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Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Book Review, The Lord of the Rings: Volume 1- Chapter 4 by J.R.R. Tolkien

Book Review, The Lord of the Rings: Volume 1- Chapter 4 by J.R.R. Tolkien

Tolkien’s romance involves a general use for words on levels other than what’s appealed to from the 1st look.  Appearance to a word, as short and simple as it can be, or as strange and unique as it’s designed to be, resembles much to the imagination just from peering into the pages spread out like wildfire in the sun, or a mission to the Moon’s reflection, or an old vibe felt by inhabitants for an ancient passage in Europe.  None of these things are in the chapter of course.  I’m just remarking on how Tolkien’s words can appeal the masses from relevance to concepts we’ve known from leaking interest on history and fame for politicians and important leaders.  Bilbo himself is kind of like a politician with the other hobbits even if his presence in Chapter 4 is only implicated through Frodo’s songs and the sheer determination for hobbit-races of mythological ethnicity for us humans reading along the lines to The Lord of the Rings.  Don’t say I’m crazy just yet; in fact, I’m happy that Frodo was scurrying off to a farmer’s tract of produce to steal vegetation on a budget as money itself is part of the hobbit’s wilderness for spooks, some endowed beyond recognition of charm and others released on impact through song and authorizing imitations.  Are you a philosopher who draws the wrong suggestions from my opinions on purpose for ultimate realization of truth?  Well, I hate to burst your bubble, but my sarcasm goes deeper than such ignorance of facts; in particular, we have to consider different kinds of facts the hobbits themselves use and express despite lack of relevance to their adventure on those particulars.  The dark riders arrive at paths which are less than longitudinal often and appear designed by some force to Bilbo’s liking.  Volume 1 is only technically modern if considered as written by Tolkien; however, it’s an ancient book on an imaginary scale between hobbits and fellow-like creatures if not utter enemies in disguise of questionable fortune.  A ring has eternal power in our lives and Tolkien’s account gives fictional coloring to such a concept as endearing to note within reason to perfection, many of which turn the rhyme on through vivid sounds likened to sheer motion of word by the nostrils as Tolkien may say of his upon the pipe of weed.  Fortune in absolute terms may cause anxiety to hobbits who reckon enough on treasures for pursuit of vanity towards happiness within conduct for polite table manners while on the fields of grey, forlorn or forsaken, taken to ponies out of bounds for glory along the lines in Tolkien’s constant exchange of words for reaching the formal perfection assumed, by us, for our world of classic literature.



https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/fellowship/section5/

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