Stay with them at the camp rather than return to the dwarves.
Bilbo snuck out of the Dwarves camp and delivered the Arkenstone to Bard.
Bilbo found the Arkenstone in Smaug's treasure chamber.
Bard keeps the arkenstone and will give it back to Thorin later if he can receive part of the share
Bilbo had put on his ring, so he was invisible. Gollum couldn't find him.
In The Hobbit, Bard, who was the King of Dale, can be described as gallant and brave.
Smaug has the Arkenstone in his hoard. Bilbo acquires it from the pile of treasure. He then gives it to Bard. Bard puts it with Thorin when he is buried. That is where it stayed.
He had possession of the Arkenstone.
Bilbo snuck out of the Dwarves camp and delivered the Arkenstone to Bard.
Bilbo found the Arkenstone in Smaug's treasure chamber.
Bilbo never intended to keep the Arkenstone. He only took it because he saw the feverish greed that overtook the Dwarves when the saw their long lost treasure. Knowing how badly Thorin coveted the Arkenstone, Bilbo kept it and later used it to bargain for his share of the treasure (which he intended to share with Bard and Thranduil). What it revealed was that deep at heart, Bilbo was a good person and only wanted to do what was right. It was why Gandalf was drawn to him in the first place.
Bard keeps the arkenstone and will give it back to Thorin later if he can receive part of the share
Bard demands a share of the treasure to help the people of Lake-town. The dwarves offer Bard a portion of the treasure, and the elves offer to help the dwarves in their quest. Ultimately, they all come to an agreement to share the treasure before a battle breaks out.
Bilbo had put on his ring, so he was invisible. Gollum couldn't find him.
He is hoping that the desire for the Arkenstone would force Thorin to negotiate with the Men and Elves instead of fighting with them.Bilbo believes that if the men and elves have the Arkenstone, which Thorin values even more than gold, they may be able to convince the dwarves to bargain with them. If an agreement can be reached, it will spare a good deal of bloodshed.Also, Bilbo is getting quite tired of being trapped in the mountain, and wants to be somewhere with green grass underfoot and better meals.
In The Hobbit, Bard, who was the King of Dale, can be described as gallant and brave.
He devised several plans. If you're talking about the troll scene from the movie, An Unexpected Journey, he came up with reasons why the trolls shouldn't eat the dwarves, such as them having parasites. The intention was to keep them occupied until the sun shone on them and turned them to stone. If you're talking about the part with the elves of Mirkwood in the second movie, The Desolation of Smaug, and in the book, he stole the keys and led all the dwarves to an area with some empty barrels, and pushed a lever to release them into the river below. If you're talking about the part with the Arkenstone in the third movie, The Battle of Five Armies, and in the book, he decides to take the Arkenstone to Thranduil (the elven king of Mirkwood) and Bard as his share of the treasure, and gives it to them so that they can trade it to Thorin in exchange for a share in the treasure of the Lonely Mountain, therefore avoiding war.
the person who praised bilbo was Gandalf.