Girls Gone Canon Cast - ASOIAF Episode 106 - ACOK Davos II: Part 2
Episode Date: October 23, 2020After doing the unthinkable in splitting a chapter to make two episodes, we follow Davos for another unthinkable moment: a baby shower. But it's not just any baby shower as watches a shadow in the sha...pe of his king born while Davos feels himself die just a little on the inside. --- Eliana's twitter:Â https://twitter.com/arhythmetric Eliana's reddit account:Â https://www.reddit.com/user/glass_table_girl Eliana's blog:Â https://themanyfacedblog.wordpress.com/ Chloe's twitter:Â https://twitter.com/liesandarbor Chloe's blog:Â www.liesandarborgold.com Intro by Anton Langhage
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Girls Gone Canon, A Song of Ice and Fire, Episode 106, Davos 2, and
A Clash of Kings part 2. You are invited to a baby shower and I am one of
the hosts of this baby shower Chloe. It actually is quite wet around this baby shower this time
and I am another one of your hosts for this baby shower Eliana. Thank you for coming we did our
best with what we could for this it was a very last minute baby
shower but melisandre called us and we said we'd see what we could do yeah we brought her a boat
that's a among the gifts that we brought no cradles unfortunately what new child is this who came to kill Courtney Penrose?
R.I.P.
That's the song.
No one ever said I was great at lyrics.
You know, no one ever said you're great at lyrics, Eliana,
but we have had other compliments that usually end up in our iTunes reviews
about your quirks, we could call them.
I thought you were going to say about my musical tastes,
but that works too.
I'm sticking by what I said, your quirks.
Yep.
And this was from our friend Hotter Potter,
who said, wow, exclamation point, exclamation point.
And I think the two exclamation points really sell me on this review,
but I want you to read me the rest of it.
I mean, there's a lot that's good in this review.
And Hotter Potter says,
Found my way here recently
after Chloe did a guest appearance over
at History of Westeros.
Love your humor and your analysis
of the women in A Song of Ice and Fire.
All your hot takes are canon,
as far as I'm concerned.
Then, for your stats purposes,
I hit subscribe as soon as
Eliotta started singing about Skimbleshanks
slash Steelshanks, so I'm pretty sure that
more cats references
is a sure win, and
thank you for that, Hotter Potter
thank you for your support
of our podcast, but most importantly
me, our podcats
ooh, how come, does that exist?
a podcats podcast?
I don't want to give you any ideas, so I'm not going to dignify that with any other response.
Well.
It's a great review. Thank you for the review, Hotter Potter.
Thank you.
And I'm glad you enjoy our analysis of Women in a Song of Ice and Fire.
I do think sometimes we kind of skip out on a very
rarely seen perspective in this series which is the male perspective i think we're really missing
out on it but we do our best here with what we can do do and you know what what we miss we make
up for with pizzazz and musical numbers like skimble shanks the railway cat the cat on the railway i can probably sing most of uh memory
too it's not something that's gonna happen on this podcast but uh is it danny alone in the
dothraki sea could be or or no no no sorry that that's an american tale again i was thinking
about the starks again being far apart um oh, that's sad. Yeah, so we can talk about
memory eventually one day
and how my family used to force
me to sing it in front of people. That was
traumatic. Anyway,
until then. Today is not
yeah, today's not the day for that.
Today's a different kind of traumatic.
Yes, we're going to live some other trauma
today, not Eliana's trauma, and
I was going to call this a lightning round, which is really just explaining what we did in the very last episode.
Maybe it's more like the Stormlord round since we're going to Storm's End at Chapter's End, but this is a lightning round on what we did last episode.
Davos spent the last couple weeks delivering mail around the realm
staff defunding USPS
and trying, failing to talk
Stannis down from his upcoming battle
with Courtney Penrose
but instead of talking Stannis down
Davos apparently gets himself
talked into going along
with Melisandre who invites him
to a baby shower
as her plus one
except Courtney Penrose is the one who's taking
the baby shower um that doesn't that doesn't sound it's not how baby showers usually work
but that's how this one does it is gonna in the words of what is that Lady Gaga that chromatica
song rain down on him rain on me i don't know what it
is i don't know i'm trying to be topical it's failing but to be topical stannis and davos
have arrived back at camp after the parlay and the smell of horse dung is sticking to the wood
smoke and cooking meat stannis commands the lords to disband and meet in an hour for a war council
in his pavilion. Davos and Melisandre ride for the pavilion, which is a large canvas soldier's
tent dyed yellow gold. The royal banner is the only thing marking it as a king's tent,
and the guards as well. Queen's men on spears, the badge of a fiery heart sewn on their own heart.
Wow. I do love the language here that describes Stannis' pavilion.
It very much, in my opinion, screams the same message as the cold but shining sword.
The language here is the tent had to be large since it was there his lord's bannermen came to council.
Yet there was nothing grand about it.
It was a soldier's tent of heavy canvas.
Dyed the dark yellow that sometimes
passed for gold.
Definitely gives you a sort of
fool's gold or fake gold
kind of idea to Stannis.
I was just gonna say, that
is what we call fool's gold, son.
Fool's gold.
I didn't even think about that.
That's such a good call out.
Well, the guards right now, they're relieving Melisandre of the standard that she carried,
and Devon prepares to lift the flap of the tent for the king.
I've had some growth, some character growth in the last week.
Wow.
I commented last week.
I know not often does that happen.
I commented last week about Melisandre's placement in the parlay audience, if you recall,
and she was in the back. I don't really think I paid enough attention to her carrying the standard
and how that kind of fits into it, so this week I'm going to. Standard bearing is a super honored
position that goes back to Roman and medieval warfare, and it's a major target for other troops. In Roman legions,
they're called a signifier, carried on a standard with phalarrae or discs and medallions and other
things mounted on a pole, which could be like a leaf-shaped spearhead or an open human hand,
a wreath, to show an award or honor, generally something to display the oath of loyalty taken
by the soldiers. Now, this isn't a normal battle to the eye that we're seeing.
Melisandre carries Stannis' fiery banner in the back next to the Onion Knight,
kind of makes it feel like a bait and switch.
Melisandre is presented at the start of the chapter in the parlay as a woman,
standing in the back, made to hold the banner at this peaceful discussion,
with the dazzled, armed men out in front.
But by chapter's end, Melisandre has become several gods,
not just the mother giving birth to the stranger,
but also the warrior as she's sending her child forth to kill Courtney.
The whole situation is presented like a parlay,
but Melisandre's position in the back holding the banner is most important
because, like other standard bearers
for stannis if melisandre and that fiery stag flag fall so does he and without her they don't
capture storm's end without considerable bloodshed and this is where games like capture the flag
come from literally yes yes huh i liked that game yeah well it's a war game so yeah back when people used to
play games with each other in real life and i think that's interesting what you're saying
about melisandre and then the flag especially when it comes to the blackwater later on
yes the middle never done before yeah blackwater 72 hour blue stanis hands his crown to devon commanding
cold water and cups for two party sending melisandre away so he could have a private
discussion with davos he threatens to make davos a lord someday meaning he'll have to suffer these
councils with the braying mules of the kingdom and boy do the
mules love to hear themselves bray he says he explains that once in a while they come up with
something useful though just every once in a while mules seem pretty cool i could make that a tier
i like mules so does maya oh you're. I forgot the name of Maya's mule.
I'll have to look that up sometime.
But here, you know, as you said, it's a party with some cups of water.
Stannis making some big ass here, right?
Stannis is about to make a really, really, really big ass Godavos.
And I think that this exchange really calls to mind again, Robert visiting Ned and being like ned guess what i came all this
way to make you my hand and then immediately after in the crypts like first ned like falls to his
knees he's like oh my god i'm honored and robert's like no no it's not an honor you know you're gonna
wipe my shit right he says this is a huge burden but whereas whereas Ned, he was the Lord of Winterfell, Warden of the North, and has a lot of control. He has the power to say no to Robert if he wanted to. And then even later on, when he and Robert clash in terms of their values, he has enough power to refuse being Hand. He doesn't do it just yet, he does it later on, of course. And Davos isn't in that same
position, right? The power is completely different. Whereas Ned is like, I'm still gonna be fine,
right? If I go back to Winterfell, live my life how I wanted to, that's not the case. Because
for Davos, everything's contingent on Stannis, his god, right? It's not just about Davos's morals,
because Ned and Robert have a dynamic that offers Ned more freedom.
