Sign me up for the “I love both Sansa and Arya Stark, they’ve suffered too much, and I hope they develop a good relationship when they’re older and more mature (also please let them survive)” Club.
As long as there are cookies.
Sign me up for the “I love both Sansa and Arya Stark, they’ve suffered too much, and I hope they develop a good relationship when they’re older and more mature (also please let them survive)” Club.
As long as there are cookies.
I’ve finally found words for why I hate Tywin Lannister so much: he’s a rape-minded, murderous asshole with delusions of grandeur like many of the other men in Westeros (as others have pointed out), but he manages to hide that behind a veneer of competence because he’s surrounded by fellow rape-minded, murderous assholes who also happen to have idiotic delusions of grandeur and are louder about it.
It’s important to
remember that Lyanna was not only a kid, but a kid with canonically romantic –
although well-founded – ideals, even if she did have a practical side. People
wonder why she would have run away with Rhaegar, a married man, when she
rightfully excoriated Robert for being unfaithful. It’s a good point, but…
…well, Rhaegar probably
spun a tale of a prophecy that only she could help him fulfill, and that would
have seemed a LOT more romantic to her than the idea of Robert the Canonical Cad, who swaggered around and whose motto can
be best summed up with “If she’s female and she’s breathing, stick it in” (best
sung to the tune of If You’re Happy and You Know It). So she chose what seemed like the only way to get away from him, and Rhaegar sold it to her as ‘well, it’s not really a bad thing at all if you help save the world, wife, what wife?’ She enabled Rhaegar, but
I’m firmly of the idea that it was entirely unintentional, and she’s not to
blame because she was fifteen years old.
On a side note, Lyanna
being upset over Robert siring a lot of known bastards, and wanting him to be
faithful to her, is not dissimilar to what Catelyn feels about Ned having sired
Jon and raised him alongside their kids. Both perspectives are entirely valid, and both should be defended more than they are.