Fingolfin's Last Stand - Scribbles & Drabbles 2025
I made art for @fall-for-tolkien's Scribbles & Drabbles 2025! This event has been such a great time and I've had so much fun creating things (both art and fics) for it.
The night his father rides out over Anfauglith, Fingon does not sleep. He stands upon the parapet of Barad Eithel’s highest watchtower. It is a clear night of icy starlight — but to the North all is dark.
The Eagle appears suddenly, like a blue brushstroke against the blushing dawn. All through the slow sunrise Fingon’s heart hangs upon the brink of hope and despair. Could Manwë’s pity bless them twice?
He teeters towards despair on the Eagle’s return journey, for it is somber and without urgency. Still, Fingon waits. He waits until the ends of his nails are scraped away from clinging to the stone walls.
The Eagle wheels down into the jagged bowl of the Echoriath.
Fingon forestalls the onslaught of grief with denials, clinging, clinging. Say not that he is gone. Say not that the Noldor have lost their King. The Eagle rises again!
“Thorondor!” Fingon cries, knowing he can be no other.
Once the Lord of Eagles bore Fingon hither. Against reason Fingon hopes to see his father where once Thorondor accepted the burden of another Fingon loves.
But Thorondor’s back is bare. Fingon chokes, nearly collapses onto the stone — but his eyes catch on a flash of light beneath the Eagle’s great body. He hauls himself to standing.
Thorondor lands upon the tower’s roof, huge and majestic. In his talons he holds Fingolfin’s sword. Ringil, glittering through ropes of thick black blood.
The Eagle offers no words of explanation or consolation. He lets the sword fall gently at Fingon’s feet, and that is enough. Fingon knows: Fingolfin has fallen, but not in vain.
Reverential, grieving, Fingon bends to pick it up. As he stands, his cheeks are streaked with the salt trails of his tears, blown back by the beat of the Eagle’s wings.
Sometimes I embroider and lately I’ve been embroidering fantastical swords! ⚔️
The amethyst sword is my idea of a yassified Dawn, of House Dayne fame. The blue sword is my idea of Fingolfin’s sword Ringil. The others are just ideas I had and are called Fineldoroth (the green) and Spellbinder (the red), respectively, because I thought it would be fun to name them too 🗡️
*very much an amateur, this is a hobby, not a hustle
The Others: Ringil, Dagmor, Glamdring, Orcrist, Sting
Swords of the First Age, Part 3 of 3
[This is a continuation of the response to this ask]
Ringil
Meaning: From ringe- “cold”. Quenya. (Eldamo).
Maker: Unknown
Owned/wielded by: Fingolfin
Notable for: wounding Morgoth seven times and hewing his foot.
Fate: Unknown.
But Fingolfin gleamed beneath it as a star; for his mail was overlaid with silver, and his blue shield was set with crystals; and he drew his sword Ringil, that glittered like ice.
The Silmarillion, ‘Of the Ruin of Beleriand and the Fall of Fingolfin’
Discussion
We don’t know a lot about Ringil besides its epic, climactic moment. Who made it? Was it brought from Valinor or made in Beleriand? Did it somehow survive Fingolfin’s fall? Lots of room for the imagination to roam.
Dagmor
Meaning: Uncertain. Possibly “Slayer of Darkness”, combining dag- “slay” and môr “darkness”. Sindarin. (Eldamo).
Maker: Unknown
Owned/wielded by: Beren
Fate: Unknown
Danger he sought and death pursued,
and thus escaped the doom he wooed,
and deeds of breathless daring wrought
alone, of which the rumour brought
new hope to many a broken man.
They whispered 'Beren,' and began
in secret swords to whet, and soft
by shrouded hearths at evening oft
songs they would sing of Beren's bow,
of Dagmor his sword…
Lay of Leithian Recommenced, 503-12
This is the only mention of Beren’s sword’s name.
From the Trolls' Lair
There were lots of clothes, too, hanging on the walls—too small for trolls, I am afraid they belonged to victims—and among them were several swords of various makes, shapes, and sizes. Two caught their eyes particularly, because of their beautiful scabbards and jewelled hilts. Gandalf and Thorin each took one of these; and Bilbo took a knife in a leather sheath. It would have made only a tiny pocket-knife for a troll, but it was as good as a short sword for the hobbit.