They grew up together, right? They have, they grew up as equals in the Vale until they're like,
what if Robert was king? I mean, there's a whole rebellion, not just his rebellion,
a lot of things happened. But we see in Ned's chapters, you know, he's doing the same thing
as Davos in many ways, right? He's using for the most part softer language initially when it comes
to Robert, because he's like, I don't know who this guy is anymore, right? It's been
several years. He's wondering if Robert, his friend, has been replaced by Robert the King,
and Catelyn warns him of as much. And that's the issue that Davos ends up dealing with when it
comes to Stannis right now. He's constantly stepping on eggshells until later on but he's trying to be palatable to what stannis he thinks
stannis wants to hear but ned can say all these things right and if robert pulls anything i mean
if robert tries to fight a war war against north well ned stood up to one king before right
so when robert asked ned do something that would disgrace Ned entirely
and that goes against his very morals,
Ned can say something in a small council,
some of the most powerful men in the realm,
and be able to hold his own
and be able to make a point of saying,
Robert, I ask you,
what did we rise against Ares Targaryen for
if not to put an end to the murder of children?
Davos doesn't get to do that
because Stannis gets to dictate what his morality is
and hold his family and everything that he's gotten hostage.
And, you know, it's just really convenient
when Stannis is like, you know,
Renly died because the Lord of Light willed it.
It's really convenient that the Lord of Light's will
kind of matches Stannis' own.
And for what it's worth,
I think in a lot of other ways, stannis is also exhibiting some hypocrisy with regards to what he was saying about how people regarded
robert he was always like coming back to that thing of he's like robert could piss in a cup
and everyone's like this is such awesome fucking wine and stannis is like i give them water and
they're like suspicious about it and stannis is super mad about it.
And I think the fact is that Robert's mercy, the reason why people felt that way, is his mercy turned men's fortunes from things like fated death for treason into a trusted advisor.
Whereas here, Stannis has invited someone that he should be trusting, someone who has followed him, promises to serve him.
He's offering him a cup of cool, cold water, which should be very safe.
And what he's asking him is to drink moral poison.
He's asking him to do something that goes against the very core of what Davos wants to be and do.
The very core of what he has wanted Davos to be and do, or said he wanted Davos to be and do.
Obviously, actions speak louder than words in
my opinion that's all and you know the whole finger thing it's kind of like so I'm still
stuck on that uh they're they're not stuck on Davos but I'm stuck on them no wonder uh people
are suspicious of his water like what comes with this, because you chop fingers off, bro. You just do that in your free time.
I love that Robert's big vice, besides being too trusting, obviously, and thinking like, oh, things will work out and be fine, is that he died from wine, right?
That was one of his big vices as well.
That's how he drowned the world out.
And it's like Stannis has to do everything the opposite of robert like he can never
never enjoy wine right because that's a hidden dagger in the dark like you're saying he has to
do the opposite of this yeah trying to differentiate himself from his brother's shadow
devon brings them in their water that we were talking about. Stannis adds a pinch of salt into his, and Davos is like,
I could use
a hell of a drink right now.
This has been a stressful-ass day.
And I do think it's interesting that
Stannis adds a pinch of salt to his water.
I'm just saying, does it mean that we should take everything
that Stannis does or says, especially when it
comes to moral conviction with a
grain of salt? And I am, in fact,
not actually only making
a pun there i'm actually being very serious no i think you're right especially i mean
davos certainly should take everything he says with a grain of salt shit
i'm just saying he needs to look out i really worry about that guy uh stannis adding the salt
to his water reminds me a lot of just some stuff i've read from like
religious medieval texts and medieval texts and what that whole myth of like they didn't have
readily available water is very silly water was definitely available many texts put focus on it
it's just wine tasted better and sometimes it was more available uh let's face it, water tastes like nothing. They were like,
we have this beautiful fruit vinegar juice, like, why not drink this instead? I mean,
by the 13th century in London, they had built the conduit with pipes bringing fresh water in.
It's a non-starter. So more related, it reminds me of some religious medieval texts and how they
treated water. Some accounts would say that saints abstained from alcohol and they would drink water only,
and some austere communities as well advocated for relying on water.
There were medieval handbooks of penance that often punished people by taking away finer food or drink in the face of wrongdoing,
for example, including taking away wine and making them drink water, and being pure.
For an example, there's an 11th century writer, Bouchard of Worms, who explained,
of Worms, if thou hast sworn by God's hair or by his head or made use of any other blasphemous
expression against God, if thou hast done so but once unwittingly, thou shalt do penance for seven days on bread and water.
If, after having been upbraided for it, thou hast done it a second or third time, thou shalt do penance for 15 days on bread and water.
So, I mean, it fits so well that Stannis seems to be in this perpetual state of penance, right?
to be in this perpetual state of penance, right? Like he's trying to somehow
absolve himself of
this shame that he hasn't
brought glory in
the shadow of Robert, right?
Or that is paying it readily.
And I just thought it was very interesting to think of it
in a way of Stannis being
pure. Like that Frank from
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
moment where he's covered in
Purell hand sanitizer on the ground
half nude and it's like i've got to be pure that's stannis that's him i think i actually
remember that i haven't watched it's always sunny since like over a decade which i know it's
memorable but then i watched like three seasons in one night i stayed up all night it was a
hell of a time he's just like a worm on the ground covered in pure
and he's just like i just want to be pure that's stanis uh he just wants to be pure that's the
other thing like he just wants to get that fast track of devotion to power he's like how what
what how can i cheat this how can i cheat this there's an essence of him that is a little also holier than thou.
Yeah, absolutely.
Like, he does it here,
right? Especially even when he talks
about all his mules of lords
around him. He's telling Davos what he
expects that he's gonna hear in his next council.
It's like Lord Valyrian would tell him to
storm the walls at first light with
grapnels. And he's like, the younger
mules are gonna love it.
Estermont's gonna say,
let's do a year-long siege,
just like the Tyrells and Redwine did with
Stannis. Then you're gonna have Bryce
Caron, and the rest are gonna plead for single
combat and that undying fame
that comes with it.
I do love the beginning of Stannis'
crew with these sweet summer nights,
many that have come over from Redley's camp,
and just the air of all the glory they want.
And it's so sad because we get it so perverted as we get through to Adowada, right?
I feel this is a perfect intro for House Karen,
or to give more attention to House Karen, I should say.
Their semi-canon words from the World of Ice and Fire app are,
no song so sweet. And
Karen is singing a sweet song indeed this whole chapter about his prowess in combat. House Karen
is actually a pretty interesting house. They're lord of the marches, but it's nothing but a title.
They have no extra rule over marcher lords or anything. And if you recall, one of the boys
Brienne was to marry was a Karenairn, Brian Cairn's
younger son who died of a chill. But to bring it back to something we've talked about a tiny bit
on Patreon with Agen III, there was a Lord Cairn on his council who helped with the whole rebuild
Westeros better bullshit that was happening then, though only for about a year. It's interesting to
see him on Team Stannis, new front runner for rebuild westeros
though i'm not really sure what infrastructure they're rebuilding but you know interesting
interesting yeah and i mean we are in quite a bit of a war right now so interesting stannis asks
well davos what would you do and davos says well i would leave and take king's landing because the
lannisters actually are our enemy and penrose doesn't have the power to harm us or do anything more than this.
He's like, once we attack and dethrone Joff, the rest is Stannis' and Tywin.
As they know at the moment, Tywin is heading west to defend Lannisport, not, you know, back to King's Landing for like the Blackwater or anything.
He's not right now, right?
Stannis tells Devon, you know, Devon, your father's pretty clever and that I wish I had more smugglers in my service.
Really laying it on there, Stannis.
But Davos, he says, is wrong about one thing.
He says there is, in fact, a need for him to take his ancestral home.
He says,
there is in fact a need for him to take his ancestral home he says if i leave storms and untaken in my rear it will be said i was defeated there and that i cannot permit men do not love me
as they loved my brothers they follow me because they fear me and defeat is death to fear. The castle must fall.
Hmm.
Hmm.
You know, being Stannis just means grit your teeth in your beer.
Lots going on.
But no, no, interestingly enough, they're both semi-right. There's something about this that always made me wonder why Cersei wasn't more focused on, like, taking Storm's End ahead of time,
especially since it's the ancestral seat for her sons in the end for Tommen.
Like if Joffrey is king and doesn't die,
Tommen needs to have a place to go to and have little lordlings there and,
you know, carry on the family legacy and all that. And it kind of shows that short-sightedness.
