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1[[center:'''Tropes from ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' (the book)''']]
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3[[center:TheLordOfTheRings/TropesAToC -- TheLordOfTheRings/TropesDToF -- TheLordOfTheRings/TropesGToI -- TheLordOfTheRings/TropesJToL -- TheLordOfTheRings/TropesMToO -- TheLordOfTheRings/TropesSToU -- TheLordOfTheRings/TropesVToZ]]
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9* PairTheSpares: Tolkien originally wrote Éowyn as the love-interest for Aragorn, before he revised the story to include Arwen; therefore after he did so, Éowyn becomes rather hastily paired with Faramir, and a chapter is dedicated to their growing relationship.
10* PalsWithJesus: Frodo may just be a normal hobbit, but he has little difficulty in befriending the incarnate soldier of the Valar gods, Gandalf the Grey.
11* {{Panacea}}: The Athelas plant, with the right usage, though the exact extent of its healing properties is never explored.
12%%* PapaWolf: Everyone is this to the hobbits. Even the hobbits get to be this on occasion because of ThePowerOfFriendship.
13* TheParagonAlwaysRebels:
14** Morgoth in [[Literature/TheSilmarillion the backstory]] was the greatest of the Ainur (angels) and ultimately becomes Satan.
15** Saruman, respected leader of the wizards and the White Council, winds up attempting to capture the Ring for himself and replace Sauron as Dark Lord. Subverted in the backstory... [[spoiler:Galadriel, trying to put the White Council together, wanted ''Gandalf'' as the leader, but half due to Saruman's speciality vs Gandalf's and half of Gandalf's own humility, Saruman was chosen instead. Thus Gandalf should have been the paragon in charge but denied it.]]
16* ParentalFavoritism: Boromir (the elder son) is heavily preferred to Faramir by their father, Denethor. It's especially emphasized in The Movies, where Denethor is shown as blatantly unfair; in the book, Gandalf at least believes that it is partly that Denethor is still grief-stricken over the death of their mother and Faramir reminds him too much of her.
17* ParentalMarriageVeto: When Elrond finds out that Aragorn and Arwen are in love, he sets down what seems to be an impossible set of restrictions on their marriage (Sauron must be vanquished, Aragorn must unite the ancient kingdoms of Gondor and Arnor and become High King once again). Needless to say, Aragorn helps to fulfill these conditions, and Love Conquers All.\
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19It also harkens back to ''Literature/TheSilmarillion'' when Thingol tasked Beren with retrieving a Silmaril from Morgoth's crown before allowing him to marry Lúthien (a task that Sam Gamgee openly recognizes as 'a darker danger' than their quest). Since Aragorn and Arwen are both descendants of Beren and Lúthien it seems appropriate; at least to Elrond. According to the appendices, Elrond was being GenreSavvy and deliberately invoking the trope: he realised that they were fated to be together like Beren and Lúthien, and would accomplish whatever task he set, so he set a task which would solve the great problems the world was facing at the time.
20* PartyOfRepresentatives: Invoked at the Council of Elrond which calls for the Fellowship of the Ring to be composed of representatives from all free peoples of Middle-Earth.
21* PassThePopcorn: The Riders of Rohan all laugh at the show when Gimli, Aragorn, and Legolas express their outrage on finding Merry and Pippin "feasting and smoking" at the ruins of Isengard.
22* PassingTheTorch: Bilbo to Frodo, although not without one last attempt by the elder Mr. Baggins to join the new adventure.
23* ThePasswordIsAlwaysSwordfish: The password to open the doors of Khazad-dum was ''written on the doors themselves''. {{Justified|Trope}} in that it wasn't intended to be a password in that sense, since the Elves of Hollin and the Dwarves of Khazad-dum were close allies.
24* PastVictimShowcase: What the Mouth of Sauron hints at when he [[spoiler:shows Frodo's mithril shirt, his elven cloak, and Sam's sword (which Sam had switched with him when he presumed the other hobbit dead) to the Captains of the West at the Black Gate.]]
25* PetTheDog: Gollum has a rare moment of humanity when he catches Frodo and Sam [[SleepCute asleep]] on the stairs of Cirith Ungol. He even attempts to pet Frodo's knee. Unfortunately, the moment doesn't last.
