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'
We
shall
see
,
'
said
Bilbo
.
The
next
day
more
carts
rolled
up
the
Hill
,
and
still
more
carts
.
There
might
have
been
some
grumbling
about
'd
ealing
locally
'
,
but
that
very
week
orders
began
to
pour
out
of
Bag
End
for
every
kind
of
provision
,
commodity
,
or
luxury
that
could
be
obtained
in
Hobbiton
or
Bywater
or
anywhere
in
the
neighbourhood
.
People
became
enthusiastic
;
and
they
began
to
tick
off
the
days
on
the
calendar
;
and
they
watched
eagerly
for
the
postman
,
hoping
for
invitations
.
Before
long
the
invitations
began
pouring
out
,
and
the
Hobbiton
post-office
was
blocked
,
and
the
Bywater
post-office
was
snowed
under
,
and
voluntary
assistant
postmen
were
called
for
.
There
was
a
constant
stream
of
them
going
up
the
Hill
,
carrying
hundreds
of
polite
variations
on
Thank
you
,
I
shall
certainly
come
.
A
notice
appeared
on
the
gate
at
Bag
End
:
no
admittance
except
on
party
business
.
Even
those
who
had
,
or
pretended
to
have
Party
Business
were
seldom
allowed
inside
.
Bilbo
was
busy
:
writing
invitations
,
ticking
off
answers
,
packing
up
presents
,
and
making
some
private
preparations
of
his
own
.
From
the
time
of
Gandalf
's
arrival
he
remained
hidden
from
view
.
One
morning
the
hobbits
woke
to
find
the
large
field
,
south
of
Bilbo
's
front
door
,
covered
with
ropes
and
poles
for
tents
and
pavilions
.
A
special
entrance
was
cut
into
the
bank
leading
to
the
road
,
and
wide
steps
and
a
large
white
gate
were
built
there
.
The
three
hobbit-families
of
Bagshot
Row
,
adjoining
the
field
,
were
intensely
interested
and
generally
envied
.
Old
Gaffer
Gamgee
stopped
even
pretending
to
work
in
his
garden
.
The
tents
began
to
go
up
.
There
was
a
specially
large
pavilion
,
so
big
that
the
tree
that
grew
in
the
field
was
right
inside
it
,
and
stood
proudly
near
one
end
,
at
the
head
of
the
chief
table
.
Lanterns
were
hung
on
all
its
branches
.
More
promising
still
(
to
the
hobbits
'
mind
)
:
an
enormous
open-air
kitchen
was
erected
in
the
north
corner
of
the
field
.
A
draught
of
cooks
,
from
every
inn
and
eating-house
for
miles
around
,
arrived
to
supplement
the
dwarves
and
other
odd
folk
that
were
quartered
at
Bag
End
.
Excitement
rose
to
its
height
.
Then
the
weather
clouded
over
.
That
was
on
Wednesday
the
eve
of
the
Party
.
Anxiety
was
intense
.
Then
Thursday
,
September
the
22nd
,
actually
dawned
.
The
sun
got
up
,
the
clouds
vanished
,
flags
were
unfurled
and
the
fun
began
.
Bilbo
Baggins
called
it
a
party
,
but
it
was
really
a
variety
of
entertainments
rolled
into
one
.
Practically
everybody
living
near
was
invited
.
A
very
few
were
overlooked
by
accident
,
but
as
they
turned
up
all
the
same
,
that
did
not
matter
.
Many
people
from
other
parts
of
the
Shire
were
also
asked
;
and
there
were
even
a
few
from
outside
the
borders
.
Bilbo
met
the
guests
(
and
additions
)
at
the
new
white
gate
in
person
.
He
gave
away
presents
to
all
and
sundry
--
the
latter
were
those
who
went
out
again
by
a
back
way
and
came
in
again
by
the
gate
.
Hobbits
give
presents
to
other
people
on
their
own
birthdays
.
Not
very
expensive
ones
,
as
a
rule
,
and
not
so
lavishly
as
on
this
occasion
;
but
it
was
not
a
bad
system
.
Actually
in
Hobbiton
and
Bywater
every
day
in
the
year
it
was
somebody
's
birthday
,
so
that
every
hobbit
in
those
parts
had
a
fair
chance
of
at
least
one
present
at
least
once
a
week
.
But
they
never
got
tired
of
them
.