Like if you don't have your ancestral home,
that doesn't really hold up your claim. But interestingly enough, Davos does have the right of it because King's Landing is a mess right now. Last chapter comes off the riot where people
don't have food or housing. The Lannisters are walking the streets as royals with no repercussions
for what they've done to the city until, you know, this riot. And the real shadowbinding we end up
seeing is that by waiting and letting the Lannisters calculate and come up with plots and
plans and schemes to see themselves safe, like Tyrion with the chain, keeping Tommen quote-unquote
safe, the small folks still cling to Renly's ghost, not Stannis. That's the true shadowbinding that
gets done is Garland in that suit suit stannis is too wrapped up in
his image as a king and his glory over his brother's memories that the small folk cheer
for the ghost of renly who dared to save the city and stannis ends up the villain who attacked it
that's so interesting when you're saying about that being shadowbinding it's uh
he's putting on that face right the way that the shadow at the end
has stanis's face yeah and you know uh what you were saying right about it does make sense why
he needs storms that i mean we see the consequences of losing winterfell in this very same book right
this kind of portends that importance when it comes to theon taking it out from Robb's army, but also that idea of why doesn't Cersei
try to take Storm's End? And I mean, why doesn't Tyrion as well? And I think that does have a bit
to do with Tywin's host heading west. King's Landing does, as you said, it's a mess. They're
a little afraid. They feel like they're not ready for an invasion from Stannis. It's why they start
laughing. Cersei and Tyrion are so relieved and they're like ready for an invasion from Stannis. It's why they start laughing.
Cersei and Tyrion are so relieved
and they're like, are you fucking kidding me?
Renly and Stannis are fighting each other?
Because they are legitimately afraid of
Stannis, right? Yeah, they're laughing.
They're like, wow, I can't believe we locked out like this.
And we can see how afraid Cersei is
actually of Stannis, even
at the Blackwater, right? She's like, I would rather
die than face Stannis. And that blackwater right she's like i would rather die than face
stannis and that's the plan that she has for her you're not alone cersei most of westeros feels
that way and you know i'm reminded of this because not a cast is entering blackwater territory i love
that we once more will be covering a thing similar, they are entering Blackwater. The Sansa and Sandor episode this week recorded before Blackwater, before everything really pumps off.
So they are getting to Blackwater soon.
And Cersei at Blackwater, around then when Sansa gets her period and Cersei at Blackwater,
Cersei says that love is poison and it'll kill you all the same.
Like you are weaker, Sans sansa if you love more
people but then of course we have thoughts from catalan in a different part of the books where
she thinks that laughter is poison to fear so it's really interesting to see how these two thoughts
regard everything and of course you have sansa at the blackwater thinking when i'm queen i'll
make them love me in comparison to all this ruling through fear.
I know that we need to stop talking about Stannis, but it's interesting that idea of laughter is poison to fear in that, I mean, no one fucking laughs at Stannis, right?
Stannis doesn't even fucking laugh at Stannis.
Yeah, he's laughed, what, three times?
Yeah, actually we did see one of them earlier this episode, never mind.
But that's with Davos. It's not with people.
You don't see it publicly.
This is seen in the eyes of his smuggler.
Yeah.
Stannis is like laughing in front of Davos and he's pulling a Bill Murray's like a no one will ever believe you.
This ever happened.
He does it quickly, his laughs, right? But in just like this, right?
What he has to do here at Storm's End.
He has to do it quickly.
Dorner's swords are waiting in the mountain passes to sweep the marches.
Highgarden, of course, has the height of Renly's power, 60,000 foot soldiers.
Not all of them, as we know, defected to Stannis.
And the men he sent to retrieve them, Arrol and Parmesan Crane,
Jean Parmesan Crane, Jean Parmesan Crane had still not
returned, and it's likely
Loras had taken the army for himself
by now. Which,
what resume builder? Davos
begins to tell him what Salador
San said, but Stannis is like, I don't want to hear it.
He thinks that Salador thinks only of
gold, and his head is full of dreams
and the red keeps treasure.
Is that Cersei's vagina?
Yes, that's Cersei's cunt where the gold is kept, as we know from Robert Baratheon.
Yes.
I did want to rewind now that I think about it.
The situation where it's likely Loras had taken the army for himself by now.
Does that make you think about later vibes for loris at all the
dragon stone dude i hope so i mean i still worry about that boy but i worry about that boy but i
really want to see loris has the potential for such interesting character development he does
and alas will he get it he's gonna be a great foil if he survives to John Connington, right?
The king, prince that he loved.
Anyway.
There's this line we get from Stannis about Salador San, and Stannis says,
The day I need military counsel from a Lysine brigand is the day I put off my crown and take the black.
Interestingly enough, the next two people who take Storm's End
will have a Free Cities or Valyrian
advisor, right?
Orien Waters for Cersei and Lysona
Marr for Aegon.
Yeah, so, you know,
Stannis went through all that fucking trouble just to lose
the goddamn castle anyway, but he was trying to
get Edric Storm anyway. He was telling them
it's about the castle. It's not about the castle, it was about
the boy. Whatever.
But there's something about that line of the lysine brigand
the day I put off
my crown take the black that makes me pause
and wonder like I'm sure there are people who
take this line to have meant
Stannis taking the black because he does
go and aid the Night's Watch of course of course
and there's like all those parallels he has with
the Night's King and
I think that that makes a
lot of sense but like while i'm here wilding out on my own podcast uh part of me wonders if that
moment when stannis is so desperate right that he removes his crown and takes the black
could that be him relinquishing rather his kingship and donning morning clothes not the
night's watch black because after all we see from circe investors black is still the color of
morning and you know stannis is about to do a lot of shit that might involve some morning for family
members or something i sure would say it's a wake-up call to some fans that's for sure a wake up call amazing
morning wake we're going to hell for this we should start a podcast oh we should you know
not this so interesting because he's finally letting himself mourn kind of falling upon his flaming sword in a
way and i used to really like all those commander theories those lord commander theories for stannis
for the night's watch back when i liked stannis we all have a redemption art everyone so i'm just
saying i used to like stannis now i don't uh i haven't really thought about that theory in a
while though and something else that kind of just popped out
is Edric is later whisked off
to Lys. So it's
funny that he says, like, oh, the day I start
trusting Lysini Brigand, well, that's
where Edric ends up with Lord Eastermont,
isn't it? It is.
And we do talk about that
quite a bit also in our Aegon III episode.
And yes, we did.
And there's a little bit of that. There's that
theory that maybe Aegon
VI, Blackfire
Garion, whatever, will be
whatever you want to effing
call him, Egghead.
Maybe he will be bringing Edric back
as his Storm's End lord.
You know? Yeah.
Lord Eggstramon. I've always liked that.
That's where tyrek went
so the estermont so this is just something i was thinking randomly for no reason the other day
and you know how george like really is into turtles and the estermont sigil is turtles
is there like maybe something with where george grew up or his childhood or youth or whatever
with the turtles that's like an eastern mountain
or something because that's what I think Estermont
sort of sounds like it might mean
and that's it that was the thought
turtles and there's a
connection. Eastern mountain time
I mean oh yeah I mean like
I don't know I'm just
we know that turtles is George's first
true inspiration for all of his
fiction pretty much yeah and
no it does make sense uh i don't know i like the idea that's like how there's the giant star
turtle in disc world uh who carries the four giant elephants who turn then carry the actual
disc world on top of them like the idea the idea in disc world no
spoilers it's there's only like 50 something books and it's been out for a jillion years but
he's been trying to get me to read them they're good it's just there's a lot and there are some
really good reading guides that tell you like don't read this just read these and read spark
notes on this too like save yourself this handful of books uh but yes so basically i think that's probably a
great influence of course is the turtles because they carry the entire world on their back with
the elephants and i thought that was neat so i'm sure there's a little bit of that somewhere in
there as well in his little turtle war worlds he started writing this book off of when he was like
a child making turtles yeah other anyways yeah so you know just as the turtles serve george the king asks if davos is here to serve him
stannis and davos is like yes i am and then he tasks davos with a mission and all this language
of serving service to stannis that melisandre serves it does i will say set things up quite nicely for later on when
stienis is like wait but what about me do i serve do i serve the realm maybe later on in a storm of
swords so courtney penrose is someone who has served as well in this story right we talked a
little bit about him in the last episode and that he treated edrick as his own child since no one else
gave a fuck about edrick obviously except him it's sad but true i mean even his own uh kin as we
learn just see him as a political piece and courtney penrose uh has a lieutenant as well who
is another bastard a bastard cousin to the fosways a boy of 20. And if Courtney Penrose dies, Stannis says the cousins
will likely take control with this Lord Meadows character. Davos reminds him of another 20-year-old
he once knew who once commanded Storm's End, and Stannis says, well, this one isn't as stubborn as
I was. Davos doesn't know why this matters. He's like, Penrose seems to look super healthy.
Couple things here.
It tickles me to think Stannis cutting Davos' fingers off
by the ripe age of 21 years old
is considered this big crazy like
Stannis' righteous act.
He's a 21 year old who had too much lemon water one night
and was like, I'm going to chop your fingers off
because you stole Davos.
What fucking 21 year old is sitting around and is like, I'm going to punish'm gonna chop your fingers off because you stole davos what fucking
21 year old is sitting around and is like i'm gonna punish you and take your fingers off as
as a righteous 21 year old but have you considered that's definitely a thing that a 21 year old would
think on the other hand i mean on the other hand davos has different fingers eliana oh well
i didn't even mean for that to happen.
