Summary
Chapter 3
2 months later, Gandalf returns and informs Frodo to go to the House of Elfrond. Frodo Baggins slowly prepares to leave his home Bag End. He sells it to a family relative who has been wanting his hole for many years. He has some family helping him pack and he also hosted a small party to celebrate his shared birthday with Bilbo on September 22nd. Frodo and his two companions, Sam and Pippin, begins to leave to the woods. Frodo overhears a conversation between a mysterious figure and Sam's father. The stranger wants Bilbo Baggins, but Sam's father told them that Bilbo has already
left. Frodo and his friends quickly leave. On the second day, Frodo sensed danger and he told Sam and Pippin to climb up into the trees. A tall figure in a black cloak that conceals his face, riding on a black horse, approaches. Frodo also has a sudden desire to put the ring on. The figure leaves and Sam informs Frodo that the figure is the same figure who questioned his father last night. The hobbits moved on cautiously and they once again hide from the dark figure. The dark figure immediately leaves after it hears elves approaching and singing. Frodo knows how to speak the elves language, and the elves told him that the Black Riders are servants of the Enemy and must be avoided.
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Dark Riders |
Chapter 4
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Farmer Maggot |
Review
Like many epics, The Lord of the Rings is a huge quest and the chapters so far were just the starting line. Tolkien's experience with reading several fiction books helps allow him to firmly ground his main characters. For example, The Sword in the Stone by T.H. White begin with Sir Ector and his two sons: Kay who is biological child, and Art (Wart/Arthur) who is an adopted orphan. White introduces his characters and gradually tells the story of how Art will pull out the enchanted sword in the stone becoming the legendary King Arthur.
Tolkien also uses these two chapters to bring a lot of suspense and tension between the Dark Riders and the hobbits. Tolkien also makes it very clear on who is good and who is evil. The dark cloaked Dark Riders has evil written all over them. The elves and their singing immediately appears to be good. Sauron and his One Ring represent the corruption within ourselves and the Elves represent our purity. These two conflicts balance each other out.
The One Ring also seems to be in the middle between good and evil. When the Dark Riders are nearby, Frodo has the sudden desire to put on the ring. This is an impulse of Frodo giving in to the the One Ring's power. Even Gandalf in the previous chapters refuse to wear it because he fears that the ring's seductive power will overwhelm him. In other words, the One Ring is the gap between the powers of good and evil.