Description of Legolas
by
Varda-(Valar)
October 30, 2004
(in progress, latest update August 1, 2009)
Elves
Legolas
of the Fellowship
Lived during the Third and Fourth Ages
Place in Society
Equipment, Clothing
Appearance
Age
Eyesight
Hearing natural things
Language
Making fire
Snow, cold, running lightly
Archery
Tree-climbing
Dwarves
Sea-longing
Rivendell
Moria
Lothlorien
Place
in Society:
Legolas is a prince of Mirkwood. He is also expected
to act as a messenger (diplomat?) and guard (leader?).
"There was also a
strange Elf clad in green and
brown. Legolas, a messenger from his father, Thranduil, the King of the
Elves of Northern Mirkwood."
At the Council, Legolas describes the guarding of
Gollum and reports the escape.
At the Council, he is chosen to represent the
Elves in the Fellowship, although many powerful Rivendell elves are
available.
(Fellowship,
"Council of Elrond")
After the War of the Ring, Legolas "brought south
Elves out of Greenwood, and they dwelt in Ithilien, and it became once
again the fairest country in all the westlands."
(Return of
the King, Appendix A)
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Equipment,
Clothing:
Legolas enters Rivendell clad in green and
brown. (Fellowship:
"Council of Elrond")
He leaves Rivendell equipped with a bow and
quiver, a long white knife at his belt. As were all the Fellowship,
Elrond supplied him with thick, warm clothes, jacket and cloak lined
with fur, plus spare food, clothes, blankets and other needs. Sam's
pony, Bill, carried everyone's spare supplies. Later, Frodo notices
that Legolas always wears light shoes, even in snow, and leaves little
imprint. (Fellowship:
"The Ring Goes South")
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Appearance:
His face is fairer than that of Men.
Contrast with Gimli the Dwarf in Gondor:
Together the Elf and
the Dwarf entered Minas Tirith, and folk that saw them pass marveled to
see such companions; for Legolas was fair of face beyond the measure of
Men, and he sang an elven-song in a clear voice as he walked in the
morning; but Gimli stalked beside him, stroking his beard and staring
about him.
- Return of the King,
"The Last Debate"
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Age:
His date of birth is never stated. His approximate
age may only be worked out through clues in the text, but we know he is
considered young for an elf of his time.
The three hunters arrive at Fangorn Forest and
Legolas senses much about it, including its age leading him to comment
on how old it is next to them.
"It is old, very old," said the Elf.
"So old that almost I feel young again, as I have not felt since I
journeyed with you children."
-Two Towers, "The White Rider", p. 480
This suggests that Legolas was considered young, at least among the elves, when he joined the Fellowship.
Gandalf and the three hunters arrive at the barrows
of the deceased kings of Rohan, the sires of Theoden, with seven mounds
on the left and nine on the right. Aragorn says,
"Many long lives of men it is since the golden hall was built."
"Five-hundred times have the red
leaves of Mirkwood fallen in Mirkwood in my home since then," said
Legolas, "and but a little while does that seem to us."
-Two Towers, "The King of the Golden Hall", p. 496
Eyesight:
Legolas has keen eyesight.
As they set out, "Legolas
whose eyes were keen was
the rearguard". (Fellowship:
"The Ring Goes South")
As the Lords of the West ride to the Black Gate,
they are watched after the failure of the Enemy's feint with an ambush:
And from that
evening onward the Nazgul came and followed every move of the army.
They still flew high and out of sight of all save Legolas, and yet
their presence could be felt, as a deepening of shadow and a dimming of
the sun; ...."
-Return of the King, "The Black Gate Opens"
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Hearing and understanding natural things:
He can hear the speech of such things as trees,
grass, and stones.
In Hollin/Eregion, Legolas says the Elves of the
land "were of a race strange to us of
the Silvan folk, and the trees
and grass do not now remember them. Only I hear the stones lament
them." And Legolas speaks the words the stones use. (Fellowship: "The Ring Goes
South")
On the ships taken from the Corsairs, the folk were
fearful that they would not reach the Harlond in time to aid Minas
Tirith, as they struggled that day against the current with no help
from the wind, and Gimli said he would have felt miserable, "if Legolas had not laughed suddenly. "Up
with your beard, Durin's son!" he said. "For thus it is spoken: Oft
hope is born, when all is forlorn." But what hope he saw from afar he
would not tell. " By midnight, sailors of Ethir gazing southward
said a fresh wind would be coming. Long before daybreak, they had a
fair wind, and in the new day the sun unveiled. (Return of the King, "The
Last Debate")
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Language:
He uses Westron; Sindarin (Grey-elven) Eastern and
Western dialects.
