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ARTICLES: DWARVES
This essay examines the characteristics, activities and survival of dragons in Middle
Earth. Dragons were also called Urulóki ('fire serpents'), great worms, and fire-drakes.
They were created by the Darklord Melkor, in the First Age. The first such creature was
Glaurung, referred to as the 'father of dragons' (QS C18, p.181). He grew to be great in
malice and power and committed much depredation and destruction against the lands and
armies of the Darklord's foes. Though we cannot assume that all dragons shared the same
characteristics as their monstrous forefather, the best survivng details pertain to
Glaurung.
Characteristics: Nearly a century after he was breed
by Morgoth, Glaurung '...was yet young and scare half-grown, for long and slow is the life
of the dragons...' (QS C13, p.138). Physically they were large creatures, with tough
armoured scales for protection. Despite their bulk, they could move fast over ground:
'Glaurung therefore passed Mablung by, a vast shape in the mist; and he went swiftly.
For he was a mighty Worm, and yet lithe.'
(Unf 1 II, p.117)
They were not hampered by daylight (unlike the Nazgul or Orcs, for example) and possessed
remarkable vision, to judge by this description of Glaurung:
'...the glance of his fell eyes was keener than that of eagles, and outreached the far
sight of Elves...'
(Unf 1 II, p.117)
Apart from the strength of their bodies, dragons had the deadly ability to breathe fire.
This power was used to great affect in battle, where only those wearing Dwarven armour
could hope to stand firm against their flame. However, such power was not inexhaustible,
as evidenced by this comment on Glaurung after he had driven off an Eldar scouting party
from his lair at Nargoththrond:
'But he was slow now and stealthy; for all the fires in him were burned low: great
power had gone out of him, and he would rest and sleep in the dark.'
(Unf 1 II, p.119)
Unlike the normal beastly creations of the Shadow, they were very intelligent creatures
and had the power of speech. Furthermore they also possessed the power to control other
people's mind.
'...Glaurung withheld his blast, and opened wide his serpent-eyes and gazed upon
Túrin. Without fear Túrin looked into them as he raised up the sword; and straightway he
fell under the blinding spell of the lidless eye of the dragon...'
(QS C21, p.257).
Glaurung's descendents had some similar power, as evidenced by the attempt of Smaug to
place his spell on Bilbo Baggins. In his conversation with Smaug, whenever the
dragons gaze swept where he hid, Bilbo felt an urge to reveal himself;
'In fact he was in grievous danger of coming under the dragon-spell.'
(TH, CXII, p.202)
All told, this combinaion of intelligence, physical strength and evil powers made the
Great Worms one of the most infamous of Middle Earth's creatures.
Growth and Evolution in the First Age: Morgoth breed
more dragons after Glaurung and through the long years of the First Age their numbers
increased. By the time of Nirnaeth Arnoediad, the Battle of Unnumbered Tears, a number of
dragons existed alongside Glaurung. With the power of the Eldar and Men broken, these fell
creatures were free to roam Beleriand and beyond, though it is not known whether any took
up their abode outside the Iron Mountains of Angband. Their number continued to grow, and
this strength was mustered by Morgoth for the assault on Gondolin.
'At last...Morgoth was ready, and he loosed upon Gondolin his Balrogs, and his Orcs
and his wolves; and with them came dragons of the brood of Glaurung, and they were become
now many and terrible.'
(QS C23, p.292)
After he had all but gained the mastery of Beleriand, Morgoth experimented with a new
breed of dragon, one that could fly. Though conceived as a means to extend his sway
further and to seek out the hidden refuges of his remaining foes, they were not actually
revealed until the tide of war had suddenly turned against Morgoth with the intervention
of the Valar in the War of Wrath. However, the unleashed power of this new breed of dragon
was terrifying:
'...and out of the pits of Angband there issued the winged dragons, that had not been
seen; and so sudden and ruinous was the onset of that dreadful fleet that the host of the
Valar was driven back, for the coming of the dragons was with great thunder, and
lightning, and a tempest of fire.'