26%%* PeacefulInDeath:
27%%** Boromir, contrasted with his desperate last fight.
28%%** Subverted in the Dead Marshes.
29* PerpetualMotionMonster: The ringwraiths, the Watcher in the Water.
30* PersonalizedPledge: At one point, Gollum makes a promise and wants to swear on "the precious" (the One Ring). Frodo allows him to swear ''by'' "the precious", but not ''on'' it.
31* PhosphorEssence: As Frodo succumbs to the Nazgûl blade, he perceives Glorfindel as "a shining figure of white light". Sam notes that, at times, it seems as if a light is shining through Frodo.
32%%* PhysicalReligion: The Valar.
33* {{Pirates}}: The Corsairs of Umbar live across the sea south of Gondor and attack ships in the vicinity. ("Corsair" was a historical name given to Barbary pirates in the Mediterranean in real life, who may be the inspiration for them.)
34* PlayingPossum: A handful of Uruk-hai pretend to be dead during the Battle of Helm's Deep and spring up to ambush Éomer. Unfortunately, they didn't realize that killing orcs is the way that Gimli cures his sleepiness.
35* PlayingWithFire:
36** Gandalf, servant of the Secret Fire and wielder of the Flame of Anor (which may or may not have to do with [[spoiler:the Flame Imperishable/Holy Spirit]] and [[spoiler:Narya, the Elven Ring "red as fire"]], respectively). However, he needs wood to sustain a fire, as he cannot burn snow.
37** In the battle that cost him the Ring, Sauron's body was described as blackened from the immense heat he gave off and even set people who got too close to him on fire.
38* PleaseWakeUp: Sam is left sobbing and desperately shaking his master from sleep after said master is stung by the venom of an eldritch arachnid. After some time, he mistakes sleep for death and leaves him to be taken by Orcs.
39* {{Plunder}}: After the Ents destroy Orthanc, Merry and Pippin collect a fine meal and pipeweed for themselves from the wreckage.
40%%* {{Pluralses}}: Gollum speaks like this all the time.
41* PointOfDivergence: In the appendices, Gandalf says how things might have been, if Smaug the dragon had not been killed in ''Literature/TheHobbit'':
42--> Think of what might have been. Dragon fire and savage swords in Eriador, night in Rivendell. There might be no Queen in Gondor. We might now hope to return from the victory here only to ruin and ash. But that has been averted - because I met Thorin Oakenshield one evening on the edge of spring in Bree. A chance-meeting, as we say in Middle-earth
43* PointsOfLightSetting: By the time of the War of the Ring, millennia of war and social decline have left Middle-Earth in this state.
44** The elves and dwarves are {{Dying Race}}s, the former restricted to four city-states often little more than fortified households and the latter a VestigialEmpire clinging on to life in a handful of far-flung outposts after the center of their civilization was lost to orcs, dragons, and worse.
45** The human kingdoms have been in decline for centuries or more, with the northern land of Eriador so completely destroyed by civil war and a great plague that the western Middle-Earth is almost totally devoid of human life, with only ruins and haunted cairnlands marking the old kingdoms' extent.
46** Outside of pockets of civilization and a couple of dying kingdoms, Middle-Earth consists of miles and miles of empty lands, dark forests where no one dares to go, ruined dwarf-cities crawling with monsters and lands ruled by orcs and human barbarians hostile to all outsiders.
47** The remaining holdouts of civilization are often highly isolated and superstitious -- the hobbits have little to no knowledge of anything outside the Shire, for instance, while the Rohirrim have come to regard the elves of Lothlórien, one of the greatest remaining bastions of good, as malevolent fey ruled by a dangerous witch.
48* PoisonedWeapons: The Witch-King stabs Frodo with a Morgul-blade. If Elrond hadn't cured him, the poison of the blade would have turned him into a wraith. It's also mentioned in the books that orcs sometimes put poison on their blades.
49* PokeInTheThirdEye:
50** ''The Fellowship of the Ring''. When Frodo sits in the seat at the top of Amon Hen while wearing the One Ring, he sees many things with the seat's scrying ability, including Sauron's dark tower. Unfortunately Sauron detects him, and sends his will to locate him. Frodo barely manages to take off the Ring in time and Sauron's attack (in the form of a black shadowy arm) misses him.
