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The Lord of the Rings

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Meads of Deadly Flowers

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Luminous pale white flowers in shadowy meads, horrible demented shapes like uneasy dreams, emit rotten charnel odour.

The Meads of Deadly Flowers emerge in The Two Towers as a nightmarish landscape of luminous pale white flowers in shadowy meads, their horrible demented shapes evoking uneasy dreams and emitting a rotten charnel odour that fills the air with dread. Encountered by the company amid their perilous journey, these deadly blooms represent the insidious perils of Mordor’s borderlands, blending beauty with mortal horror to test the resolve of the Fellowship’s remnants. Though appearing only once in the series, they linger as a haunting symbol of the corrupted natural world under Sauron’s shadow, with no further evolution in later volumes.

Evolution

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

Luminous pale white flowers in shadowy meads, horrible demented shapes like uneasy dreams, emit rotten charnel odour.

Book Appearances

2

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

First appears Ch 19

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