You set it up and I just bowled it straight down, strike after strike.
I do like the hint, though, that Davos is like, I don't understand what you mean.
Courtney Penrose looks healthy.
And Stannis then follows up and he's like, Renly looked healthy, too, the night before he died.
And Davos feels hair stand up on his neck like those
are the words of complicit behavior in this horrible task and suddenly the reality sets in
and davos is like wow i am being tasked to help serve as a firing squad a covert firing squad
from melisandre's powerful pussy like we are firing that murder out at courtney penrose straight out
of there just and he pachoo! And he
doesn't even know that yet, but he will.
He has an idea, because, like, at a
point, he thinks of the term, like, I've never
been an assassin before.
And, yeah, as you said,
you know, things are sinking in. He's like,
he's, like, not admitting it
to himself, but he knows. He's like, so
Stan has killed his brother
and he gets confirmation of that
right Davos is
the one who's crafting a theory
in his head right now he's
writing up the post on Reddit he's like I think Stannis
killed his brother
here's my proof
confirmation
TLDR
Stannis I think killed redly
oh my god why did the user delete their account he's like oh god it was true or no one else can
like refer back to it they're like wait remember that guy who Comments were locked.
Stannis says Melisandre has seen Courtney's death in the flames and the manner of it.
He won't die in nightly combat.
Her flames don't lie. She saw Renly's doom as well, he says.
Melisandre had told Stannis that if he sailed to Storm's End, he would win his brother's power.
Davos then protests. Renly was marching against the Lannisters originally, and he begins to say what Renly would have done,
but Stannis cuts him off mid-conjugation. Stannis goes, was, would have, what is that?
He did what he did. He came here with his banners and his peaches to his doom.
And it was well for me he did.
Melisandre saw another day in her flames as well.
Amaro, where Renly rode out of the south in his green armor to smash my host beneath the walls of King's Landing.
Had I met my brother there, it might have been me who died in place of him. Davos then brings up, you know, if there were two futures,
maybe one of the futures would have been an alternate universe
where you join each other to bring the Lannisters down.
And Stannis is like, no, that sounds fake.
Sounds fake.
Yeah, because like Davos is like, so how do you know that these are like different futures?
And you know what?
I'm going to tell you right now, davos ends up being right in a way and i want to talk about why the take on theology that has to
do solely around how light works right and all this is stupid because turns out stannis doesn't
know shit about light and no one knows shit about how light works in the story i'm going to read you another another stannis line here of there you err on your night some lights cast more
than one shadow stand before the night fire and you'll see for yourself the flames shift and dance
never still the shadows grow tall and short and every man casts a dozen some are fainter than
others that's all while men cast their shadows across the future as well.
One shadow, or many,
Melisandre sees them all.
So everyone,
I want you all to buckle up, you're gonna get something
that you didn't think you were gonna get
on these podcasts, and I'm gonna go through a
slight drawing 101
lesson here.
As some of you may know,
I have an artistic background, and lighting is actually, believe
it or not, a pretty big fucking
deal when it comes to art.
And to Stannis' credit, he is right.
You know, flames do shift and dance
as they grow,
and that shifting, right,
can cause those multiple shadows,
but that's because the light source
is changing, or there is more than one
as that light dances, you know, things flicker, etc., and shadows, but that's because the light source is changing, or there is more than one as
that light dances, you know, things flicker, etc. and light moves fast.
But when you have a single light source, alright, you do not get multiple shadows that split.
You might get different shadows on your object, such as like maybe a cast shadow or half shadows
on the object, right, like the shadow's gradation might change the intensity,
but those shadows aren't created by the light.
A cast shadow comes from an object blocking the light.
Those are the shadows that Stannis is talking about,
what's cast down on the ground.
You might get some reflective light back on the object,
but that's not the fucking same, right?
That's from other objects bouncing light back.
Anyways, I digress so artists have to be really particular in how they portray something because
if your shadows are confusing then your viewer is going to be confused right because then you
have a confusing light source it's not as good looking of an image it's not as aesthetic unless
that's your intentional perhaps artistic intent like you're doing that on purpose because you you want to make a certain point in it, you want to portray something,
or maybe it's something more abstracted, or maybe that's how things look. But regardless,
if there's more than one light source, you just have to be very, very careful because
lighting is very deliberate, right? An image is not a 3d object, right? You're using light
to create the illusion of volume. And light is used
to highlight that form and shape. And the point is, if you have multiple shadows, it gets confusing,
right? Because what you actually have is multiple light sources. And again, that's why artists are
very deliberate in how they set things up for paintings, drawings, etc. For that very reason,
I encourage you to go look at some of maybe your favorite still life paintings, drawings, etc. for that very reason. I encourage you to go
look at some of maybe your favorite still life paintings, or maybe some of your, I don't know,
favorite Rembranzos have really dramatic lighting, right? Many of these are effective studies,
right, especially for still lifes, because artists will only use one light source for those still
lives so that they can really get a sense of the form. But the point is, this scene, therefore,
this
moment where Stannis is
trying to give a lesson on theology
to Davos can be read
two ways. Because
again, Stannis and Melisandre don't actually
know how the fuck light works.
One of those ways is, A,
Davos is correct in his questioning, and there
is, in fact fact a single shadow
that is cast as we see because yes Renly dies and yes at the same time his armor does appear at the
Blackwater and that spells Stannis's doom like Davos questioning how he must be used to make
these prophecies come true he's like that's really weird Stannis is doing the same thing
and spelling his doom throughout all of this by killing Renly, adding to his power, therefore, when his ghost comes back, that adds to his own mystique.
It turns out it's Scarlet Tyrell.
Both of these are true, and that means there's one true light source.
Or the other interpretation of this is that there are, in fact, if there are multiple
shadows cast in multiple futures, there are, in fact, multiple light sources and not just
one light source.
And that means that the measure of good and evil via the lord of light isn't just one measure there there must be other senses of morality and
would you know it wouldn't you know it something interesting that happens when you have multiple
light sources sometimes is that you get a lot of those different not just shadows but a lot of
different tonal shades those in-betweens mid-tones you know how you make those colors those different shades
shadows, shades of grey
ah
like Stani and Mel
yes
so today you got not just drawing 101
but a little dash of color theory
just the tiniest pinch, like that salt
that's
what I have to say about light thank you eliana for your beautiful
artistic render we can say that you just brought us amazing brilliant thank you you know stannis
knows that davos doesn't love melisandre no matter how many shades of gray or shadows she can cast or see or fires she can light.
Not many people really like Melisandre in this camp.
Most of them just find her unnatural, right?
Like, Gaillard thinks a woman shouldn't be his standard bearer, as we kind of mentioned earlier,
and others whisper, she shouldn't be in the war councils at all.
You should send her back to Asshai.
That's not how that works they whisper while she serves
and sees in her flames davos boldly asks how melisandre serves since he couldn't winkle it
out of the sun and stannis responds as needed and now stannis commands davos he must take a small
boat and bring stannis the boy davosos protests, saying there are cleaner ways. Court may may yield, but Stannis responds that he must have the boy, Davos, must. Melisandre has seen that in her flames as well.
Which I thought was interesting, because besides the idea of king's blood, we don't actually know what Melisandre saw in the flames that makes everyone so desperate to get a hold of edrick right yeah
he becomes this obsession with power it's like a microcosm of stannis's entire obsession with power
edrick is this symbol of freedom and liberation at first right he starts off as a symbol of like hey
this could free us from the lannisters but then it gets perverted in a pathway for power for Stannis. He goes and turns into the body of Christ from the symbol of power to becoming an ingredient of power, a mixture to put into the power potion Stannis wants to drink.
to Eliana's delight,
especially from our friend Bidonica,
who wrote some really good meta over at Tumblr.
So if you missed it, check out last week's episode.
But Stannis here ends up getting to the point of like,
first, King's blood is powerful for proving things. And then it becomes King's blood is powerful
to drink and absorb all the powers
and take over Westeros.
It's a pretty, it's a steep climb, right?
It's so steep that even Davos, as
we're going to get to in the future, in the chapters
to come, goes, this feels wrong?
Question mark?
Question mark?
Maybe we're lucky that Stannis doesn't laugh,
right? Would he come off as like a crazy
villain laugh or
something? No, he'd be like one of those stupid
nerdy ones that would be like a nerdy genius villain.
Yeah, like,
I can't stand that I've been foiled again
by you Davos Onion Knight.
Yeah, it would be interesting.
Even though I know that it's supposed to sound like a gust of wind,
but, you know,
whatever.
