Symbolism In The Hobbit

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The Hobbit
The Hobbit is a fantasy fiction book and the author is Tolkien. The main idea is how the hobbit, a small creature named Bilbo who is the main character, changes throughout the different adventures becoming an unlikely hero. In fact the hobbits themselves symbolize the modern middle class and therefore allow the reader to identify with the hobbits. The following paragraphs will describe the setting, the characterization, the theme and symbolism.
The Hobbit takes place in the land of the Middle Earth. Some of the locations the Hobbit and the Dwarves visit are Shire which contains hobbit villages, the Misty Mountains, the Lonely Mountains, and Mirkwood. The novel is narrated in the third person, almost always from Bilbo’s point …show more content…

He also is fat because he eats 6 meals every day. "There is more in you of good than you know, child of the kindly West, some courage and some wisdom, blended in measure. If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.” Thorin speaks these words in Chapter 18 on page 274 just before he dies asking Bilbo’s forgiveness for his harsh words to him before the Battle of the Five Armies. “Somehow the killing of this giant spider, all alone by himself in the dark . . . 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. This passage from Chapter 8 page shows Bilbo’s reaction to his escape from the giant spider of Mirkwood. There really is no dominant antagonist there are many antagonists like Trolls, Goblins,the Spiders of Mirkwood, the elves, Smaug. If there was one dominant antagonist or enemy I think it would be Smaug because. Smaug as the dragon flies toward Lake Town to wreak vengeance. The people of Lake Town see the dragon coming from a long way off and prepare archers and many buckets of water to douse the coming flames. Their readiness is of little …show more content…

He develops a lot during the book and turns into the hero that Tolkien created. Two examples from the book that support the theme are when he defeats the spiders of Mirkwood his character develops more like being fierce and aggressive also when he saved his friends from the spiders he changed from just worrying about himself into caring about the dwarves and Thorin. Some symbolism is Bilbo naming his short sword Sting after killing the spider it symbolizes his

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