Weapons and armour of Middle-earth are found in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fantasy writings, such as The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion. Wars and battles are featured in much of Tolkien's writings, and weapons and armour are often given special attention.
Tolkien modelled his fictional warfare on the Ancient and Early Middle periods of history. His depiction of weapons and armour particularly reflect the Northern European culture of Beowulf, the Norse sagas and similar works. Tolkien established this relationship in The Fall of Gondolin, the first story in his legendarium to be written. In this story, the Elves of Gondolin use mail armour, swords, shields, spears, axes and bows, which is consistent with Northern European warfare. In Tolkien's writings, these kinds of weapons and armour are used by his fictional races, including Elves, Dwarves, Men, Hobbits, and Orcs. Like his sources Tolkien sometimes uses the motif of ceremonial runic inscriptions in his fictional items of warfare to show these items are magical and have their own history.
It seems the harder that I try
The further I fall behind, I'm falling behind.
So many things I just don't know.
All these decisions
Too little time to decide them
I wonder why I even try
Seems it happened once again
Do my best but in the end
What have I done, well, nothing
In a world that moves so fast
Yeah, I'll be sure to finish last
Left with nothing to show I'm going nowhere slow
Facing daily frustrations
Not meeting expectations
Expectations
So many things I just don't know
All these decisions
Too little time to decide them
I wonder why I even try
I figured out That Life's not about A human race
(It's about) decisions made