Davos tries to convince him that Courtney
may actually be looking for a way to yield to Stannis with honor, even if it means his life, but Stannis is, as noted earlier, stubborn.
He truly, truly is. More like he had plans for some treachery. There'll be no combat of champions, Sir Courtney was dead before he ever threw that glove.
The flames do not lie, Davos.
Yet,
they require me to make them true.
He thought.
It had been a long time
since Davos Seaworth
felt so sad.
Aww.
But anyway, this is how Stannis has been playing with prophecy, forcing them into truth and holding a sword aww but anyway
this is how Stannis has been playing with prophecy
forcing them into truth
and holding a sword without a hilt
which, you know, bites his ass at the Blackwater
as we mentioned
but until then, Davos has found himself
steering a tiny boat
I'm on a boat, how did I fucking get here
across shipbreaker bay
thinking of the difference from the last time
he took a smuggler's ship the difference from the last time he took a smuggler ship to
storm's end last time he brought life in an onion shape layers he brought shrek to storm's end
the tyrells and the red wines scattered around and this time it's death and it's melisandre
and stanis's ship surrounding storm's end and melisandre's hidden in red cloaks on the ship with him.
And he takes no comfort from the sea, even though he loves it.
And she tells him she can smell his fear.
Someone once told me the night is dark and full of terrors.
And tonight, I am no knight.
Tonight I am Davos the smuggler again.
Would that you were an onion.
She laughed.
I laughed too if someone fucking told. Would that you were an onion. She laughed. I'd laugh too if someone fucking told me.
I wish you were an onion.
Anyways, Davos revisiting this watery place
actually reminds me of another sea-affiliated POV character in this book,
our favorite para-larvae, Theon.
This isn't really Davos' crossing of the Rubicon.
You know, as we discussed with Theon crossing that one river,
he goes over it and then returns change
when he decides to come back with the Miller's boys.
As again, no man can cross the same river twice
for he is not the same man.
It is not the same river.
Once more, Heraclitus.
That's great.
It also reminds me of the River Styx, right?
Major River Styx vibes. I mean,
even down to the etymology, Styx means abomination or abhorrent. And the water of the River Styx is
black and inky and fatal to the touch and fatal if it's drunk. And it's where the fifth circle is,
right? Those damned for being wrathful and sullen interesting they're immersed in a toxic black
liquid that makes the river up and it circles the underworld nine times from the university of texas
at austin like the fourth circle of hell the fifth circle represented in inferno seven and eight
contains two related groups of sinners but whereas avarice and prodigality are two distinct sins based on the
same principle and a moderate attitude toward material wealth, wrath and sullenness are
basically two forms of a single sin. Anger that's expressed, wrath, and anger that's repressed,
sullenness. The idea that anger takes various forms is common in ancient and medieval thought.
Note how the two groups suffer different punishments appropriate to their anger the wrathful ruthlessly attacking one another and the sullen stewing below the surface of the
muddy swamp but they're all confined to the sticks so hysterically stannis will end up having to spend
his later existence in hell with robert so hysterically because robert's wrath and stannis will end up having to spend his later existence in hell with Robert so hysterically because Robert's wrath and Stannis' sullenness will haunt them to the river Styx, I'm guessing.
But I think this can be drawn on when we get to Blackwater as well and its inky depths.
But it felt about right.
Like, this is, that's Stannis' problem.
His repressed anger throughout all the years is now manifesting in his tie ray to take over the whole country yeah stannis like many other characters in these books also needs a therapist
and i like this and just it's a quick side note kind of fits with how robert's always like seven
hells right sounds like the inferno seven that's where he and stannis are gonna chill forever
that is the funniest part of it like you're gonna be stuck
with your fucking brothers the rest of eternity after you die stannis so don't be so quick to get
on this path to glory hell is other people has another from another book well technically play
whatever anyways melisandre asks if davos fears her or if he fears what they do
and he says the latter
he says I fear what you're gonna do
and he's like I'm gonna have no part of it
and she's like
but you are a part of it
you're the one who raised the seal
you're the one holding the tiller
yeah this uh classic exchange
are you a good man Davos Seaworth?
She asked.
Would a good man be doing this?
I am a man, he said.
I am kind to my wife, but I have known other women.
I have tried to be a father to my sons, to help them make a place in this world.
I have broken laws, but I never felt evil
until tonight. I would say my parts are mixed, m'lady, good and bad.
A grey man, she said, neither white nor black, but partaking of both. Is that what you are,
Sir Davos? What if I am? Seems to me that most men are grey.
If half of an onion is black with rot,
it is a rotten onion.
A man is good,
or he is evil.
The fires behind them had melted into
one vague glow against the black sky,
and the land was almost
out of sight.
It was time to come about.
Yo, I don't think Melisandre knows how to cook.
You know, for all her fire stuff,
I don't think she knows how to cook.
I'm gonna throw that out there.
Wasteful.
Actually, though, absolutely wasteful.
Like, I would get my hands smacked.
I know.
I just like cut.
I think we've discussed this before.
I just cut off the other parts,
take off the other parts.
I'm like, this part's fine.
You and I have both discussed that we've gotten in trouble already for trying to rinse out plastic
bags and reuse them this season you know i mean melisandre would not last a moment in my kitchen
absolutely not anyway so there's a lot in this passage what i find very interesting about this exchange is this idea of
someone being either a good person or a bad person because of how it manifests in the context of
davos and of course like stanis historian even melisandras but that idea of morality here and
how it works is quite backwards this philosophy about it because beyond the connections of how
it ties in with power and that those with power get to dictate the moral systems as we see with stanis
there's just something i think very strange about the idea of someone either being
intrinsically from the get-go good or bad being made good or made bad and i do think pushing
against that or questioning what that means is kind of one of the really big drivers of the
entire fucking series like as we discussed with jamie lannister's chapters he's one of the big
explorations of this question right goodness and evilness greatness but i i find it just so
backwards because like it's as though melisandre and by stannis uh by extension they sort of define
this idea that a person is either good or evil, right? And it's
quite hypocritical, as we'll discuss later with some other stuff that Stannis says earlier in
this chapter. But it feels as though Melisandre maybe has sold Stannis on this narrative that he
is intrinsically good. He's the one true king, chosen by the one true god, and Stannis just
desperately, desperately wants that in a world uh where
people suspect him of poisoning them when he offers cold water which again what davos is doing
now this is the poison but he wants to be seen as good in a world that constantly suspects him of
bad and so we get that justification that no matter what stanis does whether it whether it's burning the gods, killing his brother,
killing Cornelio Penrose to steal his nephew
so that he can use his king's blood for nefarious reasons,
i.e. also killing him,
all of this is fine
and okay because
the idea is that Stannis is
by definition, right,
set out at the beginning of this world
by Melisandre's
theology and philosophy, Stannis is a
good person. And by virtue of
him always having been a good person, any
of the further actions that come from what he
does are therefore good, no matter what
it is. And it's kind of this
idea that a good tree can only
bear good fruit, and a bad tree can only
bear bad fruit, coming back to
food things. But
that one true king- Okay okay we did have a pepper
plant with rot and it only bore bad peppers but anyways um the one true king and one true god
right that's from where all morality flows that's this moral objectivity that's going around this
books which i think that the books are very much arguing against, not just because we're like, wow, seeing this through Davos's POV and that grayness and seeing it, but the book's very
structure itself argues against this idea of objectivity at all, moral or not, right? That's
why it's structured in such a way that we have different chapters and we have this roving
third-person narrative framing through which you see that rationale. And that constant questioning
that we see here of Davos as a smuggler feels like it's not just a jab at his status or his class,
it's a reminder of his past sins. And it's meant to make him question like, well, Davos, you've got
a criminal record. Are you a bad person? And I mean, if you're not a bad person not just born bad right prove yourself then by
doing good deeds like this when truly it should be actually the deeds and culmination of those works
and and the impact of all of that right all of these are it's a much more complex equation
and question there's not always even like one right answer that's spit out at the end of that
mathematical question that leads to the later judgment of whether or not someone is good versus the way here where it's
the other way around yeah it does as you're saying it feels like it's being used as blackmail against
davos right his past being brought up to haunt him at every corner to get him into a moral quandary
that he normally would say no to
because he is a good guy i mean i think that maybe he needs to work on his relationship with maria
and knowing other women uh if the dates align which i know george really doesn't think about
it in this manner but with the ages with the ages of his children like he's been with maria since he
was like 17 18 19 you know like he and
maria have been together forever so if he's known other women i'm just surprised that he still would
think of it as a sin after these 20 something years you know what i mean uh i digress so i feel
like it's weird that stannis is just blackmailing him for this all the time when it's what he's punished him for.
And it kind of reminds me of just the justice system in any world of how it pretends it's going to rehabilitate people and pretends it's going to try to help to do so.
