Frodo Baggins uttered this inspired outcry in The Lord of the Rings, book IV, chapter 10, while going with Sam Gamgee through Shelob’s lair at Cirith Ungol. Tolkien
stated in a letter (n° 297 in Humphrey Carpenter’s edition) that this sentence ultimately originated in the line Éala Éarendel engla beorhtast of the Old English poem Crist by Cynewulf.
The text is transcribed in tengwar or “letters of Fëanor” according to the classical mode for Quenya described by Tolkien in the Appendix E to The Lord of the Rings and used for instance by the Namárië manuscript in The Road Goes Ever On p. 65. We made use of Måns Björkman Berg’s typeface Tengwar Eldamar. Open this mode in Glaemscribe
References
࿔Tolkien, John Ronald Reuel.
The Lord of the Rings.
London: HarperCollins, 1999.
3 vol.
ISBN 0-261-10235-1.
࿔Tolkien, John Ronald Reuel.
The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien.
Selection edited by Humphrey Carpenter with assistance by Christopher Tolkien.
London: HarperCollins, 2006.
480 p.
ISBN 0-261-10265-6.
The works of John Ronald Reuel and Christopher Tolkien are under the copyright of their authors and/or rights holders, including their publishers and the Tolkien Estate.
Quotations from other authors, editors and translators mentioned in the bibliography are under the copyright of their publishers, except for those whose copyright term has ended.
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