own house when you destroyed mine. And now, what ship will
bear you back across so wide a sea?' he mocked. 'It will be a grey ship, and
full of ghosts.' He laughed, but his voice was cracked and
hideous.
'Get up, you idiot!' he shouted to the other
beggar, who had sat down on the ground; and he struck him with his staff. 'Turn
about! If these fine folk are going our way, then we will take another. Get on,
or I'll give you no crust for your supper!'
The beggar
turned and slouched past whimpering: 'Poor old Gríma! Poor old Gríma! Always
beaten and cursed. How I hate him! I wish I could leave
him!'
'Then leave him!' said
Gandalf.
But Wormtongue only shot a glance of his bleared
eyes full of terror at Gandalf, and then shuffled quickly past behind Saruman.
As the wretched pair passed by the company they came to the hobbits, and Saruman
stopped and stared at them; but they looked at him with
pity.
'So you have come to gloat too, have you, my
urchins?' he said. 'You don't care what a beggar lacks, do you? For you have all
you want, food and fine clothes, and the best weed for your pipes. Oh yes, I
know! I know where it comes from. You would not give a pipeful to a beggar,
would you?'
'I would, if I had any,' said
Frodo.
'You can have what I have got left,' said Merry, 'if
you will wait a moment.' He got down and searched in the bag at his saddle. Then
he handed to Saruman a leather pouch. 'Take what there is,' he said. 'You are
welcome to it; it came from the flotsam of
Isengard.'
'Mine, mine, yes and dearly bought!' cried
Saruman, clutching at the pouch. 'This is only a repayment in token; for you
took more, I'll be bound. Still, a beggar must be grateful, if a thief returns
him even a morsel of his own. Well, it will serve you right when you come home,
if you find things less good in the Southfarthing than you would like. Long may
your land be short of leaf!'
'Thank you!' said Merry. 'In
that case I will have my pouch back, which is not yours and has journeyed far
with me. Wrap the weed in a rag of your own.'
'One thief
deserves another,' said Saruman, and turned his back on Merry, and kicked
Wormtongue, and went away towards the wood.
'Well, I like
that!' said Pippin. 'Thief indeed! What of our claim for waylaying, wounding,
and orc-dragging us through Rohan?'
'Ah!' said Sam. 'And
bought he said. How, I wonder? And I didn't like the sound of what he
said about the Southfarthing. It's time we got back.'
'I'm
sure it is,' said Frodo. 'But we can't go any quicker, if we are to see Bilbo. I
am going to Rivendell first, whatever happens.'
'Yes, I
think you had better do that,' said Gandalf. 'But alas for Saruman! I fear
nothing more can be made of him. He has withered altogether. All the same, I am
not sure that Treebeard is right: I fancy he could do some mischief still in a
small mean way.'
Next day they went on into northern
Dunland, where no men now dwelt, though it was a green and pleasant country.
September came in with golden days and silver nights, and they rode at ease
until they reached the Swanfleet river, and found the old ford, east of the
falls where it went down suddenly into the lowlands. Far to the west in a haze
lay the meres and eyots through which it wound its way to the Greyflood: there
countless swans housed in a land of reeds.
So they passed
into Eregion, and at last a fair morning dawned, shimmering above gleaming
mists; and looking from their camp on a low hill the travellers saw away in the
east the Sun catching three peaks that thrust up into the sky through floating
clouds: Caradhras, Celebdil, and Fanuidhol. They were near to the Gates of
Moria.
Here now for seven days they tarried, for the time
was at hand for another parting which they were loth to make. Soon Celeborn and
Galadriel and their folk would turn eastward, and so pass by the Redhorn Gate
and down the Dimrill Stair to the Silverlode and to their own country. They had
journeyed thus far by the west-ways, for they had much to speak of with Elrond
and with Gandalf, and here they lingered still in converse with their friends.
Often long after the hobbits were wrapped in sleep they would sit together under
the stars, recalling the ages that were gone and all their joys and labours in
the world, or holding council, concerning the days to come. If any wanderer had
chanced to pass, little would he have seen or heard, and it would have seemed to
him only that he saw grey figures, carved in stone, memorials of forgotten
things now lost in unpeopled lands. For they did not move or speak with mouth,
looking from mind to mind; and only their shining eyes stirred and kindled as
their thoughts went to and fro.
But at length all was said,
and they parted again for a while, until it was time for the Three Rings to pass
away. Quickly fading into the stones and the shadows the grey-cloaked people of
Lórien rode towards the mountains; and those who were going to Rivendell sat on
the hill and watched, until there came out of the gathering mist a flash; and
then they saw no more. Frodo knew that Galadriel had held aloft her ring in
token of farewell.
Sam turned away and sighed: 'I wish I
was going back to Lórien!'
At last one evening they came
over the high moors, suddenly as to travellers it always seemed, to the brink of
the deep valley of Rivendell and saw far below the lamps shining in Elrond's
house. And they went down and crossed the bridge and came to the doors, and all
the house was filled with light and song for joy at Elrond's
homecoming.
First of all, before they had eaten or washed
or even shed their cloaks, the hobbits went in search of Bilbo. They found him
all alone in his little room. It was littered with papers and pens and pencils;
but Bilbo was sitting in a chair before a small bright fire. He looked very old,
but peaceful, and sleepy.
He opened his eyes and looked up as they came
in. 'Hullo, hullo!' he said. 'So you've come back? And tomorrow's my birthday,
too. How clever of you! Do you know, I shall be one hundred and twenty-nine? And
in one year more, if I am spared, I shall equal the Old Took. I should like to
beat him; but we shall see.'
After the celebration of
Bilbo's birthday the four hobbits stayed in Rivendell for some days, and they
sat much with their old friend, who spent most of his time now in his room,
except at meals. For these he was still very punctual as a rule, and he seldom
failed to wake up in time for them. Sitting round the fire they told him in turn
all that they could remember of their journeys and adventures. At first he
pretended to take some notes; but he often fell asleep; and when he woke he
would say: 'How splendid! How wonderful! But where were we?' Then they went on
with the story from the point where he had begun to
nod.
The only part that seemed really to rouse him and hold
his attention was the account of the crowning and marriage of Aragorn. 'I was
invited to the wedding of course,' he said. 'And I have waited for it long
enough. But somehow, when it came to it, I found I had so much to do here; and
packing is such a bother.'
When nearly a fortnight had
passed Frodo looked out of his window and saw that there had been a frost in the
night, and the cobwebs were like white nets. Then suddenly he knew that he must
go, and say good-bye to Bilbo. The weather was still calm and fair, after one of
the most lovely summers that people could remember; but October had come, and it
must break soon and begin to rain and blow again. And there was still a very
long way to go. Yet it was not really the thought of the weather that stirred
him. He had a feeling that it was time he went back to the Shire. Sam shared it.
Only the night before he had said:
'Well, Mr. Frodo, we've
been far and seen a deal, and yet I don't think we've found a better place than
this. There's something of everything here, if you understand me: the Shire and
the Golden Wood and Gondor and kings' houses and inns and meadows and mountains
all mixed. And yet, somehow, I feel we ought to be going soon. I'm worried about
my gaffer, to tell you the truth.'
'Yes, something of
everything, Sam, except the Sea,' Frodo had answered; and he repeated it now to
himself: 'Except the Sea.'
That day Frodo spoke to Elrond,
and it was agreed that they should leave the next morning. To their delight
Gandalf said: 'I think I shall come too. At least as far as Bree. I want to see
Butterbur.'
In the evening they went to say good-bye to
Bilbo. 'Well, if you must go, you must,' he said. 'I am sorry. I shall miss you.
It is nice just to know that you are about the place. But I am getting very
sleepy.' Then he gave Frodo his mithril-coat and Sting, forgetting that he had
already done so; and he gave him also three books of lore that he had made at
various times, written in his spidery hand, and labelled on their red backs:
Translations from the Elvish, by B.B.
To Sam he gave
a little bag of gold. 'Almost the last drop of the Smaug vintage,' he said. 'May
come in useful, if you think of getting married, Sam.' Sam
blushed.
'I have nothing much to give to you young
fellows,' he said to Merry and Pippin, 'except good advice.' And when he had
given them a fair sample of this, he added a last item in Shire-fashion: 'Don't
let your heads get too big for your hats! But if you don't finish growing up
soon, you are going to find hats and clothes
expensive.'
'But if you want to beat the Old Took,' said
Pippin, 'I don't see why we shouldn't try and beat the
Bullroarer.'
Bilbo laughed, and he produced out of a pocket
two beautiful pipes with pearl mouth-pieces and bound with fine-wrought silver.
'Think of me when you smoke them!' he said. 'The Elves made them for me, but I
don't smoke now.' And then suddenly he nodded and went to sleep for a little;
and when he woke up again he said: 'Now where were we? Yes, of course, giving
presents. Which reminds me: what's become of my ring, Frodo, that you took
away?'
'I have lost it, Bilbo dear,' said Frodo. 'I got rid
of it, you know.'
'What a pity!' said Bilbo. 'I should have
liked to see it again. But no, how silly of me! That's what you went for, wasn't
it: to get rid of it? But it is all so confusing, for such a lot of other things
seem to have got mixed up with it: Aragorn's affairs, and the White Council and
Gondor, and the Horsemen, and Southrons, and oliphaunts – did you really see
one, Sam? – and caves and towers and golden trees, and goodness knows what
besides.
'I evidently came back by much too straight a road
from my trip. I think Gandalf might have shown me round a bit. But then the
auction would have been over before I got back, and I should have had even more
trouble than I did. Anyway it's too late now; and really I think it's much more
comfortable to sit here and hear about it all. The fire's very cosy here, and
the food's very good, and there are Elves when you want them. What more could
one want?
The Road goes ever on and on
Out from the door where it
began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
Let others follow it who
can!
Let them a journey new begin,
But I at last with weary feet
Will
turn towards the lighted inn,
My evening-rest and sleep to
meet.'
And as Bilbo murmured the
last words his head dropped on his chest and he slept
soundly.
The evening deepened in the room, and the
firelight burned brighter; and they looked at Bilbo as he slept and saw that his
face was smiling. For some time they sat in silence; and then Sam looking round
at the room and the shadows flickering on the walls, said
softly:
'I don't think, Mr. Frodo, that he's done much
writing while we've been away. He won't ever write our story
now.'
At that Bilbo opened an eye, almost as if he had
heard. Then he roused himself. 'You see, I am getting so sleepy,' he said. 'And
when I have time to write, I only really like writing poetry. I wonder, Frodo my
dear fellow, if you would very much mind tidying things up a bit before you go?
Collect all my notes and papers, and my diary too, and take them with you, if
you will. You see, I haven't much time for the selection and the arrangement and
all that. Get Sam to help, and when you've knocked things into shape, come back,
and I'll run over it. I won't be too critical.'
'Of course
I'll do it!' said Frodo. 'And of course I'll come back soon: it won't be
dangerous any more. There is a real king now and he will soon put the roads in
order.'
'Thank you, my dear fellow!' said Bilbo. 'That
really is a very great relief to my mind.' And with that he fell fast asleep
again.
The next day Gandalf and the hobbits took leave of
Bilbo in his room, for it was cold out of doors; and then they said farewell to
Elrond and all his household.
As Frodo stood upon the
threshold, Elrond wished him a fair journey, and blessed him, and he
said:
'I think, Frodo, that maybe you will not need to come
back, unless you come very soon. For about this time of the year, when the
leaves are gold before they fall, look for Bilbo in the woods of the Shire. I
shall be with him.'
These words no one else heard, and
Frodo kept them to himself.
Chapter 7
Homeward Bound
At last the hobbits had their faces turned towards home.
They were eager now to see the Shire again; but at first they rode only slowly,
for Frodo had been ill at ease. When they came to the Ford of Bruinen, he had
halted, and seemed loth to ride into the stream; and they noted that for a while
his eyes appeared not to see them or things about him. All that day he was
silent. It was the sixth of October.
'Are you in pain,
Frodo?' said Gandalf quietly as he rode by Frodo's
side.
'Well, yes I am,' said Frodo. 'It is my shoulder. The
wound aches, and the memory of darkness is heavy on me. It was a year ago
today.'
'Alas! there are some wounds that cannot be wholly
cured,' said Gandalf.
'I fear it may be so with mine,' said
Frodo. 'There is no real going back. Though I may come to the Shire, it will not
seem the same; for I shall not be the same. I am wounded with knife, sting, and
tooth, and a long burden. Where shall I find rest?'
Gandalf
did not answer.
By the end of the next day the pain and
unease had passed, and Frodo was merry again, as merry as if he did not remember
the blackness of the day before. After that the journey went well, and the days
went quickly by; for they rode at leisure, and often they lingered in the fair
woodlands where the leaves were red and yellow in the autumn sun. At length they
came to Weathertop; and it was then drawing towards evening and the shadow of
the hill lay dark on the road. Then Frodo begged them to hasten, and he would
not look towards the hill, but rode through its shadow with head bowed and cloak
drawn close about him. That night the weather changed, and a wind came from the
West laden with rain, and it blew loud and chill, and the yellow leaves whirled
like birds in the air. When they came to the Chetwood already the boughs were
almost bare, and a great curtain of rain veiled Bree Hill from their
sight.
So it was that near the end of a wild and wet
evening in the last days of October the five travellers rode up the climbing
road and came to the South-gate of Bree. It was locked fast; and the rain blew
in their faces, and in the darkening sky low clouds went hurrying by, and their
hearts sank a little, for they had expected more
welcome.
When they had called many times, at last the
Gate-keeper came out, and they saw that he carried a great cudgel. He looked at
them with fear and suspicion; but when he saw that Gandalf was there, and that
his companions were hobbits, in spite of their strange gear, then he brightened
and wished them welcome.
'Come in!' he said, unlocking the
gate. 'We won't stay for news out here in the cold and the wet, a ruffianly
evening. But old Barley will no doubt give you a welcome at The Pony, and
there you'll hear all there is to hear.'
'And there you'll
hear later all that we say, and more,' laughed Gandalf. 'How is
Harry?'
The Gate-keeper scowled. 'Gone,' he said. 'But
you'd best ask Barliman. Good evening!'
'Good evening to
you!' they said, and passed through; and then they noticed that behind the hedge
at the road-side a long low hut had been built, and a number of men had come out
and were staring at them over the fence. When they came to Bill Ferny's house
they saw that the hedge there was tattered and unkempt, and the windows were all
boarded up.
'Do you think you killed him with that apple,
Sam?' said Pippin.
'I'm not so hopeful, Mr. Pippin,' said
Sam. 'But I'd like to know what became of that poor pony. He's been on my mind
many a time and the wolves howling and all.'
At last they
came to The Prancing Pony, and that at least looked outwardly unchanged;
and there were lights behind the red curtains in the lower windows. They rang
the bell, and Nob came to the door, and opened it a crack and peeped through;
and when he saw them standing under the lamp he gave a cry of
surprise.
'Mr. Butterbur! Master!' he shouted. 'They've
come back!'
'Oh have they? I'll learn them,' came
Butterbur's voice, and out he came with a rush, and he had a club in his hand.
But when he saw who they were he stopped short, and the black scowl on his face
changed to wonder and delight.
'Nob, you woolly-pated
ninny!' he cried. 'Can't you give old friends their names? You shouldn't go
scaring me like that, with times as they are. Well, well! And where have you
come from? I never expected to see any of you folk again, and that's a fact:
going off into the Wild with that Strider, and all those Black Men about. But
I'm right glad to see you, and none more than Gandalf. Come in! Come in! The
same rooms as – before? They're free. Indeed most rooms are empty these days, as
I'll not hide from you, for you'll find it out soon enough. And I'll see what
can be done about supper, as soon as may be; but I'm short-handed at present.
Hey, Nob you slowcoach! Tell Bob! Ah, but there I'm forgetting, Bob's gone: goes
home to his folk at nightfall now. Well, take the guests' ponies to the stables,
Nob! And you'll be taking your horse to his stable yourself Gandalf; I don't
doubt. A fine beast, as I said when I first set eyes on him. Well, come in! Make
yourselves at home!'
Mr. Butterbur had at any rate not
changed his manner of talking, and still seemed to live in his old breathless
bustle. And yet there was hardly anybody about, and all was quiet; from the
Common Room there came a low murmur of no more than two or three voices. And
seen closer in the light of two candles that he lit and carried before them the
landlord's face looked rather wrinkled and careworn.
He led
them down the passage to the parlour that they had used on that strange night
more than a year ago; and they followed him, a little disquieted, for it seemed
plain to them that old Barliman was putting a brave face on some trouble. Things
were not what they had been. But they said nothing, and
waited.
As they expected Mr. Butterbur came to the parlour
after supper to see if all had been to their liking. As indeed it had: no change
for the worse had yet come upon the beer or the victuals at The Pony at
any rate. 'Now I won't make so bold as to suggest you should come to the Common
Room tonight,' said Butterbur. 'You'll be tired; and there isn't many folk there
this evening, anyway. But if you could spare me half an hour before you go to
your beds, I would dearly like to have some talk with you, quiet-like by
ourselves.'
'That is just what we should like, too,' said
Gandalf. 'We are not tired. We have been taking things easy. We were wet, cold
and hungry, but all that you have cured. Come, sit down! And if you have any
pipe-weed, we'll bless you.'
'Well, if you'd called for
anything else, I'd have been happier,' said Butterbur. 'That's just a thing that
we're short of, seeing how we've only got what we grow ourselves, and that's not
enough. There's none to be had from the Shire these days. But I'll do what I
can.'
When he came back he brought them enough to last them
for a day or two, a wad of uncut leaf. 'Southlinch,' he said, 'and the best we
have; but not the match of Southfarthing, as I've always said though I'm all for
Bree in most matters, begging your pardon.'
They put him in
a large chair by the wood-fire, and Gandalf sat on the other side of the hearth,
and the hobbits in low chairs between them; and then they talked for many times
half an hour, and exchanged all such news as Mr. Butterbur wished to hear or
give. Most of the things which they had to tell were a mere wonder and
bewilderment to their host, and far beyond his vision; and they brought forth
few comments other than: 'You don't say; often repeated in defiance of the
evidence of Mr. Butterbur's own ears. 'You don't say, Mr. Baggins, or is it Mr.