But then when it realizes that the risk assessment means that getting the risk to fall on that person who they spent the
time rehabilitating is cheaper than taking the fall themselves like why why is it a crime then
just call it not a crime yeah if you're just gonna keep using it it just doesn't make sense
like doesn't that make you bad for exploiting a rehabilitated criminal that you punished for
being a criminal you know like
that's what i feel really like i just feel really weird about that plot line like it just feels
weird or stanley says like i'm not part of this i haven't done anything with it whereas you know
as we discussed last chapter there's a sorry it was actually this chapter last episode of this
chapter there's a blurry line of responsibility as we see through Makar.
And that carries through for Davos here, right?
Stirring the ship.
This is a threesome, yeah.
It is.
This is your first threesome, guys, and you're not doing hot.
You know, it's a question that Sansa's going to have to wrestle with later on.
Even she's like, what is my role in this by wearing the hairnet, right?
Even though she was ignorant of it at the time.
But, you know, it's a question that carries throughout the series.
And, you know, coming back to that good or evil when it comes to Stannis,
there's all a...
Speaking of Nata crimes, Nata Cass brought up the line from earlier in this chapter
where Stannis believes, as Davos does, right, that men are mixed. Or so stannis believes as davos does right that men are mixed or so stannis says right he's like a good deed doesn't wash out the bad nor the bad the
good which i don't know why i quote that sometimes in my life i don't like stannis i just say it
every now and then but he also believes that a good deed therefore deserves reward and a bad
deed punishment it's different from mel's philosophy and stannis is operating
on something of a moral paradox here then and that he gets to dole out the punishment and reward
again he's operating in that position of god and we you know coming back to theology a little we
talked about this a little especially in regards to the stark storyline that contrast between
justice versus mercy mercy is going to come up a lot, I think,
in the Starks storyline. It already is, especially in terms of this idea of forgiveness. Stannis says
of the men who have defected to him from Renly that he has forgiven them, but he hasn't really
forgotten. And my understanding from some biblical theology, it's not always the case,
but there's that idea that you're supposed to forget the sins that are done against you and that's something that um happens right that that's how
like the forgiveness of god works right but you know coming back to stannis and that idea of
goodness rewards bad punishment i do think that gives us some insight into why stannis is so salty it's not just that he's drinking salt water which interesting stannis believes right that's why he loves melisandre's
philosophy he he ultimately believes that he has been very good he's like why didn't robert like
fucking love me or do anything for me and he's salty that he has not been rewarded for the
goodness that he's done and how he served robert
because good deeds should be rewarded and we'll find that as the story progresses his fixation
on his own goodness then blinds him to the other atrocious acts that he does and the eventual
punishment that he's going to bring upon himself because he's so set in this idea that he's been
good and deserves that reward and is chasing it. But
we already know this thing that Stannis
has not accepted
because the story has also taught us this,
right? The story mind, as well as
I mean, the real world, has taught us that
good doesn't just beget good
nor bad bad. It's
the savatis of that notion from the
get-go because it killed
Ned. Ned was set up to be
our moral compass and died you know it's funny that you said that uh you use that quote in your
life all the time because i always accidentally interchange that quote with a quote from dr who
which is something that you will watch eventually i'm working on it uh we have other things first
like gossip girl anyways important that one i'm gonna do that one's important yeah very important
doctor who though is important too just later we have many years together you and me you know
we're gonna cherish them many years but the line in doctor who is from uh the vincent and the
doctor it's a vincent oh i've seen i've seen that i've seen that one scene i cry sometimes even
though i've never seen the series.
Imagine if you saw the series, you'll be a little baby. I can't wait. I'll get you on it. See, but the quote is, the doctor says, the way I see it, every life is a pile of good things and bad things. The good things don't always soften the bad things, but vice versa. The bad things don't always spoil the good and make them unimportant.
I always think of that line against this line. That quote always comes into my mind when I think
of that Stannis line about men are being mixed, right? That's a mixed bag. And
I think the biggest reason why Stannis tries to preach that while maybe not always acting like it is because he desperately wants it to be true.
He wants to believe it's true, not only about his actions, but about what was done to him.
And he wants to be able to forgive his brother for what he's holding and grudging against him.
Like you said earlier of him ripping off the crown and donning the black for mourning.
Like you said earlier of him ripping off the crown and donning the black for mourning.
I think he's always wanted to be able to forgive and to be forgiven, right?
In his family.
Yeah.
He hasn't experienced mercy or love because, I mean, he comes from a broken family in many ways. Yeah.
So he's just been yearning for what he thinks is justice and all of that
that's why 21 year old Stan is
some people drink too much when they're 21
he chops off people's fingers
yup
normal shit, normal rich kid shit
yeah he's fine
yup it's fine
as they pull into the shore
Davos asks Melisandre so this whole like
good bad gray thing right that counts for women too right and she laughs at him she says
of course i'm good and she frames herself as a knight and calls herself a champion of light and
life and i thought that was a really interesting tie-in to some of the other things that go on in
this book as we said last episode this is a keystone chapter and melisandre's about to actually give birth as we all know and
brienne and catlin just a few chapters earlier have discussed the birthing bed as a woman's
battlefield so it's interesting for melisandre to call herself a knight
davos says she means to kill a man just as she killed Cressen and Melisandre says yes
with that powerful pussy uh Melisandre says I didn't kill him I did not uh he poisoned himself
and she was protected by a greater power I didn't touch him I did. I did not poison Mr. Cresson. I did not.
Oh, hi, Renly.
Oh, hi, Renly.
How's the sex life?
Dead.
Yeah, dead.
Exactly. That is what the sex life is.
Because Renly's dead, too.
But yes, so she says she didn't kill Renly, either.
I did not.
Davos names her a liar and i'm just saying if melisandre's like well she's like it wasn't me so i'm like she's saying
it was stannis right so maybe stannis's cock is powerful wow i mean i'm just saying like maybe it
is i don't that's the real light bring. He just doesn't want to wave his hand.
I don't know if it brings light. It brings darkness.
That's too close to current events during the time we're recording this.
We get a passage.
Feel how cold the wind is?
The guards will huddle close to those torches.
A little warmth, a little light.
Their comfort on a night like this
Yet that will blind them so they will not see us pass
I hope
The god of darkness protects us now, my lady
Even you
The flames of her eyes seem to burn a little brighter at that
Speak not that name, sir
Lest you draw his black eye upon us he protects no man i promise you
he's the enemy of all that lives it is the tortures that hide us you have said so yourself
fire the bright gift of the lord of light
i love that fire is described as the gift of r'hllor who wields it to see in darkness because
of course fire burns and destroys which is about to become so totally prominent in the waters
outside King's Landing during Blackwater and we see gifts described often as physical injuries
like Sandor describes his burns from Gregor as a gift, much like he stole Gregor's gift, which was a toy knight.
And of course, like the bruises that Joffrey gifts Sansa or the black eye Robert gifts Cersei.
But with regards to religion or political groups, most of the vanilla religions describe things like plentiful harvests and babies as gifts of the gods.
and babies as gifts of the gods not a lot of religions or interest groups form the idea of being able to bestow a burning fire or with faceless men who give a gift which is peaceful
painless death for example not a lot of people tout that as their tagline i thought that was
interesting that is interesting even with the i mean this this is a baby it's about to be a gift
here but oh yeah the way that they frame some of those euphemisms, right?
Like the kiss of life that happens in R'hllor.
Actually, that is pretty gifty, you know?
Coming back from the dead.
Anyway, Davos here talks about that bright light blinding the guards,
and I kind of thought that made sense in the context of a lot of this story, right?
The bright light, the fire, all the
flashiness of the tricks
that Melisandre does, and then the sword,
right, that's gonna blind them to the truth of everything,
which is that Stannis is not Azor Ahai.
Yeah. He's a false
god.
But he's still the one true king of Westeros.
Melisandre helps
Davos bring in the seal
and he rubs them in
he asks who rode her to
Renly and she says there was no need
he was unprotected
but Storm's End is an old place with
ancient spells in its stone walls
walls that no shadow can pass and Davos
says that a shadow is a thing of darkness,
got him! And Melisandre says
you're ignorant!
Shadows are the servants of life, the children
of fire, and then says that
the brightest flame casts the darkest
shadows. Well, I'm sorry I didn't
go to fucking shadow school in a
shy beyond the fucking shadows,
Melisandre! I'm sorry I'm
fucking poor! Like like what the fuck
yeah not everyone's a shadow scholarship yeah sorry i'm a fucking peasant bitch god uh
she's probably like i'm also a peasant try harder pull yourself up by your bootstraps davos
davos frowns and he hushes melissandre and rows them into the mouth of Storm's End's cliff because water travels.
By the way, sound travels on water is what I mean by that.
