Midsummer

  • 01.017 Old Took used to have them on Midsummer’s Eve.
  • 03.034 So the time came to midsummer eve,
  • 03.034 on midsummer morning.
  • 03.042 These must have been written on a midsummer’s eve
  • 03.049 and sing upon the midsummer’s eve.
  • 03.050 The next morning was a midsummer’s morning
  • 04.003 in the high hope of a midsummer morning,
  • 06.072 in a circle like people round a midsummer bonfire.

Mirkwood

  • 01.103 and I know where Mirkwood is,
  • 07.039 who lives near the Southern borders of Mirkwood?’
  • 07.055 away east beyond Mirkwood,’
  • 07.094 the terrible forest of Mirkwood.
  • 07.123 If you lived near the edge of Mirkwood,
  • 07.126 But your way through Mirkwood is dark,
  • 07.126 in Mirkwood
  • 07.130 the edge of Mirkwood drew closer
  • 07.130 through Mirkwood
  • 07.134 By the afternoon they had reached the eaves of Mirkwood,
  • 07.135 Well, here is Mirkwood!’
  • 07.141 at the very edge of Mirkwood,
  • 07.145 towards the shadow of Mirkwood.
  • 07.147 and never get out of Mirkwood;
  • 07.151 Before you could get round Mirkwood
  • 08.132 some miles within the edge of Mirkwood on its eastern side
  • 09.017 probably all the dark distance of Mirkwood lay between them.
  • 09.020 near to the very eastern edge of Mirkwood.
  • 10.003 as the roads out of the East towards Mirkwood vanished
  • 10.003 from the skirts of Mirkwood
  • 10.041 through Mirkwood
  • 11.021 over the wide lands to the black wall of Mirkwood,
  • 14.025 in tattered shreds over the marshes before Mirkwood.
  • 14.040 Far over Mirkwood tidings spread:
  • 18.024 in the trackless dark of Mirkwood.
  • 18.043 to the borders of Mirkwood,
  • 18.053 There behind lay Mirkwood,
  • 19.006 in the south of Mirkwood.