Underhill? I'm getting so mixed up. You don't say, Master Gandalf! Well I never!
Who'd have thought it in our times!'
But he did say much on
his own account. Things were far from well, he would say. Business was not even
fair, it was downright bad. 'No one comes nigh Bree now from Outside,' he said.
'And the inside folks, they stay at home mostly and keep their doors barred. It
all comes of those newcomers and gangrels that began coming up the Greenway last
year, as you may remember; but more came later. Some were just poor bodies
running away from trouble; but most were bad men, full o' thievery and mischief.
And there was trouble right here in Bree, bad trouble. Why, we had a real
set-to, and there were some folk killed, killed dead! If you'll believe
me.'
'I will indeed,' said Gandalf. 'How
many?'
'Three and two,' said Butterbur, referring to the
big folk and the little. 'There was poor Mat Heathertoes, and Rowlie Appledore,
and little Tom Pickthorn from over the Hill; and Willie Banks from up-away, and
one of the Underhills from Staddle: all good fellows, and they're missed. And
Harry Goatleaf that used to be on the West-gate, and that Bill Ferny, they came
in on the strangers' side, and they've gone off with them; and it's my belief
they let them in. On the night of the fight, I mean. And that was after we
showed them the gates and pushed them out: before the year's end, that was; and
the fight was early in the New Year, after the heavy snow we
had.
'And now they're gone for robbers and live outside,
hiding in the woods beyond Archet, and out in the wilds north-away. It's like a
bit of the bad old times tales tell of, I say. It isn't safe on the road and
nobody goes far, and folk lock up early. We have to keep watchers all round the
fence and put a lot of men on the gates at nights.'
'Well,
no one troubled us,' said Pippin, 'and we came along slowly, and kept no watch.
We thought we'd left all trouble behind us.'
'Ah, that you
haven't, Master, more's the pity,' said Butterbur. 'But it's no wonder they left
you alone. They wouldn't go for armed folk, with swords and helmets and shields
and all. Make them think twice, that would. And I must say it put me aback a bit
when I saw you.'
Then the hobbits suddenly realized that
people had looked at them with amazement not out of surprise at their return so
much as in wonder at their gear. They themselves had become so used to warfare
and to riding in well-arrayed companies that they had quite forgotten that the
bright mail peeping from under their cloaks, and the helms of Gondor and the
Mark, and the fair devices on their shields, would seem outlandish in their own
country. And Gandalf, too, was now riding on his tall grey horse, all clad in
white with a great mantle of blue and silver over all, and the long sword
Glamdring at his side.
Gandalf laughed. 'Well, well,' he
said, 'if they are afraid of just five of us, then we have met worse enemies on
our travels. But at any rate they will give you peace at night while we
stay.'
'How long will that be?' said Butterbur. 'I'll not
deny we should be glad to have you about for a bit. You see, we're not used to
such troubles; and the Rangers have all gone away, folk tell me. I don't think
we've rightly understood till now what they did for us. For there's been worse
than robbers about. Wolves were howling round the fences last winter. And
there's dark shapes in the woods, dreadful things that it makes the blood run
cold to think of. It's been very disturbing, if you understand
me.'
'I expect it has,' said Gandalf. 'Nearly all lands
have been disturbed these days, very disturbed. But cheer up, Barliman! You have
been on the edge of very great troubles, and I am only glad to hear that you
have not been deeper in. But better times are coming. Maybe, better than any you
remember. The Rangers have returned. We came back with them. And there is a king
again, Barliman. He will soon be turning his mind this
way.
'Then the Greenway will be opened again, and his
messengers will come north, and there will be comings and goings, and the evil
things will be driven out of the waste-lands. Indeed the waste in time will be
waste no longer, and there will be people and fields where once there was
wilderness.'
Mr. Butterbur shook his head. 'If there's a
few decent respectable folk on the roads, that won't do no harm,' he said. 'But
we don't want no more rabble and ruffians. And we don't want no outsiders at
Bree, nor near Bree at all. We want to be let alone. I don't want a whole crowd
o' strangers camping here and settling there and tearing up the wild
country.'
'You will be let alone, Barliman,' said Gandalf.
'There is room enough for realms between Isen and Greyflood, or along the shore
lands south of the Brandywine, without any one living within many days' ride of
Bree. And many folk used to dwell away north, a hundred miles or more from here,
at the far end of the Greenway: on the North Downs or by Lake
Evendim.'
'Up away by Deadmen's Dike?' said Butterbur,
looking even more dubious. 'That's haunted land, they say. None but a robber
would go there.'
'The Rangers go there,' said Gandalf.
'Deadmen's Dike, you say. So it has been called for long years; but its right
name, Barliman, is Fornost Erain, Norbury of the Kings. And the King will come
there again one day; and then you'll have some fair folk riding
through.'
'Well, that sounds more hopeful, I'll allow,'
said Butterbur. 'And it will be good for business, no doubt. So long as he lets
Bree alone.'
'He will,' said Gandalf. 'He knows it and
loves it.'
'Does he now?' said Butterbur looking puzzled.
'Though I'm sure I don't know why he should, sitting in his big chair up in his
great castle, hundreds of miles away. And drinking wine out of a golden cup, I
shouldn't wonder. What's The Pony to him, or mugs o' beer? Not but what
my beer's good, Gandalf. It's been uncommon good, since you came in the autumn
of last year and put a good word on it. And that's been a comfort in trouble, I
will say.'
'Ah!' said Sam. 'But he says your beer is always
good.'
'He says?'
'Of course he does.
He's Strider. The chief of the Rangers. Haven't you got that into your head
yet?'
It went in at last, and Butterbur's face was a study
in wonder. The eyes in his broad face grew round, and his mouth opened wide, and
he gasped. 'Strider!' he exclaimed when he got back his breath. 'Him with a
crown and all and a golden cup! Well, what are we coming
to?'
'Better times, for Bree at any rate,' said
Gandalf.
'I hope so, I'm sure,' said Butterbur. 'Well, this
has been the nicest chat I've had in a month of Mondays. And I'll not deny that
I'll sleep easier tonight and with a lighter heart. You've given me a powerful
lot to think over, but I'll put that off until tomorrow. I'm for bed, and I've
no doubt you'll be glad of your beds too. Hey, Nob!' he called, going to the
door. 'Nob, you slowcoach!'
'Now!' he said to himself,
slapping his forehead. 'Now what does that remind me
of?'
'Not another letter you've forgotten. I hope, Mr.
Butterbur?' said Merry.
'Now, now, Mr. Brandybuck, don't go
reminding me of that! But there, you've broken my thought. Now where was I? Nob,
stables, ah! that was it. I've something that belongs to you. If you recollect
Bill Ferny and the horsethieving: his pony as you bought, well, it's here. Come
back all of itself, it did. But where it had been to you know better than me. It
was as shaggy as an old dog and as lean as a clothes-rail, but it was alive.
Nob's looked after it.'
'What! My Bill?' cried Sam. 'Well,
I was born lucky, whatever my gaffer may say. There's another wish come true!
Where is he?' Sam would not go to bed until he had visited Bill in his
stable.
The travellers stayed in Bree all the next day, and
Mr. Butterbur could not complain of his business next evening at any rate.
Curiosity overcame all fears, and his house was crowded. For a while out of
politeness the hobbits visited the Common Room in the evening and answered a
good many questions. Bree memories being retentive, Frodo was asked many times
if he had written his book.
'Not yet,' he answered. 'I am
going home now to put my notes in order.' He promised to deal with the amazing
events at Bree, and so give a bit of interest to a book that appeared likely to
treat mostly of the remote and less important affairs 'away
south'.
Then one of the younger folk called for a song. But
at that a hush fell, and he was frowned down, and the call was not repeated.
Evidently there was no wish for any uncanny events in the Common Room
again.
No trouble by day, nor any sound by night, disturbed
the peace of Bree while the travellers remained there; but the next morning they
got up early, for as the weather was still rainy they wished to reach the Shire
before night, and it was a long ride. The Bree folk were all out to see them
off, and were in merrier mood than they had been for a year; and those who had
not seen the strangers in all their gear before gaped with wonder at them: at
Gandalf with his white beard, and the light that seemed to gleam from him, as if
his blue mantle was only a cloud over sunshine; and at the four hobbits like
riders upon errantry out of almost forgotten tales. Even those who had laughed
at all the talk about the King began to think there might be some truth in
it.
'Well, good luck on your road, and good luck to your
home-coming! said Mr. Butterbur. 'I should have warned you before that all's not
well in the Shire neither, if what we hear is true. Funny goings on, they say.
But one thing drives out another, and I was full of my own troubles. But if I
may be so bold, you've come back changed from your travels, and you look now
like folk as can deal with troubles out of hand. I don't doubt you'll soon set
all to rights. Good luck to you! And the oftener you come back the better I'll
be pleased.'
They wished him farewell and rode away, and
passed through the West-gate and on towards the Shire. Bill the pony was with
them, and as before he had a good deal of baggage, but he trotted along beside
Sam and seemed well content.
'I wonder what old Barliman
was hinting at,' said Frodo.
'I can guess some of it,' said
Sam gloomily. 'What I saw in the Mirror: trees cut down and all, and my old
gaffer turned out of the Row. I ought to have hurried back
quicker.'
'And something's wrong with the Southfarthing
evidently,' said Merry. 'There's a general shortage of
pipe-weed.'
'Whatever it is,' said Pippin, 'Lotho will be
at the bottom of it: you can be sure of that.'
'Deep in,
but not at the bottom,' said Gandalf. 'You have forgotten Saruman. He began to
take an interest in the Shire before Mordor did.'
'Well,
we've got you with us,' said Merry, 'so things will soon be cleared
up.'
'I am with you at present,' said Gandalf, 'but soon I
shall not be. I am not coming to the Shire. You must settle its affairs
yourselves; that is what you have been trained for. Do you not yet understand?
My time is over: it is no longer my task to set things to rights, nor to help
folk to do so. And as for you, my dear friends, you will need no help. You are
grown up now. Grown indeed very high; among the great you are, and I have no
longer any fear at all for any of you.
'But if you would
know, I am turning aside soon. I am going to have a long talk with Bombadil:
such a talk as I have not had in all my time. He is a moss-gatherer, and I have
been a stone doomed to rolling. But my rolling days are ending, and now we shall
have much to say to one another.'
In a little while they
came to the point on the East Road where they had taken leave of Bombadil; and
they hoped and half expected to see him standing there to greet them as they
went by. But there was no sign of him; and there was a grey mist on the
Barrow-downs southwards, and a deep veil over the Old Forest far
away.
They halted and Frodo looked south wistfully. 'I
should dearly like to see the old fellow again,' he said. 'I wonder how he is
getting on?'
'As well as ever, you may be sure,' said
Gandalf. 'Quite untroubled and I should guess, not much interested in anything
that we have done or seen, unless perhaps in our visits to the Ents. There may
be a time later for you to go and see him. But if I were you, I should press on
now for home, or you will not come to the Brandywine Bridge before the gates are
locked.'
'But there aren't any gates,' said Merry, 'not on
the Road; you know that quite well. There's the Buckland Gate, of course; but
they'll let me through that at any time.'
'There weren't
any gates, you mean,' said Gandalf. 'I think you will find some now. And you
might have more trouble even at the Buckland Gate than you think. But you'll!
manage all right. Good-bye dear friends! Not for the last time, not yet.
Good-bye!'
He turned Shadowfax off the Road, and the great
horse leaped the green dike that here ran beside it; and then at a cry from
Gandalf he was gone, racing towards the Barrow-downs like a wind from the
North.
'Well here we are, just the four of us that started
out together,' said Merry. 'We have left all the rest behind, one after another.
It seems almost like a dream that has slowly faded.'
'Not
to me,' said Frodo. 'To me it feels more like falling asleep again.'
Chapter 8
The Scouring of the
Shire
It was after nightfall when, wet and tired, the
travellers came at last to the Brandywine, and they found the way barred. At
either end of the Bridge there was a great spiked gate; and on the further side
of the river they could see that some new houses had been built: two-storeyed
with narrow straight-sided windows, bare and dimly lit, all very gloomy and
un-Shirelike.
They hammered on the outer gate and called,
but there was at first no answer; and then to their surprise someone blew a
horn, and the lights in the windows went out. A voice shouted in the
dark:
'Who's that? Be off! You can't come in! Can't you
read the notice:
No admittance between sundown and
sunrise?'
'Of course we can't read the notice in the
dark.' Sam shouted back. 'And if hobbits of the Shire are to be kept out in the
wet on a night like this, I'll tear down your notice when I find
it.'
At that a window slammed, and a crowd of hobbits with
lanterns poured out of the house on the left. They opened the further gate, and
some came over the bridge. When they saw the travellers they seemed
frightened.
'Come along!' said Merry, recognizing one of
the hobbits. 'If you don't know me, Hob Hayward, you ought to. I am Merry
Brandybuck, and I should like to know what all this is about, and what a
Bucklander like you is doing here. You used to be on the Hay
Gate.'
'Bless me! It's Master Merry, to be sure, and all
dressed up for fighting!' said old Hob. 'Why, they said you was dead! Lost in
the Old Forest by all accounts. I'm pleased to see you alive after
all!'
'Then stop gaping at me through the bars, and open
the gate!' said Merry.
'I'm sorry, Master Merry, but we
have orders.'
'Whose orders?'
'The
Chief's up at Bag End.'
'Chief? Chief? Do you mean Mr.
Lotho?' said Frodo.
'I suppose so, Mr. Baggins; but we have
to say just “the Chief” nowadays.'
'Do you indeed!' said
Frodo. 'Well, I am glad he has dropped the Baggins at any rate. But it is
evidently high time that the family dealt with him and put him in his
place.'
A hush fell on the hobbits beyond the gate. 'It
won't do no good talking that way,' said one. 'He'll get to hear of it. And if
you make so much noise, you'll wake the Chief's Big
Man.'
'We shall wake him up in a way that will surprise
him,' said Merry. 'If you mean that your precious Chief has been hiring ruffians
out of the wild, then we've not come back too soon.' He sprang from his pony,
and seeing the notice in the light of the lanterns, he tore it down and threw it
over the gate. The hobbits backed away and made no move to open it. 'Come on,
Pippin!' said Merry. 'Two is enough.'
Merry and Pippin
climbed the gate, and the hobbits fled. Another horn sounded. Out of the bigger
house on the right a large heavy figure appeared against a light in the
doorway.
'What's all this,' he snarled as he came forward.
'Gate-breaking? You clear out, or I'll break your filthy little necks!' Then he
stopped, for he had caught the gleam of swords.
'Bill
Ferny,' said Merry, 'if you don't open that gate in ten seconds, you'll regret
it. I shall set steel to you, if you don't obey. And when you have opened the
gates you will go through them and never return. You are a ruffian and a
highway-robber.'
Bill Ferny flinched and shuffled to the
gate and unlocked it. 'Give me the key!' said Merry. But the ruffian flung it at
his head and then darted out into the darkness. As he passed the ponies one of
them let fly with his heels and just caught him as he ran. He went off with a
yelp into the night and was never heard of again.
'Neat
work, Bill,' said Sam, meaning the pony.
'So much for your
Big Man,' said Merry. 'We'll see the Chief later. In the meantime we want a
lodging for the night, and as you seem to have pulled down the Bridge Inn and
built this dismal place instead, you'll have to put us
up.'
'I am sorry, Mr. Merry,' said Hob, 'but it isn't
allowed.'
'What isn't allowed?'
Taking
in folk off-hand like and eating extra food, and all that, said
Hob.
'What's the matter with the place?' said Merry. 'Has
it been a bad year, or what? I thought it had been a fine summer and
harvest.'
'Well no, the year's been good enough,' said Hob.
'We grows a lot of food, but we don't rightly know what becomes of it. It's all
these “gatherers” and “sharers”, I reckon, going round counting and measuring
and taking off to storage. They do more gathering than sharing, and we never see
most of the stuff again.'
'Oh come!' said Pippin yawning.
'This is all too tiresome for me tonight. We've got food in our bags. Just give
us a room to lie down in. It'll be better than many places I have
seen.'
The hobbits at the gate still seemed ill at ease,
evidently some rule or other was being broken; but there was no gainsaying four
such masterful travellers, all armed, and two of them uncommonly large and
strong-looking. Frodo ordered the gates to be locked again. There was some sense
at any rate in keeping a guard, while ruffians were still about. Then the four
companions went into the hobbit guard-house and made themselves as comfortable
as they could. It was a bare and ugly place, with a mean little grate that would
not allow a good fire. In the upper rooms were little rows of hard beds, and on
every wall there was a notice and a list of Rules. Pippin tore them down. There
was no beer and very little food, but with what the travellers brought and
shared out they all made a fair meal; and Pippin broke Rule 4 by putting most of
next day's allowance of wood on the fire.
'Well now, what
about a smoke, while you tell us what has been happening in the Shire?' he
said.
'There isn't no pipe-weed now,' said Hob, 'at least
only for the Chief's men. All the stocks seem to have gone. We do hear that
waggon-loads of it went away down the old road out of the Southfarthing, over
Sarn Ford way. That would be the end o' last year, after you left. But it had
been going away quietly before that, in a small way. That
Lotho—'
'Now you shut up, Hob Hayward!' cried several of
the others. 'You know talk o' that sort isn't allowed. The Chief will hear of
it, and we'll all be in trouble.'
'He wouldn't hear naught,
if some of you here weren't sneaks,' rejoined Hob
hotly.
'All right, all right!' said Sam. “That's quite
enough. I don't want to hear no more. No welcome, no beer, no smoke, and a lot
of rules and orc-talk instead. I hoped to have a rest, but I can see there's
work and trouble ahead. Let's sleep and forget it till
morning!'
The new 'Chief' evidently had means of getting
news. It was a good forty miles from the Bridge to Bag End, but someone made the
journey in a hurry. So Frodo and his friends soon
discovered.
