In case there were any doubt about how serious the scene is:
- 05.007 and a pitter.
In case there were any doubt about how serious the scene is:
This is not a heart attack, just the pattering heart of a gentlehobbit encountering the unknown.
What a scene! Giant spiders, Thorin & Company captive, but Tolkien writes it for physical humour:
[08.089] To the fattest of these bundles the spider went – ‘It is poor old Bombur, I’ll bet,’ thought Bilbo – and nipped hard at the nose that stuck out. There was a muffled yelp inside, and a toe shot up and kicked the spider straight and hard. There was life in Bombur still. There was a noise like the kicking of a flabby football, and the enraged spider fell off the branch, only catching itself with its own thread just in time.
Once again, a peaceful word. Tonight while I sleep, I’ll reconsider whether every word-play word needs to be “low” or “high” (or both). I suspect not. You’ll hear more about how I work with this idea in a later method post, Word Fans. For now, I will continue as I have been doing.
Well, is it low or high? “Hush” is calming, but it’s also a word of caution. I like that it’s missing from Chapter 8 through 18. I’m going to label it “low”, but that does not satisfy: what I mean is that it’s a peaceful word for use in the Shire and among elves except when warning others not to notice a certain giant bear.
Trust Gloin to say exactly what he means.
Shivers down our spines? High-register word!
Owls, dwarves, and the goblins of Chapter 5 do it!
Etymologically we learn that this word could represent a hum or a throat-clearing noise. While elves are high, smelling them is as prosaic as it gets.
“h’m | hm, int.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, March 2015. Web. 27 May 2015.
Like the visages of the gargoyles, gurgling frightens us!