The Departure of Boromir: Difference between revisions
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'''The Departure of Boromir''' is the first chapter of the third book in [[The Two Towers]]. | '''The Departure of Boromir''' is the first chapter of the third book in ''[[The Two Towers]]''. | ||
===Summary=== | ===Summary=== | ||
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Aragorn tells Gimli and Legolas that he thinks [[Frodo Baggins|Frodo]] and [[Samwise Gamgee|Sam]] have gone alone to [[Mordor]] and that they themselves should follow the Orcs and not Frodo. So saying, these adventurers continue on their journey, traveling in search of their missing companions. | Aragorn tells Gimli and Legolas that he thinks [[Frodo Baggins|Frodo]] and [[Samwise Gamgee|Sam]] have gone alone to [[Mordor]] and that they themselves should follow the Orcs and not Frodo. So saying, these adventurers continue on their journey, traveling in search of their missing companions. | ||
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[[fi:Boromirin lähtö (TSH)]] | [[fi:Boromirin lähtö (TSH)]] |
Revision as of 10:41, 26 May 2015
The Two Towers chapters |
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Book III |
Book IV |
The Departure of Boromir is the first chapter of the third book in The Two Towers.
Summary
The camp having been attacked by Uruk-hai in The Fellowship of the Ring, Aragorn finds Boromir mortally wounded. Before Boromir dies, he tells Aragorn that the Orcs have carried off the other Hobbits. The remaining members of the party (Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli) search through the bodies of dead Orcs and find many weapons, as well as the blades of Merry and Pippin. Because they do not have time to bury him or build a cairn, they put Boromir's body on a raft and set it out to sail, Legolas and Aragorn singing a beautiful Lament for Boromir, taking the voices of three of the winds.
Aragorn tells Gimli and Legolas that he thinks Frodo and Sam have gone alone to Mordor and that they themselves should follow the Orcs and not Frodo. So saying, these adventurers continue on their journey, traveling in search of their missing companions.