If I'm using real words that go together, sound travels on water and they are entering a tunnel on a rather dangerous cavern that Davos must definitely work through to get them through. Not the most treacherous we'll see Davos at, right,
as we later get him going to Skagos,
which is supposed to be the most treacherous.
Can't wait to see more of that in The Winds of Winter.
Interestingly enough, the next chapter after this is a Jon chapter,
and this is the chapter that men from the Shadow Tower arrive.
Yeah, so Davos and Mel are currently at a Tower of Shadows,
several Towers of Shadows, Storm's End,
and Jon actually goes on to kill a man that seems pretty innocent as well,
Corrin Hathian, out of necessity.
Not for power, which is what Stannis and Melisandre have kind of built up,
but for the sake of the realm.
Interesting.
Sacrifices.
Hmm.
A lot to think about there.
Right now, people aren't thinking.
They're feeling.
They're soaked to the skin.
They enter darkness.
The waters are finally smoothing,
and the echoes of their breathing surround them.
Again, the last time Davos had been here.
But this time, he's like, the torches were lighting the tunnel and the darkness.
This time actually took him by surprise.
He tells her that this is as far as they go,
stuck up against the portcullis unless someone's gonna sneak to let them in,
and you know what? No one is.
As we enter this cave,
there's something really eerie going on here
that I feel is very Freudian.
So in Freud's essay on the uncanny, he talks about the Heimlich and the Unheimlich.
The idea that what is familiar becomes unfamiliar and therefore uncanny and a little scary, right?
And here in this place, in the cave you're in entering this liminal space where both
birth and life exists at the same time uh as well as death and i think shakespeare of thrones
actually covers that quite well but here in this cave right and the cave of course uh
is a euphemism at times for the vagina and melisre, and this is something that Freud explores quite a lot too, and you'll see it quite a bit in even other stories, right? Edgar Allan Poe's interested in things like that. Or even the earth itself and the cave is, of course, in some ways, the vagina of the earth. I wish I were kidding. I'm not really kidding. there's a lot of that this episode but the womb and the tomb
become one here right and that's again some really freudian things going on but also as we said at
the end of last episode this is a keystone chapter in the books that stone in the middle of the
architectural arch that's bridging a lot of things holding a lot of things in this book together
thematically but in terms of parallels with other things, right? We talked about those questions about
morality. Obviously, that stretches across this whole series. We have prophecies in this chapter
that are tying together the beginning of the books, right? Such as what was seen when it came
to Renly, and it holds this book together with things that happen later on in terms of the
Blackwater. It all
comes together here, but it also ties other things together, such as, for example, the aforementioned
parts about Theon and the Rubicon. And then we have the infiltration of Storm's End with an
assassin, right? And this magic, and it actually feels very similar to another thing that's
happening in this book with Jaqen Hin Hagar in Harrenhal, right?
He and Arya, they go into Harrenhal and then bring death, especially with the mysterious circumstances around Courtney Penrose's, the mysterious circumstances around like a bazillion different deaths, right?
In Harrenhal.
And then we also have the sneaking of a baby.
Here it's a shadow baby, right?
Into a place that is so fortified.
It's a poison gift or child
that's later going to kill.
And it actually reminds me a bit
of the story that we also get
in the same book
from Jon's chapters of
Bael the Bard's child
being brought into Winterfell.
Great points, especially when you consider
again that R'hllor's gift is actually this
assassination is a gift from R'hllor, right?
I'm sure that Melisandre would say, happy birthday.
That's the baby shower gift.
Exactly.
And Jaqen H'ghar gives a gift as well in Harrenhal.
Oh, you're right.
Yeah.
So it is a gift, again, coming back to that faceless men kind of parallel.
And of course, you bring up Bail the Bard, which is coming up in just a bit for the Jon chapters, which we covered before.
And that even has some of the hints of what Stannis' plot is going to encompass in the future, right?
It's going to revolve around the North.
And Davos' plot, as well, revolves around the Siguric the Deceiver plot from the Bail the bard story over in skagos a skagosi hero
davos is chasing that very tail so to speak that direwolf tail if you will so really good call
outs really good thoughts to put this into context melisandre asks davos if they're within the walls
and he confirms that they are and so her answer comes physically because she shrugs out of her robe and she gets naked and she is bursting with child.
God's preserve us, he whispered and heard her answering laugh deep and throaty. Her eyes were
hot coals and the sweat that dappled her skin seemed to glow with a light of its own.
Melisandre shone. Panting, she squatted and spread her legs. Blood ran down her thighs,
black as ink. Her cry might have been agony or ecstasy or both, and Davos saw the crown of the child's head push its way out of her. Two arms wriggled free, grasping, black fingers coiling around
Melisandre's straining thighs, pushing, until the whole of the shadow slid out into the world and
rose taller than Davos, tall as the tunnel, towering above the boat. He had only an instant
to look at it before it was gone, twisting between the bars of the porticolis and racing across the surface of the water.
But that instant was long
enough. He knew that shadow
as he knew the man who'd
cast it.
Spoopy.
So
a couple things.
There's that agony and ecstasy
there that comes back. I'm not going to dwell too long
on this. With the St. Teresa imagery that we discussed that we discussed um i think in the first davos chapter
with the azorahai myth and again those are these those two opposite things becoming one like the
womb and the tomb birth and life but also most importantly i want to know how melisandre's
cloak like how big was that cloak right how come this entire time throughout this
whole chapter no one could tell that like she was super pregnant the whole time not even Davos when
they were on the boat like and how how thick are people's cloaks usually right why don't why doesn't
anyone know that Melisandre's like bursting with child as the imagery says I want to say that it
was like scarlet silks too and silk isn't very forgiving.
It's not. Unless she was wearing
like ten layers of it? I don't know.
I don't know. Well, maybe that's
where all of Stannis' money is really going.
You know, red ass bitch. It's like
still summertime-ish, you know? She's not
like, and they're in the south, it's not like she's
wearing like, my understanding
like a huge wool cloak or fur
cloak that's gonna hide all that. Listen, maybe it, like a huge wool cloak or fur cloak that's going to hide all that.
Listen, maybe it's like in The Sims.
In The Sims, it's three days.
Your trimesters are one a day, and it's three days.
And then you birth the kid.
And if you have cheats installed and mods installed, you can force the birth to happen early.
And maybe that's what she did.
And, you know, Stannis is a Republican, so he'd be into that, you know, for her to make sure she had the kid no matter what was happening.
Wow.
I digress.
Something about the language here.
He says he knew that shadow as he knew the man who'd cast it.
I know that kind of like, it's kind of saying that he knows it.
He knows the man who cast the shadow right now but
it also has that tense yes that past tense of as he knew once knew as he once knew this man who had
cast this shadow and obviously it does not tell us the language does not tell us it's stannis but
it does it gives itself away that the shadow looks like stannis
because davos knew what stannis looked like uh and it does feel like very i don't know it just
feels very past tense like davos is like i don't fucking know this guy anymore he straight up lied
to my face and said like no i didn't kill my brother no i'm not gonna kill courtney penrose
and then here he is in shadow form coming out of Melisandre's vagina, the last place he
crawled inside of.
And he's crawling on out. Yeah, the shadow realm.
Okay, settle down.
Blue dragon, ice eyes.
Ice eyes, blue dragon.
What is it called? Duel.
I don't know. Baby blades.
Rip it.
Let him rip.
Shadow baby blades. Let him rip rip uh no it's yukio but i'm i'm
on bay blades now so the language in the shadow baby reminds me of another very recent supernatural
birth right in the last book at the end of the book the flames writhed before her like the women
who had danced at her wedding whirling and singing and spitting their yellow and orange and crimson veils.
Fearsome to behold, yet lovely, so lovely, alive with heat.
Dany opened her arms to them, her skin flushed and glowing.
This is a wedding too, she thought.
This feels very much like when Dany gave birth to the dragons in a few ways, right?
Like she's giving birth to flame, which is flesh,
and Melisandre is giving birth to smoke and shadows here.
Specifically, of course, in the flames writhing around her.
And interestingly enough, we had that line from Florent in Davos 1
where he was like, ah, I saw maidens in their yellow dresses dancing.
And here, Dany compares the flames dancing like the
woman who danced at her wedding whirling in their yellow orange and crimson veils
absolutely and i think that's really interesting it's a great contrast because here you know in
that birth that you're talking about with danny it's completely encompassed in light whereas this one's in the darkness right and something else
that is interesting is there's this language briefly here where danny of course is a queen
santa is a king and we have regarding the the birth and davos saw the crown of the child's
head push its way out of her and of course course, yes, I know that when children, when babies
are being born, it's called like the crowning
as the head comes out, but for George to use
that language feels
really pointed
in terms of what Stannis is trying to get here.
