BookwormWiki

The Lord of the Rings

Viewing

Whole series

All section pages include the full series.

White Bridge

bridgeancient carved stone

Faintly gleaming white bridge over steaming silent stream, flanked by shadowy meads of luminous horrible white flowers with rotten odour, corrupt carvings.

The White Bridge, a faintly gleaming structure spanning a steaming silent stream in the shadowy meads of the Dead Marshes, emerges as a haunting landmark in The Two Towers, its corrupt carvings and luminous white flowers exuding a rotten odour that underscores the perilous decay of Mordor's fringes. Though appearing only once in the series, it marks a pivotal crossing point for Frodo, Sam, and Gollum on their treacherous journey to Mordor, symbolizing the blurred line between life and the eerie remnants of ancient battlefields. Its singular but vivid depiction cements its role as an unforgettable emblem of horror and foreboding in Middle-earth's forsaken landscapes.

History

The Two Towers: Being the Second Part of the Lord of the Rings

Faintly gleaming white bridge over steaming silent stream, flanked by shadowy meads of luminous horrible white flowers with rotten odour, corrupt carvings.

Book Appearances

2

The Two Towers: Being the Second Part of the Lord of the Rings

First appears Ch 19

Read with a companion

Bookworm generates illustrations, character cards, and glossary context as you read your favorite EPUB books.

Download on the App Store