(QS C24, p.303)
The battle suddenly centred on this struggle between the Great Worms and the free
creatures of the air, but the tide was turned by the heroism of EarÁ ndil and the Valar
were triumphant.
'Before the rising of the sun EarÁ ndil slew Ancalagon the Black, the mightiest of
the dragon-host, and cast him from the sky; and he fell upon the towers of Thangorodrim,
and they were broken in his ruin. Then the sun rose, and the host of the Valar prevailed,
and well-nigh all the dragons were destroyed...'
(QS C24, p.303)
As recorded, most of the Great Worms were slain in the War of Wrath...but Middle Earth was
not rid of their kind for many ages. For some survived and crawled or flew eastwards out
of the ruin of Morgoth's realm.
The Second And Third Age: We have little or no
account of the activities of the Great Worms in the Second Age. Their continued presence
is referred to in passing by a description in the Akallabêth of the dark years of Man in
Middle Earth between the Fall of Beleriand and the voyages of the Numenoreans to Middle
Earth:
'...and Men dwelt in darkness and were troubled by many evil things that Morgoth had
devised in the days of his dominion: demons, and dragons, and mishapen beasts...'
(Akallabêth, SIL p.312)
There is a staggering five thousand year gap in the records of dragon activity, between
the War of Wrath and the next documented outbreak of dragon attacks. They were no doubt
active inbetween, though perhaps in lands of which no account reached the Eldar or
Numenoreans.
Despite the gap in the records, it is possible to speculate that the Great Worms spread
eastwards, beyond the Westlands of Middle Earth. There is an indirect clue given by the
following passage in Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age:
'It is said that the foundation of the each of the Seven Hoards of the Dwarf-kings of
old was a golden ring; but all those hoards long ago were plundered and the Dragons
devoured them, and of the Seven Rings some were consumed in fire and some Sauron
recovered.'
(Sil, Rings of Power, p.348)
The 'Seven Hoards' are presumably associated with the seven Dwarf Houses, of which only
two were in the Westlands (Durin's, the father house, was at Khadzad-dûm, while the First
Age mansions of Belegost-Nogrod in Ered Luin, I believe, formed another House). If the
legend of the Seven Hoards is accurate, then Dwarven mansions in the east of Middle Earth
were afflicted by dragons at various times between the middle of the Second Age and late
Third Age (if we use the chronology of the Rings of Power).
The Great Worms reappear with certainty in the recorded tales of Man around 2000 T.A, in
the far North, which is troubled on and off by these creatures for the remainder of the
age. The first glimpse comes from the lore of the Rohirrim about their old lands in the
Upper Anduin vale:
'Many lords and warriors, and many fair and valiant women, are named in the songs of
Rohan that still remember the North. Frumgar, they say, was the name of the chieftain who
led his people to Éothéod. Of his son, Fram, they tell that he slew Scatha, the great
dragon of Ered Mithrin, and the land had peace from the long-worms afterwards.'
(LOTR App. A II, The House of Eorl, p.1039)
The movement of the Northmen to Éothéod followed the defeat of Angmar in 1975, so this
would place the slaying of Scatha in the first century of the third millenium. The peace
did not last, for after the loss of Khadzad-dûm to the Balrog in 1981, Durin's folk
settled in new lands, among them Erebor and the Grey Mountains. The subsequent squabble
between Fram and the Dwarves over Scatha's hoard would imply that by the time of the
dragon's death, Durin's folk had already established mines, mansions and wealth in their
new settlement's in the Grey Mountains. However, the new Dwarven realm eventually
attracted the malicious interest of the northern dragons, as is recounted in the Red Book
of Westmarch:
'But Thorin I his son removed and went into the far North to the Grey Mountain, where
most of Durin's folk were now gathering; for those mountains were rich and little
explored. But there were dragons in the wastes beyond; and after many years they became
strong again and multiplied, and they made war on the Dwarves, and plundered their works.