Since he is a prince and is known in
Rivendell, he is probably well enough educated to at least read the
elven equivalent of Latin, which is Quenya.
With the Fellowship, Legolas speaks educated Westron which is the Common Speech,
shown as English. (Lord of
the Rings)
In Lothlorien, Legolas answers the Lorien guards in
their own language. Frodo could understand little of it "for the speech that the Silvan folk east
of the mountains used among themselves was unlike that of the West."
(Fellowship,
"Lothlorien"). A note below "Of the Elves" referring to this incident
says:
In Lorien at
this period Sindarin was spoken, though with an 'accent', since most of
its folk were of Silvan origin. This 'accent' and his own limited
acquaintance with Sindarin misled Frodo (as is pointed out in The Thain's Book by a commentator
of Gondor. ) All the Elvish words cited in Book I, ii, chs 6, 7,
and 8 are in fact Sindarin, and so are most of the names of places and
persons. But Lorien, Caras Galadhon, Amroth, Nimrodel are probably of Silvan
origin, adapted to Sindarin.
-(Return
of the King, "Appendix F").
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Making
fire:
Legolas is skilled at making fire.
"It passed the
skill of Elf or even Dwarf to strike
a flame that would hold amid the swirling wind or catch in the wet
fuel." This implies that the Elf had notable skill with fire
beyond
Hobbit or Man, although not as great as the Dwarf's or Wizard's, since
Gandalf was successful by using his power. (Fellowship: "The Ring Goes
South")
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Snow, cold, running lightly:
Cold troubles him little.
He can run on top of snow in which humans and even
hobbits sink.
He can run lightly over grass and leaf, much as he
can snow.
After the blizzard on Caradhras: "The storm had
troubled him little, and he alone of the Company remained still light
at heart." Fellowship:
"The Ring Goes South".
He smiles watching the Men struggle through snow up
to their chests, then light-heartedly does reconnaissance for them as
only an Elf can.
Legolas watched them
for a while with a smile upon his lips, and then turned to the others.
"The strongest must seek a way, say you? But I say: let a ploughman
plough, but choose an otter for swimming, and for running light over
grass and leaf, or over snow - an Elf."
With that he sprang forth nimbly, and then Frodo
noticed as if for the first time, though he had long known it, that the
Elf had no boots, but wore only light shoes, as he always did, and his
feet made little imprint in the snow.
"Farewell!" he said to Gandalf. "I go to find the
Sun!" Then swift as a runner over firm sand he shot away, and quickly
overtaking the toiling men, with a wave of his hand he passed them, and
sped into the distance, and vanished around the rocky turn.
Fellowship:
"The Ring Goes South"
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Archery:
Legolas is an excellent archer.
Just before Moria, wargs howl near the Fellowship
which makes a stand on a hill. The warg that seems to be the captain
calls the others and Gandalf speaks defiantly to it, calling it Hound
of Sauron.
"The wolf snarled
and sprang towards them with a
great leap. At that moment there was a sharp twang. Legolas had loosed
his bow. There was a hideous yell, and the leaping shape thudded to the
ground; the elvish arrow had pierced its throat."
The wolves immediately retreat out of sight and make
no more howls. They attack again later suddenly as a group, and
the whole Fellowship fights. The archery is referred to in beautiful
imagery: "The bow of Legolas was
singing." "The last arrow of
Legolas
kindled in the air as it flew, and plunged burning into the heart of a
great wolf-chieftain." The next day, the Fellowship finds no
bodies;
all Legolas' arrows are undamaged save one of which only the point is
left.
(Fellowship: "A Journey in the Dark".)
In Moria in the Chamber of Mazarbul, Legolas shot
two orcs, each through the throat. The Fellowship's fierce defense made
the Orcs retreat, and the group ran before the next attack came with
many more Orcs and with cave trolls.
(Fellowship: "The
Bridge of Khazad-dum")
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Tree-climbing:
Although Legolas is of the ruling Sindarin race in
Mirkwood and son of the king, his grandfather King Oropher wanted to
return to the ways of the Silvan wood elves, so Legolas is very
accomplished in tree-climbing.
Just inside Lothlorien, Aragorn says he wants to
move the Fellowship into the trees for the night.
"I will climb up,"
said Legolas. "I am at home among
trees, by root or bough, though these trees are of a kind strange to
me, save as a name in song. Mellyrn
they are called, and are those that bear the yellow blossom, but I have
never climbed in one. I will see now what is their shape and way of
growth." (...)
