He runs. He leaves his handkerchief behind (a detail that defines his character more than any sword ever could). But he does not run home. He catches up to the dwarves—breathless, panicked, and utterly out of place.
That is precisely why Gandalf chose him. the hobbit 1
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. He runs
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. He catches up to the dwarves—breathless, panicked, and
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."