During the War of the Ring the strange forest giants called Ents came
in battle against the Orcs and Menof Isengard. Half Men, half trees,
the Ents were fourteen feet tall, and the eldest had lived in
Middle-earth for nine Ages of Stars and Sun.
Lord of the Ents was Fangorn who in the common toungue was called
Treebeard. He was huge and ancient, for he belonged to the tallest and
strongest race born into the World. Like oak or beech was the huge
rough-barked trunk of Treebeard, while his branch-like arms were smooth
and his seven-fingered hands were gnarled. Treebeard peculiar, almost
neckless head was tall and thick as his trunk. His brown eyes were
large and wise and seemed to glint with a green light. His wild grey
beard was like a thatch of twigs and moss. He was made of the fibre of
trees, yet he moved swiftly on unbending legs with feet like living
roots, swaying and stretching like long-legged wading birds.
Elvish histories tell how, when Varda, Queen of the Heavens,
rekindled the Stars the Elves awoke, the Ents also awoke in the Great
Forests of Arda. They came from the thoughts of Yavanna, Queen of the
Earth, and were her shepherds of trees. Shepherds and guardians they
proved to be, for if roused to anger Entish wrath was terrible and they
could crush stone and steel with their hands alone. Justly they were
feared, but they were also gentle and wise. They loved the trees and
all the Olvar and guarded them from evil.
At the time of their awakening Ents could not speak, but the Elves
taught them that art, and they loved it greatly. They delighted in
learning many toungues, even the short chirping language of Men.
Dearest of all they loved the language they had devised themselves,
that none but Ents ever mastered. It rolled deep and full from their
tongues as slow thunder or the timeless booming of waves on forgotten
shores. In the slow passing of Entish time they formed their thoughts
in unhurried meditation, and framed them into speech as undisturbed and
rolling as the changing seasons.
Though Ents at times had great gatherings called Entmoots, for the
most part they were a solitary folk living apart from one another in
isolated Ent houses in the great forests. Often these were mountain
caverns plentifully supplied with spring water and surrounded by
beautiful trees. In these places they took their meals, not solid food
but clear liquid stored in great stone jars. These were Ent-draughts
and the magical flui glowed with gold and green light. And in their Ent
houses they took their rest, often finding refreshment in standing
beneath the crystal coolness of a waterfall throughout the night.
So the Ents lived out their wise, almost immortal lives, and the
many races of the Earth thrived and declined around them without
troubling their greatness. Only when the foul Orcs came armed with
weapons of steel were the Ents roused in wrath. The dwarves too were
not loved by the Ents, for they were axe-bearers and hewerns of wood.
And it is said that in the First Age of Sun the Dwarf-warriors of
Nogrod, who had sacked the Grey-elven citadel of Menegroth, were caught
by Ents and utterly destroyed.
Ents, in the years of starlight, had been both male and female, yet
in the Ages of Sun the Entwives became enamoured of the open lands
where they might tend the lesser Olvar - the fruit trees, shrubs,
flowers, grasses and grains, whereas the male Ents loved the trees of
the forests. So it was that the Entwives went to the open Brown lands,
where they were worshipped by the race of Men who learned from them the
art of tending the fruits of the Earth.
Yet before the Second Age of Sun, the gardens of the Entwives were
destroyed, and with the gardens went the Entwives. Among them was the
spouse of Treebeard, Fimbrethil, who was called Wandlimb the
Lightfooted. No tale tells of their fate. Perhaps the Entwives went to
the South or East; but, wherever it was, it was beyond the knowledge of
the Ents of the forests, who wandered in search of them for many long
years.
So, though Ents could not die in the manner of Men, they became a
dwindling race none the less. They were never numerous, and some were
slain with steel and fire, and no new Entings came with the departure
of the Entwives. As well, the vast forests of Eriador where many once
roamed had by the Third Age been hewn down or burnt, so Only the Old
Forest, which bordered the Shire, and the great Entwood of Treebeard
remained.
By the War of the Ring Treebeard was counted one of the three eldest
Ents who had came forth under the Stars at the Time of Awakening.
Besides Treebeard, there was Finglas, which means "leaflock", and
Fladrif, which means "skin-bark", but the latter two had withdrawn even
from the affiars of the Ents. Finglas had retreated in Ent fashion into
the nature of his beaing and had become "treeish". He moved but little
and few could tell him from the trees. Faladrif had battled alone
against Orcs, who had captured his birch groves, slain many of his
Entings, and had wounded him with axes. He eventually fled to live
alone on high mountain slopes.
Though only Treebeard of the elders remained limb-lithe and active,
there were many youn Ents. Throughout the Entwood there was discontent
because the Ents were being haressed by the servants of Saruman, who
inhabited neighbouring Isengard. So the Ents entered the War of the
Ring, and this was the Great March of the Ents. Rank upon Rank of Ents
marched on the stronghold of Isengard. With them came the Huorns, the
Tree-spirits whom the Ents commanded and whose streanght was nearly as
great as their own. The very walls of Isengard were torn down and
destroyed by Entish wrath and the power of Saruman shattered. The
Huorns advanced into the battle of the Hornburg like a great forest,
and the Orc legions of Saruman was exterminated.
After the War of the Ring, the Ents again lived on peacefully in the
Entwood, yet they continued to wane, and the Fourth Age was believed to
be thier last.