He sprang lightly up from the ground and caught a
branch that grew from the trunk high above his head. But even as he
swung there for a moment, a voice spoke suddenly from the tree-shadows
above him.
-Fellowship of the Ring,
"Lothlorien"
He "ran lightly up"
the slender rope ladder sent down by the Lorien elves, contrasted with
Frodo's and Sam's slow going. (Fellowship,
"Lotholorien")
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Dwarves:
Legolas and Dwarves did not get along well
before the Fellowship.
Legolas began to show signs of fellowship
with Gimli even before Lothlorien, such as in the Chamber of Mazarbul.
At the Council of Elrond, Legolas tried to tell
about Gollum, but the Dwarf Gloin interrupts:
"You were less
tender to me," said Gloin with a flash of his eyes, as old memories
were stirred of his imprisonment in the deep places of the Elven-king's
halls..
"Now come!" said Gandalf "Pray do not interrupt, my
good Gloin. That was a regrettable misunderstanding, long set right. If
all the grievances that stand between Elves and Dwarves are to be
brought up here, we may as well abandon this Council."
Gimli rose and bowed, and Legolas continued.
Fellowship:
"Council of Elrond
Before the closed West-door of Moria, Gandalf says,
"Those were happier
days, when there was still close friendship at times between folk of
different race, even between Dwarves and Elves."
"It was not the fault of the Dwarves that the
friendship waned," said Gimli.
"I have not heard that it was the fault of the
Elves," said Legolas.
"I have heard both," said Gandalf, "and I will not
give judgement now. But I beg you two, Legolas and Gimli, at least to
be friends, and to help me. I need you both...."
Fellowship:
"A Journey in the Dark"
The Dwarf and Elf
then try to help
Gandalf find the door, Gimli tapping the stone with his axe; Legolas
pressed against the rock as if listening. (Fellowship: "A Journey in
the Dark")
In the Chamber of Mazarbul, when the Fellowship
needs to run from the
Chamber of Mazarbul, Gimli does not want to leave Balin's tomb, but
Legolas dragged him away. (Fellowship: "The Bridge of
Khazad-dum")
On the ships taken from the Corsairs, the folk were
fearful that they would not reach the Harlond in time to aid Minas
Tirith, as they struggled that day against the current with no help
from the wind, and Gimli said he would have felt miserable, "if Legolas had not laughed suddenly. "Up
with your beard, Durin's son!" he said. "For thus it is spoken: Oft
hope is born, when all is forlorn." But what hope he saw from afar he
would not tell. " By midnight, sailors of Ethir gazing southward
said a fresh wind would be coming. Long before daybreak, they had a
fair wind, and in the new day the sun unveiled. (Return of the King, "The
Last Debate")
Gimli "was named Elf-friend because of the great
love that grew between him and Legolas, son of King Thranduil, and
because of his reverence for the Lady Galadriel."
Return of
the King, "Appendix A"
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Sea-longing:
Legolas is hit by sea-longing, but holds back from
it until the death of Aragorn.
In the hearts of the
Exiles the yearning for the Sea was an unquiet never to be stilled; in
the hearts of the Grey-elves it slumbered, but once awakened it could
not be appeased.
-Return of
the King, "Appendix F"
Galadriel sends a note to Legolas warning him to
beware of the Sea. She is referring to the sea-longing, although he
thinks the warning is of his death:
Legolas Greenleaf, long under tree
In joy thou hast lived. Beware of the Sea!
If thou hearest the cry of the gull on the shore,
Thy heart shall then rest in the forest no more.
-(Two Towers, "The
White Rider".)
After the great battle in Minas Tirith while looking
out over the Anduin River, Legolas warns his friends that he is under
the sea-longing and we are shown a little of why he remains from the
dwarf's and the hobbit's words.
And now Legolas fell
silent, while the others talked, and he looked out against the sun, and
as he gazed he saw white sea-birds beating up the River.
"Look!" he cried. "Gulls! They are flying far
inland. A wonder they are to me and a trouble to my heart. Never in all
my life had I met them, until we came to Pelargir, and there I heard
them crying in the air as we rode to the battle of the ships. Then I
stood still, forgetting war in Middle-earth; for their wailing voices
spoke to me of the Sea. The Sea! Alas! I have not yet beheld it. But
deep in the hearts of all my kindred lies the sea-longing, which it is
perilous to stir. Alas! for the gulls. No peace shall I have again
under beech or under elm."
"Say not so!" said Gimli. "There are countless
things still to see in Middle-earth, and great works to do. But if all
the fair folk take to the Havens, it will be a duller world for those
who are doomed to stay."