They had not made any definite plans, but had
vaguely thought of going down to Crickhollow together first, and resting there a
bit. But now, seeing what things were like, they decided to go straight to
Hobbiton. So the next day they set out along the Road and jogged along steadily.
The wind had dropped but the sky was grey. The land looked rather sad and
forlorn; but it was after all the first of November and the fag-end of Autumn.
Still there seemed an unusual amount of burning going on, and smoke rose from
many points round about. A great cloud of it was going up far away in the
direction of the Woody End.
As evening fell they were drawing near to
Frogmorton, a village right on the Road, about twenty-two miles from the Bridge.
There they meant to stay the night;
The Floating Log at Frogmorton was a
good inn. But as they came to the east end of the village they met a barrier
with a large board saying no road; and behind it stood a large band of Shirriffs
with staves in their hands and feathers in their caps, looking both important
and rather scared.
'What's all this?' said Frodo, feeling
inclined to laugh.
This is what it is, Mr. Baggins, said
the leader of the Shirriffs, a two-feather hobbit: 'You're arrested for
Gate-breaking, and Tearing up of Rules, and Assaulting Gate-keepers, and
Trespassing, and Sleeping in Shire-buildings without Leave, and Bribing Guards
with Food.'
'And what else?' said
Frodo.
'That'll do to go on with,' said the
Shirriff-leader.
'I can add some more, if you like it,'
said Sam. 'Calling your Chief Names, Wishing to punch his Pimply Face, and
Thinking you Shirriffs look a lot of Tom-fools.'
'There
now, Mister, that'll do. It's the Chief's orders that you're to come along
quiet. We're going to take you to Bywater and hand you over to the Chief's Men;
and when he deals with your case you can have your say. But if you don't want to
stay in the Lockholes any longer than you need, I should cut the say short, if I
was you.'
To the discomfiture of the Shirriffs Frodo and
his companions all roared with laughter. 'Don't be absurd!' said Frodo. 'I am
going where I please, and in my own time. I happen to be going to Bag End on
business, but if you insist on going too, well that is your
affair.'
'Very well, Mr. Baggins,' said the leader, pushing
the barrier aside. 'But don't forget I've arrested you.'
'I
won't,' said Frodo. 'Never. But I may forgive you. Now I am not going any
further today, so if you'll kindly escort me to
The Floating Log, I'll be
obliged.'
'I can't do that, Mr. Baggins. The inn's closed.
There's a Shirriff-house at the far end of the village. I'll take you there.
'
'All right,' said Frodo. 'Go on and we'll
follow.'
Sam had been looking the Shirriffs up and down and
had spotted one that he knew. 'Hey, come here Robin Smallburrow!' he called. 'I
want a word with you.'
With a sheepish glance at his
leader, who looked wrathful but did not dare to interfere, Shirriff Smallburrow
fell back and walked beside Sam, who got down off his
pony.
'Look here, Cock-robin!' said Sam. 'You're
Hobbiton-bred and ought to have more sense, coming a-waylaying Mr. Frodo and
all. And what's all this about the inn being
closed?'
'They're all closed,' said Robin. 'The Chief
doesn't hold with beer. Leastways that is how it started. But now I reckon it's
his Men that has it all. And he doesn't hold with folk moving about; so if they
will or they must, then they has to go to the Shirriff-house and explain their
business.'
'You ought to be ashamed of yourself having
anything to do with such nonsense,' said Sam. 'You used to like the inside of an
inn better than the outside yourself. You were always popping in, on duty or
off.'
'And so I would be still, Sam, if I could. But don't
be hard on me. What can I do? You know how I went for a Shirriff seven years
ago, before any of this began. Gave me a chance of walking round the country and
seeing folk, and hearing the news, and knowing where the good beer was. But now
it's different.'
'But you can give it up, stop Shirriffing,
if it has stopped being a respectable job,' said
Sam.
'We're not allowed to,' said
Robin.
'If I hear
not allowed much oftener,' said
Sam, 'I'm going to get angry.'
'Can't say as I'd be sorry
to see it,' said Robin lowering his voice. 'If we all got angry together
something might be done. But it's these Men, Sam, the Chief's Men. He sends them
round everywhere, and if any of us small folk stand up for our rights, they drag
him off to the Lockholes. They took old Flourdumpling, old Will Whitfoot the
Mayor, first, and they've taken a lot more. Lately it's been getting worse.
Often they beat 'em now.'
'Then why do you do their work
far them?' said Sam angrily. 'Who sent you to
Frogmorton?'
'No one did. We stay here in the big
Shirriff-house. We're the First Eastfarthing Troop now. There's hundreds of
Shirriffs all told and they want more, with all these new rules. Most of them
are in it against their will, but not all. Even in the Shire there are some as
like minding other folk's business and talking big. And there's worse than that:
there's a few as do spy-work for the Chief and his
Men.'
'Ah! So that's how you had news of us, is
it?'
'That's right. We aren't allowed to send by it now,
but they use the old Quick Post service, and keep special runners at different
points. One came in from Whitfurrows last night with a “secret message”, and
another took it on from here. And a message came back this afternoon saying you
was to be arrested and taken to Bywater, not direct to the Lockholes. The Chief
wants to see you at once, evidently.'
'He won't be so eager
when Mr. Frodo has finished with him,' said Sam.
The
Shirriff-house at Frogmorton was as bad as the Bridge-house. It had only one
storey, but it had the same narrow windows, and it was built of ugly pale
bricks, badly laid. Inside it was damp and cheerless, and supper was served on a
long bare table that had not been scrubbed for weeks. The food deserved no
better setting. The travellers were glad to leave the place. It was about
eighteen miles to Bywater, and they set off at ten o'clock in the morning. They
would have started earlier, only the delay so plainly annoyed the
Shirriff-leader. The west wind had shifted northward and it was turning colder,
but the rain was gone.
It was rather a comic cavalcade that
left the village, though the few folk that came out to stare at the 'get-up' of
the travellers did not seem quite sure whether laughing was allowed. A dozen
Shirriffs had been told off as escort to the 'prisoners'; but Merry made them
march in front, while Frodo and his friends rode behind. Merry, Pippin, and Sam
sat at their ease laughing and talking and singing, while the Shirriffs stumped
along trying to look stern and important. Frodo, however, was silent and looked
rather sad and thoughtful.
The last person they passed was
a sturdy old gaffer clipping a hedge. 'Hullo, hullo!' he jeered. 'Now who's
arrested who?'
Two of the Shirriffs immediately left the
party and went towards him. 'Leader!' said Merry. 'Order your fellows back to
their places at once, if you don't want me to deal with
them!'
The two hobbits at a sharp word from the leader came
back sulkily. 'Now get on!' said Merry, and after that the travellers saw to it
that their ponies' pace was quick enough to push the Shirriffs along as fast as
they could go. The sun came out, and in spite of the chilly wind they were soon
puffing and sweating.
At the Three-Farthing Stone they gave
it up. They had done nearly fourteen miles with only one rest at noon. It was
now three o'clock. They were hungry and very footsore and they could not stand
the pace.
'Well, come along in your own time!' said Merry.
'We are going on.'
'Good-bye, Cock-robin!' said Sam. 'I'll
wait for you outside
The Green Dragon, if you haven't forgotten where
that is. Don't dawdle on the way!'
'You're breaking arrest,
that's what you're doing,' said the leader ruefully, 'and I can't be
answerable.'
'We shall break a good many things yet, and
not ask you to answer,' said Pippin. 'Good luck to
you!'
The travellers trotted on, and as the sun began to
sink towards the White Downs far away on the western horizon they came to
Bywater by its wide pool; and there they had their first really painful shock.
This was Frodo and Sam's own country, and they found out now that they cared
about it more than any other place in the world. Many of the houses that they
had known were missing. Some seemed to have been burned down. The pleasant row
of old hobbit-holes in the bank on the north side of the Pool were deserted, and
their little gardens that used to run down bright to the water's edge were rank
with weeds. Worse, there was a whole line of the ugly new houses all along Pool
Side, where the Hobbiton Road ran close to the bank. An avenue of trees had
stood there. They were all gone. And looking with dismay up the road towards Bag
End they saw a tall chimney of brick in the distance. It was pouring out black
smoke into the evening air.
Sam was beside himself. 'I'm
going right on, Mr. Frodo!' he cried. 'I'm going to see what's up. I want to
find my gaffer.'
'We ought to find out first what we're in
for, Sam,' said Merry. 'I guess that the “Chief” will have a gang of ruffians
handy. We had better find someone who will tell us how things are round
here.'
But in the village of Bywater all the houses and
holes were shut, and no one greeted them. They wondered at this, but they soon
discovered the reason of it. When they reached
The Green Dragon, the last
house on the Hobbiton side, now lifeless and with broken windows, they were
disturbed to see half a dozen large ill-favoured Men lounging against the
inn-wall; they were squint-eyed and sallow-faced.
'Like
that friend of Bill Ferny's at Bree,' said Sam.
'Like many
that I saw at Isengard,' muttered Merry.
The ruffians had
clubs in their hands and horns by their belts, but they had no other weapons, as
far as could be seen. As the travellers rode up they left the wall and walked
into the road, blocking the way.
'Where d'you think you're
going?' said one, the largest and most evil-looking of the crew. 'There's no
road for you any further. And where are those precious
Shirriffs?'
'Coming along nicely,' said Merry. 'A little
footsore, perhaps. We promised to wait for them
here.'
'Garn, what did I say?' said the ruffian to his
mates. 'I told Sharkey it was no good trusting those little fools. Some of our
chaps ought to have been sent.'
'And what difference would
that have made, pray?' said Merry. 'We are not used to footpads in this country,
but we know how to deal with them.'
'Footpads, eh?' said
the man. 'So that's your tone, is it? Change it, or we'll change it for you. You
little folk are getting too uppish. Don't you trust too much in the Boss's kind
heart. Sharkey's come now and he'll do what Sharkey
says.'
'And what may that be?' said Frodo
quietly.
'This country wants waking up and setting to
rights,' said the ruffian, 'and Sharkey's going to do it; and make it hard, if
you drive him to it. You need a bigger Boss. And you'll get one before the year
is out, if there's any more trouble. Then you'll learn a thing or two, you
little rat-folk.'
'Indeed. I am glad to hear of your
plans,' said Frodo. 'I am on my way to call on Mr. Lotho, and he may be
interested to hear of them too.'
The ruffian laughed.
'Lotho! He knows all right. Don't you worry. He'll do what Sharkey says. Because
if a Boss gives trouble, we can change him. See? And if little folks try to push
in where they're not wanted, we can put them out of mischief.
See?'
'Yes, I see,' said Frodo. 'For one thing, I see that
you're behind the times and the news here. Much has happened since you left the
South. Your day is over, and all other ruffians'. The Dark Tower has fallen, and
there is a King in Gondor. And Isengard has been destroyed, and your precious
master is a beggar in the wilderness. I passed him on the road. The King's
messengers will ride up the Greenway now not bullies from
Isengard.'
The man stared at him and smiled. 'A beggar in
the wilderness!' he mocked. 'Oh, is he indeed? Swagger it, swagger it, my little
cock-a-whoop. But that won't stop us living in this fat little country where you
have lazed long enough. And' – he snapped his fingers in Frodo's face – 'King's
messengers! That for them! When I see one, I'll take notice,
perhaps.'
This was too much for Pippin. His thoughts went
back to the Field of Cormallen, and here was a squint-eyed rascal calling the
Ring-bearer 'little cock-a-whoop'. He cast back his cloak, flashed out his
sword, and the silver and sable of Gondor gleamed on him as he rode
forward.
'I am a messenger of the King,' he said. 'You are
speaking to the King's friend, and one of the most renowned in all the lands of
the West. You are a ruffian and a fool. Down on your knees in the road and ask
pardon, or I will set this troll's bane in you!'
The sword
glinted in the westering sun. Merry and Sam drew their swords also and rode up
to support Pippin; but Frodo did not move. The ruffians gave back. Scaring
Breeland peasants, and bullying bewildered hobbits, had been their work.
Fearless hobbits with bright swords and grim faces were a great surprise. And
there was a note in the voices of these newcomers that they had not heard
before. It chilled them with fear.
'Go!' said Merry. 'If
you trouble this village again, you will regret it.' The three hobbits came on,
and then the ruffians turned and fled running away up the Hobbiton Road; but
they blew their horns as they ran.
'Well, we've come back
none too soon,' said Merry.
'Not a day too soon. Perhaps
too late, at any rate to save Lotho,' said Frodo. 'Miserable fool, but I am
sorry for him.'
'Save Lotho? Whatever do you mean?' said
Pippin. 'Destroy him I should say.'
'I don't think you
quite understand things, Pippin,' said Frodo. 'Lotho never meant things to come
to this pass. He has been a wicked fool, but he's caught now. The ruffians are
on top, gathering, robbing and bullying, and running or ruining things as they
like, in his name. And not in his name even for much longer. He's a prisoner in
Bag End now, I expect, and very frightened. We ought to try and rescue
him.'
'Well I am staggered!' said Pippin. 'Of all the ends
to our journey that is the very last I should have thought of: to have to fight
half-orcs and ruffians in the Shire itself – to rescue Lotho
Pimple!'
'Fight?' said Frodo. 'Well, I suppose it may come
to that. But remember: there is to be no slaying of hobbits, not even if they
have gone over to the other side. Really gone over, I mean; not just obeying
ruffians' orders because they are frightened. No hobbit has ever killed another
on purpose in the Shire, and it is not to begin now. And nobody is to be killed
at all, if it can be helped. Keep your tempers and hold your hands to the last
possible moment!'
'But if there are many of these
ruffians,' said Merry, 'it will certainly mean fighting. You won't rescue Lotho,
or the Shire, just by being shocked and sad, my dear
Frodo.'
'No,' said Pippin. 'It won't be so easy scaring
them a second time. They were taken by surprise. You heard that horn-blowing?
Evidently there are other ruffians near at hand. They'll be much bolder when
there's more of them together. We ought to think of taking cover somewhere for
the night. After all we're only four, even if we are
armed.'
'I've an idea,' said Sam. 'Let's go to old Tom
Cotton's down South Lane! He always was a stout fellow. And he has a lot of lads
that were all friends of mine.'
'No!' said Merry. 'It's no
good “getting under cover”. That is just what people have been doing, and just
what these ruffians like. They will simply come down on us in force, corner us,
and then drive us out, or burn us in. No, we have got to do something at
once.'
'Do what?' said Pippin.
'Raise
the Shire!' said Merry. 'Now! Wake all our people! They hate all this, you can
see: all of them except perhaps one or two rascals, and a few fools that want to
be important, but don't at all understand what is really going on. But
Shire-folk have been so comfortable so long they don't know what to do. They
just want a match, though, and they'll go up in fire. The Chief's Men must know
that. They'll try to stamp on us and put us out quick. We've only got a very
short time.
'Sam, you can make a dash for Cotton's farm, if
you like. He's the chief person round here, and the sturdiest. Come on! I am
going to blow the horn of Rohan, and give them all some music they have never
heard before.'
They rode back to the middle of the village.
There Sam turned aside and galloped off down the lane that led south to
Cotton's. He had not gone far when he heard a sudden clear horn-call go up
ringing into the sky. Far over hill and field it echoed; and so compelling was
that call that Sam himself almost turned and dashed back. His pony reared and
neighed.
'On, lad! On!' he cried. 'We'll be going back
soon.'
Then he heard Merry change the note, and up went the
Horn-cry of Buckland, shaking the air.
Awake! Awake! Fear, Fire, Foes!
Awake!
Fire, Foes!
Awake!
Behind him Sam heard
a hubbub of voices and a great din and slamming of doors. In front of him lights
sprang out in the gloaming; dogs barked; feet came running. Before he got to the
lane's end there was Farmer Cotton with three of his lads, Young Tom, Jolly, and
Nick, hurrying towards him. They had axes in their hands, and barred the
way.
'Nay! It's not one of them ruffians,' Sam heard the
farmer say. 'It's a hobbit by the size of it, but all dressed up queer. Hey!' he
cried. 'Who are you, and what's all this to-do?'
'It's Sam,
Sam Gamgee. I've come back.'
Farmer Cotton came up close
and stared at him in the twilight. 'Well!' he exclaimed. 'The voice is right,
and your face is no worse than it was, Sam. But I should a' passed you in the
street in that gear. You've been in foreign parts, seemingly. We feared you were
dead.'
'That I ain't!' said Sam. 'Nor Mr. Frodo. He's here
and his friends. And that's the to-do. They're raising the Shire. We're going to
clear out these ruffians, and their Chief too. We're starting
now.'
'Good, good!' cried Farmer Cotton. 'So it's begun at
last! I've been itching for trouble all this year, but folks wouldn't help. And
I've had the wife and Rosie to think of. These ruffians don't stick at nothing.
But come on now, lads! Bywater is up! We must be in
it!'
'What about Mrs. Cotton and Rosie?' said Sam. 'It
isn't safe yet for them to be left all alone.'
'My Nibs is
with them. But you can go and help him, if you have a mind,' said Farmer Cotton
with a grin. Then he and his sons ran off towards the
village.
Sam hurried to the house. By the large round door
at the top of the steps from the wide yard stood Mrs. Cotton and Rosie, and Nibs
in front of them grasping a hay-fork.
'It's me!' shouted
Sam as he trotted up. 'Sam Gamgee! So don't try prodding me, Nibs. Anyway, I've
a mail-shirt on me.'
He jumped down from his pony and went
up the steps. They stared at him in silence. 'Good evening, Mrs. Cotton!' he
said. 'Hullo Rosie!'
'Hullo, Sam!' said Rosie. 'Where've
you been I They said you were dead; but I've been expecting you since the
Spring. You haven't hurried have you?'
'Perhaps not,' said
Sam abashed. 'But I'm hurrying now. We're setting about the ruffians, and I've
got to get back to Mr. Frodo. But I thought I'd have a look and see how Mrs.
Cotton was keeping, and you, Rosie.'
'We're keeping nicely,
thank you,' said Mrs. Cotton. 'Or should be, if it weren't for these thieving
ruffians.'
'Well, be off with you!' said Rosie. 'If you've
been looking after Mr. Frodo all this while, what d'you want to leave him for,
as soon as things look dangerous?'