51** [=LotR=]'s "fancy crystal balls" are called Palantíri, and the problem with using them is that Sauron possesses one and can turn his will against anyone who tries using the others, with varying results:
52*** Saruman is corrupted in a distinctly MoreThanMindControl fashion, swearing allegiance to Sauron but [[TheStarscream plotting to betray him and become the Dark Lord in his place.]]
53*** Pippin gets away with nothing more than a terrible fright, but only because Sauron believes Saruman will send Pippin to him and is saving the real horror for an in-person interrogation.
54*** Aragorn is (barely) strong enough to resist, and actually manages to wrest control of the palantír away from Sauron, but he is visibly shaken from the effort afterward. It goes both ways: the experience unnerves Sauron enough to accelerate his timetable.
55*** Sauron is unable to corrupt Denethor to evil the way he does Saruman, but by forcing him to see only the might of Sauron's armies, drives him to despair and ultimately madness.
56* PortalStatuePairs:
57** The Argonath, also known as the Gate of Kings or the Pillars of the Kings, was a landmark on the northern edge of Gondor in representing two of the earliest kings of Gondor.
58** The Two Watchers of Cirith Ungol are [[OurGargoylesRock grotesque, three-headed statues]] that flank the gate to the [[EvilTowerOfOminousness corrupted tower of Cirith Ungol]]. They're haunted by phantoms that [[AvoidThisAreaEffect repel trespassers]] with the force of their will and raise the alarm if anyone gets through.
59* PossessionImpliesMastery: Subverted. About the only thing you get through mere possession of a great ring is invisibility. It may not even be possible for most ordinary beings to master. When Frodo wonders why he can't use the One to see the nineteen lesser Rings, Galadriel cautions him not to try.
60* PostClimaxConfrontation: The One Ring has been destroyed along with Sauron and the armies of Mordor, Aragorn has been crowned the king of Gondor, and the members of the Fellowship have separated to return to their homelands. When the hobbits return to The Shire, however, they discover it has been taken control of by Saruman, and they have to fight one last battle against him.
61* PostVictoryCollapse: Merry and Éowyn after defeating the Witch-King, Sam after defeating Shelob, and Frodo and Sam when they finally achieve their goal (though they do manage to make it down the mountain first).
62* PowderGag: Will Whitfoot, mayor of Michel Delving and the fattest hobbit in the Shire, is caught in the collapse of the Town Hole and emerges covered in chalk, thus earning the nickname "Flourdumpling". It happens off-screen --er, off-page-- but still, there you are.
63* ThePowerOfFriendship: A very strong theme, especially that between Sam and Frodo. The clash between TheCorruption and ThePowerOfFriendship is central to Gollum's arc... and to Frodo's.
64%%* PragmaticVillainy: Uglúk, to some extent Sauron.
65%%--> '''Grishnakh:''' Why else do you think you've been kept alive? It's not out of ''kindness...''
66%%--> '''Merry:''' I find that very easy to believe.
67* PreemptiveDeclaration: Gandalf says "Saruman, your staff is broken", and the staff is split asunder.
68* PreInsanityReveal: Gollum is a prime example. Originally a hobbit named Sméagol, he was corrupted mentally and physically by the Ring by the time Bilbo meets him in The Hobbit.
69* ProducePelting: When Bill Ferny insults Strider and the hobbits as they walk out of Bree, Sam whirls on him and smacks him in the nose with an apple (which he regrets afterward, because it was a good apple).
70* ProhibitedHeroSavesTheDay: A major overarching theme. The hobbits are frequently encouraged to return to the Shire and let others take responsibility for the Ring, especially Pippin, the youngest of the group. All four of them prove to be vital to the quest in different ways. The same goes for Eowyn. As the highest-ranking female in Rohan, she's left behind to take care of Edoras while the men march to war, but comes along in disguise and manages to defeat the Witch-King, who could not have been beaten by a man.
71* PromotionNotPunishment: During the siege of Minas Tirith, Beregond deserted his post and killed the porter with the keys to the Silent Street, as well as two members of the Guard. However, he only did this to protect Faramir from a premature funeral pyre, and only slew the others because [[PoorCommunicationKills they would not listen to him]] and attempted to kill him first. After the crowning of King Elessar, Beregond is brought before the new King. King Elessar spares him from execution because of the circumstances, but discharges Beregond from the Guard and orders him out of Minas Tirith... so that he may be reassigned to Faramir's newly-formed personal Guard in Ithilien as its captain.
