Khamûl, the Lord of Rhûn❤️
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Watch out for the 💜 Nazgurls 💜 Mr Frodo
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(Context, credit, and source below poll.)
Today's poll is based on this thread with notable principles @penny-anna, @elodieunderglass, @elanorpam, and @earhartsease. All of the options above are paraphrased from their original answers.
The full original question:
Can I please ask for your top five theories on why the Ringwraiths become so much more powerful over the course of the LotR trilogy? By the end of the books a single Ringwraith holds an army of 6000 men in paralysing dread from a height of a mile, they're dismaying hosts of men, etc. And in the beginning, they're easily defeated by "jumping behind a tree," "pretending to be in a different room," "getting on a little boat," "man with a stick on fire," etc.
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Journey through the Middle-earth continues:
Nazgul on the East-west Road and Sam's recital under petrified trolls ♡
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even the nazguls learned from thorin's mistakes and stopped to ask directions rather than get lost in the shire 😌😌
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The Nazgul: Khamul and the Witch-king of Angmar. Still alive but worn down by powers they should not have had and very close to becoming wraiths.
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[...] but the sun now climbing toward the South was veiled in the reeks of Mordor, and through a threatening haze it gleamed, remote, a sullen red, as if it were the ending of the day, or the end maybe of all the world of light.
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The Road to Rivendell by Joe Gilronan
As the sun sets low over the misty mountains, the companions make camp. Frodo wounded, sits crouched by the fire; Merry, Pippin and Strider watch on with concern, while Sam busies himself attending Bill the pony. Unnoticed on the distant bridge, a black rider observes the scene with malice, eager to report back to his fellow pursuers.
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