This was too much for
Sam. It needed a week's answer, or none. He turned away and mounted his pony.
But as he started off, Rosie ran down the steps.
'I think
you look fine, Sam,' she said. 'Go on now! But take care of yourself, and come
straight back as soon as you have settled the
ruffians!'
When Sam got back he found the whole village
roused. Already, apart from many younger lads, more than a hundred sturdy
hobbits were assembled with axes, and heavy hammers, and long knives, and stout
staves: and a few had hunting-bows. More were still coming in from outlying
farms.
Some of the village-folk had lit a large fire, just
to enliven things, and also because it was one of the things forbidden by the
Chief. It burned bright as night came on. Others at Merry's orders were setting
up barriers across the road at each end of the village. When the Shirriffs came
up to the lower one they were dumbfounded; but as soon as they saw how things
were, most of them took off their feathers and joined in the revolt. The others
slunk away.
Sam found Frodo and his friends by the fire
talking to old Tom Cotton, while an admiring crowd of Bywater folk stood round
and stared.
'Well, what's the next move?' said Farmer
Cotton.
'I can't say,' said Frodo, 'until I know more. How
many of these ruffians are there?'
'That's hard to tell,'
said Cotton. 'They moves about and comes and goes. There's sometimes fifty of
them in their sheds up Hobbiton way; but they go out from there roving round,
thieving or “gathering” as they call it. Still there's seldom less than a score
round the Boss, as they names him. He's at Bag End, or was; but he don't go
outside the rounds now. No one s seen him at all, in fact, for a week or two;
but the Men don't let no one go near.'
'Hobbiton's not
their only place, is it?' said Pippin.
'No, more's the
pity,' said Cotton. 'There's a good few down south in Longbottom and by Sarn
Ford, I hear; and some more lurking in the Woody End; and they've sheds at
Waymeet. And then there's the Lockholes, as they call 'em: the old
storage-tunnels at Michel Delving that they've made into prisons for those as
stand up to them. Still I reckon there's not above three hundred of them in the
Shire all told, and maybe less. We can master them, if we stick
together.'
'Have they got any weapons?' asked
Merry.
'Whips, knives, and clubs, enough for their dirty
work: that's all they've showed so far,' said Cotton. 'But I dare say they've
got other gear, if it comes to fighting. Some have bows, anyway. They've shot
one or two of our folk.'
'There you are, Frodo!' said
Merry. 'I knew we should have to fight. Well, they started the
killing.'
'Not exactly,' said Cotton. 'Leastways not the
shooting. Tooks started that. You see our dad Mr. Peregrin, he's never had no
truck with this Lotho, not from the beginning: said that if anyone was going to
play the chief at this time of day, it would be the right Thain of the Shire and
no upstart. And when Lotho sent his Men they got no change out of him. Tooks are
lucky, they've got those deep holes in the Green Hills, the Great Smials and
all, and the ruffians can't come at 'em; and they won't let the ruffians come on
their land. If they do, Tooks hunt 'em. Tooks shot three for prowling and
robbing. After that the ruffians turned nastier. And they keep a pretty close
watch on Tookland. No one gets in nor out of it now.'
'Good
for the Tooks!' cried Pippin. 'But someone is going to get in again, now. I am
off to the Smials. Anyone coming with me to
Tuckborough?'
Pippin rode off with half a dozen lads on
ponies. 'See you soon!' he cried. 'It's only fourteen miles or so over the
fields. I'll bring you back an army of Tooks in the morning.' Merry blew a
horn-call after them as they rode off into the gathering night. The people
cheered.
'All the same,' said Frodo to all those who stood
near, 'I wish for no killing; not even of the ruffians, unless it must be done,
to prevent them from hurting hobbits.'
'All right!' said
Merry. 'But we shall be having a visit from the Hobbiton gang any time now, I
think. They won't come just to talk things over. We'll try to deal with them
neatly, but we must be prepared for the worst. Now I've got a
plan.'
'Very good,' said Frodo. 'You make the
arrangements.'
Just then some hobbits, who had been sent
out towards Hobbiton, came running in. 'They're coming!' they said. 'A score or
more. But two have gone off west across country.'
'To
Waymeet, that'll be,' said Cotton, 'to fetch more of the gang. Well, it's
fifteen mile each way. We needn't trouble about them just
yet.'
Merry hurried off to give orders. Farmer Cotton
cleared the street, sending everyone indoors, except the older hobbits who had
weapons of some sort. They had not long to wait. Soon they could hear loud
voices, and then the tramping of heavy feet. Presently a whole squad of the
ruffians came down the road. They saw the barrier and laughed. They did not
imagine that there was anything in this little land that would stand up to
twenty of their kind together.
The hobbits opened the
barrier and stood aside. 'Thank you!' the Men jeered. 'Now run home to bed
before you're whipped.' Then they marched along the street shouting: 'Put those
lights out! Get indoors and stay there! Or we'll take fifty of you to the
Lockholes for a year. Get in! The Boss is losing his
temper.'
No one paid any heed to their orders; but as the
ruffians passed, they closed in quietly behind and followed them. When the Men
reached the fire there was Farmer Cotton standing all alone warming his
hands.
'Who are you, and what d'you think you're doing?'
said the ruffian-leader.
Farmer Cotton looked at him
slowly. 'I was just going to ask you that,' he said. 'This isn't your country,
and you're not wanted.'
'Well, you're wanted anyhow,' said
the leader. 'We want you. Take him lads! Lockholes for him, and give him
something to keep him quiet!'
The Men took one step forward
and stopped short. There rose a roar of voices all round them, and suddenly they
were aware that Farmer Cotton was not all alone. They were surrounded. In the
dark on the edge of the firelight stood a ring of hobbits that had crept up out
of the shadows. There was nearly two hundred of them, all holding some
weapon.
Merry stepped forward. 'We have met before,' he
said to the leader, 'and I warned you not to come back here. I warn you again:
you are standing in the light and you are covered by archers. If you lay a
finger on this farmer, or on anyone else, you will be shot at once. Lay down any
weapons that you have!'
The leader looked round. He was
trapped. But he was not scared, not now with a score of his fellows to back him.
He knew too little of hobbits to understand his peril. Foolishly he decided to
fight. It would be easy to break out.
'At 'em lads!' he
cried. 'Let 'em have it!'
With a long knife in his left
hand and a club in the other he made a rush at the ring, trying to burst out
back towards Hobbiton. He aimed a savage blow at Merry who stood in his way. He
fell dead with four arrows in him:
That was enough for the
others. They gave in. Their weapons were taken from them, and they were roped
together, and marched off to an empty hut that they had built themselves, and
there they were tied hand and foot, and locked up under guard. The dead leader
was dragged off and buried.
'Seems almost too easy after
all, don't it?' said Cotton. 'I said we could master them. But we needed a call.
You came back in the nick o' time, Mr. Merry.'
'There's
more to be done still,' said Merry. 'If you're right in your reckoning, we
haven't dealt with a tithe of them yet. But it's dark now. I think the next
stroke must wait until morning. Then we must call on the
Chief.'
'Why not now?' said Sam. 'It's not much more than
six o'clock. And I want to see my gaffer. D'you know what's come of him, Mr.
Cotton?'
'He's not too well, and not too bad, Sam,' said
the farmer. 'They dug up Bagshot Row, and that was a sad blow to him. He's in
one of them new houses that the Chief's Men used to build while they still did
any work other than burning and thieving: not above a mile from the end of
Bywater. But he comes around to me, when he gets a chance, and I see he's better
fed than some of the poor bodies. All against
The Rules, of course. I'd
have had him with me, but that wasn't allowed.'
'Thank'ee
indeed, Mr. Cotton, and I'll never forget it,' said Sam. 'But I want to see him.
That Boss and that Sharkey, as they spoke of, they might do a mischief up there
before the morning.'
'All right, Sam,' said Cotton. 'Choose
a lad or two, and go and fetch him to my house. You'll not have need to go near
the old Hobbiton village over Water. My Jolly here will show
you.'
Sam went off. Merry arranged for look-outs round the
village and guards at the barriers during the night. Then he and Frodo went off
with Farmer Cotton. They sat with the family in the warm kitchen, and the
Cottons asked a few polite questions about their travels, but hardly listened to
the answers: they were far more concerned with events in the
Shire.
'It all began with Pimple, as we call him,' said
Farmer Cotton, 'and it began as soon as you'd gone off, Mr. Frodo. He'd funny
ideas had Pimple. Seems he wanted to own everything himself, and then order
other folk about. It soon came out that he already did own a sight more than was
good for him; and he was always grabbing more, though where he got the money was
a mystery: mills and malt-houses and inns, and farms, and leaf-plantations. He'd
already bought Sandyman's mill before he came to Bag End,
seemingly.
'Of course he started with a lot of property in
the Southfarthing which he had from his dad; and it seems he'd been selling a
lot o' the best leaf, and sending it away quietly for a year or two. But at the
end o' last year he began sending away loads of stuff, not only leaf. Things
began to get short, and winter coming on, too. Folk got angry, but he had his
answer. A lot of Men, ruffians mostly, came with great waggons, some to carry
off the goods south-away, and others to stay. And more came. And before we knew
where we were they were planted here and there all over the Shire, and were
felling trees and digging and building themselves sheds and houses just as they
liked. At first goods and damage was paid for by Pimple; but soon they began
lording it around and taking what they wanted.
'Then there
was a bit of trouble, but not enough. Old Will the Mayor set off for Bag End to
protest, but he never got there. Ruffians laid hands on him and took and locked
him up in a hole in Michel Delving, and there he is now. And after that, it
would be soon after New Year, there wasn't no more Mayor, and Pimple called
himself Chief Shirriff, or just Chief, and did as he liked; and if anyone got
“uppish” as they called it, they followed Will. So things went from bad to
worse. There wasn't no smoke left, save for the Men; and the Chief didn't hold
with beer, save for his Men, and closed all the inns; and everything except
Rules got shorter and shorter, unless one could hide a bit of one's own when the
ruffians went round gathering stuff up “for fair distribution”: which meant they
got it and we didn't, except for the leavings which you could have at the
Shirriff-houses, if you could stomach them. All very bad. But since Sharkey came
it's been plain ruination.'
'Who is this Sharkey?' said
Merry. 'I heard one of the ruffians speak of him.'
'The
biggest ruffian o' the lot, seemingly,' answered Cotton. 'It was about last
harvest, end o' September maybe, that we first heard of him. We've never seen
him, but he's up at Bag End; and he's the real Chief now, I guess. All the
ruffians do what he says; and what he says is mostly hack, burn, and ruin; and
now it s come to killing. There s no longer even any bad sense in it. They cut
down trees and let 'em lie, they burn houses and build no
more.
'Take Sandyman's mill now. Pimple knocked it down
almost as soon as he came to Bag End. Then he brought in a lot o' dirty-looking
Men to build a bigger one and fill it full o' wheels and outlandish
contraptions. Only that fool Ted was pleased by that, and he works there
cleaning wheels for the Men, where his dad was the Miller and his own master.
Pimple's idea was to grind more and faster, or so he said. He's got other mills
like it. But you've got to have grist before you can grind; and there was no
more for the new mill to do than for the old. But since Sharkey came they don't
grind no more corn at all. They're always a-hammering and a-letting out a smoke
and a stench, and there isn't no peace even at night in Hobbiton. And they pour
out filth a purpose; they've fouled all the lower Water and it's getting down
into Brandywine. If they want to make the Shire into a desert, they're going the
right way about it. I don't believe that fool of a Pimple's behind all this.
It's Sharkey, I say.'
'That's right!' put in Young Tom.
'Why, they even took Pimple's old ma, that Lobelia, and he was fond of her, if
no one else was. Some of the Hobbiton folk, they saw it. She comes down the lane
with her old umbrella. Some of the ruffians were going up with a big
cart.
' “Where be you a-going?” says
she.
' “To Bag End,” says they.
'
“What for?” says she.
' “To put up some sheds for Sharkey,”
says they.
' “Who said you could?” says
she.
' “Sharkey,” says they. “So get out o' the road, old
hagling!”
' “I'll give you Sharkey, you dirty thieving
ruffians!” says she, and ups with her umbrella and goes for the leader. near
twice her size. So they took her. Dragged her off to the Lockholes, at her age
too. They've took others we miss more, but there's no denying she showed more
spirit than most.'
Into the middle of this talk came Sam,
bursting in with his gaffer. Old Gamgee did not look much older, but he was a
little deafer.
'Good evening. Mr. Baggins!' he said. 'Glad
indeed I am to see you safe back. But I've a bone to pick with you, in a manner
o' speaking, if I may make so bold. You didn't never ought to have a' sold Bag
End, as I always said. That's what started all the mischief. And while you're
been trapessing in foreign parts, chasing Black Men up mountains from what my
Sam says, though what for he don't make clear, they've been and dug up Bagshot
Row and ruined my taters!'
'I am very sorry, Mr. Gamgee,'
said Frodo. 'But now I've come back, I'll do my best to make
amends.'
'Well, you can't say fairer than that,' said the
gaffer. 'Mr.
Frodo Baggins is a real gentlehobbit, I always have said,
whatever you may think of some others of the name, begging your pardon. And I
hope my Sam's behaved hisself and given
satisfaction?'
'Perfect satisfaction, Mr. Gamgee,' said
Frodo. 'Indeed, if you will believe it, he's now one of the most famous people
in all the lands, and they are making songs about his deeds from here to the Sea
and beyond the Great River.' Sam blushed, but he looked gratefully at Frodo, for
Rosie's eyes were shining and she was smiling at him.
'It
takes a lot o' believing,' said the gaffer, 'though I can see he's been mixing
in strange company. What's come of his weskit? I don't hold with wearing
ironmongery, whether it wears well or no.'
Farmer Cotton's
household and all his guests were up early next morning. Nothing had been heard
in the night, but more trouble would certainly come before the day was old.
'Seems as if none o' the ruffians were left up at Bag End,' said Cotton, 'but
the gang from Waymeet will be along any time now.'
After
breakfast a messenger from the Tookland rode in. He was in high spirits. 'The
Thain has raised all our country,' he said, 'and the news is going like fire all
ways. The ruffians that were watching our land have fled off south, those that
escaped alive. The Thain has gone after them, to hold off the big gang down that
way; but he's sent Mr Peregrin back with all the other folk he can
spare.'
The next news was less good. Merry, who had been
out all night, came riding in about ten o'clock. 'There's a big band about four
miles away,' he said. 'They're coming along the road from Waymeet, but a good
many stray ruffians have joined up with them. There must be close on a hundred
of them; and they're fire-raising as they come. Curse
them!'
'Ah! This lot won't stay to talk, they'll kill, if
they can,' said Farmer Cotton. 'If Tooks don't come sooner, we'd best get behind
cover and shoot without arguing. There's got to be some fighting before this is
settled, Mr. Frodo.'
The Tooks did come sooner. Before long
they marched in, a hundred strong, from Tuckborough and the Green Hills with
Pippin at their head. Merry now had enough sturdy hobbitry to deal with the
ruffians. Scouts reported that they were keeping close together. They knew that
the countryside had risen against them, and plainly meant to deal with the
rebellion ruthlessly, at its centre in Bywater. But however grim they, might be,
they seemed to have no leader among them who understood warfare. They came on
without any precautions. Merry laid his plans quickly.
The
ruffians came tramping along the East Road, and without halting turned up the
Bywater Road, which ran for some way sloping up between high banks with low
hedges on top. Round a bend, about a furlong from the main road, they met a
stout barrier of old farm-carts upturned. That halted them. At the same moment
they became aware that the hedges on both sides, just above their heads, were
all lined with hobbits. Behind them other hobbits now pushed out some more
waggons that had been hidden in a field, and so blocked the way back. A voice
spoke to them from above.
'Well, you have walked into a
trap,' said Merry. 'Your fellows from Hobbiton did the same, and one is dead and
the rest are prisoners. Lay down your weapons! Then go back twenty paces and sit
down. Any who try to break out will be shot.'
But the
ruffians could not now be cowed so easily. A few of them obeyed, but were
immediately set on by their fellows. A score or more broke back and charged the
waggons. Six were shot, but the remainder burst out, killing two hobbits, and
then scattering across country in the direction of the Woody End. Two more fell
as they ran. Merry blew a loud horn-call, and there were answering calls from a
distance.
'They won't get far,' said Pippin. 'All that
country is alive with our hunters now.'
Behind, the trapped
Men in the lane, still about four score, tried to climb the barrier and the
banks, and the hobbits were obliged to shoot many of them or hew them with axes.
But many of the strongest and most desperate got out on the west side, and
attacked their enemies fiercely, being now more bent on killing than escaping.
Several hobbits fell, and the rest were wavering, when Merry and Pippin, who
were on the east side, came across and charged the ruffians. Merry himself slew
the leader, a great squint-eyed brute like a huge orc. Then he drew his forces
off, encircling the last remnant of the Men in a wide ring of
archers.
At last all was over. Nearly seventy of the
ruffians lay dead on the field, and a dozen were prisoners. Nineteen hobbits
were killed, and some thirty were wounded. The dead ruffians were laden on
waggons and hauled off to an old sand-pit nearby and there buried: in the Battle
Pit, as it was afterwards called. The fallen hobbits were laid together in a
grave on the hill-side, where later a great stone was set up with a garden about
it. So ended the Battle of Bywater, 1419, the last battle fought in the Shire,
and the only battle since the Greenfields, 1147, away up in the Northfarthing.
In consequence, though it happily cost very few lives, it has a chapter to
itself in the Red Book, and the names of all those who took part were made into
a Roll, and learned by heart by Shire-historians. The very considerable rise in
the fame and fortune of the Cottons dates from this time; but at the top of the
Roll in all accounts stand the names of Captains Meriadoc and
Peregrin.
Frodo had been in the battle, but he had not
drawn sword, and his chief part had been to prevent the hobbits in their wrath
at their losses, from slaying those of their enemies who threw down their
weapons. When the fighting was over, and the later labours were ordered, Merry,
Pippin, and Sam joined him, and they rode back with the Cottons. They ate a late
midday meal, and then Frodo said with a sigh: 'Well, I suppose it is time now
that we dealt with the “Chief”.'