72* ProphecyTwist: The Witch-King feels confident of his complete safety on the battlefield due to a prophecy stating he cannot be felled by any man. Then he runs into a halfling and a warrior woman on the field of battle.
73* PropheticFallacy:
74** Denethor sees the coming of the Black Fleet in the Palantír, and loses hope for Gondor defending itself against the onslaught from Mordor. Aragorn saw the same and went on to commandeer said ships, fill them with the now-unoccupied soldiers from southern Gondor, and helps turning the tide in Gondor's favor.
75** The Palantír does this a lot. Among other things, it also tricks Sauron into attacking Aragorn.
76** It's heavily implied that the Palantír also shows Denethor that [[spoiler:Frodo is imprisoned in the tower of Cirith Ungol]], leading him to believe that [[spoiler:the Enemy has the Ring]]. He doesn't realize that [[spoiler:Sam had taken the Ring, and is still free]].
77** Even the elves get in on this. Glorfindel foresees that the Witch-King will fall "[[NoManOfWomanBorn not by the hand of man]]," without mentioning that he will fall by the hands of a woman and a hobbit.
78** WordOfGod claimed that the last was inspired by Theatre/{{Macbeth}}: Tolkien always thought that the quibble about Macduff not being "a man of woman born" was too inelegant, and it would have been much more satisfying if Macbeth had simply been killed by a woman. Similarly, the Last March of the Ents comes from Tolkien's disappointment that Birnham Wood didn't ''literally'' march on Macbeth's castle.
79* ProudWarriorRaceGuy:
80** Merry and Pippin are downplayed examples. Tooks and Brandybucks have a reputation among other Hobbits for being more adventurous and warlike as Hobbit clans go, but Merry and Pippin just act like Hobbits. At least at first. Later both kind of [[GoingNative go native]] and become something like [[{{Swashbuckler}} Hobbit Swashbucklers]].
81** The Rohirrim are a nation of barbarian warriors in the mold of Migration-era Germanic tribesmen like the Geats in ''Literature/{{Beowulf}}''.
82** The Uruk-hai (pardon, the ''fighting Uruk-hai'') boast about their battle prowess and ability to withstand sunlight. Their contrast with the Misty Mountain orcs couldn't be stronger.
83* AProtagonistShallLeadThem: Aragorn is a counterexample: he's not the protagonist (Frodo is); he's the SupportingLeader.
84* PsychicDreamsForEveryone: Boromir's and Faramir's recurring dream about Isildur's bane that prompts Boromir to go to Rivendell. Frodo also sees Gandalf's escape from Orthanc in a dream, though he doesn't understand what he saw until he hears Gandalf's story later.
85* PsychicPowers: At the time the books were written, 'psychic' powers [[UnbuiltTrope weren't indissolubly linked to sci-fi yet.]] Elves and Istari show various abilities. Aragorn, unsurprisingly, is TheAce in this area too: he foretells the future accurately several times, demonstrates supernatural healing abilities, and has the necessary mental strength to wrest the ''palantir'' from Sauron's control. Some instances, such as silencing the Mouth of Sauron, are more questionable.
86* ThePuppetCutsHisStrings: Played straight with old king Théoden of Rohan. He is made a puppet by his advisor Gríma (who answers to Saruman, who is himself in league with Sauron), mainly through applied psychology. Then Gandalf arrives and shows him the evil of Gríma and how to be once again a great, proud, and noble king.
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90* TheQuest: Frodo's quest is a double subversion. So much so, it might called an ''Anti Quest''.
91* QuestToTheWest: The story inverts this as the heroes journey east and then south. Probably symbolic of the fact that they, in contrast to the vast majority of epic stories, set out to ''get rid of'' something rather than to ''find'' something. At the very end of the book though [[spoiler:most of the characters do in fact travel all the way west - to either spend the rest of their eternal life there, or to die there]].
92* RaceNameBasis: Most likely the TropeCodifier.