Of course, you know, in terms
of trying to seize that power, after all,
power resides where men believe
it does as very says
in this very book that's another thing that's another thing that comes up in this book that
whole idea of shadows power influence and shadows can kill oftentimes a very small man can cast a
very large shadow but i guess this one's what not that large of a shadow it's like an average
stannis size shadow it's very literal so again another another uh keystone moment in this chapter
it's weird you point out that the crowning was so pointed because they should really start
forming the baby's head oh you're right as it crowns i understand that maybe you
miss flathead wouldn't understand that but I do have a flat head, everyone.
I've seen it.
I felt it with my own two hands.
It's flat as fuck.
All right, on to some real shit.
Not like the last hour wasn't real shit, but I have more real shit to bring to this podcast.
So Melisandre can't birth her shadow baby without being within the walls of Storm's End to assassinate Courtney Penrose, which brings up a handful of thoughts.
Having Melisandre at the parlay, was this also so her pussy knew what to target for the shadow baby?
Like, is that...
She probably needed to know who Courtney Penrose was.
I'd guess. I don't know how the magic works.
You know, I don't know how the sausage is made or the shadow baby's made,
but I'd guess she I don't know how the magic works. You know, I don't know how the sausage is made or the shadow baby's made, but I guess she'd have to know.
Also, is this akin to Alysanne and her dragon then at the wall?
Unable to pass the enchantments?
It feels like a similar kind of enchantment.
It does.
Yeah.
As we know, Stannis will eventually burn that big old godswood,
but it has a giant godswood.
The old gods still rule here
legend claims it was built by durin god's grief the first storm king back in the dawn age and he
declared a war against the sea god and the goddess of the wind because they killed his family and
guests ruining his wedding to their daughter eleni during god's grief then built castle after castle
until the seventh survived the storms. And
in A Clash of Kings, chapter 31, Catalan 3, we get,
The seventh castle built by Durin that continued to stand against the wrath of the sea god and the
goddess of the wind. Some said the children of the forest helped him build it, shaping the stones
with magic. Others claimed a small boy told him what he must do, a boy who would grow to be Bran the Builder.
Durin's descendants joined the Andals in marriage,
and it's said the Seven, and Seven attempts at building it,
mean Seven gods have influenced its sustainability.
We get a great look at the greenery of the Stormlands,
just really beautiful, and a story of the sea in relation to the Dornish here,
in Arianne, the Winds of Winter 2 sample chapter.
So spoilers if you have not heard it tune out for just a couple minutes.
Dusk found them on the fringes of the rainwood a wet green world where brooks and rivers ran
through dark forests and the ground was made of mud and rotting leaves. Huge willows grew along
the watercourses larger than any that A Arian had ever seen, their great trunks
as gnarled and twisted as an old man's face and festooned with beards of silvery moss.
Trees pressed close on every side, shutting out the sun, hemlock and red cedars, white oaks,
soldier pines that stood as tall and straight as towers, colossal sentinels, big-leaf maples,
redwoods, worm trees, even here and there a wild weirwood.
Underneath their tangled branches, ferns and flowers grew in profusion.
Sword ferns, lady ferns, bellflowers and piper's lace, evening stars and poison kisses.
Liverwort, lungwort, hornwort, mushrooms sprouted down amongst the tree roots and from their trunks as well.
Pale, spotted hands that caught
the rain. Other trees were furred with moss, green or gray or red-tailed, and once a vivid purple.
Lichens covered every rock and stone, toadstools festered beside rotting logs. The very air seemed
green. Arian had once heard her father and Maester Calliote arguing with the Septon about why
the north and south sides of the Sea of Dorne were so different.
The Septon thought it was because of Durin Godscreef, the first Storm King who had stolen
the daughter of the Sea God and the Goddess of the Wind and earned their eternal enmity.
Prince Dorin and the Maester inclined more toward wind and water, and spoke of how the big storms
that formed down in the summer sea would
pick up moisture moving north until they slammed
into Cape Wrath. For some
strange reason, the storms never seemed to strike
at Dorne. She recalled
her father saying, I know your
reason, Decepton had responded.
No Dornishman ever stole away
the daughter of two gods.
Stannis seems to be toying with the daughter of a new god and as we later learn he and this daughter burned down the gods
wood which feels like one of the most deeply magical places of this castle and it feels
very likely it was a mix of children of the forest and probably brand the builder in some iteration
with them interestingly enough that in that in Storm's End history,
daughters like Argella Durandon seems to be a sacrifice, and Eleni, obviously. And heck,
Storm's End history, I guess Shireen will be added to that as well. But there is so much history here,
right? Jaehaerys was proclaimed king by Rojar here, hastening Maegor's downfall. Lucerys Velaryon gets killed
here as Rhaenyra's envoy when Aemond arrives on Vhagar, Arax, his dragon, dying as well.
Aemond had earlier enjoyed the hunting grounds immensely at Dance's start. The dance of the
dragons start. Poor suckers, though, because Lucerys was dead from the start as soon as he
set foot, as soon as he touched down off that dragon, dumb idiot.
And of course, Prince Daemon Targaryen, Rhaenyra's husband,
suggested that Storm's End be granted to the lowborn Ser Ulf White later,
an idea that shocked Lord Corlys Velaryon.
And Baelor Targaryen recuperated at Storm's End for a year injured in Dorne.
So there's a lot of history happening at Storm's End for a year injured in Dorne. So there's a lot of history happening at Storm's End
and I can definitely see some parallels to the
current plot as far as the Dance of the Dragons
and things going on
at Storm's End and with
Aegon invading in the
Winds of Winter, I'm very interested to see where it
takes us.
I will say that at least Elenia and
Argella lived, right?
Yeah, and didn't burn alive.
Nope, they didn't.
They actually didn't.
So, well, shit.
But yeah, as you said, Storm's End
is quite a landmark. Lots of history.
Pretty important. Especially important to
Stannis' heart.
He held it for a while
and almost died in it and starved.
It's kind of funny
because that's like that's probably the most interesting thing that happens there in my
opinion like it's not that it's not interesting it's just i think stannis thinks it's more
interesting than it actually is you know it's bigger to his heart to his big old issues going
on i think so i think that you know
as we said it's important in the way that winterfell is important to the stark cause and it
looks bad if you don't have your seat yeah but also as you were saying you know that's something
that we didn't really think about or touch about until now so thank you for all this but like yeah
he doesn't want to admit that like it has sentimental value like this is he says to
davos it's my home but he doesn't like go into like yo i went through a ton of fucking effort
to hold this goddamn place like i deserve it i mean does he or does he not deserve it but like
i can imagine him thinking like i deserve this fucking place yeah and maybe like
fucking place yeah and maybe like i don't know maybe no one deserves anything i think that there's an idea that you know in an ideal world people get good things but also at the same time
a world that is completely adheres to this justice of all bad acts are punished to the extent that's equal to it right
first of all how do you like gauge that second of all that's a nightmare right that's why the
idea of mercy is so important in this story even if you keep it at a strict wrath and sullen level
of robert versus stannis robert knew that he could pick these people off their feet
and add them to their cause.
And yes, the way that he did it wasn't perfect
and Robert didn't have the best diplomacy in all the realm,
as we already know.
However, his reign is still going to last longer
compared to what Stannis' reign will last.
Damn.
And that's the thing I love.
Stannis is going to be so bad.
He's going to be so bad in the afterlife in the fifth circle
of hell when he's stuck with Robert and all
Robert can say was, you know, I held the
Iron Throne for a lot longer than that, Stannis.
And I drank.
Drunk.
And fucked. Yeah.
Well, I guess
that's Davos too.
We did it.
Everyone, we crossed our own
Rubicon. Yes, we
went into the River Styx and somehow
we were not stuck in the muddy
waters fighting Robert or
murking about with Stannis
for the rest of our existence.
We are changed now,
you know, now we've opened this door, this
can of worms.
Birth this baby we can never of worms. I would say that...
Birth this baby we can never unbirth.
Of splitting episodes.
The oncoming storm, you know, it arrived.
Yep.
Yeah.
Well, now that we've split the baby and tossed half of it down the river...
Mm-hmm.
That's this week's episode.
Thanks for listening.
You can tune in. next week we will not have
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Yes.
Thanks again for tuning in.
As always, I have been one
of your hosts, Chloe.
And I have been another one of your hosts,
Eliana. And you're gonna be another one of my hosts next week, Chloe. And I have been another one of your hosts, Eliana.
And you're gonna be another one of my hosts
next week, too. Yeah.
You know, I don't think we said sapeech
really much this episode. We really should have.
The sapeech.
There was no sapeech, and that's a drag,
but you know what?
We're just gonna have to wait till next week. Maybe we'll get a new
fruit. Whose fruit is it anyway
bye see y'all later i had to think about that