'Yes indeed; the sooner
the better,' said Merry. 'And don't be too gentle! He's responsible for bringing
in these ruffians, and for all the evil they have
done.'
Farmer Cotton collected an escort of some two dozen
sturdy hobbits. 'For it's only a guess that there is no ruffians left at Bag
End,' he said. 'We don't know.' Then they set out on foot. Frodo, Sam, Merry,
and Pippin led the way.
It was one of the saddest hours in
their lives. The great chimney rose up before them; and as they drew near the
old village across the Water, through rows of new mean houses along each side of
the road, they saw the new mill in all its frowning and dirty ugliness: a great
brick building straddling the stream, which it fouled with a steaming and
stinking overflow. All along the Bywater Road every tree had been
felled.
As they crossed the bridge and looked up the Hill
they gasped. Even Sam's vision in the Mirror had not prepared him for what they
saw. The Old Grange on the west side had been knocked down, and its place taken
by rows of tarred sheds. All the chestnuts were gone. The banks and hedgerows
were broken. Great waggons were standing in disorder in a field beaten bare of
grass. Bagshot Row was a yawning sand and gravel quarry. Bag End up. beyond
could not be seen for a clutter of large huts.
'They've cut
it down!' cried Sam. 'They've cut down the Party Tree!' He pointed to where the
tree. had stood under which Bilbo had made his Farewell Speech. It was lying
lopped and dead in the field. As if this was the last straw Sam burst into
tears.
A laugh put an end to them. There was a surly hobbit
lounging over the low wall of the mill-yard. He was grimy-faced and
black-handed. 'Don't 'ee like it, Sam?' he sneered. 'But you always was soft. I
thought you'd gone off in one o' them ships you used to prattle about, sailing,
sailing. What d'you want to come back for? We've work to do in the Shire
now.'
'So I see,' said Sam. 'No time for washing, but time
for wall-propping. But see here, Master Sandyman, I've a score to pay in this
village, and don't you make it any longer with your jeering, or you'll foot a
bill too big for your purse.'
Ted Sandyman spat over the
wall. 'Garn!' he said. 'You can't touch me. I'm a friend o' the Boss's. But
he'll touch you all right, if I have any more of your
mouth.'
'Don't waste any more words on the fool, Sam!' said
Frodo. 'I hope there are not many more hobbits that have become like this. It
would be a worse trouble than all the damage the Men have
done.'
'You are dirty and insolent, Sandyman,' said Merry.
'And also very much out of your reckoning. We are just going up the Hill to
remove your precious Boss. We have dealt with his Men.'
Ted
gaped, for at that moment he first caught sight of the escort that at a sign
from Merry now marched over the bridge. Dashing back into the mill he ran out
with a horn and blew it loudly.
'Save your breath!' laughed
Merry. 'I've a better.' Then lifting up his silver horn he winded it, and its
clear call rang over the Hill; and out of the holes and sheds and shabby houses
of Hobbiton the hobbits answered, and came pouring out, and with cheers and loud
cries they followed the company up the road to Bag End.
At
the top of the lane the party halted, and Frodo and his friends went on; and
they came at last to the once beloved place. The garden was full of huts and
sheds, some so near the old westward windows that they cut off all their light.
There were piles of refuse everywhere. The door was scarred; the bell-chain was
dangling loose, and the bell would not ring. Knocking brought no answer. At
length they pushed and the door yielded. They went in. The place stank and was
full of filth and disorder: it did not appear to have been used for some
time.
'Where is that miserable Lotho hiding?' said Merry.
They had searched every room and found no living thing save rats and mice.
'Shall we turn on the others to search the sheds?'
'This is
worse than Mordor!' said Sam. 'Much worse in a way. It comes home to you, as
they say; because it is home, and you remember it before it was all
ruined.'
'Yes, this is Mordor,' said Frodo. 'Just one of
its works. Saruman was doing its work all the time, even when he thought he was
working for himself. And the same with those that Saruman tricked, like
Lotho.'
Merry looked round in dismay and disgust. 'Let's
get out!' he said. 'If I had known all the mischief he had caused, I should have
stuffed my pouch down Saruman's throat.'
'No doubt, no
doubt! But you did not, and so I am able to welcome you home.' There standing at
the door was Saruman himself, looking well-fed and well-pleased; his eyes
gleamed with malice and amusement.
A sudden light broke on
Frodo. 'Sharkey!' he cried.
Saruman laughed. 'So you have
heard the name, have you? All my people used to call me that in Isengard, I
believe. A sign of affection, possibly.
3But
evidently you did not expect to see me here.'
'I did not,'
said Frodo. 'But I might have guessed. A little mischief in a mean way: Gandalf
warned me that you were still capable of it.
'Quite
capable,' said Saruman, 'and more than a little. You made me laugh, you
hobbit-lordlings, riding along with all those great people so secure and so
pleased with your little selves. You thought you had done very well out of it
all, and could now just amble back and have a nice quiet time in the country.
Saruman's home could be all wrecked, and he could be turned out, but no one
could touch yours. Oh no! Gandalf would look after your
affairs.'
Saruman laughed again. 'Not he! When his tools
have done their task he drops them. But you must go dangling after him, dawdling
and talking, and riding round twice as far as you needed. “Well,” thought I, “if
they're such fools, I will get ahead of them and teach them a lesson. One ill
turn deserves another.” It would have been a sharper lesson, if only you had
given me a little more time and more Men. Still I have already done much that
you will find it hard to mend or undo in your lives. And it will be pleasant to
think of that and set it against my injuries.'
'Well, if
that is what you find pleasure in,' said Frodo, 'I pity you. It will be a
pleasure of memory only, I fear. Go at once and never
return!'
The hobbits of the villages had seen Saruman come
out of one of the huts, and at once they came crowding up to the door of Bag
End. When they heard Frodo's command, they murmured
angrily:
'Don't let him go! Kill him! He's a villain and a
murderer. Kill him!'
Saruman looked round at their hostile
faces and smiled. 'Kill him!' he mocked. 'Kill him, if you think there are
enough of you, my brave hobbits!' He drew himself up and stared at them darkly
with his black eyes. 'But do not think that when I lost all my goods I lost all
my power! Whoever strikes me shall be accursed. And if my blood stains the
Shire, it shall wither and never again be healed.'
The
hobbits recoiled. But Frodo said: 'Do not believe him! He has lost all power,
save his voice that can still daunt you and deceive you, if you let it. But I
will not have him slain. It is useless to meet revenge with revenge: it will
heal nothing. Go, Saruman, by the speediest way!'
'Worm!
Worm!' Saruman called; and out of a nearby hut came Wormtongue, crawling, almost
like a dog. To the road again, Worm!' said Saruman. 'These fine fellows and
lordlings are turning us adrift again. Come along!'
Saruman
turned to go, and Wormtongue shuffled after him. But even as Saruman passed
close to Frodo a knife flashed in his hand, and he stabbed swiftly. The blade
turned on the hidden mail-coat and snapped. A dozen hobbits, led by Sam, leaped
forward with a cry and flung the villain to the ground. Sam drew his
sword.
'No, Sam!' said Frodo. 'Do not kill him even now.
For he has not hurt me. And in any case I do not wish him to be slain in this
evil mood. He was great once, of a noble kind that we should not dare to raise
our hands against. He is fallen, and his cure is beyond us; but I would still
spare him, in the hope that he may find it.'
Saruman rose
to his feet, and stared at Frodo. There was a strange look in his eyes of
mingled wonder and respect and hatred. 'You have grown, Halfling,' he said.
'Yes, you have grown very much. You are wise, and cruel. You have robbed my
revenge of sweetness, and now I must go hence in bitterness, in debt to your
mercy. I hate it and you! Well, I go and I will trouble you no more. But do not
expect me to wish you health and long life. You will have neither. But that is
not my doing. I merely foretell.'
He walked away, and the
hobbits made a lane for him to pass; but their knuckles whitened as they gripped
on their weapons. Wormtongue hesitated, and then followed his
master.
'Wormtongue!' called Frodo. 'You need not follow
him. I know of no evil you have done to me. You can have rest and food here for
a while, until you are stronger and can go your own
ways.'
Wormtongue halted and looked back at him, half
prepared to stay. Saruman turned. 'No evil?' he cackled. 'Oh no! Even when he
sneaks out at night it is only to look at the stars. But did I hear someone ask
where poor Lotho is hiding? You know, don't you, Worm? Will you tell
them?'
Wormtongue cowered down and whimpered: 'No,
no!'
'Then I will,' said Saruman. 'Worm killed your Chief,
poor little fellow, your nice little Boss. Didn't you, Worm? Stabbed him in his
sleep, I believe. Buried him, I hope; though Worm has been very hungry lately.
No, Worm is not really nice. You had better leave him to
me.'
A look of wild hatred came into Wormtongue's red eyes.
'You told me to; you made me do it,' he hissed.
Saruman
laughed. 'You do what Sharkey says, always, don't you, Worm? Well, now he says:
follow!' He kicked Wormtongue in the face as he grovelled, and turned and made
off. But at that something snapped: suddenly Wormtongue rose up, drawing a
hidden knife, and then with a snarl like a dog he sprang on Saruman's back,
jerked his head back, cut his throat, and with a yell ran off down the lane.
Before Frodo could recover or speak a word, three hobbit-bows twanged and
Wormtongue fell dead.
To the dismay of those that stood by,
about the body of Saruman a grey mist gathered, and rising slowly to a great
height like smoke from a fire, as a pale shrouded figure it loomed over the
Hill. For a moment it wavered, looking to the West; but out of the West came a
cold wind, and it bent away, and with a sigh dissolved into
nothing.
Frodo looked down at the body with pity and
horror, for as he looked it seemed that long years of death were suddenly
revealed in it, and it shrank, and the shrivelled face became rags of skin upon
a hideous skull. Lifting up the skirt of the dirty cloak that sprawled beside
it, he covered it over, and turned away.
'And that's the
end of that,' said Sam. 'A nasty end, and I wish I needn't have seen it; but
it's a good riddance.'
'And the very last end of the War, I
hope,' said Merry.
'I hope so,' said Frodo and sighed. 'The
very last stroke. But to think that it should fall here, at the very door of Bag
End! Among all my hopes and fears at least I never expected
that.'
'I shan't call it the end, till we've cleared up the
mess,' said Sam gloomily. 'And that'll take a lot of time and work.'
Chapter 9
The Grey Havens
The clearing up certainly needed a lot of work, but it
took less time than Sam had feared. The day after the battle Frodo rode to
Michel Delving and released the prisoners from the Lockholes. One of the first
that they found was poor Fredegar Bolger, Fatty no longer. He had been taken
when the ruffians smoked out a band of rebels that he led from their hidings up
in the Brockenbores by the hills of Scary.
'You would have
done better to come with us after all, poor old Fredegar!' said Pippin, as they
carried him out too weak to walk.
He opened an eye and
tried gallantly to smile. 'Who's this young giant with the loud voice?' he
whispered. 'Not little Pippin! What's your size in hats
now?'
Then there was Lobelia. Poor thing, she looked very
old and thin when they rescued her from a dark and narrow cell. She insisted on
hobbling out on her own feet; and she had such a welcome, and there was such
clapping and cheering when she appeared, leaning on Frodo's arm but still
clutching her umbrella, that she was quite touched, and drove away in tears. She
had never in her life been popular before. But she was crushed by the news of
Lotho's murder, and she would' not return to Bag End. She gave it back to Frodo,
and went to her own people, the Bracegirdles of
Hardbottle.
When the poor creature died next Spring-she was
after all more than a hundred years old – Frodo was surprised and much moved:
she had left all that remained of her money and of Lotho's for him to use in
helping hobbits made homeless by the troubles. So that feud was
ended.
Old Will Whitfoot had been in the Lockholes longer
than any, and though he had perhaps been treated less harshly than some, he
needed a lot of feeding up before he could look the part of Mayor; so Frodo
agreed to act as his Deputy, until Mr. Whitfoot was in shape again. The only
thing that he did as Deputy Mayor was to reduce the Shirriffs to their proper
functions and numbers. The task of hunting out the last remnant of the ruffians
was left to Merry and Pippin, and it was soon done. The southern gangs, after
hearing the news of the Battle of Bywater, fled out of the land and offered
little resistance to the Thain. Before the Year's End the few survivors were
rounded up in the woods, and those that surrendered were shown to the
borders.
Meanwhile the labour of repair went on apace, and
Sam was kept very busy. Hobbits can work like bees when the mood and the need
comes on them. Now there were thousands of willing hands of all ages, from the
small but nimble ones of the hobbit lads and lasses to the well-worn and horny
ones of the gaffers and gammers. Before Yule not a brick was left standing of
the new Shirriff-houses or of anything that had been built by 'Sharkey's Men';
but the bricks were used to repair many an old hole, to make it snugger and
drier. Great stores of goods and food, and beer, were found that had been hidden
away by the ruffians in sheds and barns and deserted holes, and especially in
the tunnels at Michel Delving and in the old quarries at Scary; so that there
was a great deal better cheer that Yule than anyone had hoped
for.
One of the first things done in Hobbiton, before even
the removal of the new mill, was the clearing of the Hill and Bag End, and the
restoration of Bagshot Row. The front of the new sand-pit was all levelled and
made into a large sheltered garden, and new holes were dug in the southward
face, back into the Hill, and they were lined with brick. The Gaffer was
restored to Number Three; and he said often and did not care who heard
it:
'It's an ill wind as blows nobody no good, as I always
say. And All's well as ends Better!'
There was some
discussion of the name that the new row should be given.
Battle Gardens
was thought of, or
Better Smials. But after a while in sensible
hobbit-fashion it was just called
New Row. It was a purely Bywater joke
to refer to it as Sharkey's End.
The trees were the worst
loss and damage, for at Sharkey's bidding they had been cut down recklessly far
and wide over the Shire; and Sam grieved over this more than anything else. For
one thing, this hurt would take long to heal, and only his great-grandchildren,
he thought, would see the Shire as it ought to be.
Then
suddenly one day, for he had been too busy for weeks to give a thought to his
adventures, he remembered the gift of Galadriel. He brought the box out and
showed it to the other Travellers (for so they were now called by everyone), and
asked their advice.
'I wondered when you would think of
it,' said Frodo. 'Open it!'
Inside it was filled with a
grey dust, soft and fine, in the middle of which was a seed, like a small nut
with a silver shale. 'What can I do with this?' said
Sam.
'Throw it in the air on a breezy day and let it do its
work!' said Pippin.
'On what?' said
Sam.
'Choose one spot as a nursery, and see what happens to
the plants there,' said Merry.
'But I'm sure the Lady would
not like me to keep it all for my own garden, now so many folk have suffered,'
said Sam.
'Use all the wits and knowledge you have of your
own, Sam,' said Frodo, 'and then use the gift to help your work and better it.
And use it sparingly. There is not much here, and I expect every grain has a
value.'
So Sam planted saplings in all the places where
specially beautiful or beloved trees had been destroyed, and he put a grain of
the precious dust in the soil at the root of each. He went up and down the Shire
in this labour; but if he paid special attention to Hobbiton and Bywater no one
blamed him. And at the end he found that he still had a little of the dust left;
so he went to the Three-Farthing Stone, which is as near the centre of the Shire
as no matter, and cast it in the air with his blessing. The little silver nut he
planted in the Party Field where the tree had once been; and he wondered what
would come of it. All through the winter he remained as patient as he could, and
tried to restrain himself from going round constantly to see if anything was
happening.
Spring surpassed his wildest hopes. His trees
began to sprout and grow, as if time was in a hurry and wished to make one year
do for twenty. In the Party Field a beautiful young sapling leaped up: it had
silver bark and long leaves and burst into golden flowers in April. It was
indeed a
mallorn, and it was the wonder of the neighbourhood. In after
years, as it grew in grace and beauty, it was known far and wide and people
would come long journeys to see it: the only
mallorn west of the
Mountains and east of the Sea, and one of the finest in the
world.
Altogether 1420 in the Shire was a marvellous year.
Not only was there wonderful sunshine and delicious rain, in due times and
perfect measure, but there seemed something more: an air of richness and growth,
and a gleam of a beauty beyond that of mortal summers that flicker and pass upon
this Middle-earth. All the children born or begotten in that year, and there
were many, were fair to see and strong, and most of them had a rich golden hair
that had before been rare among hobbits. The fruit was so plentiful that young
hobbits very nearly bathed in strawberries and cream; and later they sat on the
lawns under the plum-trees and ate, until they had made piles of stones like
small pyramids or the heaped skulls of a conqueror, and then they moved on. And
no one was ill, and everyone was pleased. except those who had to mow the
grass.
In the Southfarthing the vines were laden, and the
yield of 'leaf' was astonishing; and everywhere there was so much corn that at
Harvest every barn was stuffed. 'The Northfarthing barley was so fine that the
beer of 1420 malt was long remembered and became a byword. Indeed a generation
later one might hear an old gaffer in an inn, after a good pint of well-earned
ale, put down his mug with a sigh: 'Ah! that was proper fourteen-twenty, that
was!'
Sam stayed at first at the Cottons' with Frodo; but
when the New Row was ready he went with the Gaffer. In addition to all his other
labours he was busy directing the cleaning up and restoring of Bag End; but he
was often away in the Shire on his forestry work. So he was not at home in early
March and did not know that Frodo had been ill. On the thirteenth of that month
Farmer Cotton found Frodo lying on his bed; he was clutching a white gem that
hung on a chain about his neck and he seemed half in a
dream.
'It is gone for ever,' he said, 'and now all is dark
and empty.'
But the fit passed, and when Sam got back on
the twenty-fifth, Frodo had recovered, and he said nothing about himself. In the
meanwhile Bag End had been set in order, and Merry and Pippin came over from
Crickhollow bringing back all the old furniture and gear, so that the old hole
soon looked very much as it always had done.
When all was
at last ready Frodo said: 'When are you going to move in and join me,
Sam?'
Sam looked a bit awkward.
