"
For MILO BURROWS, hoping it will be useful, from B.B."
Bilbo's label for Milo
Burrows' gift
The Fellowship of the Ring I 1
A Long-expected Party
A grandson of Master Gorbadoc Brandybuck of Buckland, who married into the Baggins family when he wedded Peony, a distant cousin of both Bilbo and Frodo Baggins. They had four children (Mosco, Moro, Myrtle and Minto), and most of the family was present at Bilbo's famous Birthday Party (apart from Minto, who was only five years old at that time).
Milo was known for his habit of failing to reply to letters, and because of this he was one of those that found a specially selected gift waiting for him in Bag End, after Bilbo's departure: a golden inkpot and pen.
Notes
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The origins of the name Milo are unclear - not only as a Hobbit-name, but also in reality. Possible sources or connections include Germanic mild, 'calm, peaceful', Slavonic milu, 'gracious, merciful' or Latin miles, 'soldier'. Given that Milo Burrows' father Rufus had an unambiguously Latin name, the last of these, Latin miles, perhaps seems most likely to have been Tolkien's intended meaning.
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