Frodo Baggins never asked for adventure, but adventure found him. When his uncle Bilbo left him a peculiar gold ring, the old wizard Gandalf soon revealed its dark secret: it belonged to the Dark Lord Sauron, and if Sauron recovered it, Middle-earth would fall into shadow.
With no choice but to flee, Frodo and his loyal friend Sam set off for Rivendell, joined by Merry and Pippin, their mischievous but steadfast companions. The journey was perilous—black-robed riders hunted them, and the road was long. They found unexpected allies in Aragorn, a ranger with a king’s blood, and in the elf-lord Elrond, who called a great council to decide the Ring’s fate.
It was clear: the Ring had to be destroyed in the fires of Mount Doom. But who would carry such a burden? Frodo, though small and afraid, stepped forward. He would take it.
A fellowship was formed—Aragorn, Gandalf, the warrior Boromir, the elf Legolas, the dwarf Gimli, and Frodo’s three hobbit friends. Together, they set out on a journey across the wild, facing orcs, treacherous mountains, and the ancient halls of Moria, where tragedy struck. Gandalf, their guide and protector, fell into darkness, battling a monstrous Balrog. The fellowship, brokenhearted, pressed on.
At last, they reached the woods of Lothlórien, where the elf-queen Galadriel offered them gifts and wisdom. But the Ring’s power grew heavier, and Boromir, desperate to save his people, tried to take it from Frodo. Realizing the danger he posed to his friends, Frodo chose to go alone.
Yet Sam refused to leave him. As the fellowship shattered—Boromir falling in battle, Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli setting out to rescue the captured Merry and Pippin—Frodo and Sam quietly slipped away toward Mordor, knowing the hardest part of their journey was just beginning.
The Fellowship had failed, but hope was not lost. The journey was far from over.