Girls Gone Canon Cast - ASOIAF Episode 87 - ASOS Jaime VIII
Episode Date: April 17, 2020Jaime reads a book and sits at a table. He calls a couple of other folks, just the Kingsguard, over to the table then deals with the brothers he did not choose. --- Eliana's twitter: https://twitte...r.com/arhythmetric Eliana's reddit account: https://www.reddit.com/user/glass_table_girl Eliana's blog: https://themanyfacedblog.wordpress.com/ Chloe's twitter: https://twitter.com/liesandarbor Chloe's blog: www.liesandarborgold.com Intro by Anton Langhage
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Hello and welcome to Girls Gone Canon, A Song of Ice and Fire, Episode 87, Jamie in a Storm
of Swords, chapter 8. I am one of your hosts,
Chloe. You might know me from the internet as LizaNarber on Twitter or LizaNarberGold.com.
And I am another one of your hosts, Eliana. You might know me as GlassTableGirl on Reddit,
on the Maester Monthly Podcast, maybe as Arithmetric on Twitter. But now I am just an
Animal Crossing Twitter account. Oh my god me too yeah me too
i've heard some whispers that there might be animal crossing content in the future i don't know
in the present
there was an hour of animal crossing content that went unrecorded before this episode, but you, the listener, don't
know that at all, but you
should know that I'm very excited
about this Jaime chapter. I'm really
excited. This chapter is something that is so
simple that I think nobody realizes
is a powerhouse.
I'm excited. Yeah, and as you and I were
discussing, it's very interesting that
up until now, right,
we don't have jamie interacting with
tyrian and continues in this chapter even though tyrian is the backdrop to which all of this is
happening right he's like a specter hanging over this chapter yeah i feel really interested in the
direction of this chapter after rereading it with the idea of no Tyrion because Jaime's investigating
Tyrion on his own terms in this chapter
and I think that's something that's less
explored. I think there's a lot of stuff in this chapter
that's very less explored
by people in the fandom and I want
to talk about it at full
extent. I think that's
going to be fun. I'm very
pumped and I'm also excited
for next week.
Eliana, do you know what next week is?
Well, I found out today.
So Chloe, tell us what next week is.
It's not Ice and Fire Con because Ice and Fire Con was postponed until Halloween weekend this year due to the old COVID-19.
However, we are doing some digital content, I hear,
for Ice and FireCon next weekend,
and I am going to be a part of it for two different things happening.
There's three things I'm doing.
There's a drinking with the small council thing,
or a hangout with small council thing on Thursday night.
There is Friday night, 425.
There's a
Westeros and American Musical
livestream where people are just gonna
kind of do a live
mystery science theater kind of thing
of just going through every song
in the musical and commentating. And we'll have
revolving cast members in and out. It's gonna be
really fun if you guys haven't seen
that. It's a Hamilton
parody musical Game of thrones covering
uh season slash books one through three to four ish ish barely four uh it cuts off there really
fun though really fun it's like only one legal notice only one cease and desist on one of the
songs i singed uh so after that, the one I'm most excited for,
which is hard to say because I'm excited for all of it,
is Hanging Out with Hayley from The Manimals.
She's the lead singer of The Manimals.
They did an album called Seven, which is a Game of Thrones concept album.
Every song is about a character.
I love all of them.
She has a podcast called Drinking Game of Thrones Brooklyn.
It's about Game of Thrones or was, I guess, until we get the House of the Dragon, the Blood of the Dragon, whatever the shit ass show we're all going to watch and complain about is called.
Until that show comes out, she's not doing new content, I don't think, except for this.
We are going to talk about Season 8 of Game of Thrones.
It's kind of like an every-couple-years thing for us now.
I'm going to get drunk on the internet and talk about Season 8, so you can't miss it.
I'll be reprising my dead ex-side project, Drunk Song of Ice and Fire history, for that.
So, can't wait. Can't wait.
It doesn't have to be history you know
I think that all the time but it's like here I am
with you I can't
I'm stuck in the middle with you
I'm so sorry
you wifed me
you wifed me
one of our favorite people
one of our friends Rachel
Rachel Gomes sent us an email
about Jamie Sixx and you know i
eliana's usually our shakespearean one right like eliana you grasp those themes quicker than i do
love a good shakespeare but it's just not my first language right or my second it's like my third
but we talked about the taming of the shrew during the bear pit episode i think it was right or maybe
it was last i don't know whatever episode it was we recently talked about taming of the shrew during the bear pit episode i think it was right or maybe it was last i don't know whatever episode it was we recently talked about taming of the shrew in regards to
cersei and brienne and jamie just kind of some fun parallels and rachel sent us some stuff about
the scottish play it's important that you all know that i will not say oh that's right i forgot
you don't say it i was in it i was in it i was in it i well so you know the fact that You don't say it. I was in it. I will say it. How could I say it? I was in it. Well, so, you know,
the fact that you don't say it is probably why you
get two bottles of vodka and I don't.
Because I'm a good person and you're not.
I will read aloud
this email.
And I disagree with it, you not
being fluent. That was like a really
great call as you were
talking about the taming of the shrew and you definitely
brought up other things before
in regards to Shakespeare but anyways
Rachel Gomes slash Gomez
unsure says anyways I have
some thoughts about
Jamie 6 I listened to both
your episode and History of Westeros
episodes about this chapter and about the same time
so Jamie's fever dream has been on my mind
as a high school English teacher I've taught like Beth
for years I said it!