93* RagsToRoyalty: Aragorn, sort of. He was already the leader of the remaining Dúnedain in the north, but they collectively appeared to be this to most other humans. Among the elves, however, he and his people still had fairly high status. And when his father died early in his life, he was taken in and raised by one of the most important elven leaders still in Middle-Earth.
94* RankScalesWithAsskicking:
95** Théoden is King of Rohan and pretty handy with a sword as well, Aragorn is Chieftain of the Dúnedain and [[spoiler:King of Gondor]] and hacks his way through a whole mess of orcs and Uruk-hai.
96** Gil-Galad. Last High King of the Elves, was described as an unmatched fighter/leader and [[TakingYouWithMe died taking Sauron with him]] (who may have been barely weaker than Morgoth at the time).
97** In Gondor, being king denotes military leadership as well as political; [[LikeFatherLikeSon Elendil and Isildur]] are both on the battlefield in the Battle of the Last Alliance, with the former dying in combat and the latter defeating Sauron.
98** Tolkien's works are generally rife with this trope - as is most High Fantasy. The Silmarillion provides further examples from Tolkien's world.
99* RansackedRoom: Happens to Frodo's house in Crickhollow after he leaves, as well as the Hobbits' abandoned room in the Prancing Pony.
100* RavenHairIvorySkin:
101** Luthien in the backstory and Arwen in the main story.
102** Prince Imrahil of Dol Amroth has dark hair, pale skin, and is beautiful enough that people speculate he has elven ancestry.
103* RayOfHopeEnding: Although Frodo and Sam are parted at the end of the book, the appendices imply there is a chance they will be reunited one day in the West.
104* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld:
105** Aragorn is 87 and still going strong, Gandalf is about two thousand years old in his current form. As the Maia Olórin he existed before Middle-Earth was created.
106** Every last named elf is this as well, with Círdan being the oldest of all elves that haven't set sail to Valinor. (It's probably relevant that Círdan is the only Elf in the entire story who's explicitly stated to have grown a beard, let alone a ''long white'' beard.)
107* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: It takes Gandalf some ingenuity to restore Théoden's past judgement, but after Gandalf succeeds the King of Rohan is one of the main assets to the Free Peoples. Gandalf tries later to talk sense into Denethor, this time to no avail.
108* RecurringDreams: Faramir, twice. One of these is based on the 'great wave' dream that both Tolkien and his son Michael had.
109* RedEyesTakeWarning: Sauron's symbol is a red eye on black, and the Mûmak (giant elephant) in ''The Two Towers'' has raging small red eyes.
110* RedPillBluePill: Frodo is given the choice to unburden himself of the Ring and its mission several times throughout the story, but he never chooses to return to normalcy.
111* RedRightHand:
112** There are only four fingers on the [[DarkIsEvil Black Hand]], but [[TakeOurWordForIt they are enough]]. [-([[ComicallyMissingThePoint especially with today's prosthetics]].)-]
113** Lotho Sackville-Baggins' acne.
114* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Boromir dies trying to defend Merry and Pippin from capture, after his attempt to seize the Ring sends Frodo fleeing and the rest of the Fellowship runs hither and yon trying to find him.
115* ReforgedBlade: Narsil, sword of Elendil, which was shattered - but the hilt-shard cut The One Ring from the finger of Sauron, thus winning the war. Much later, they were reforged for Aragorn's use and renamed Andúril. He never does anything 'special' with the sword, but since it serves as a symbol of his status as the Returned King, and since the reforging was part of a series of prophesied events leading up to the final fall of Sauron, it qualifies as a SwordOfPlotAdvancement.
116* RefugeInTheWest: The Undying Lands, to which the Elves, Gandalf and the Ring-Bearers eventually retreated, were across the sea to the west.
117* RefusedByTheCall: A 128-year-old Bilbo Baggins is the first to offer himself as Ringbearer for the Quest of Mount Doom, but is gently refused by Gandalf and Elrond as too old and too vulnerable to the Ring.
118* RegentForLife: Denethor. Though he actually has a good precedent for not accepting Aragorn's claim -- especially since he has reason to believe Aragorn won't act in Gondor's best interest -- and we don't know what he would have actually done had he not been DrivenToSuicide. So it's certainly not a clear-cut example.
119* RejectionRitual: Gandalf the White casting Saruman out of the order of wizards, culminating in the breaking of Saruman's staff.