'There
is no need to come yet, if you don't want to,' said Frodo. 'But you know the
Gaffer is close at hand, and he will be very well looked after by Widow
Rumble.'
It s not that, Mr. Frodo, said Sam, and he went
very red.
'Well, what is it?'
'It's
Rosie, Rose Cotton,' said Sam. 'It seems she didn't like my going abroad at all,
poor lass; but as I hadn't spoken, she couldn't say so. And I didn't speak,
because I had a job to do first. But now I have spoken, and she says: “Well,
you've wasted a year, so why wait longer?” “Wasted?” I says. “I wouldn't call it
that.” Still I see what she means. I feel torn in two, as you might
say.'
'I see,' said Frodo; 'you want to get married, and
yet you want to live with me in Bag End too? But my dear Sam, how easy! Get
married as soon as you can, and then move in with Rosie. There's room enough in
Bag End for as big a family as you could wish for.'
And so
it was settled. Sam Gamgee married Rose Cotton in the Spring of 1420 (which was
also famous for its weddings), and they came and lived at Bag End. And if Sam
thought himself lucky, Frodo knew that he was more lucky himself; for there was
not a hobbit in the Shire that was looked after with such care. When the labours
of repair had all been planned and set going he took to a quiet life, writing a
great deal and going through all his notes. He resigned the office of Deputy
Mayor at the Free Fair that mid-summer, and dear old Will Whitfoot had another
seven years of presiding at Banquets.
Merry and Pippin
lived together for some time at Crickhollow, and there was much coming and going
between Buckland and Bag End. The two young Travellers cut a great dash in the
Shire with their songs and their tales and their finery, and their wonderful
parties. 'Lordly' folk called them, meaning nothing but good; for it warmed all
hearts to see them go riding by with their mail-shirts so bright and their
shields so splendid, laughing and singing songs of far away; and if they were
now large and magnificent, they were unchanged otherwise, unless they were
indeed more fairspoken and more jovial and full of merriment than ever
before.
Frodo and Sam, however, went back to ordinary
attire, except that when there was need they both wore long grey cloaks, finely
woven and clasped at the throat with beautiful brooches; and Mr. Frodo wore
always a white jewel on a chain that he often would
finger.
All things now went well, with hope always of
becoming still better; and Sam was as busy and as full of delight as even a
hobbit could wish. Nothing for him marred that whole year, except for some vague
anxiety about his master. Frodo dropped quietly out of all the doings of the
Shire, and Sam was pained to notice how little honour he had in his own country.
Few people knew or wanted to know about his deeds and adventures; their
admiration and respect were given mostly to Mr. Meriadoc and Mr. Peregrin and
(if Sam had known it) to himself. Also in the autumn there appeared a shadow of
old troubles.
One evening Sam came into the study and found
his master looking very strange. He was very pale and his eyes seemed to see
things far away.
'What's the matter, Mr. Frodo?' said
Sam.
'I am wounded,' he answered, 'wounded; it will never
really heal.'
But then he got up, and the turn seemed to
pass, and he was quite himself the next day. It was not until afterwards that
Sam recalled that the date was October the sixth. Two years before on that day
it was dark in the dell under Weathertop.
Time went on, and
1421 came in. Frodo was ill again in March, but with a great effort he concealed
it, for Sam had other things to think about. The first of Sam and Rosie's
children was born on the twenty-fifth of March, a date that Sam
noted.
'Well, Mr. Frodo,' he said. 'I'm in a bit of a fix.
Rose and me had settled to call him Frodo, with your leave; but it's not
him, it's
her. Though as pretty a maidchild as any one could hope
for, taking after Rose more than me, luckily. So we don't know what to
do.'
'Well, Sam,' said Frodo, 'what's wrong with the old
customs? Choose a flower name like Rose. Half the maidchildren in the Shire are
called by such names, and what could be better?'
'I suppose
you're right, Mr. Frodo,' said Sam. 'I've heard some beautiful names on my
travels, but I suppose they're a bit too grand for daily wear and tear, as you
might say. The Gaffer, he says: “Make it short, and then you won't have to cut
it short before you can use it.” But if it's to be a flower-name, then I don't
trouble about the length: it must be a beautiful flower, because, you see, I
think she is very beautiful, and is going to be beautifuller
still.'
Frodo thought for a moment. 'Well, Sam, what about
elanor, the sun-star, you remember the little golden flower in the grass
of Lothlórien?'
'You're right again, Mr. Frodo!' said Sam
delighted. 'That's what I wanted.'
Little Elanor was nearly
six months old, and 1421 had passed to its autumn, when Frodo called Sam into
the study.
'It will be Bilbo's Birthday on Thursday, Sam,'
he said. 'And he will pass the Old Took. He will be a hundred and
thirty-one!'
'So he will!' said Sam. 'He's a
marvel!'
'Well, Sam,' said Frodo. 'I want you to see Rose
and find out if she can spare you, so that you and I can go off together. You
can't go far or for a long time now, of course,' he said a little
wistfully.
'Well, not very well, Mr.
Frodo.'
'Of course not. But never mind. You can see me on
my way. Tell Rose that you won't be away very long, not more than a fortnight;
and you'll come back quite safe.'
'I wish I could go all
the way with you to Rivendell, Mr. Frodo, and see Mr. Bilbo,' said Sam. 'And yet
the only place I really want to be in is here. I am that torn in
two.'
'Poor Sam! It will feel like that, I am afraid,' said
Frodo. 'But you will be healed. You were meant to be solid and whole, and you
will be.'
In the next day or two Frodo went through his
papers and his writings with Sam, and he handed over his keys. There was a big
book with plain red leather covers; its tall pages were now almost filled. At
the beginning there were many leaves covered with Bilbo's thin wandering hand;
but most of it was written in Frodo's firm flowing script. It was divided into
chapters but Chapter 80 was unfinished, and after that were some blank leaves.
The title page had many titles on it, crossed out one after another,
so:
My Diary. My Unexpected Journey. There and Back
Again. And What Happened After.
Adventures of Five
Hobbits. The Tale of the Great Ring, compiled by Bilbo Baggins from his own
observations and the accounts of his friends. What we did in the War of the
Ring.
Here Bilbo's hand ended and Frodo had
written:
THE DOWNFALL OF THE LORD OF THE RINGS AND THE
RETURN OF THE KING (as seen by the Little People;
being the memoirs of Bilbo and Frodo of the Shire, supplemented by the accounts
of their friends and the learning of the
Wise.) Together with extracts from Books of Lore
translated by Bilbo in Rivendell. 'Why, you have nearly
finished it, Mr. Frodo!' Sam exclaimed. 'Well, you have kept at it, I must
say.'
'I have quite finished, Sam,' said Frodo. 'The last
pages are for you.'
On September the twenty-first they set
out together, Frodo on the pony that had borne him all the way from Minas
Tirith, and was now called Strider; and Sam on his beloved Bill. It was a fair
golden morning, and Sam did not ask where they were going: he thought he could
guess.
They took the Stock Road over the hills and went
towards the Woody End, and they let their ponies walk at their leisure. They
camped in the Green Hills, and on September the twenty-second they rode gently
down into the beginning of the trees as afternoon was wearing
away.
'If that isn't the very tree you hid behind when the
Black Rider first showed up, Mr. Frodo!' said Sam pointing to the left. 'It
seems like a dream now.'
It was evening, and the stars were
glimmering in the eastern sky as they passed the ruined oak and turned and went
on down the hill between the hazel-thickets. Sam was silent, deep in his
memories. Presently he became aware that Frodo was singing softly to himself,
singing the old walking-song, but the words were not quite the same.
Still round the corner there may wait
A new road or a
secret gate;
And though I oft have passed them by,
A day will come at
last when I
Shall take the hidden paths that run
West of the Moon, East
of the Sun.
And as if in answer,
from down below, coming up the road out of the valley, voices sang:
A! Elbereth Gilthoniel!
silivren penna míriel
o menel
aglar elenath,
Gilthoniel, A! Elbereth!
We still remember, we who
dwell
In this far land beneath the trees
The starlight on the Western
Seas.
Frodo and Sam halted and sat
silent in the soft shadows, until they saw a shimmer as the travellers came
towards them.
There was Gildor and many fair Elven folk;
and there to Sam's wonder rode Elrond and Galadriel. Elrond wore a mantle of
grey and had a star upon his forehead, and a silver harp was in his hand, and
upon his finger was a ring of gold with a great blue stone, Vilya, mightiest of
the Three. But Galadriel sat upon a white palfrey and was robed all in
glimmering white, like clouds about the Moon; for she herself seemed to shine
with a soft light. On her finger was Nenya, the ring wrought of
mithril,
that bore a single white stone flickering like a frosty star. Riding slowly
behind on a small grey pony, and seeming to nod in his sleep, was Bilbo
himself.
Elrond greeted them gravely and graciously, and
Galadriel smiled upon them. 'Well, Master Samwise,' she said. 'I hear and see
that you have used my gift well. The Shire shall now be more than ever blessed
and beloved.' Sam bowed, but found nothing to say. He had forgotten how
beautiful the Lady was.
Then Bilbo woke up and opened his
eyes. 'Hullo, Frodo!' he said. 'Well, I have passed the Old Took today! So
that's settled. And now I think I am quite ready to go on another journey. Are
you coming?'
'Yes, I am coming,' said Frodo. 'The
Ring-bearers should go together.'
'Where are you going,
Master?' cried Sam, though at last he understood what was
happening.
'To the Havens, Sam,' said
Frodo.
'And I can't come.'
'No, Sam.
Not yet anyway, not further than the Havens. Though you too were a Ring-bearer,
if only for a little while. Your time may come. Do not be too sad, Sam. You
cannot be always torn in two. You will have to be one and whole, for many years.
You have so much to enjoy and to be, and to do.'
'But,'
said Sam, and tears started in his eyes, 'I thought you were going to enjoy the
Shire, too. for years and years, after all you have
done.'
'So I thought too, once. But I have been too deeply
hurt, Sam. I tried to save the Shire, and it has been saved, but not for me. It
must often be so, Sam, when things are in danger: some one has to give them up,
lose them, so that others may keep them. But you are my heir: all that I had and
might have had I leave to you. And also you have Rose, and Elanor; and Frodo-lad
will come, and Rosie-lass, and Merry, and Goldilocks, and Pippin; and perhaps
more that I cannot see. Your hands and your wits will be needed everywhere. You
will be the Mayor, of course, as long as you want to be, and the most famous
gardener in history; and you will read things out of the Red Book, and keep
alive the memory of the age that is gone. so that people will remember the Great
Danger and so love their beloved land all the more. And that will keep you as
busy and as happy as anyone can be, as long as your part of the Story goes
on.
'Come now, ride with me!'
Then
Elrond and Galadriel rode on; for the Third Age was over, and the Days of the
Rings were passed, and an end was come of the story and song of those times.
With them went many Elves of the High Kindred who would no longer stay in
Middle-earth; and among them, filled with a sadness that was yet blessed and
without bitterness, rode Sam, and Frodo, and Bilbo, and the Elves delighted to
honour them.
Though they rode through the midst of the
Shire all the evening and all the night, none saw them pass, save the wild
creatures; or here and there some wanderer in the dark who saw a swift shimmer
under the trees, or a light and shadow flowing through the grass as the Moon
went westward. And when they had passed from the Shire, going about the south
skirts of the White Downs, they came to the Far Downs, and to the Towers, and
looked on the distant Sea; and so they rode down at last to Mithlond, to the
Grey Havens in the long firth of Lune.
As they came to the
gates Cirdan the Shipwright came forth to greet them. Very tall he was, and his
beard was long, and he was grey and old, save that his eyes were keen as stars;
and he looked at them and bowed, and said: 'All is now
ready.'
Then Cirdan led them to the Havens, and there was a
white ship lying, and upon the quay beside a great grey horse stood a figure
robed all in white awaiting them. As he turned and came towards them Frodo saw
that Gandalf now wore openly upon his hand the Third Ring, Narya the Great, and
the stone upon it was red as fire. Then those who were to go were glad, for they
knew that Gandalf also would take ship with them.
But Sam
was now sorrowful at heart, and it seemed to him that if the parting would be
bitter, more grievous still would be the long road home alone. But even as they
stood there, and the Elves were going aboard, and all was being made ready to
depart, up rode Merry and Pippin in great haste. And amid his tears Pippin
laughed.
'You tried to give us the slip once before and
failed, Frodo.' he said. 'This time you have nearly succeeded, but you have
failed again. It was not Sam, though, that gave you away this time, but Gandalf
himself!'
'Yes,' said Gandalf, 'for it will be better to
ride back three together 'than one alone. Well, here at last, dear friends, on
the shores of the Sea comes the end of our fellowship in Middle-earth. Go in
peace! I will not say: do not weep; for not all tears are an
evil.'
Then Frodo kissed Merry and Pippin, and last of all
Sam, and went aboard; and the sails were drawn up, and the wind blew, and slowly
the ship slipped away down the long grey firth; and the light of the glass of
Galadriel that Frodo bore glimmered and was lost. And the ship went out into the
High Sea and passed on into the West, until at last on a night of rain Frodo
smelled a sweet fragrance on the air and heard the sound of singing that came
over the water. And then it seemed to him that as in his dream in the house of
Bombadil, the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back,
and he beheld white shores and beyond them a far green country under a swift
sunrise.

But to Sam the evening deepened to darkness as
he stood at the Haven; and as he looked at the grey sea he saw only a shadow on
the waters that was soon lost in the West. There still he stood far into the
night, hearing only the sigh and murmur of the waves on the shores of
Middle-earth, and the sound of them sank deep into his heart. Beside him stood
Merry and Pippin, and they were silent.
At last the three
companions turned away, and never again looking back they rode slowly homewards;
and they spoke no word to one another until they came back to the Shire, but
each had great comfort in his friends on the long grey
road.
At last they rode over the downs and took the East
Road, and then Merry and Pippin rode on to Buckland; and already they were
singing again as they went. But Sam turned to Bywater, and so came back up the
Hill, as day was ending once more. And he went on, and there was yellow light,
and fire within; and the evening meal was ready, and he was expected. And Rose
drew him in, and set him in his chair, and put little Elanor upon his
lap.
He drew a deep breath. 'Well, I'm back,' he
said.
(Chronology of the Westlands)
The
First Age ended with the Great Battle, in which the Host of Valinor broke
Thangorodrim
50
and overthrew Morgoth. Then most of the Noldor returned into the Far West
51
and dwelt in Eressëa within sight of Valinor; and many of the Sindar went over
Sea also.
The
Second Age ended with the first
overthrow of Sauron, servant of Morgoth, and the taking of the One
Ring.
The
Third Age came to its end in the War of
the Ring; but the
Fourth Age was not held to have begun until Master
Elrond departed, and the time was come for the dominion of Men and the decline
of all other 'speaking-peoples' in Middle-earth.
52 In
the Fourth Age the earlier ages were often called the
Elder Days; but
that name was properly given only to the days before the casting out of Morgoth.
The histories of that time are not recorded here.
The Second Age
These were the dark years for Men of
Middle-earth, but the years of the glory of Númenor. Of events in Middle-earth
the records are few and brief, and their dates are often
uncertain.
In the beginning of this age many of the High
Elves still remained. Most of these dwelt in Lindon west of the Ered Luin; but
before the building of the Barad-dûr many of the Sindar passed eastward, and
some established realms in the forests far away, where their people were mostly
Silvan Elves. Thranduil, king in the north of Greenwood the Great, was one of
these. In Lindon north of the Lune dwelt Gil-galad, last heir of the kings of
the Noldor in exile. He was acknowledged as High King of the Elves of the West.
In Lindon south of the Lune dwelt for a time Celeborn, kinsman of Thingol; his
wife was Galadriel, greatest of Elven women. She was sister of Finrod Felagund,
Friend-of-Men, once king of Nargothrond, who gave his life to save Beren son of
Barahir.
Later some of the Noldor went to Eregion, upon the
west of the Misty Mountains, and near to the West-gate of Moria. This they did
because they learned that
mithril had been discovered in Moria.
53
The Noldor were great craftsmen and less unfriendly to the Dwarves than the
Sindar; but the friendship that grew up between the people of Durin and the
Elven-smiths of Eregion was the closest that there has ever been between the two
races. Celebrimbor was lord of Eregion and the greatest of their craftsmen; he
was descended from Fëanor.
1. Foundation of the Grey
Havens, and of Lindon.
32. The Edain reach
Númenor.
c. 40. Many Dwarves leaving their old
cities in Ered Luin go to Moria and swell its numbers.
442.
Death of Elros Tar-Minyatur.
c. 500. Sauron begins
to stir again in Middle-earth.
548. Birth in Númenor of
Silmariën.
600. The first ships of the Númenoreans appear
off the coasts.
750. Eregion founded by the Noldor.
c. 1000. Sauron, alarmed by the growing power of
the Númenoreans, chooses Mordor as a land to make into a stronghold. He begins
the building of Barad-dûr.
1075. Tar-Ancalimë becomes the
first Ruling Queen of Númenor.
1200. Sauron endeavours to
seduce the Eldar. Gil-galad refuses to treat with him; but the smiths of Eregion
are won over. The Númenoreans begin to make permanent
havens.
c. 1500. The Elven-smiths instructed by
Sauron reach the height of their skill. They begin the forging of the Rings of
Power.
c. 1590. The Three Rings are completed in
Eregion.
c. 1600. Sauron forges the One Ring in Orodruin.
He completes the Barad-dûr. Celebrimbor perceives the designs of
Sauron.
1693. War of the Elves and Sauron begins. The Three
Rings are hidden.
1695. Sauron's forces invade Eriador.
Gil-galad sends Elrond to Eregion.
1697. Eregion laid
waste. Death of Celebrimbor. The gates of Moria are shut. Elrond retreats with
remnant of the Noldor and founds the refuge of
Imladris.
1699. Sauron overruns
Eriador.
1700. Tar-Minastir sends a great navy from Númenor
to Lindon. Sauron is defeated.