After listening to both your pods,
I, for the first time, found a possible
connection between the two.
From Jamie's dream, around him stood
a dozen tall, dark figures in cowled
robes that hid their faces.
In their hands were spears.
Who are you? He demanded of them. What business
do you have in Casterly Rock?
This scene reminded me immediately of Macbeth's second encounter with the three witches,
an act four, scene one.
Witches, show his eyes and grieve his heart, come like shadows, so depart.
A show of eight kings, the last with a glass in his hand, ghost of Banquo following.
Then Macbeth says, thou art too like the spirit of Banquo.
Down, thy crown, dustier mine.
Eyeballs and thy hair, thou other gold-bound brow, is like the first.
A third is like the former, filthy hags.
Why do you show me this?
A fourth, start, eyes.
What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?
Another yet, a seventh, I'll see no more.
And yet the eighth appears, who bears a seventh, I'll see no more, and yet the eighth appears,
who bears a glass, which shows me many more, and some I see, that two-fold balls and troubled
scepters carry, horrible sight. Now I see tis true, for the blood-boltered Banquo smiles upon
me and points at them for his. Rachel says whenie described seeing the shadowy figures around him i was reminded of
mcbath seeing a line of kings behind banquo's ghost children and succession are an issue for
both mcbath and jamie though for different reasons i wonder if jamie's seeing the ghost of the true
he could have had or maybe he's seeing the former lords of casterly rock that are waiting for him
to prove himself worthy rachel talks about how she feels it was an
interesting parallel, whether or not it was intentional
on George's part.
What say you about Macbeth?
Chloe.
I'm cursing our podcast with every
moment I live.
I'll remember this. No, I think
that's a really, really,
really apt comparison. I see a lot
of comparisons with Stannis, right, in this regard.
And not as many with Jaime, I think.
Jaime, in comparison to Banquo's kind of ghost appearing and following around,
that is kind of one of those fundamental storytelling aspects in general.
You know what I mean?
Jaime's very much so haunted by the ghost of his past.
We've obviously already lived it and seen it from the Weirwood dream. It's not the last time we'll
live it or see it from him either. I'm excited to see where it goes forward. And I do think it was
a good connection. We know that George does pay attention to Shakespeare, whether or not he uses
it. Sometimes he uses it in the opposite manner he said before
in So Spake Martins for example like Ned and Azshara's relationship someone asked is this
like Romeo and Juliet and he said no so sometimes he doesn't use it sometimes he goes the opposite
direction from things like that but I also think that some of these tragic characters especially
like House Lannister oh god it's a
tragic downfall house as we've discussed house targaryen eliana's done amazing work in discussing
some of the tragedy and some of this mysticism that kind of surrounds them and how each of them
handles it separately in different times i don't know i don't know what's gonna happen with those
uh ghosts jamie what are you going to do?
Maybe confront them, hopefully.
But yeah, I loved this email.
I don't think I would have thought to connect these.
And thinking of Jamie as a sort of Macbeth figure,
especially in the context of the 93 letter,
but still playing with that idea of looking at the past and that succession,
and especially because Jamie did kill a king.
And the 93 letter has him taking the throne. jamie's gone down a different path but there's definitely some
things there and george has woven in macbeth in many different ways in this story whether it's
like as sort of easter eggs right with the way that it goes down in asha gray joy's chapter with the branches and the woods
moving and that's sort of george's more subtle take on the burnham woods moving like in dunstanane
tolkien's like magic trees yeah so sorry not magic trees ants um i know it's different anyway but
like they're all you know george's even the very structure and the way that he approaches things very
much
weaving these ideas in.
So I think it's such a great catch.
We all know the main core of
Aeswaf will always revolve around
the heart and conflict with
itself, right? Like Faulkner style.
And I think
never lose sight of that
especially in Jamie 8.
Jamie 8 is a chapter of a man that's very tired.
But before Jamie 8 came some other tired people after Jamie 7.
And we missed some things.
Let's cover them in our lightning round.
In Davos 6, Davos faces Azor Ahai's judgment
in freeing an innocent and reads a plea sent from the north.
Jon 8.
After surviving two of the Free Folk's attacks,
the wall is Jon's?
Hmm.
Arya 12.
In dreams she runs with wolves
but by day she learns the gift
of mercy
Tyrion 9
Tyrion's fate lies in the hands of a viper
but unfortunately, sneks do not
have hands nor feet
I'm glad that you got to read this one
Are you glad that I just
changed it entirely?
Kind of, a little offended offended we'll learn the end
so that brings us to jamie eight in jamie eight a storm of swords jamie thumbs through the pages
of the white book wondering what his legacy will be will he be known as the king slayer
as golden hand the just and will he be able to preserve Brienne from King's
Landing stench? Let's jump in and find out.
A white book sat on a white table in a white room. What kind of fucking riddle is this?
The White Sword Tower holds the armory in the sleeping cells of Jaime's brothers. I'm
sorry, it just sounds like little blue man in the blue house. Turns out I don't know the lyrics.
See, I was thinking Madeline.
You know, 12 girls in a line.
One in a row.
I was very into the
Madeline fandom.
I was a stand.