"Dull and dreary indeed!" said Merry. "You must not
go to the Havens, Legolas. There will always be some folk big or
little, and even a few wise dwarves like Gimli, who need you."
-Return of
the King, "The Last Debate"
Again as he and Gimli tell the tale of the Paths of
the Dead and Pelargir, Legolas refers to the sea-longing:
"Then I thought in
my heart that we drew near to the Sea; for wide was the water in the
darkness, and sea-birds innumerable cried on its shores. Alas for the
wailing of the gulls! Did not the Lady tell me to beware of them? And
now I cannot forget them."
-Return of
the King, "The Last Debate"
Legolas finally succumbs to the call of the sea, and
we find what held him to the last.
But when King Elessar gave up his life
Legolas followed at last the desire of his heart and sailed over the
Sea.
Return of the King,
"Appendix A"
This is a quoted comparison of the sea-longing of
the Noldor and the Sindar:
In the hearts of the
Exiles the yearning for the Sea was an unquiet never to be stilled; in
the hearts of the Grey-elves it slumbered, but once awakened it could
not be appeased.
Return of the King
"Appendix F" I "Of the Elves"
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Rivendell:
The first mention and description of Legolas comes
as Elrond points him out to Frodo in Fellowship "Council of
Elrond", after introducing Frodo to a large group. Even though other
elves included in this large group are unknown to Frodo, the word
"strange"
is added to the description, as Legolas is not like the Rivendell Elves
or any Frodo has seen before. It also tells us his station in life as a
prince.:
"There was also a strange Elf clad in green and
brown. Legolas, a messenger from his father, Thranduil, the King of the
Elves of Northern Mirkwood."
In the "Council of Elrond", Aragorn refers to the
Mirkwood Elves as "watchful".
Legolas agrees that they are watchful, but
over-kind. They guarded their prisoner, Gollum, night and day, though
wearied of it, but took him outside on days of fair weather since
Gandalf bade them hope for a cure. This set them up for a trap from
outside help during which Gollum escaped. The way he tells the story
does not specifically say he is present, something he does even when we
are sure he is speaking of himself, but his knowledge of details and
feelings strongly suggests he may have been involved in the guarding.
In "The Ring Goes South", both Legolas and Gimli are
willing to go at least to the passes of the mountains and maybe beyond.
Remember, they had not come to Rivendell set for any such journey or
with permission from home, an especially serious matter for the prince
of Mirkwood. Gimli at least had his father present
who agreed to it. In the Fellowship, Legolas represents all Elves and
Gimli all Dwarves.
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Moria:
Only Gimli is pleased by going into Moria; Legolas
is not.
Legolas is "troubled by the mere darkness in itself".
Legolas is willing to set his small bow against orcs
or even cave trolls.
He knows very well what a Balrog is and that
they are overmatched. This is the scarier later version of the Balrog,
not the early version that can be dispatched by a powerful sword. Even
so, he is unwilling to leave Gandalf, same as the others who do not
know better.
"On all the others a dread fell at the mention of
the name [Moria]. Even to the hobbits it was a legend of vague fear."
Only when asked directly by Boromir does Legolas say
his opinion, and states it clearly: "I do not wish to go to Moria." Fellowship: "A Journey in
the Dark".
Inside Moria, while in single file, Legolas is in
the center of the line. The line is: Gandalf, Gimli, Frodo, Sam,
Legolas, the young hobbits, Boromir, and Aragorn. Bill is lost by then.
"Gimli aided Gandalf very little, except by his
stout courage. At least he was not, as were most of the others,
troubled by the mere darkness in itself." Who else is not afraid? In
the next paragraph, Aragorn tells the others not to be afraid as they
can trust Gandalf. Frodo discovers that thanks to the morgul-knife
wound and the Ring, he can see better in the dark than anyone other
than Gandalf.
Everyone takes watch in Moria, including Legolas.
(Fellowship: "A Journey in the Dark".)
Orcs shoot arrows at the Fellowship as the group
starts to cross the bridge, 50 feet long curving over fire and very
narrow with no railings. An arrow bounces off Frodo's mithril coat and
another sticks in Gandalf's hat. Gandalf and the two Men have not yet
crossed.
"Legolas turned and
set an arrow to the string, though it was a long shot for his small
bow. He drew, but his hand fell, and the arrow slipped to the ground.
He gave a cry of dismay and fear....But it was not the trolls that had
filled the Elf with terror.... "Ai, ai!" wailed Legolas. "A Balrog! A
Balrog is come!"
Gimli stared with wide eyes. "Durin's Bane!" he
cried, and letting his axe fall he covered his face.