1701. Sauron is driven out
of Eriador. The Westlands have peace for a long
while.
c. 1800. From about this time onward the
Númenoreans begin to establish dominions on the coasts. Sauron extends his power
eastwards. The shadow falls on Númenor.
2251. Tar-Atanamir
takes the sceptre. Rebellion and division of the Númenoreans begins. About this
time the Nazgûl or Ringwraiths, slaves of the Nine Rings, first
appear.
2280. Umbar is made into a great fortress of
Númenor.
2350. Pelargir is built. It becomes the chief
haven of the Faithful Númenoreans.
2899. Ar-Adûnakhôr
takes the sceptre.
3175. Repentance of Tar-Palantír. Civil
war in Númenor.
3255. Ar-Pharazôn the Golden seizes the
sceptre.
3261. Ar-Pharazôn sets sail and lands at
Umbar.
3262. Sauron is taken as prisoner to Númenor;
3262-3310 Sauron seduces the King and corrupts the
Númenoreans.
3310. Ar-Pharazôn begins the building of the
Great Armament.
3319. Ar-Pharazôn assails Valinor. Downfall
of Númenor. Elendil and his sons escape.
3320. Foundations
of the Realms in Exile: Arnor and Gondor. The Stones are divided (II, 54).
Sauron returns to Mordor.
3429. Sauron attacks Gondor,
takes Minas Ithil and burns the White Tree. Isildur escapes down Anduin and goes
to Elendil in the North. Anárion defends Minas Anor and
Osgiliath.
3430. The Last Alliance of Elves and Men is
formed.
3431. Gil-galad and Elendil march east to
Imladris.
3434. The host of the Alliance crosses the Misty
Mountains. Battle of Dagorlad and defeat of Sauron. Siege of Barad-dûr
begins.
3440. Anárion slain.
3441.
Sauron overthrown by Elendil and Gil-galad, who perish. Isildur takes the One
Ring. Sauron passes away and the Ringwraiths go into the shadows. The Second Age
ends.
The Third Age
These were the fading years of the
Eldar. For long they were at peace wielding the Three Rings while Sauron slept
and the One Ring was lost; but they attempted nothing new, living in memory of
the past. The Dwarves hid themselves in deep places, guarding their hoards; but
when evil began to stir again and dragons reappeared, one by one their ancient
treasures were plundered, and they became a wandering people. Moria for long
remained secure, but its numbers dwindled until many of its vast mansions became
dark and empty. The wisdom and the life-span of the Númenoreans also waned as
they became mingled with lesser Men.
When maybe a thousand
years had passed, and the first shadow had fallen on Greenwood the Great, the
Istari or Wizards appeared in Middle-earth. It was afterwards said that
they came out of the Far West and were messengers sent to contest the power of
Sauron, and to unite all those who had the will to resist him; but they were
forbidden to match his power with power, or to seek to dominate Elves or Men by
force and fear.
They came therefore in the shape of Men,
though they were never young and aged only slowly, and they had many powers of
mind and hand. They revealed their true names to few,
54
but used such names as were given to them. The two highest of this order (of
whom it is said there were five) were called by the Eldar Curunír, 'the Man of
Skill', and Mithrandir, 'the Grey Pilgrim', but by Men in the North Saruman and
Gandalf. Curunír journeyed often into the East, but dwelt at last in Isengard.
Mithrandir was closest in friendship with the Eldar, and wandered mostly in the
West, and never made for himself any lasting
abode.
Throughout the Third Age the guardianship of the
Three Rings was known only to those who possessed them. But at the end it became
known that they had been held at first by the three greatest of the Eldar:
Gil-galad, Galadriel and Círdan. Gil-galad before he died gave his ring to
Elrond; Círdan later surrendered his to Mithrandir. For Círdan saw further and
deeper than any other in Middle-earth, and he welcomed Mithrandir at the Grey
Havens, knowing whence he came and whither he would
return.
'Take this ring, Master,' he said, 'for your
labours will be heavy; but it will support you in the weariness that you have
taken upon yourself. For this is the Ring of Fire, and with it you may rekindle
hearts in a world that grows chill. But as for me, my heart is with the Sea, and
I will dwell by the grey shores until the last ship sails. I will await you.'
2. Isildur plants a seedling of the White Tree in Minas
Anor. He delivers the South-kingdom to Meneldil. Disaster of the Gladden Fields;
Isildur and his three elder sons are slain.
3. Ohtar brings
the shards of Narsil to Imladris.
10. Valandil becomes King
of Arnor.
109. Elrond weds Celebrían, daughter of
Celeborn.
130. Birth of Elladan and Elrohir, sons of
Elrond.
241. Birth of Arwen
Undómiel.
420. King Ostoher rebuilds Minas
Anor.
490. First invasion of
Easterlings.
500. Rómendacil I defeats the
Easterlings.
541. Rómendacil slain in
battle.
830. Falastur begins the line of Ship-kings of
Gondor.
861. Death of Eärendur, and division of
Arnor.
933. King Eärnil I takes Umbar, which becomes a
fortress of Gondor.
936. Eärnil lost at
sea.
1015. King Ciryandil slain in the siege of
Umbar.
1050. Hyarmendacil conquers the Harad. Gondor
reaches the height of its power. About this time a shadow falls on Greenwood,
and men begin to call it Mirkwood. The Periannath are first mentioned in
records, with the coming of the Harfoots to
Eriador.
c. 1100. The Wise (the Istari and the chief
Eldar) discover that an evil power has made a stronghold at Dol Guldur. It is
thought to be one of the Nazgûl.
1149. Reign of Atanatar
Alcarin begins.
c. 1150. The Fallohides enter
Eriador. The Stoors come over the Redhorn Pass and move to the Angle, or to
Dunland.
c. 1300. Evil things begin to multiply
again. Orcs increase in the Misty Mountains and attack the Dwarves. The Nazgûl
reappear. The chief of these comes north to Angmar. The Periannath migrate
westward; many settle at Bree.
1356. King Argeleb I slain
in battle with Rhudaur. About this time the Stoors leave the Angle, and some
return to Wilderland.
1409. The Witch-king of Angmar
invades Arnor. King Arvaleg I slain. Fornost and Tyrn Gorthad are defended. The
Tower of Amon Sûl destroyed.
1432. King Valacar of Gondor
dies, and the civil war of the Kin-strife begins.
1437.
Burning of Osgiliath and loss of the
palantír. Eldacar flees to
Rhovanion; his son Ornendil is murdered.
1447. Eldacar
returns and drives out the usurper Castamir. Battle of the Crossings of Erui.
Siege of Pelargir.
1448. Rebels escape and seize
Umbar.
1540. King Aldamir slain in war with the Harad and
Corsairs of Umbar.
1551. Hyarmendacil II defeats the Men of
Harad.
1601. Many Periannath migrate from Bree, and are
granted land beyond Baranduin by Argeleb II.
c.
1630. They are joined by Stoors coming up from
Dunland.
1634. The Corsairs ravage Pelargir and slay King
Minardil.
1636. The Great Plague devastates Gondor. Death
of King Telemnar and his children. The White Tree dies in Minas Anor. The plague
spreads north and west, and many parts of Eriador become desolate. Beyond the
Baranduin the Periannath survive, but suffer great
loss.
1640. King Tarondor removes the King's House to Minas
Anor, and plants a seedling of the White Tree. Osgiliath begins to fall into
ruin. Mordor is left unguarded.
1810. King Telumehtar
Umbardacil retakes Umbar and drives out the Corsairs.
1851.
The attacks of the Wainriders upon Gondor begin.
1856.
Gondor loses its eastern territories, and Narmacil II falls in
battle.
1899. King Calimehtar defeats the Wainriders on
Dagorlad.
1900. Calimehtar builds the White Tower in Minas
Anor.
1940. Gondor and Arnor renew communications and form
an alliance. Arvedui weds Fíriel daughter of Ondoher of
Gondor.
1944. Ondoher falls in battle. Eärnil defeats the
enemy in South Ithilien. He then wins the Battle of the Camp, and drives
Wainriders into the Dead Marshes. Arvedui claims the crown of
Gondor.
1945. Eärnil II receives the
crown.
1974. End of the North-kingdom. The Witch-king
over-runs Arthedain and takes Fornost.
1975. Arvedui
drowned in the Bay of Forochel. The
palantíri of Annúminas and Amon Sûl
are lost. Eärnur brings a fleet to Lindon. The Witch-king defeated at the Battle
of Fornost, and pursued to the Ettenmoors. He vanishes from the
North.
1976. Aranarth takes the title of Chieftain of the
Dúnedain. The heirlooms of Arnor are given into the keeping of
Elrond.
1977. Frumgar leads the Éothéod into the
North.
1979. Bucca of the Marish becomes first Thain of the
Shire.
1980. The Witch-king comes to Mordor and there
gathers the Nazgûl. A Balrog appears in Moria, and slays Durin
VI.
1981. Náin I slain. The Dwarves flee from Moria. Many
of the Silvan Elves of Lórien flee south. Amroth and Nimrodel are
lost.
1999. Thráin I comes to Erebor and founds a
dwarf-kingdom 'under the Mountain'.
2000. The Nazgûl issue
from Mordor and besiege Minas Ithil.
2002. Fall of Minas
Ithil, afterwards known as Minas Morgul. The
palantír is
captured.
2043. Eärnur becomes King of Gondor. He is
challenged by the Witch-king.
2050. The challenge is
renewed. Eärnur rides to Minas Morgul and is lost Mardil becomes the first
Ruling Steward.
2060. The power of Dol Guldur grows. The
Wise fear that it may be Sauron taking shape again.
2063.
Gandalf goes to Dol Guldur. Sauron retreats and hides in the East. The Watchful
Peace begins. The Nazgûl remain quiet in Minas
Morgul.
2210. Thorin I leaves Erebor, and goes north to the
Grey Mountains, where most of the remnants of Durin's Folk are now
gathering.
2340. Isumbras I becomes thirteenth Thain, and
first of the Took line. The Oldbucks occupy the
Buckland.
2460. The Watchful Peace ends. Sauron returns
with increased strength to Dol Guldur.
2463. The White
Council is formed. About this time Déagol the Stoor finds the One Ring, and is
murdered by Sméagol.
2470. About this time Sméagol-Gollum
hides in the Misty Mountains.
2475. Attack on Gondor
renewed. Osgiliath finally ruined, and its stone-bridge
broken.
c. 2480. Orcs begin to make secret
strongholds in the Misty Mountains so as to bar all the passes into Eriador.
Sauron begins to people Moria with his creatures.
2509.
Celebrían, journeying to Lórien, is waylaid in the Redhorn Pass, and receives a
poisoned wound.
2510. Celebrían departs over Sea. Orcs and
Easterlings overrun Calenardhon. Eorl the Young wins the victory of the Field of
Celebrant. The Rohirrim settle in Calenardhon.
2545. Eorl
falls in battle in the Wold.
2569. Brego son of Eorl
completes the Golden Hall.
2570. Baldor son of Brego enters
the Forbidden Door and is lost. About this time Dragons reappear in the far
North and begin to afflict the Dwarves.
2589. Dáin I slain
by a Dragon.
2590. Thrór returns to Erebor. Grór his
brother goes to the Iron Hills.
c. 2670. Tobold
plants 'pipe-weed' in the Southfarthing.
2683. Isengrim II
becomes tenth Thain and begins the excavation of Great Smials.
2698. Ecthelion I rebuilds the White Tower in Minas
Tirith.
2740. Orcs renew their invasions of
Eriador.
2747. Bandobras Took defeats an Orc-band in the
Northfarthing.
2758. Rohan attacked from west and east and
overrun. Gondor attacked by fleets of the Corsairs. Helm of Rohan takes refuge
in Helm's Deep. Wulf seizes Edoras.
2758-9. The Long Winter
follows. Great suffering and loss of life in Eriador and Rohan. Gandalf comes to
the aid of the Shire-folk.
2759. Death of Helm. Fréaláf
drives out Wulf, and begins second line of Kings of the Mark. Saruman takes up
his abode in Isengard.
2770. Smaug the Dragon descends on
Erebor. Dale destroyed. Thrór escapes with Thráin II and Thorin
II.
2790. Thrór slain by an Orc in Moria. The Dwarves
gather for a war of vengeance. Birth of Gerontius, later known as the Old
Took.
2793. The War of the Dwarves and Orcs
begins.
2799. Battle of Nanduhirion before the East-gate of
Moria. Dáin Ironfoot returns to the Iron Hills. Thráin II and his son Thorin
wander westwards. They settle in the South of Ered Luin beyond the Shire
(2802).
2800-64. Orcs from the North trouble Rohan. King
Walda slain by them (2861).
2841. Thráin II sets out to
revisit Erebor, but is pursued by the servants of
Sauron.
2845. Thráin the Dwarf is imprisoned in Dol Guldur;
the last of the Seven Rings is taken from him.
2850.
Gandalf again enters Dol Guldur, and discovers that its master is indeed Sauron,
who is gathering all the Rings and seeking for news of the One, and of Isildur's
Heir. He finds Thráin and receives the key of Erebor. Thráin dies in Dol
Guldur.
2851. The White Council meets. Gandalf urges an
attack on Dol Guldur. Saruman overrules him.
55
Saruman begins to search near the Gladden Fields.
2852.
Belecthor II of Gondor dies. The White Tree dies, and no seedling can be found.
The Dead Tree is left standing.
2885. Stirred up by
emissaries of Sauron the Haradrim cross the Poros and attack Gondor. The sons of
Folcwine of Rohan are slain in the service of Gondor.
2890.
Bilbo born in the Shire.
2901. Most of the remaining
inhabitants of Ithilien desert it owing to the attacks of Uruks of Mordor. The
secret refuge of Henneth Annûn is built.
2907. Birth of
Gilraen mother of Aragorn II.
2911. The Fell Winter. The
Baranduin and other rivers are frozen. White Wolves invade Eriador from the
North.
2912. Great floods devastate Enedwaith and
Minhiriath. Tharbad is ruined and deserted.
2920. Death of
the Old Took.
2929. Arathorn son of Arador of the Dúnedain
weds Gilraen.
2930. Arador slain by Trolls. Birth of
Denethor II son of Ecthelion II in Minas Tirith.
2931.
Aragorn son of Arathorn II born on March 1st.
2933.
Arathorn II slain. Gilraen takes Aragorn to Imladris. Elrond receives him as
foster-son and gives him the name Estel (Hope); his ancestry is
concealed.
2939. Saruman discovers that Sauron's servants
are searching the Anduin near Gladden Fields, and that Sauron therefore has
learned of Isildur's end. He is alarmed, but says nothing to the
Council.
2941. Thorin Oakenshield and Gandalf visit Bilbo
in the Shire. Bilbo meets Sméagol-Gollum and finds the Ring. The White Council
meets; Saruman agrees to an attack on Dol Guldur, since he now wishes to prevent
Sauron from searching the River. Sauron having made his plans abandons Dol
Guldur. The Battle of the Five Armies in Dale. Death of Thorin II. Bard of
Esgaroth slays Smaug. Dáin of the Iron Hills becomes King under the Mountain
(Dáin II).
2942. Bilbo returns to the Shire with the Ring.
Sauron returns in secret to Mordor.
2944. Bard rebuilds
Dale and becomes King. Gollum leaves the Mountains and begins his search for the
'thief' of the Ring.
2948. Théoden son of Thengel, King of
Rohan, born.
2949. Gandalf and Balin visit Bilbo in the
Shire.
2950. Finduilas, daughter of Adrahil of Dol Amroth,
born.
2951. Sauron declares himself openly and gathers
power in Mordor. He begins the rebuilding of Barad-dûr. Gollum turns towards
Mordor. Sauron sends three of the Nazgûl to reoccupy Dol Guldur. Elrond reveals
to 'Estel' his true name and ancestry, and delivers to him the shards of Narsil.
Arwen, newly returned from Lórien, meets Aragorn in the woods of Imladris.
Aragorn goes out into the Wild.
2953. Last meeting of the
White Council. They debate the Rings. Saruman feigns that he has discovered that
the One Ring has passed down Anduin to the Sea. Saruman withdraws to Isengard,
which he takes as his own, and fortifies it. Being jealous and afraid of Gandalf
he sets spies to watch all his movements; and notes his interest in the Shire.
He soon begins to keep agents in Bree and the
Southfarthing.
2954. Mount Doom bursts into flame again.
The last inhabitants of Ithilien flee over Anduin.
2956.
Aragorn meets Gandalf and their friendship begins.
2957-80.
Aragorn undertakes his great journeys and errantries. As Thorongil he serves in
disguise both Thengel of Rohan and Ecthelion II of Gondor.
2968. Birth of Frodo.
2976. Denethor
weds Finduilas of Dol Amroth.
2977. Bain son of Bard
becomes King of Dale.
2978. Birth of Boromir son of
Denethor II.
2980. Aragorn enters Lórien and there meets
again Arwen Undómiel. Aragorn gives her the ring of Barahir, and they plight
their troth upon the hill of Cerin Amroth. About this time Gollum reaches the
confines of Mordor and becomes acquainted with Shelob. Théoden becomes King of
Rohan.
2983. Faramir son of Denethor born. Birth of
Samwise.
2984. Death of Ecthelion II
. Denethor II
becomes Steward of Gondor.
2988. Finduilas dies
young.
2989. Balin leaves Erebor and enters
Moria.
2991. Éomer Éomund's son born in
Rohan.
2994. Balin perishes, and the dwarf-colony is
destroyed.
2995. Éowyn sister of Éomer
born.
c. 3000. The shadow of Mordor lengthens.
Saruman dares to use the
palantír of Orthanc, but becomes ensnared by
Sauron, who has the Ithil Stone. He becomes a traitor to the Council. His spies
report that the Shire is being closely guarded by the
Rangers.
3001. Bilbo's farewell feast. Gandalf suspects his
ring to be the One Ring. The guard on the Shire is doubled. Gandalf seeks for
news of Gollum and calls on the help of Aragorn.
3002.
Bilbo becomes a guest of Elrond, and settles in Rivendell.
3004. Gandalf visits Frodo in the Shire, and does so at
intervals during the next four years.
3007. Brand son of
Bain becomes King in Dale. Death of Gilraen.