The stand
line. Jamie had
stayed in actually one of these sorts of sleeping
cells for 18 years, but this
morning, he's moving up to the
Lord Commander's apartment at the top
floor. We love drawing those
parallels between past POVs,
right? We've moved on, of course,
from Theon and Jon
and all of these characters, but gone but never
forgotten in our hearts
until Tiwau. And
this kind of gives me some strong parallels to Jon acquiring the wall, right?
He is just given the wall in his last chapter.
He's told, hey, the wall's yours.
Everyone else is pretty much gone, dead, you know, indisposed.
And this is the first time Jaime's taking the Lord Commander's tower.
Only, of course, in the White Sword Tower.
The Lord Commander Tower in the north, however, is stone.
It catches fire in the White Attack with Othar Flowers,
and Jaor moves into the King's Tower instead.
So Jon never truly lives in the Lord Commander's Tower,
much like Jaime hadn't until now.
I thought that was very interesting to think on
right it was it's also interesting because like john ends up he has a slightly different
circumstance where he's like man i gotta deal with like stannis and like when he becomes lord
commander eventually and he's like you know what stannis you take you take the fancy digs and gives
him the the knight tower because like you said lord commander's
tower is kind of a wreck and then john actually instead and it's both a parallel and not right
because jamie as we see throughout this chapter sees all these like lord commanders perform as
sort of mentors he's like wow amazing and john doesn't take lord commander's tower but goes into
donald noye's quarters his mentor so jamie's room has a view of the sea and on his way to the tower
he thinks you know maybe he'll like that and i thought that was kind of a powerful moment for
jamie's pov because not only has george given him this voice right by giving him a pov but this is
also kind of the first time jamie's ever gotten to think about what he might like.
Right?
Like, he's never had a choice to think, huh, I might like the sea.
He's never gotten to think that.
This is Jamie looking out and going, hmm, I could like the sea.
You're right.
I've never thought about that.
Jamie's like, the only thing that we know for sure he likes is Cersei and fighting.
And he goes where those things tell him to go.
It's sad.
It is.
He reads through the white book while he's waiting.
He thinks about how uncomfortable he is.
His sword is on the wrong side, his right hip, and his Kingsguard clothing doesn't fit anymore either.
It's too loose.
hip and his kingsguard clothing doesn't fit anymore either it's too loose he'd been spending his days at tyrian's trial although he'd gone unnoticed by everyone in the room even tyrian
who is he maybe it's better to be unnoticed than this time you know from one kingslayer to another
but yeah like i like this line where where Jaime thinks he feels as though he's
a stranger in his own home with all of those things going on and again it the backdrop is
Tyrion's trial and I do think that makes it very meaningful because truthfully right now I think
both brothers kind of feel like I'm a stranger to my family in my own home one uh who who am I who
are these people now the other they're trying to have me executed. Interesting.
And Jamie, for the most part,
has actually almost always felt welcome,
except for the part where last chapter
he really let down his dad for the first
time ever. He did before,
right? But time was like,
whatever, we can reverse it.
Turns out he finds out, oh, Jamie doesn't
want to. But anyways, you have both
brothers feeling pushed out right now. And then, of course, the clothes reverse it turns out he finds out oh jamie doesn't want to but anyways you have both brothers brothers
feeling pushed out right now and then of course like the clothes not fitting right i mean you
know going back again to ned and king's landing we don't really need to have a whole fashion hour
for this we can have a fashion minute it speaks for itself yeah it absolutely speaks for itself
i'm different we have this passage. I thought
it was kind of powerful.
His son was dead. His father
had disowned him and his sister.
She had not allowed him to be alone
with her once after the first day
in the royal sept where Joffrey lay
amongst the candles. That's a lot
to think about. Everything
just kind of fell away at once. This is a
man that's come back from war.
He's been through hell and back and he came back to a whole world changed. Yeah, he came back. It's
all changed. He's isolated, but, you know, it kind of lends credence to some of the things you were
talking about between that interaction between him and Cersei last chapter, but also like...
Cersei, is it that she just didn't see a need for him anymore also as well?
Like, it's all so wrapped up.
Anyway.
Yeah, and we're definitely going to get into some of Cersei's machinations and manipulations
as we greet some of his new Kingsguard members,
right, that he didn't know before. But first, we survey the room. White hangings and shields and two crossed swords adorn the hearth. And the chair at his table is an old black oak with thin
leather cushions. And I love that the wood was described here i always think it's important when george describes what the wood is not important but just pay attention like oh he
took the time so we should take the time so we're gonna i do want you to know that when we were first
writing out this episode and discussing what kind of themes were happening with this i took the
liberty of finding every single mention of oak and Iron in A Song of Ice and Fire.
Really?
And what percentage was dedicated to what POVs.
I haven't shared it with you.
I should.
It's a spreadsheet.
There's two pages.
There's one that has a pivot table and-
There's one that has a pivot table.
For the most part, it's like Starks and tyrian that have oak and iron in their arcs and davos
which i thought was kind of interesting just kind of spoke to kind of the environment they were in
and what they were about a lot of oak and iron doors and the king's tower where stannis gets to
stay per john in uh the north of the wall and also where jr decided to go move his lord commandership to
after you know kind of lord commander tower was fucked is oak and iron doors as well
interesting i mean the iron makes sense right especially when you think of
the first man but for tyrian i mean that he needs a lot of protection guard him well Tyrion actually has a lot of mentions of
Oak and Iron too and
I think there's gotta be something more there
but I'm not sure
Jamie reflects on those who have held
position of Lord Commander before him
Barristan, Gerald Hightower
Aemon the Dragon Knight
Rhyam Redwyne, the Demon of Derry
Duncan the Tall,
Pale Griffin, Alan Connington.
