Well,
Quote:
It must be admitted that Giles owed his rise in a large measure to luck, though he showed some wits in the use of it. Both the luck and the wits remained with him to the end of his days
|
Luck not only in Caudimordax itself, but also in the giant blundering into
his fields, Chrysophylax advancing on Ham rather than some other place, that particular dragon being the first one the cavalcade of knights blundered into... a whole lotta luck. But we can't deny the wits as well. Opportunity knocked, and Giles opened.
Then again, how best to describe Bilbo's career except as "luck and wits"?