3008. In the
autumn Gandalf pays his last visit to Frodo.
3009. Gandalf
and Aragorn renew their hunt for Gollum at intervals during the next eight
years, searching in the vales of Anduin, Mirkwood, and Rhovanion to the confines
of Mordor. At some time during these years Gollum himself ventured into Mordor,
and was captured by Sauron. Elrond sends for Arwen, and she returns to Imladris;
the Mountains and all lands eastward are becoming
dangerous.
3017. Gollum is released from Mordor. He is
taken by Aragorn in the Dead Marshes, and brought to Thranduil in Mirkwood.
Gandalf visits Minas Tirith and reads the scroll of
Isildur.
The Great
Years 3018.
April 12.
Gandalf reaches
Hobbiton.
June 20. Sauron
attacks Osgiliath. About the same time Thranduil is attacked, and Gollum
escapes.
July 4. Boromir sets
out from Minas Tirith.
10. Gandalf imprisoned in
Orthanc.
August All trace of
Gollum is lost. It is thought that at about this time, being hunted both by the
Elves and Sauron's servants, he took refuge in Moria; but when he had at last
discovered the way to the West-gate he could not get
out
September 18. Gandalf
escapes from Orthanc in the early hours. The Black Riders cross the Fords of
Isen.
19. Gandalf comes to Edoras as a beggar, and is
refused admittance.
20. Gandalf gains entrance to Edoras.
Théoden commands him to go: 'Take any horse, only be gone ere tomorrow is
old!'
21. Gandalf meets Shadowfax, but the horse will not
allow him to come near. He follows Shadowfax far over the
fields.
22. The Black Riders reach Sarn Ford at evening;
they drive off the guard of Rangers. Gandalf overtakes
Shadowfax.
23. Four Riders enter the Shire before dawn. The
others pursue the Rangers eastward, and then return to watch the Greenway. A
Black Rider comes to Hobbiton at nightfall. Frodo leaves Bag End. Gandalf having
tamed Shadowfax rides from Rohan.
24. Gandalf crosses the
Isen.
26. The Old Forest. Frodo comes to
Bombadil.
27. Gandalf crosses Greyflood. Second night with
Bombadil.
28. The Hobbits captured by a Barrow-wight.
Gandalf reaches Sarn Ford.
29. Frodo reaches Bree at night.
Gandalf visits the Gaffer.
30. Crickhollow and the Inn at
Bree are raided in the early hours. Frodo leaves Bree. Gandalf comes to
Crickhollow, and reaches Bree at
night
October 1. Gandalf leaves
Bree.
3. He is attacked at night on
Weathertop.
6. The camp under Weathertop attacked at night
Frodo wounded.
9. Glorfindel leaves
Rivendell.
11. He drives the Riders off the Bridge of
Mitheithel.
13. Frodo crosses the
Bridge.
18. Glorfindel finds Frodo at dusk. Gandalf reaches
Rivendell.
20. Escape across the Ford of
Bruinen.
24. Frodo recovers and wakes. Boromir arrives in
Rivendell at night
25. Council of
Elrond.
December 25. The
Company of the Ring leaves Rivendell at dusk.
3019.
January 8.
The Company reach Hollin.
11, 12. Snow on
Caradhras.
13. Attack by Wolves in the early hours. The
Company reaches the West-gate of Moria at nightfall. Gollum begins to trail the
Ring-bearer.
14. Night in Hall
Twenty-one.
15. The Bridge of Khazad-dûm, and fall of
Gandalf. The Company reaches Nimrodel late at night.
17.
The Company comes to Caras Galadhon at evening.
23. Gandalf
pursues the Balrog to the peak of Zirak-zigil.
25. He casts
down the Balrog, and passes away. His body lies on the
peak.
February 14. The Mirror
of Galadriel. Gandalf returns to life, and lies in a
trance.
16. Farewell to Lórien. Gollum in hiding on the
west bank observes the departure.
17. Gwaihir bears Gandalf
to Lórien.
23. The boats are attacked at night near Sam
Gebir.
25. The Company pass the Argonath and camp at Parth
Galen. First Battle of the Fords of Isen; Théodred son of Théoden
slain.
26. Breaking of the Fellowship. Death of Boromir;
his horn is heard in Minas Tirith. Meriadoc and Peregrin captured. Frodo and
Samwise enter the eastern Emyn Muil. Aragorn sets out in pursuit of the Orcs at
evening. Éomer hears of the descent of the Orc-band from the Emyn
Muil.
27. Aragorn reaches the west-cliff at sunrise. Éomer
against Théoden's orders sets out from Eastfold about midnight to pursue the
Orcs.
28. Éomer overtakes the Orcs just outside Fangorn
Forest.
29. Meriadoc and Pippin escape and meet Treebeard.
The Rohirrim attack at sunrise and destroy the Orcs. Frodo descends from the
Emyn Muil and meets Gollum. Faramir sees the funeral boat of
Boromir.
30. Entmoot begins. Éomer returning to Edoras
meets Aragorn.
March 1. Frodo
begins the passage of the Dead Marshes at dawn. Entmoot continues. Aragorn meets
Gandalf the White. They set out for Edoras. Faramir leaves Minas Tirith on an
errand to Ithilien.
2. Frodo comes to the end of the
Marshes. Gandalf comes to Edoras and heals Théoden. The Rohirrim ride west
against Saruman. Second Battle of Fords of Isen. Erkenbrand defeated. Entmoot
ends in after-noon. The Ents march on Isengard and reach it at
night.
3. Théoden retreats to Helm's Deep. Battle of the
Horn-burg begins. Ents complete the destruction of
Isengard.
4. Théoden and Gandalf set out from Helm's Deep
for Isengard. Frodo reaches the slag-mounds on the edge of the Desolation of the
Morannon.
5. Théoden reaches Isengard at noon. Parley with
Saruman in Orthanc. Winged Nazgûl passes over the camp at Dol Baran. Gandalf
sets out with Peregrin for Minas Tirith. Frodo hides in sight of the Morannon,
and leaves at dusk.
6. Aragorn overtaken by the Dúnedain in
the early hours. Théoden sets out from the Hornburg for Harrowdale. Aragorn sets
out later.
7. Frodo taken by Faramir to Henneth Annûn.
Aragorn comes to Dunharrow at nightfall.
8. Aragorn takes
the 'Paths of the Dead' at daybreak; he reaches Erech at midnight. Frodo leaves
Henneth Annûn.
9. Gandalf reaches Minas Tirith. Faramir
leaves Henneth Annûn. Aragorn sets out from Erech and comes to Calembel. At dusk
Frodo reaches the Morgul-road. Théoden comes to Dunharrow. Darkness begins to
flow out of Mordor.
10. The Dawnless Day. The Muster of
Rohan: the Rohirrim ride from Harrowdale. Faramir rescued by Gandalf outside the
gates of the City. Aragorn crosses Ringló. An army from the Morannon takes Cair
Andros and passes into Anórien. Frodo passes the Cross-roads, and sees the
Morgul-host set forth.
11. Gollum visits Shelob, but seeing
Frodo asleep nearly repents. Denethor sends Faramir to Osgiliath. Aragorn
reaches Linhir and crosses into Lebennin. Eastern Rohan is invaded from the
north. First assault on Lórien.
12. Gollum leads Frodo into
Shelob's lair. Faramir retreats to the Causeway Forts. Théoden camps under
Minrimmon. Aragorn drives the enemy towards Pelargir. The Ents defeat the
invaders of Rohan.
13. Frodo captured by the Orcs of Cirith
Ungol. The Pelennor is over-run. Faramir is wounded. Aragorn reaches Pelargir
and captures the fleet. Théoden in Drúadan Forest.
14.
Samwise finds Frodo in the Tower. Minas Tirith is besieged. The Rohirrim led by
the Wild Men come to the Grey Wood.
15. In the early hours
the Witch-king breaks the Gates of the City. Denethor burns himself on a pyre.
The horns of the Rohirrim are heard at cockcrow. Battle of the Pelennor. Théoden
is slain. Aragorn raises the standard of Arwen. Frodo and Samwise escape and
begin their journey north along the Morgai. Battle under the trees in Mirkwood;
Thranduil repels the forces of Dol Guldur. Second assault on
Lórien.
16. Debate of the commanders. Frodo from the Morgai
looks out over the camp to Mount Doom.
17. Battle of Dale.
King Brand and King Dáin Ironfoot fall. Many Dwarves and Men take refuge in
Erebor and are besieged. Shagrat brings Frodo's cloak, mail-shirt, and sword to
Barad-dûr.
18. The Host of the West marches from Minas
Tirith. Frodo comes in sight of the Isenmouthe; he is over-taken by Orcs on the
road from Durthang to Udûn.
19. The Host comes to
Morgul-vale. Frodo and Samwise escape and begin their journey along the road to
the Barad-dûr.
22. The dreadful nightfall. Frodo and
Samwise leave the road and turn south to Mount Doom. Third assault on
Lórien.
23. The Host passes out of Ithilien. Aragorn
dismisses the faint-hearted. Frodo and Samwise cast away their arms and
gear.
24. Frodo and Samwise make their last journey to the
feet of Mount Doom. The Host camps in the Desolation of the
Morannon.
25. The Host is surrounded on the Slag-hills.
Frodo and Samwise reach the Sammath Naur. Gollum seizes the Ring and falls in
the Cracks of Doom. Downfall of Barad-dûr and passing of
Sauron.
After the fall of the Dark Tower and the passing of
Sauron the Shadow was lifted from the hearts of all who opposed him, but fear
and despair fell upon his servants and allies. Three times Lórien had been
assailed from Dol Guldur, but besides the valour of the elven people of that
land, the power that dwelt there was too great for any to overcome, unless
Sauron had come there himself. Though grievous harm was done to the fair woods
on the borders, the assaults were driven back; and when the Shadow passed,
Celeborn came forth and led the host of Lórien over Anduin in many boats. They
took Dol Guldur, and Galadriel threw down its walls and laid bare its pits, and
the forest was cleansed.
In the North also there had been
war and evil. The realm of Thranduil was invaded, and there was long battle
under the trees and great ruin of fire; but in the end Thranduil had the
victory. And on the day of the New Year of the Elves, Celeborn and Thranduil met
in the midst of the forest; and they renamed Mirkwood
Eryn Lasgalen, The
Wood of Greenleaves. Thranduil took all the northern region as far as the
mountains that rise in the forest for his realm; and Celeborn took the southern
wood below the Narrows, and named it East Lórien; all the wide forest between
was given to the Beornings and the Woodmen. But after the passing of Galadriel
in a few years Celeborn grew weary of his realm and went to Imladris to dwell
with the sons of Elrond. In the Greenwood the Silvan Elves remained untroubled,
but in Lórien there lingered sadly only a few of its former people, and there
was no longer light or song in Caras Galadhon.
At the same
time as the great armies besieged Minas Tirith a host of the allies of Sauron
that had long threatened the borders of King Brand crossed the River Carnen, and
Brand was driven back to Dale. There he had the aid of the Dwarves of Erebor;
and there was a great battle at the Mountain's feet It lasted three days, but in
the end both King Brand and King Dáin Ironfoot were slain, and the Easterlings
had the victory. But they could not take the Gate, and many, both Dwarves and
Men, took refuge in Erebor, and there withstood a
siege.
When news came of the great victories in the South,
then Sauron's northern army was filled with dismay; and the besieged came forth
and routed them, and the remnant fled into the East and troubled Dale no more.
Then Bard II, Brand's son, became King in Dale, and Thorin III Stonehelm, Dáin's
son, became King under the Mountain. They sent their ambassadors to the crowning
of King Elessar; and their realms remained ever after, as long as they lasted,
in friendship with Gondor; and they were under the crown and protection of the
King of the West.
The chief days from the fall of
the Barad-dûr to the end of the Third Age56 3019. S.R.
1419. March 27. Bard II and Thorin III Stonehelm
drive the enemy from Dale.
28 Celeborn crosses Anduin; destruction of Dol
Guldur begun.
April 6. Meeting of Celeborn and
Thranduil.
8 The Ring-bearers are honoured on the Field of
Cormallen.
May 1. Crowning of King Elessar; Elrond
and Arwen set out from Rivendell.
8 Éomer and Éowyn depart for Rohan with
the sons of Elrond.
20 Elrond and Arwen come to Lórien.
27 The
escort of Arwen leaves Lórien
. June 14. The
sons of Elrond meet the escort and bring Arwen to Edoras.
16 They set out
for Gondor. 25 King Elessar finds the sapling of the
WhiteTree.
1 Lithe. Arwen comes to the
City.
Mid-year's Day. Wedding of Elessar and
Arwen.
July 18. Éomer returns to Minas Tirith.
19 The funeral escort of King Théoden sets
out.
August 7. The escort comes to Edoras.
10
Funeral of King Théoden.
14 The guests take leave of King Éomer.
18 They come to Helm's Deep. 22 They come to Isengard; they take leave of
the King of the West at sunset.
28 They overtake Saruman; Saruman turns
towards the Shire.
September 6. They halt in sight
of the Mountains of Moria.
13 Celeborn and Galadriel depart, the others
set out for Rivendell.
21 They return to Rivendell.
22 The hundred
and twenty-ninth birthday of Bilbo. Saruman comes to the
Shire.
October 5. Gandalf and the Hobbits leave
Rivendell. 6 They cross the Ford of Bruinen; Frodo feels the first return of
pain.
28 They reach Bree at nightfall.
30 They leave Bree. The
Travellers' come to the Brandywine Bridge at dark.
November 1. They are arrested at Frogmorton. 2 They
come to Bywater and rouse the Shire-folk.
3 Battle of Bywater, and
Passing of Saruman. End of the War of the
Ring.
3020. S.R. 1420: The
Great Year of Plenty March 13. Frodo is taken
ill (on the anniversary of his poisoning by
Shelob).
April 6. The mallorn flowers in the Party
Field.
May 1. Samwise marries
Rose.
Mid-year's Day. Frodo resigns office of mayor,
and Will Whitfoot is restored.
September 22. Bilbo's
hundred and thirtieth birthday.
October 6. Frodo is
again ill.
3021. S.R. 1421
The Last of the Third Age March 13. Frodo is
again ill
25 Birth of Elanor the Fair,
57
daughter of Samwise. On this day the Fourth Age began in the reckoning of
Gondor.
September 21. Frodo and Samwise set out from
Hobbiton.
22 They meet the Last Riding of the Keepers of the Rings in
Woody End.
29 They come to the Grey Havens. Frodo and Bilbo depart over
Sea with the Three Keepers. The end of the Third
Age.
October 6. Samwise returns to Bag
End.
Later events
concerning the members of the Fellowship of the
Ring S.R.
1422. With the beginning
of this year the Fourth Age began in the count of years in the Shire; but the
numbers of the years of Shire Reckoning were
continued.
1427. Will Whitfoot resigns. Samwise is elected
Mayor of the Shire. Peregrin Took marries Diamond of Long Cleeve. King Elessar
issues an edict that Men are not to enter the Shire, and he makes it a Free Land
under the protection of the Northern Sceptre.
1430.
Faramir, son of Peregrin, born.
1431. Goldilocks, daughter
of Samwise, born.
1432. Meriadoc, called the Magnificent,
becomes Master of Buckland. Great gifts are sent to him by King Éomer and the
Lady Éowyn of Ithilien.
1434. Peregrin becomes the Took and
Thain. King Elessar makes the Thain, the Master, and the Mayor Counsellors of
the North-kingdom. Master Samwise is elected Mayor for the second
time.
1436. King Elessar rides north, and dwells for a
while by Lake Evendim. He comes to the Brandywine Bridge, and there greets his
friends. He gives the Star of the Dúnedain to Master Samwise, and Elanor is made
a maid of honour to Queen Arwen.
1441. Master Samwise
becomes Mayor for the third time.
1442. Master Samwise and
his wife and Elanor ride to Gondor and stay there for a year. Master Tolman
Cotton acts as deputy Mayor.
1448. Master Samwise becomes
Mayor for the fourth time.
1451. Elanor the Fair marries
Fastred of Greenholm on the Far Downs.
1452. The Westmarch,
from the Far Downs to the Tower Hills (
Emyn Beraid),
58
is added to the Shire by the gift of the King. Many hobbits remove to
it.
1454. Elfstan Fairbairn, son of Fastred and Elanor, is
born.
1455. Master Samwise becomes Mayor for the fifth
time. At his request the Thain makes Fastred Warden of Westmarch. Fastred and
Elanor make their dwelling at Undertowers on the Tower Hills, where their
descendants, the Fairbairns of the Towers, dwelt for many
generations.
1463. Faramir Took marries Goldilocks,
daughter of Samwise.
1469. Master Samwise becomes Mayor for
the seventh and last time, being in 1476, at the end of his office, ninety-six
years old.
1482. Death of Mistress Rose, wife of Master
Samwise, on Mid-year's Day. On September 22 Master Sam-wise rides out from Bag
End. He comes to the Tower Hills, and is last seen by Elanor, to whom he gives
the Red Book afterwards kept by the Fairbairns. Among them the tradition is
handed down from Elanor that Samwise passed the Towers, and went to the Grey
Havens, and passed over Sea, last of the
Ring-bearers.
1484. In the spring of the year a message
came from Rohan to Buckland that King Éomer wished to see Master Holdwine once
again. Meriadoc was then old (102) but still hale. He took counsel with his
friend the Thain, and soon after they handed over their goods and offices to
their sons and rode away over the Sam Ford, and they were not seen again in the
Shire. It was heard after that Master Meriadoc came to Edoras and was with King
Éomer before he died in that autumn. Then he and Thain Peregrin went to Gondor
and passed what short years were left to them in that realm, until they died and
were laid in Rath Dínen among the great of Gondor.
1541. In
this year
59
on March 1st came at last the Passing of King Elessar. It is said that the beds
of Meriadoc and Peregrin were set beside the bed of the great king. Then Legolas
built a grey ship in Ithilien, and sailed down Anduin and so over Sea; and with
him, it is said, went Gimli the Dwarf. And when that ship passed an end was come
in the Middle-earth of the Fellowship of the Ring.