Yeah, so the first thing that I actually thought
was like, holy shit, this is an old-ass
chair. It must be very well
made, considering that it's oak.
Oak must be very, very
good. Like, this is a goddamn antique.
But also, you know, it
speaks once more to Jaime
and that idea of legends and songs as he thinks
of like, wow, all these people have sat in it.
And I'm like, yeah, but how much better are they than you, right?
We don't know much about the Demon of Derry, but the name doesn't bode super well.
Or Alan Connington, other than I guess he's super pale right imagine if that's
your descriptor like yeah he is pale anyways but well you have like what the red ronin and
i don't understand how the conningtons are just like a bird of a feather yeah they're like
you need some sun you've got some red hair like all the rest of you anyways. Don't get your feathers ruffled, Jon. Oh, your feather
fur, anyways.
Yeah, but we know quite a bit
about all these other Kingsguard, and they were also
flawed, right?
With Jeff from Not A Cast, we've
discussed quite a bit
Barristan in depth
and his faults and where
he fell through when it came to serving
Robert and defending children
and we also spoke about it in barriston's chapters right uh gerald hightower just stood there and was
like yeah i don't fucking know like while his queen was abused and listened to it you see that
uh coming through in jamie's chapter this time rwine. Good night, but turns out he was a shithand.
And Dunk,
who we find out may not have been a knight at all.
Well, we don't find out.
That's something that people pointed out
after close readings of Dunk and Egg.
Yeah.
It's interesting that all of these characters
are very flawed.
And look at Dunk.
He may or may not have left his king to die, right?
It's possible.
While his king was trying to set off wildfire caches, maybe.
Absolutely.
Or other sort of caches.
I mean, Dunk was maybe an enabler in some manners and not so much in others.
But maybe, you know, you't let like your child's yeah man yeah targaryens and prophecy man um anyways so it's
so shrouded right now what it is no it is it is uh will we ever get the other sorry i should not
think about this happy stop it don't even say it don't even say it i don't even want you i hurt he wonders how he could land in the line of 20 good
men and uh just kidding it was six other men ish and he surveys the room when together the lord
commander sits at the top of the table with a top like a shield brothers three to each side and the legs
of the table are carved like stallions the shield that sits on these carved legs is made of old
weirwood and it makes me wonder when they would have made the shield table you pointed out this
chair has been through a lot and i'm guessing the table has as well um i love that it's a white
weirwood shield for the Kingsguard's duties.
And I don't know, maybe it's a headcanon now,
but if Dunk had it carved maybe and brought from Winterfell,
I don't know.
That'd be cool.
That'd be cool.
It's like my little headcanon that maybe that's going to be something
that we hear of.
Or something gifted.
Yeah, exactly.
Something gifted maybe from whoever, maybe a she-wolf of Winterfell.
Like the Statue of Liberty.
There was something else from Fire and Blood that I thought was really appropriate with all this talk about the White Sword Tower.
And it was that, if you blink, you would have missed it in the Jaehaerys and Alysanne stuff.
But Princess Sarah Targaryen, when she was ten years old, sneaks into
the White Sword Tower, steals the white
cloaks, and dyes them all pink.
Sarah Targaryen's, like,
one of the best.
I stan. Yeah, same.
Yeah. She deserved a better
dad.
She said it.
Goddamn.
He was a great dad to his sons, terrible dad to his daughters.
Why do you think that was?
Who can tell?
Whoever knows.
No one ever knows these things, you know?
The man's an enigma.
Anyways, Jamie surveys the White Book next.
And we have this quote of,
The Book of the Brothers was its formal name,
but more often it was simply called the White Book. Within the White Book was the book of the brothers was its formal name but more often it was simply called
the white book within the white book was the history of the king's guard every knight who'd
ever served had a page to record his name and deeds for all time on the top left hand corner
of each page was drawn the shield the man had carried at the time he was chosen
inked in rich colors down in the bottom right corner was the shield of the Kingsguard, snow-white,
empty, pure. The upper
shields were all different, the lower shields
were all the same. In the space between
were written the facts of each man's life
and service. The heraldic
drawings and illuminations were done by
septons, sent from the great
sept of Baelor three times a year, but
it was the duty of the Lord Commander to keep the entries
up to date. My now so this is dumb but it i it stresses me out when i think that
every single person only gets one page and you're just like at the whims of each person's like
individual penmanship like okay first of all what if someone did a lot of stuff and it filled too
much of a page what if they needed a second page but you've already started someone else's fucking
page on that page right because you have to include the other people in the king's guard
anyways also what if the lord commander has awful handwriting how are you going to know
what happened in history i saw this hilarious meme on like i don't know facebook or twitter
and someone was like i asked my doctor cousin or something like what, or like pharmacist cousin, what this doctor had prescribed.
It looked like the letter P, a straight line, and then another, like, vertical line at the end.
Turns out it said paracetamol.
Like, what if the Lord Commander is like that?
What if the Lord Commander has really big handwriting?
