Frodo failed, he could not destroy the ring, it took control of him and he claimed ownership of it (attracting Sauron's attention). It took Gollum biting off Frodo's ring finger and falling into the "Cracks of Doom" to destroy the One Ring.
60 years
They decide to take the ring to Mordor to destroy it. Boromir wants to take the ring to Gondor so that it can be used as a great weapon. He is out voted but wishes for Aragorn to come to Gondor because of a dream he had.
The Two Towers in the second book in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. It follows the breaking up of the fellowship of the ring and the different members take on different roles. For example, Frodo and Sam continue to try and take the ring to Mordor.
At the end of the "the Hobbit" Bilbo leaves a note with the ring attached to it, saying that he plans to go traveling. At the beginning of "fellowship of the ring" Gandalf tells frodo to take the ring to Mordor and destroy it in the fires of the volcano. Bilbo does have a few minor parts in the later books but he is an old hobbit.
In the Lord of the Rings series Frodo Baggins of the Shire is the main character known as the "ring bearer." His job is to take the ring of Power and throw it into the fiery pits of Mordor where the ring was created to destroy it since there is no other way to destroy it. But he must face many dangers with his eight companions known as the Fellowship of the Ring (First book title) and together they must cross the land unspotted, but the ring is so powerful that it can control people by the will of Sauron its creator. Sauron who was killed but not destroyed by Isildur the son of the king had become the great eye in Mordor, and If the ring was retrieved then all hope would be lost because he would gain his physical form and rule the earth by destroying everything with his vicious army's of orcs. Frodo must not fail in his quest with his 8 companions that help him, but, as the ring grows stronger, as well as the army's of Mordor the Fellowship grows weaker and begins to break apart... I'm reading the books now they are pretty good, but I suggest reading "The Hobbit" first then you go before and see how the ring came to the shire in the first place, and then read "The Lord of the Rings" series. Hope you like them!
They agree to take a force into Mordor to challenge Sauron. The intent was to give Frodo more time and less scrutiny.
The book would most definitely be The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. The setting of Mordor only appears in Return of the King. In book four of the Two Towers Sam gets a glimpse into Mordor, but actually is only just outside Shelob's Lair, as he cannot get past the gate. However, half of the sixth book is spent in Mordor. The Akallebeth in The Silmarilliondoes have events that take place in Mordor, but as the amount of information is so huge Tolkien never described in detail the landscape and setting of Mordor, ruling out this possibility.
They decide to take the ring to Mordor to destroy it. Boromir wants to take the ring to Gondor so that it can be used as a great weapon. He is out voted but wishes for Aragorn to come to Gondor because of a dream he had.
The Two Towers in the second book in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. It follows the breaking up of the fellowship of the ring and the different members take on different roles. For example, Frodo and Sam continue to try and take the ring to Mordor.
Depending on where you bought the ring and their return policy you should be able to return an engagement ring if you were not happy with it or if things didn't go as you would have liked with the engagement.
The ring has a consciousness of its own. The ring knew that Frodo was going to take it to be destroyed, whereas the one ring abandoned Gollum as it knew that Gollum would never return it to Sauron. The ring used Bilbo as a carrier or a vector.
How long does it take a bank to return a check
At the end of the "the Hobbit" Bilbo leaves a note with the ring attached to it, saying that he plans to go traveling. At the beginning of "fellowship of the ring" Gandalf tells frodo to take the ring to Mordor and destroy it in the fires of the volcano. Bilbo does have a few minor parts in the later books but he is an old hobbit.
313131313131
It depends
It is located down south with nana G. This means that you must take the wise wizards long sleeve of passageway to mordor and take their land. So yeah lulla hub.
a long time
Along time!