

In The Fellowship of the Ring, he presented Sam with some elvish rope, "a bit thin, but it's tough and soft as milk to the hand" (4.1.64), as Sam tells us in The Two Towers. He and Sam also use it to move through Shelob's Lair on the way to Cirith Ungol. In this novel, Frodo clutches this jewel when he freaks out at the sight of the Lord of the Nazgûl outside of Minas Morgul near the end of Book Four. After all he's the one who felt guilty just looking at her.Īlso, in The Two Towers we are reminded that Galadriel is the one who gave Frodo a special jewel that glows with the light of the Evening Star, Eärendil, near the end of The Fellowship of the Ring.

Boromir may not have liked what she reflected back to him, but that's on Boromir himself. She herself is like a mirror, which shows you your own innermost heart (either good or evil). It makes sense that Galadriel's special magic object in The Fellowship of the Ring ( Book 2, Chapter 7) is a Mirror. From the moment he first saw it he wanted the Enemy's Ring!" (4.5.132). Sam also tells Faramir that it was under the gaze of Galadriel that Boromir discovered his own desire for the Ring: "it's my opinion that in Lórien he first saw clearly what I guessed sooner: what he wanted. Galadriel is the ideal of perfect beauty, different for each person because we all have changing ideals.

Sam can only describe Galadriel's beauty with a bunch of opposite ideas because her gorgeousness is beyond words. Warm as sunlight, cold as frost in stars" (4.5.128). When Sam tries to describe Galadriel to Faramir, he says that she is sometimes "like a great tree in flower, sometimes like a white daffadowndilly, small and slender like. Galadriel uses Gandalf to pass on messages to Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli, telling Aragorn to beware of the Dead, Legolas, of the Sea, and Gimli, of putting his "axe to the right tree" (3.5.150). While we don't really see much of Galadriel in The Two Towers, she still influences Our Heroes. After getting back from his almost-death in Moria, Gandalf meets up with Galadriel to hear all the news of what he missed while he was dead. Galadriel is the beautiful elf Lady of Lothlórien, who we see a lot of in The Fellowship of the Ring. It is through the palantír, which is a glass ball that communicates with the other six palantíri, that Saruman and Sauron managed to stay in touch. His main importance to this story is that he is the creator of the seven palantíri, one of which belonged to Orthanc. Fëanorįëanor only comes into The Two Towers in passing his story really appears in The Silmarillion, if you want to know more about him.

And it works: the hymn, combined with Galadriel's jewel, makes a light that sends Shelob crawling back to her lair in agony. After he has spoken this hymn, he stands and is "Samwise the hobbit, Hamfast's son again" (4.10.9). But this is the first time that we see her power almost possess someone, since Sam's "tongue was loosed and his voice cried in a language which he did not know" (4.10.9). We have seen signs of the strength of her name against evil before, in The Fellowship of the Ring Book 1, Chapter 11 when Frodo tries to fight back against the Nazgûl at Weathertop. This is Elbereth, the Elvish Queen of Stars. Elbereth GilthonielĪt Cirith Ungol, as Sam battles Shelob, he suddenly speaks a hymn to this figure as though he is speaking in tongues. For more on Eärendil's origin story, check out our "Character Analysis" of Eärendil in The Fellowship of the Ring, or, of course, The Silmarillion. When Frodo first holds the light above his head in Torech Ungol, he cries out " Aiya Eärendil Elenion Ancalima!"-"Hail, Eärendil the brightly shining star!" ( source, pg. It is the light of this star that Frodo carries in the jewel Galadriel gave him to bring light to dark places. EärendilĮärendil carries one of the three Silmarils (special, shining Elvish jewels) across the sky as the Morning and Evening Star. Treebeard meditates that the change of name means that the Golden Wood is "fading, not growing" (3.4.58). Treebeard also clarifies: Lothlórien means "Dreamflower," but it was once called "Land of the Valley of the Singing Gold," Laurelindórenan. In The Two Towers Merry asks Treebeard why Celeborn warned them away from Fangorn, and Treebeard explains that Fangorn is a strange place, and people do run into troubles. This guy's the Lord of Lothlórien, whom we meet in The Fellowship of the Ring.