And we kind of address this a little later in the chapter.
what if the lord commander has really big handwriting and we kind of address this a little later in the chapter and like it's also interesting to me that's kind of just presumed
that whoever becomes lord commander of the king's guard is going to be literate especially in the
context of someone like dunk and yeah you know it reminds me again of like the the discussion
about the false meritocracy of the night's watch yeah Yeah, it makes me wonder, like,
well, and okay, so we know that it was like a totally gilded thing that if you were a second son, you know, if you were the spare
and you weren't needed and the heir already was showing good promise of,
you know, shooting that sperm up there and bringing out some heirs,
you know what I mean?
Like, if she had birth and hips and
you married good and that dowry was already back and forth good and you'd gotten all the perks out
of the way i'm just saying like that second son's not needed right you just throw it somewhere
where's a good place where you don't have to pay for it right so uh sending like a super lordly knightly kid over to the night's watch is a
practiced and honored tradition so yeah it probably is presumed that the king's guard like
i mean think of how much shit dunk got likely as a king's guard member we know how much shit he got
as a hedge knight i can't imagine it'd be any better for the first few years. And he got all the way up to commander.
And it does bring the question,
like,
did he write pages for his men?
And,
you know,
you talk about the handwriting and we are going to get into that in this
episode.
There is a quote really soon about handwriting in this,
but I would love to see a cute scene with Dunk and Egg teaching him how to
read a la like Davos Shireen in the show.
I don't know.
Be cute.
I can't even remember if like Dunk is literate or not they they don't i don't remember it um for sure but
yeah as you said like second sons but also i mean we do have a a track record of a couple of first
born sons like jb i think barrison right also gave up his lands to become part of the king's guard
but his cousin now has his lands.
Yeah, the people who had the best training.
You know, as Donald Noy points out to Jon, like, yeah, Jon, you're fucking great at beating everyone, but also, like, you literally taught martial arts.
So, also, coming back to Kingsguard vs. Night's Watch, the book is interesting because the Night's Watch tend to be very anonymous.
They're a large order, right?
And you kind of just, there are a few that are remembered.
A lot of them are quite infamous, like the Night's King.
But, you know, as opposed to the Kingsguard, there's so few of them.
They all get their own goddamn page, I guess.
What if you need one page?
Anyways, and they're remembered for protecting just one guy in the realm versus the Night's Watch, right?
They're all expected.
Many of them go and they die nameless.
So many people and they're protecting everyone.
Anyway.
Jamie thinks that he would need to
add in some lost brothers,
right, that he has not kind
of gotten time to add to the White Book.
Sir Mandan Moore, Preston
Greenfield, Sandra Clegane's brief
but bloody experience of the Kingsguard,
he calls it, and he would start
new pages for Balin Swan,
Osmund Kettleblack, and
Loras Tyrell, after
he summons a Septon to draw their shields,
which I'm like, just draw a stupid flower.
Get over with. Jamie turns
the page to Barristan Selmy's
It's three wheat stalks
on a brown field, and turning the top
of it, and Jamie finds
amused and surprised that Barristan
somehow took the
time to write his own dismissal
before he left.
It's so
top-tier petty.
But it's amazing.
So baller.
It is. What a power move.
Honestly, I cannot take that
away from Barristan, and I'm sure we've talked about it
back then.
We've read this aloud way before.
All of his great feats. We had an actual
really chilling
Barristan intro. Yes.
If you recall where we were all like,
here are Barristan's accomplishments because it is
like the most fuck you
resume. Like, I did everything.
Here's my dick on the table.
He squired for Manfred
Swan, speaking of Balin Swan. Named the Bold at squired for manfred swan speaking of balen swan named the bold at age
10 for appearing as a mystery knight he was defeated by duncan targaryen the prince of
dragonflies slew maelys the monstrous in the nine penny kings war defeated lor mel long lance and
cedric storm named kingsguard age 23 by Gerald Hightower, played the bouncer
at the tourney of the Silver Bridge,
Victor in the melee at Maidenpool,
Defiance of Duskendale,
heroics that we've talked about, he avenged
Gwaine Gaunt and rescued
Lady Jane Swan from the
Kingswood Brotherhood, he slayed
Simon Toyne, defeated the Smiling
Knight, defeated the Mystery Knight
Black Shield at the Old Town Tourney.
He was the sole champion of the Tourney at Storm's End.
He unseated a bunch of big-name characters that you see in the background, right?
Bobby B., Oberyn, Leighton Hightower, John Connington, Jason Malister,
uwu if you're Eliana, and Rhaegar.
Honestly,
that is a lot of
big name characters. It's funny that
Oberyn was there
when I was just there to hang out, party.
Actually, though, probably.
Thank god I was knocked out.
He was also
wounded in the Battle of the Trident.
And then, of course, as we all know, named
Lord Commander by Robert.
Actually, in fact, when I picked this up, right, with wounded in the Battle of the Trident,
we're transitioning to the time that Barristan actually starts writing his own entry.
He brought Cersei to her wedding.
He led an attack on, actually, I don't know how to pronounce this, Wyke?
Wyke?
I call it Wyke.
Wyke makes sense.
I change it based on my mood whenever I'm reading it.
Yeah.
During Balin's Rebellion, champion of the tourney
at King's Landing in his 57th year.
I've never had to say it aloud.
And he was dismissed at age 21
by King Joffrey I.
He's like the first
and I hope the fucking last
Blandister for reasons and I hope the fucking last Blandister
for reasons of
I'm a fucking
teenage prick or my mommy
and her dad said so
also allegedly
age and Barristan's like
fuck that age shit I'm gonna fight
everyone go right
and then leave.
