12. The Decline of Gondor
Gandalf: "All has turned to vain ambition!"
Gandalf: "He would even use his grief as a cloak."
[The door creaks open to reveal the courtyard, its tree, and in the distance, Mordor.]
Gandalf: "A thousand years this city has stood. Now, at the whim of a madman it will fall. The White Tree, the tree of the king, will never bloom again."
Pippin: "Why are they still guarding it?"
Gandalf: "They guard it because they have hope. A faint and fading hope that one day it will flower. A King will come, and this city will be as it once was, before it fell into decay."
Gandalf: "The old wisdom bourne out of the west was forsaken. Kings made made tombs more splendid than the houses of the living, and counted the old names of their descent dearer than the names of their sons."
Gandalf: "Childless lords sat in aged halls musing on herladry, or in high cold towers asking questions of the stars. And so the people of gondor fell into run. The line of kings failed. The white tree whithered. The rule of Gondor was given over to lesser men."
[Pippin looks into Mordor.]
Pippin: "Mordor."
Gandalf: "Yes, there it lies. This city has dwelt ever in the sight of its shadow."
Pippin: "A storm is coming."
Gandalf: "This is not the weather of the world. This is the device of of Sauron's making. A broil of fumes he sends ahead of his host. The Orcs of Mordor have no love of daylight. So he covers the face of the sun to ease their passage along the road to war. When the shadow of Mordor reaches this city, it will begin."
Pippin: "Well… Minas Tirith. Very impressive. So where are we off to next?"
Gandalf: "Oh it's too late for that, Peregrin. There's no leaving this city. Help must come to us."
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