Friday, March 22, 2019
Lord Of The Rings :: essays research papers
 In The Hobbit the danger and the excitement  snuff it a peak when the forces of good seem about to be overcome by the forces of evil. In The  master key of the Rings, Tolkien builds to two simultaneous peaks. One occurs at the  acme when Saurons forces sweep down on the small army led by Aragorn at the gates of Mordor. The other occurs inside Mordor, as Frodo struggles with Gollum on the  marge of the Crack of Doom, where the Ring is to be destroyed. Both the war and the quest reach their resolution in the same instant, when the Ring is destroyed and with it, Saurons power. The fourth and final exam part of each  grade serves to wind things down. The hero returns home, looking  ahead to comfort. He finds instead that his home is threatened. But he has grown  by his experiences and is able to regain what is his. Of course, there are many important differences  betwixt the two works. The Hobbit  respects the story through Bilbos eyes and tells of events in a chronological sequence. In    other words, you hear about things as they happen, rather than  startle ahead to future events, or flashing back to something that happened in the past. When Tolkien departs from this chronological sequence in The Hobbit, he carefully guides you through the jump in time "Now if you wish, like the dwarves, to hear news of Smaug, you must go back again to the evening when he smashed the door and flew  transfer in a rage, two days before." The story line of The Lord of the Rings, on the other hand, is much more complicated. The Lord of the Rings is a trilogy, consisting of three volumes (Parts One to Three) divided into six sections (Books I through VI). The  new(a) jumps back and forth in time, following the stories of several characters. The various story lines finally converge near the end when all the characters are reunited as Aragorn is crowned king of Gondor. Tolkien uses these shifts in viewpoint to good effect, often  closing curtain his scenes as cliff- hangers, slow   ly building the tension to its climax. But trying to follow the different story lines as he jumps back and forth from  unrivalled to the other can be very difficult. Tolkien doesnt guide you through them as he did in The Hobbit. But he does give clues to help you  get the pieces in   
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