120* ReluctantGift: The One Ring has this effect on its bearers, to the point that few will give it up willingly. Most notably, Bilbo Baggins has to be prompted into giving it up when Gandalf tells him, "The Ring is still in your pocket."
121* TheRemnant: Saruman qualifies in a round-about sense, in that he is a former "EvilOverlord", but reduced to a pathetically small scale after his armies are routed and he is cast out from Isengard. [[spoiler:He spends the remainder of the book running the Shire into the ground, turning into a sort of bandit leader with a mob of "ruffians". He gets his throat cut by his much-abused servant at the end.]]
122* RepeatAfterMe: A very rare ''dramatic'' usage. After being visited by Sauron through the palantír, Pippin in his terror repeats -- as well as he can -- the exact words of Sauron's intended message for Saruman:
123-->'''Sauron, to Pippin:''' Tell Saruman that this dainty is not for him. I will send for it at once. Do you understand? Say just that!
124-->'''Pippin, to Gandalf:''' It is not for you, Saruman! I will send for it at once. Do you understand? Say just that!
125* ResolvedNoodleIncident: Sauron was briefly alluded to in ''Literature/TheHobbit.''
126* RhymingWithItself: One of the parts of Sam's Oliphaunt poem rhymes "Me" with itself, but it's worth noting the poem is more whimsical than most others throughout the story. Also, in this case it's only half of a two-syllable rhyme:
127--> If ever you'd met me / You wouldn't forget me.
128* RiddleForTheAges: Early on Sam passes along a second-hand report about an Ent-like creature roaming the northern fringes of the Shire, but no further information is ever forthcoming.
129* RidiculouslyDifficultRoute: Oh so many. Here are a few:
130** Passing over (Caradhras)/under (Moria) the Misty Mountains was this trope for the Fellowship.
131** Frodo and Sam have to get into Mordor. How? By climbing up hundreds of "stairs" on an almost vertical mountain and crawling through a giant spider's lair. Because they obviously can't use the front gate.
132** Aragorn has to go through the ghost-infested mountains that no-one has ever returned from before. Though perhaps in this case the trope is not entirely played straight since he went in there to ''gain the alliance'' of said ghosts...
133* RightInFrontOfMe: When the hobbits are accosted by some of the ruffians in Bywater, Frodo warns them that the King of Gondor has returned and that his messengers will soon be traveling the roads to set things right. The lead ruffian scoffs at him.
134-->'''Ruffian''': “Kings messengers!” That for them! [[TemptingFate When I see one, I’ll take notice, perhaps!]]\
135[''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.'']\
136'''Pippin''': [[ActuallyIAmHim I AM a messenger of the king.]] 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’ll set this troll’s bane in you!
137* RightUnderTheirNoses: Sauron would never expect something so small to sneak right past him!
138%%* RiverOfInsanity: The voyage down the Anduin.
139* RobeAndWizardHat: Gandalf.
140* RoaringRampageOfRevenge
141** The Ents reducing Isengard to a shattered ruin.
142** The Rohirrim avenging Théoden's death on the Pelennor Fields.
143* RousingSpeech: Given by Aragorn at the Stone of Erech and Théoden before the Battle of the Pelennor Fields, then subverted by Éomer during the same battle; after he finds [[spoiler:his sister Éowyn, apparently dead]], he just shouts, "Death, death, death! Death take us all!" and leads the Rohirrim in a [[SuicideMission reckless charge]]. When the charge falters, ''then'' he gives a speech... about how hope is lost and they're going to go down fighting. [[note]]Both parts were given to Théoden in [[Film/TheLordOfTheRings the movies]], some at Helm's Deep and some in his "Let's All Go And Get Killed" speech.[[/note]]
144* RoyalBlood: Flows in Aragorn's veins and is rather important.
145* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething:
146** Aragorn again, as well as Théoden, Théodred, Éomer and Éowyn. Legolas and Imrahil are princes, and Boromir and Faramir are sons of the Ruling Steward, Denethor (whose ancestors were hereditary stewards even when there was still a king in Gondor). Merry and Pippin are eldest sons of the rulers of Buckland and the Shire, respectively.
147** The same goes for Brand (King of Dale) and Dáin II Ironfoot (King Under the Mountain), whose deeds are mentioned only in the appendices.
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