"A Balrog," muttered Gandalf. "Now I understand." He
faltered and leaned heavily on his staff. "What an evil fortune! And I
am already weary....Fly! This is a foe beyond any of you...."
Aragorn and Boromir did not heed the command, but
still held their ground, side by side, behind Gandalf at the far end of
the bridge. The others halted just within the doorway at the hall's
end, and turned, unable to leave their leader to face their enemy alone.
Fellowship:
"The Bridge of Khazad-dum"
The Fellowship escaped out of bowshot.
"Grief at last wholly overcame them, and they wept
long: some standing and silent, some cast upon the ground."
(Fellowship: "The Bridge of Khazad-dum".)
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Lothlorien:
Legolas has never been to Lothlorien before joining
the Fellowship.
He can sing.
He has an accent noticeably different from a Lorien
elf's, but he can speak their language.
Rope-bridge use.
Legolas saw Lothlorien from a distance and told of
some things he knew from songs in Mirkwood, not personal experience.
Just outside the forest of Lothlorien, Legolas said:
"It is long since
any of my own folk journeyed hither back to the land whence we wandered
in ages long ago," said Legolas, "but we hear that Lorien is not yet
deserted, for there is a secret power here that holds evil from the
land. Nevertheless its folk are seldom seen, and maybe they dwell now
deep in the woods and far from the northern border."
"Indeed deep in the wood they dwell," said Aragorn,
and sighed as if some memory stirred in him.
Fellowship:
"Lothlorien"
The Fellowship comes to the Nimrodel, a stream, but
the bridge is broken. Legolas tells them that the water is not deep
and heals weariness. He asks them to follow as he wades across. It is
clear
and cold, cleaning and removing weariness as he said. They camp and
eat, and
Legolas sings them a part of the song of the elf-maiden, Nimrodel,
whose voice they seem to hear in the waterfall.
The company continues a little farther into the
woods and Aragorn wants to take refuge in the trees. Legolas leaps up
and catches a branch high above his head, but is warned off by Lorien
elves
and drops back and warns the Fellowship. The border guards had let the
group cross the river because they heard
Legolas' voice and song and recognized it as a Northern Elf's. He
speaks to them in their language, a dialect of Sindarin, which Frodo
cannot follow. Traveled Haldir speaks Westron slowly, and his brothers,
Rumil and Orophin, can speak a few words.
Haldir tells why Lorien and Mirkwood elves are
strangers to each other, while explaining why the Common Speech is not
better known: "We seldom use any
tongue but our own; for we dwell now in the heart of the forest, and do
not willingly have dealings with any other folk. Even our own kindred
in the North are sundered from us. But there are some of us who still
go abroad for the gathering of news and the watching of our enemies,
and they speak the languages of other lands. I am one."
Haldir seems to trust Legolas the
most, questioning him in his own language, rather than asking the
others.
Since it is time to sleep and because the guards
expect orcs to
follow the Fellowship, Haldir puts the responsibility for the
non-hobbits of the Fellowship's behavior on Legolas and is not giving
Legolas a chance to sleep:
"There is another
talan in the next
tree. 'There the others must take refuge. You, Legolas, must answer to
us for them. Call us, if anything is amiss! And have an eye on that
dwarf!"
-Fellowship,
"Lothlorien"
The following orcs, about a hundred, are killed by
reinforcements from Lothlorien, Gollum is frightened away by Haldir's
touch on the tree-trunk.
The next morning Haldir leads the Fellowship to a
stream called the
Celebrant, where they meet a young elf with hair that "glinted like
gold in the morning sun". Haldir tosses one end of his rope to the elf
who caught it. Both ends are tied to trees, and this is how they make
bridges because these are "days of watchfulness". He runs lightly over
and back as if he is on a road. Legolas could do that too, but feels
concern for the others who can not and asks if they are expected to
swim. Haldir rigs two more ropes for handholds.
Crossing the Celebrant brings them to the Naith, or
Gore, where Galadriel's ring begins its effect becoming stronger the
deeper they go. But they can go no further until the Dwarf is
blindfolded, but Gimli objects unless Legolas is blindfolded too. When
Legolas objects,
being a kinsman and because he very much wants to see the new mallorn
wood, Aragorn has the entire Fellowship blindfolded. They walk all
day and into noon of the next, when a group of elf warriors pass,
stopping to speak wth Haldir. They bring news that most of the orcs are
dead, the rest are being pursued and will be dead soon, and news of
a creature (what the Fellowship knew was Gollum) fleeing down the
Silverlode
southward. Also they bring news from the Lord and Lady to take off
the blindfolds. Their first view is Cerin Amroth and the mound of
Amroth.
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