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Sword of
Bilbo Baggins.
Sting was actually a long knife that made the
perfect Hobbit-sized sword. Bilbo found it in
2941 in the
Troll-hoard
of Bert, Tom and William, where the swords
Glamdring
and
Orcrist
were also found. These three blades were made by
the Elves in Gondolin in the First Age.
A
special property of the blades was that they
glowed with a blue light when Orcs were near.
Bilbo used the faint light from the sword to
make his way through the tunnels of the
Misty Mountains
after he was separated from his Dwarf
companions. He encountered the creature
Gollum
and considered using the sword to kill him but
decided to spare him out of pity.
Bilbo first used his sword to kill the Great
Spiders in
Mirkwood
who captured him and his friends. It was then
that he named the sword Sting.
Somehow
the killing of the giant spider, all alone
by himself in the dark without the help of
the wizard or the dwarves or of anyone else,
made a great difference to Mr. Baggins. He
felt a different person, and much fiercer
and bolder in spite of an empty stomach, as
he wiped his sword on the grass and put it
back into its sheath.
"I will give you a name," he said to it,
"and I shall call you Sting."
The Hobbit: "Flies and Spiders," p.
167
When
he returned home, Bilbo hung Sting over his
mantlepiece. He took it with him when he left
the Shire
in 3001. On December 25, 3018, Bilbo gave the
sword to
Frodo Baggins,
who was about to embark on his quest to destroy
the One Ring.
Frodo first used the sword in
Moria
to stab the foot of a
Cave-troll.
When Gollum attacked Sam Gamgee
in the
Emyn Muil,
Frodo drew Sting and put it to the creature's
throat. But, like Bilbo, Frodo decided to spare
Gollum's life.
In
Shelob's Lair, Frodo drew Sting and the
Phial of Galadriel
and advanced on
Shelob,
causing her to retreat. He used the sword to cut
through the spiderwebs blocking their escape,
but Shelob caught up to Frodo and stung him. Sam
took up Sting in his left hand and cut off one
of Shelob's claws and he put out one of her eyes
with his own sword. He slashed at her abdomen
with Sting, and then, as the creature lowered
her weight onto him, Sam held up Sting and it
pierced her belly, wounding her terribly and
possibly fatally.
Sam
believed Frodo to be dead, and he took Sting
from him along with the Ring intending to
continue the quest alone. When he discovered his
mistake, Sam rescued Frodo from the Tower of
Cirith Ungol. The Orcs mistook Sam, armed with
Sting, for a great Elf-warrior. Frodo then gave
Sting to Sam to keep, saying, "I do not think it
will be my part to strike any blow again." (RotK,
p. 204)
When Sam jettisoned their baggage on the Plain
of Gorgoroth he kept Sting, and the sword was
saved from the destruction of
Mordor
by
Gandalf.
At the
Field of Cormallen,
Frodo was reluctant to wear any sword, and would
have preferred to take the sword that had once
belonged to Sam, but Sam insisted that Frodo
wear Sting for the celebrations. It is likely
that Frodo returned Sting to Sam, to whom he
left all his possessions on leaving
Middle-earth. |