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The Unlikeliest of Burglars

The real turning point of Part 1 is the trolls. Bilbo fails. He tries to pickpocket a stone troll, gets caught, and must be rescued by Gandalf. He is not a hero yet; he is a liability. But he learns. By the time they reach the hidden valley of Rivendell and gaze upon the moon-letters on Thorin’s map, something has shifted. He is still afraid, but he is no longer saying no. the hobbit 1

Thorin Oakenshield and his thirteen companions arrive with little ceremony and much appetite. They sing of broken swords, of cold mountains, and of a fire-breathing tyrant named Smaug. Bilbo listens to the wind in the rafters and wakes the next morning to a signed contract: "Rates of pay, funeral expenses, and terms of delivery for the uninitiated." The Unlikeliest of Burglars The real turning point

That is precisely why Gandalf chose him. He is not a hero yet; he is a liability

When the wizard scratched a strange mark on Bilbo’s green door—a sign for a company of exiled dwarves—the hobbit’s world shrank from the size of a cozy pantry to the terrifying, magnificent breadth of the wild. The first part of The Hobbit is not about slaying dragons or finding gold. It is about the moment a kettle drum begins to beat inside a chest that has long been silent.