I like that and we get this line after go write and then leave.
I liked that.
And we get this line after this,
this harkens back to kind of to what you were saying about the writing style of the Lord Commander and how it could affect the pages,
which to be fair,
we don't have a page limit,
Eliana.
So it stresses me out.
I know,
but like a game of Thrones, the source material for A Song of Ice and Fire, if you recall,
they showed that you can have several pages because Barristan's page was like 80 pages, rightfully so.
It just stresses me out because, okay, so whenever I start a new notebook,
I am a weirdo and I don't write on the very first page.
Sometimes I don't write on the second page because I'm like, I don't know,
what if I write something fucking stupid at least i'll still like have
those clean pages and i can like anyways i start like two two to three pages in
so the passage goes the earlier part of sir barrison's storied career had been entered
by sir gerald hightower in a big forceful hand. Selmy's own smaller and more
elegant writing took over the account of his wounding on the trident. I thought this might
be interesting that this was written in two hands, and Jamie's is already written in two hands. It's
written by Gerald Hightower, and then his page is written by Barrison Selmy later on and I kind of wonder if this is foreshadowing
that maybe someone with a smaller more elegant writing style might take over Jamie's account
in the end. No uh no connection to be made here or anything they're really I it's merely
speculation there's not much but it did ring out to me.
It's something that really just made me go, huh, that's interesting.
The different handwritings.
It makes me wonder about who will
live, die, and
tell your story, which is a Hamilton quote.
Who lives, who dies, who tells
your story. And it won't surprise
me if Brienne does. There were no
real supporting quotes
for this, though though so it is
speculation I regret to inform you also so it is interesting to think about like how people present
other people's stories right of those underneath them versus like oh how much do I boast when you
write your own page but also like man when you think about it Jamie has to write all these other people's histories with his non- dominant hand. Yeah.
It's hard.
That's all.
No, absolutely agreed.
It's not easy at all.
And now he has to write about dudes he doesn't
even like. In the non-dominant hand.
Yeah, with his
non-dominant hand. And he's sitting here scrolling
past absolute legends. And A,
his confidence is obviously
shot to shit right now for many
various reasons if you've been listening to our
podcast you guys know and
I don't know poor Jamie
but his own page
feels completely scarce
he's like wow not only am I missing
a hand here now
I'm like reading that I haven't
done fuck all with my entire life life sucks
yes absolutely and uh what his says it's like what one third of what bernison says and we can
just read it a lot of jamie's own page was scanned by comparison sir jamie of house lannister okay
great his fucking name. Firstborn son
of Lord Tywin and Lady Joanna of
Casterly Rock. Served against the Kingswood
Brotherhood as squire to Lord
Sumner Crakehall. Knighted in his
15th year by Sir Arthur Dayne of the
Kingsguard for valor in the field.
Chosen
for the Kingsguard in his 15th year
by King Ares II
Targaryen. During the sack of King's Landing,
slew Ares II at the foot of the Iron Throne, thereafter known as the Kingslayer. This is
literally halfway through his paragraph. Big total shift. Thereafter known as the Kingslayer,
pardoned for his crime by King Robert I Baratheon. Okay, to be fair, a lot of them actually have this pardoned by Robert Baratheon in theirs.
Served in the honor guard that brought his sister, the Lady Cersei Lannister, to King's Landing to wed King Robert.
Champion in the tourney, held at King's Landing on the occasion of their wedding.
Summed up like that that his life seemed a rather
scant and mingy thing sir barrison could have recorded a few of his other attorney victories
at least yeah but your entire family could have not fired him and now you have his job and you
were not the most king's guardiest is all right like you got this just because you're the last
one standing so i'm just putting it out there jamie i also was like thinking about it in the context of what barrison's resume says
for barrison it's like straight up won the tourney and jamie's like but could you put like some of
the individual matches that i won he's like could you put you know like let's say let's say you got
i'm gonna try and make a sports analogy here, right? Let's say, you know, you got the whole championship, right?
Barristan won the championship.
He won the Super Bowl.
And Jamie's like, but could you talk about the single game that I won that was not the Super Bowl?
That's what he wants.
I think there's an obvious split, right?
Like, Chosen for the Kings's garden is 15th year by king
Ares II Targaryen
that is when the Gerald Hightower part
ends and the Barristan part starts
with the sack of king's landing
yeah and maybe it's Gerald Hightower's
fault maybe he could have been
better at keeping up with Jamie's
shit and writing things down
but he was busy though guarding
Lyanna Stark in a tower.
That, and also maybe he didn't love
writing.
Yeah, I mean, writing with
your hands sucks, so.
It hurts for some people.
Thanks.
Yeah, so, he's just like, I don't know.
I don't feel like doing this.
Anyway,
turns out, yeah, Geralt didn't add many more deeds either
there's nothing really about the kingswood or about the smiling knight and jamie's like i
remember the smiling knight he thinks that smiling knight was a madman he was cruelty and chivalry
all piled together and i'm like isn't that the point of most knights according to jamie lannister
and i guess you know he's gonna talk about that in like two paragraphs but whatever well i mean yes and no right like we talked about it last time but
jamie says that's how all knights are but what if they aren't what if he's just projecting
oh he absolutely is because they like in two paragraphs we'll get to it we'll get to it yeah
yeah so he remembers his sword who arthur dane had put so many notches through the Smiling Knight's sword with his own sword with Dawn, letting him fetch a new one even by the end of the battle.
