The great eagles came out of the west unlooked for and were a catalyst for victory. "The eagles are coming! The eagles are coming!"
Beorn arrives to do battle with the Wargs and Goblins.
There are many that come to the battle. Beorn is the single person that showed up, wading in to attack the goblins from the rear. And the Eagles returned to force the goblins off the edge of the mountain where they were attempting to flank the others.
Trolls
The eagles.
It was the Battle of Five Armies. The armies were the humans, elves and dwarves against the wargs and the goblins.
The HobbitThe Fellowship of the Ring, Book IThe Fellowship of the Ring, Book IIThe Two Towers, Book IThe Two Towers, Book IIThe Return of the King, Book IThe Return of the King, Book IIThe Silmarillion is another book that Tolkien also set in Middle-earth thousands of years before the first of the Hobbit books, but it is a history of the Elves and does not concern itself with Hobbits (except briefly in its final chapter where it reviews the events of the end of the Third Age from the point of view of the Elves, which differs slightly from the point of view of the Hobbits).
Chapter 17 ('The Clouds Burst') of The Hobbit, covers the Battle of the Five Armies. As is the way of battles, many died, "among the goblin dead lay many men and many dwarves, and many a fair elf that should have lived yet long ages merrily in the wood."Fili and Kili, two of the dwarves in the Company died defending Thorin, their uncle in this battle, though their death was not revealed until Chapter 18. Thorin was mortally wounded in the Battle of the Five Armies, and died shortly after.
The Fellowship of the Ring , The Two Towers and The Return of the King .
The gleam refers to the last rays of sun and the gloom of the losing battle as the eagles swoop down to finish the war once and for all. page 268 the hobbit
It was the Battle of Five Armies. The armies were the humans, elves and dwarves against the wargs and the goblins.
I'll assume this is about the Battle of the Five Armies. There are no "protagonists" that leave and come back only to fight, because technically, the protagonists in The Hobbit are Bilbo and the Dwarves. The only characters that come to the Battle that weren't there at the start and were encountered earlier, were the Eagles, and Beorn the Berserker.
The HobbitThe Fellowship of the Ring, Book IThe Fellowship of the Ring, Book IIThe Two Towers, Book IThe Two Towers, Book IIThe Return of the King, Book IThe Return of the King, Book IIThe Silmarillion is another book that Tolkien also set in Middle-earth thousands of years before the first of the Hobbit books, but it is a history of the Elves and does not concern itself with Hobbits (except briefly in its final chapter where it reviews the events of the end of the Third Age from the point of view of the Elves, which differs slightly from the point of view of the Hobbits).
Winter.
the narrator :)
Macbeth, Banquo, and Macdonwald are three men leading troops into battle against Duncan. Macbeth is the main protagonist, Banquo is his fellow nobleman and friend, while Macdonwald is the rebel leader they are fighting against.
An example of external conflict in a sentence would be, "The protagonist faced a fierce battle against the antagonist to protect their village from destruction."
The battle of five armies comes after Smaug's death, after Thorin's 'dragon greed' almost starts a war against the elves and the men of Laketown.
Chapter 17 ('The Clouds Burst') of The Hobbit, covers the Battle of the Five Armies. As is the way of battles, many died, "among the goblin dead lay many men and many dwarves, and many a fair elf that should have lived yet long ages merrily in the wood."Fili and Kili, two of the dwarves in the Company died defending Thorin, their uncle in this battle, though their death was not revealed until Chapter 18. Thorin was mortally wounded in the Battle of the Five Armies, and died shortly after.
The Fellowship of the Ring , The Two Towers and The Return of the King .
Yes, Moria is mentioned in several places in The Hobbit. It was discussed in the planning meeting in Bilbo's smial. It was also used as a battle cry by the dwarves in the Battle of Five Armies.
The gleam refers to the last rays of sun and the gloom of the losing battle as the eagles swoop down to finish the war once and for all. page 268 the hobbit