The Hobbit, Chapter 2: Roast Mutton
Elrond knew all about runes of every kind. That day he looked at the swords they had brought from the trolls' lair, and he said: ‘These are not troll make. They are old swords, very old swords of the High Elves of the West, my kin. They were made in Gondolin for the Goblin wars. They must have come from a dragon's hoard or goblin plunder, for dragons and goblins destroyed that city many ages ago. This, Thorin, the runes name Orcrist, the Goblin cleaver in the ancient tongue of Gondolin; it was a famous blade. This, Gandalf, was Glamdring, Foehammer that the king of Gondolin once wore.
The Hobbit, Chapter 3: A Short Rest
Glamdring
Meaning: Foehammer. Sindarin. Called Beater by the goblins.
Maker: Elves of Gondolin
Notable for: slaying the Great Goblin.
Owned/wielded by: Turgon, Gandalf
Fate: Unknown
Discussion
Glamdring is a significant First Age weapon for having been the sword of Turgon, though no mention of it is made in the “Silmarillion” legends, as with the other “Troll’s lair” blades. (Tolkien never returned to edit or rewrite the narrative version of the story of the fall of Gondolin — other than the unfinished ‘Of Tuor and his Coming to Gondolin’, which ends with Tuor’s arrival to the Hidden City — after the publication of The Hobbit; he may have intended to incorporate Glamdring and Orcrist into the legends and never got around to it.)
As the only weapon known to have been in Gandalf’s possession in his last standoff with Dúrin’s Bane, Glamdring may have dealt the death blow to the Balrog. It is not known whether Gandalf took Glamdring to the Undying Lands when he departed or left it in Middle-earth.
Orcrist
Meaning: Goblin Cleaver. Sindarin. Called Biter by the goblins.
Maker: Elves of Gondolin
Owned by: Unknown; Thorin Oakenshield (taken from him in Mirkwood)
Fate: Placed by Thranduil on Thorin’s tomb.
It had killed hundreds of goblins in its time, when the fair elves of Gondolin hunted them in the hills or did battle before their walls. They had called it Orcrist, Goblin-cleaver, but thegoblins called it simply Biter. They hated it and hated worse any one that carried it.
The Hobbit, Chapter 4: Over Hill and Under Hill
Upon his tomb the Elvenking then laid Orcrist, the elvish sword that had been taken from Thorin in captivity. It is said in songs that it gleamed ever in the dark if foes approached, and the fortress of the dwarves could not be taken by surprise.
The Hobbit, Chapter 18: The Return Journey
Discussion
Though Elrond says Orcrist was a “famous blade” he does not say to whom it belonged. As Gondolin had no shortage of great warriors and other nobles, there is ample opportunity for the imagination to run wild.
Sting (dagger)
Meaning: Any previous name unknown; named by Bilbo after he killed a spider of Mirkwood.
Maker: Presumably also Elves of Gondolin.
Owned by: Unknown; Bilbo Baggins, Frodo Baggins, Samwise Gamgee
Notable for: slaying Shelob.
Fate: Unknown.
Somehow the killing of the giant spider, all alone by himself in the dark without the help of the wizard or the dwarves or of anyone else, made a great difference to Mr. Baggins. He felt a different person, and much fiercer and bolder in spite of an empty stomach, as he wiped his sword on the grass and put it back into its sheath. “I will give you a name,” he said to it, “and I shall call you Sting.”
The Hobbit, Chapter 8: Flies and Spider
Discussion
Sting, as a dagger, may not have been an especially significant weapon in the First Age, though of course one can always imagine tales for it involving well-known canonical characters! As with Glamdring, we do not know whether Sam took it with him when he sailed or not.
Finally: Elrond surmises that the “Troll’s lair” weapons survived through multiple plunderings over the Ages — but it’s not a sure thing. There’s room to invent other histories for these blades.
Tangent: Glowing Blue
The ability to glow blue in the presence of Orcs seems to have been a feature unique to these three Gondolin-forged blades. Whether or not other Elven weapons had this ability is unknown, though it’s not implausible that they would possess this or other “magical” properties. For those who enjoy coming up with explanations, the “science” behind the blue glow is also left to the imagination.
Research
Note that these websites contain some inaccuracies and incomplete citations and were used to help with finding quotations.
The Tolkien Forum: Weapons
Wikipedia: List of weapons and armour in Middle-earth
Elven Swords by Iain Norman (This one is an interesting and well-researched essay comparing the sword designs in the Jackson films to Tolkien’s canon; accurate info to the best of my knowledge)