It's that white sword of yours I want, the robber knight told him as they resumed, though he was bleeding from a dozen wounds by then.
Then you shall have it, sir, the Sword of the Morning replied, and made an end of it.
You'll have it, sir, the Sword of the Morning replied, and made an end of it.
I just want to say that between this and what Ned remembers of the Tower of Joy exchange,
what is it with Arthur?
He's just super into one-liners, Arthur Danes.
Oh, yeah.
Well, he's such a badass.
I guess.
I can't help but feel like he must have practiced these.
In the mirror?
Yeah.
He's like, this is part of what it means to be a Kingsguard, right? I gotta practice my
delivery.
Jamie
thinks that, you know,
these were simpler times
and men and their swords were made of
finer steel.
And he's like,
but was I just 15 and young?
I love that, though though especially with your donald
noy comparison earlier in talking about john's mentors and taking his mentors chambers in
comparison to jamie men and swords were made of finer steel kind of rings that donald noy
comparison right with the baratheon brothers oh uh yeah absolutely and that's a great point because i was like thinking about that a little
with uh loris's description of friendly's armor later on not it wasn't like that deep i was like
interesting because like loris is all like it was the best daily you could get but yeah
donald noy like talking about the bratton brothers but also about the people in the night's watch in general so yeah the institution
all of jamie's heroes are dead before him the sword of the morning the smiling knight the white
bull prince lewin oswell went with his black humor earnest john dairy simon toyn his kingswood
brotherhood bluff old summoner craig, and me, that boy I was.
When did he die, I wonder?
When I donned the white cloak?
When I opened Ares's throat?
That boy had wanted to be Sir Arthur Dane
but someplace along the way
he had become the smiling knight instead.
I love that.
It reminds me actually, off the cuff here, it reminds me of Theon
in a way, with Smiler.
Yes.
But I do love that this discussion is such a
precursor to Jaime getting his sword
and giving Brienne
a sword, thinking I can still
be glorious, I can be chivalric, I can
still be close to
Arthur Dayne, because Arthur Dayne
wasn't perfect, as we've discussed before
and you know jamie could still be a knight even in this light right absolutely i like that callback
yeah and you know coming back to it like uh what we were saying about the night's watch right it's
a different energy and vibe and i think absolutely reverberates throughout the rest of Jaime's thoughts of this chapter
but Jon
13 in
A Dance of Dragons
there's this line of the Night's Watch needed leaders
with the wisdom of Maester Aemon, the learning of
Samwell Tarly, the courage of
Corrin Halfhand, the stubborn strength
of the Old Bear, the compassion of Donald
Noy. What it had instead was them
and he's referring to uh
offal yarwick bowen marsh and celador but of course also john right and you have jamie kind
of wondering like how the fuck did i get here and in charge and he's also changed right same as john
jamie's wondering like when did that boy die and for jamie like that in John both of them that boy has died at similar ages around the ages of like
15 right as Jamie
notes but we don't
actually know for either of them and for
Jamie he's still trying to figure out like
was the man ever born John
unsure
you know he doesn't know because
adolescence is hard and weird
and puberty is really
difficult when you're facing down
supernatural threat i'm sure but you know you also have this interesting comparison because like
jamie is romanticizing so many of these men and they are long gone for a lot of them right because
jamie's older whereas the people that john misses not all of them like were dead so long ago some of
them he still kind of thinks might be alive, theoretically alive.
He doesn't know Aemon's dead yet.
Sam's obviously alive.
It's all very fresh for him, but that same idea is that the Night's Watch is no longer what it once was
in terms of those heroes that Jon grew up with, same as the heroes that Jaime grew up with all those years ago.
Yeah, and it extremely feels like the Night's Watch, especially
because as we're about to chat,
Jamie might be ignoring some warning
signs from these men as well,
right? Just like John. And
trying to change things in the
quote-unquote watch, much like
John as well. Yeah.
Well, Osmond
Kettleblack is the first to arrive
to the meeting, and it's very awkward for both of them.
We get a line.
He gave Jamie a grin, as if they were old brothers in arms.
Hmm.
He tells Jamie that he looks much more like himself, all cleaned up, saying,
Oh, I'd have known you at once.
And Jamie's like, Yeah, I doubt that.
Jamie had been bathed shaved and no longer looked
like outlaw country but he didn't look like golden man Jamie Lannister either he's thinner
hollower older the five other brothers file in and he commands them to stand by their seats
asking who guards the king Sir Osney and Osfred guard tommen osman's two very trustworthy brothers
and garland tyrell another very trustworthy brother is guarding him as well so i thought it
was kind of funny that today on twitter very coincidental right that? That Aziz of History of Westeros tweeted today.
Hidden joke example number.
Insert number 120398 because, you know, he's like making jokes.
And he goes, the Tyrells and Littlefinger murdered Joffrey.
When Jaime returns to King's Landing just after, he has the Kingsguard meet and has other non-Kingsguard watch over Tommen in the meantime.
Who are these others? Two Kettleblacks, agents of Littleingsguard, watch over Tommen in the meantime. Who are these others?
Two Kettleblacks, agents of Littlefinger, and a Tyrell.
The Tyrell among the two most likely to have put the poison in Joffrey's cup.
In fact, Jaime has almost no chance since there's also a Tyrell and a Kettleblack in the Kingsguard already,
both of whom try to pin it on innocent people.