At last Dáin I, together with Frór his second son, was slain at the door of his hall by
a great cold-drake.'
(LOTR App. A III, Durin's Folk, p.1046)
It is interesting to note that the reference to a 'cold-drake', a variant of dragon
adapted to the cold wastes. The statement 'they made war on the Dwarves' is also
significant, implying that the dragons were acting in concert. Previously it was only in
the Darklord's campaigns that we hear of dragons operating in groups, whereas their
penchant for personal lairs and treasure hoards suggests an individual nature.
Though the events described in this passage sound close together, they are given as
centuries apart in the Tale of Years:
2210 Thorin I leaves Erebor, and goes north to the Grey
Mountains where most of the remnant of Durin's folk are now gathering
2570 About this time Dragons reappear in the far North and
begin to afflict the Dwarves
2589 Dain I slain by a Dragon
The pattern of events seems to be that the dragons present in the Northern Wastes were
subdued after the slaying of Scatha, but, several centuries after the arrival of Durin's
folk in the mountains, they were stirred to new evil by their thirst for treasure (but
perhaps also desire to defend their breeding grounds) and successfully plundered the
Dwarven mansions of Ered Lithum. Their success is indicated by the retreat of Dwarven
settlement from the area after the death of their king:
'Not long after most of Durin's folk abandoned the Grey mountains.'
(LOTR App. A III, Durin's Folk, p.1046)
The rest of the North enjoyed only a short respite (relative to a dragon's outlook) from
the depredations of the Great Worms. For less than two centuries after the flight of the
Dwarves, the kingdoms of Dale and Erebor fell victim to the terror of the last great
dragon, Smaug.
'...the rumour of the wealth of Erebor spread abroad and reached the ears of the
dragons, and at last Smaug the Golden, greatest of the dragons of his day, arose and
without warning came against King Thrór and descended on the mountain in flames.'
(LOTR App. A III, Durin's Folk, p.1047)
It is interesting to note that once Smaug had secured his new lair his attacks on the
surrounding lands declined over the next one hundred and seventy years to the point where
residents of nearby Lake Town could prosper and even discount the dragon's existence as
legend. This suggests a cycle in a dragon's activities, once they reach maturity, of
intense effort to gain their hoard, followed by periods of watchful rest from which they
are distracted only by the need to feed, mate or defend their spoils.
Survival Beyond the Third Age: The saga of Bard of
Esgorath's killing of Smaug is told elsewhere. Our accounts of the Great Worms draw to a
close not long after, as the Third Age ends. By this time a change had come over the
dragon race. Whether through natural evolution or the death of the strongest breeders, the
members of that race lacked the power of their forebears. This decline is alluded to by
Gandalf in coversation with Frodo:
'It has been said that dragon-fire could melt and consume the Rings of Power, but
there is not any dragon left on earth in which the old fire is hot enough...'
(Gandalf to Frodo, LOTR B1 C2, p.59)
Such decline, whether in longevity, power, or knowledge, was not uncommon among the races
of Middle Earth. Despite this, it is clear from Gandalf's words that dragons survived to
trouble future ages: the possible existence of dragons in the east of Middle Earth has
already been suggested, and the dragons that drove the Dwarves from the Grey Mountains
were still in possession of their lairs and free to breed. Future generations would record
the names, fell-deeds, and deaths of these Great Worms.
To turn aside from the pseudo-historical treatment of the subject so far, that we have as
'fact' the continued survival of the Great Worms is no accident of what was said or not
said in Lord of the Rings. For J.R.R Tolkien, the account of dragons in Middle Earth
provided the background for their presence in the tales of later Men, such as in the epic
Beowulf. Such devices provided an imaginary continuity in history between Middle Earth and
our own recorded history and legends. And by this reasoning it was clearly required for
the dragons to live beyond the defeat of the Shadow and the end of the Third Age.
'They [Dragons] had not stopped; since they were active in far later times, close to
our own.'
(J.R.R Tolkien, Letter No.144)
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