Yeah, that's some framework we're definitely going to talk about being played with, especially for Loras here with the blaming the innocent.
Guilty on accident, but actually innocent.
I don't know.
But I think it's funny that History of Westeros is doing their Valar Rereadis and they're doing a few chapters at a time.
So they are actually catching us.
We're kind of going neck and neck as we get through jamie and i think we're gonna lap them soon but it's like every week i feel like
we get real close and all of a sudden they're doing a chapter that we're on again and i love it
we find a lot of really fun things like this yeah i thought that was just like a funny like
thing to point out here in this moment um especially because like jamie's actual brother
not his brothers in arms right his actual brother has in fact spent the past few books keeping joffrey
alive despite joffrey's best fucking efforts and impulses to get everyone to want to kill him and
finally you know joffrey's efforts pay off and i guess to an extent right because it's the king's
guard these are jam Jaime's new family.
And I mean, like, let's be real.
Turns out all of Jaime's families are dysfunctional, including the Kingsguard.
Yeah, a bit. And these guys are totally, like you said, no different.
Boros and Meryn sit to his right.
And Osmund, Baelin, and Loras sit to the left.
An empty chair is left for aries oakheart
that sits between boros and marin the old kingsguard and the new seem to be separated and
jamie goes what does it mean what does it mean i mean obviously it means the new kingsguard are
kind of trash and the old are dying but the usual no but i love that it's kind of meta that he's like
this probably means something which is kind of what he does with everything in his life right
like hmm this must mean something but yeah here he is soldiering on yeah he thinks about history
and the times that the king's guard was divided because he's like this is a risky this is a risky
group especially like in the dance of the dragons and we have this quote of
was that something he needed to fear as well it seemed queer to him to sit in the lord commander
seat where baristan the bold had sat for so many years and even queerer to sit here crippled god
don't tell him i said it but brunanby fish is baristan defecting to agon theory all the time
feels like it could happen now
and I don't know
if that's just the quarantine talking
or like if it's real.
Anyways,
I do want to talk
Dance of the Dragons.
Patrons,
Stranger Tear and Up
have our four parts
of the Dance of the Dragons
covering everything
in all published books
from Fire and Blood to the World of Ice and Fire through the main books.
And we got a ton of new info in Fire and Blood regarding Kristen Cole and Rhaenyra, right?
Originally Rhaenyra, the heir, just to remind you guys, the actual heir.
the actual heir uh her sworn sword and shield was kristin cole and he changes sides becomes her stepmom a scheming mother clucking biatch allison hightower i just can't stand her it
becomes her stepmom's sworn shield instead kristin just changes sides and then he becomes the king
maker he convinces agon too to pursue the crown and crowns him with Aegon the Conqueror's crown. And there are further
details in Fire and Blood that include like a spicy, zesty, steamy, sexy take from Mushroom that
might be ridiculous or a lie because literally everything Mushroom says is like 50-50 chance of
being true, right? Like absolutely down the middle. Could be true, could be bullshit. Mushroom claims, you know, Rhaenyra and Criston had some sort of relationship,
and Criston was spurned by Rhaenyra, and possibly even they banged it out.
Something happened between them, and suddenly they stopped hanging.
And of course, Rhaenyra ends up marrying Laenor Velaryon,
and then fathers Harwin Strong of Harrenhal's
children instead, which we kind of know, right? Like that's kind of a truth, but I think it's
canon. I think we all know it's canon. Kristen goes on to beat Harwin up in a melee at a tourney
and Laenor's implied lover, Joffrey Lawnmouth, as well is kind of like gets the crap beaten out of
him, basically revealing that, hey,
I know what's up with you, Rhaenyra.
I know your whole thing.
The jig is up.
I think this holds some really heavy Cersei parallels, maybe?
I've spoken about a couple different things from the dance, like Rhaenyra being a direct
kind of sandbox version of Cersei and Daenerys.
But here, more than ever, it kind of makes you want to apply this to Jaime, even with his eventual split from Cersei and Daenerys. But here, more than ever, it kind of makes you want to apply this to Jaime,
even with his eventual split from Cersei.
It's a big role of a Kingsguard
choosing to follow another queen or king.
So, and obviously, like I said,
Bryn and Befish has a great series on Aegon Blackfyre.
I mean, Aegon VI, he's a Blackfyre.
And, uh,
you know, Barristan could
defect. That could be really what this is about.
I think that's a strong Kristen Cole
parallel, but this right here feels
the internal
internal struggle
Kristen Cole.
I mean, it could even be Jaime. We don't even know how
Yeah.
Who knows what was real
in the bad show or not.
Especially with those Chris and Cole
lover parallels.
But for now,
Jamie's thinking of
his brothers as Tom and Seven
and surveys them. Maren and Blount
he thinks are adequate fights
but both are cruel and vapid.
Yes, Maren sucks.
Balan Swan is decent enough, acceptable enough background.
Kingsguard cop character.
And then we have Loras, who in quotes is supposedly all a knight should be.
And then, of course, Osmund Kettleblack, the stranger to Jaime of the group.
And I quote stranger.
It's on purpose.
You know,
Nauticast is doing their live streams on Mondays,
talking about Catelyn.
They're wrapping up their Catelyn handful of chapters.
Turns out following one character's POV chapter at a time is pretty cool,
Eliana.
Just saying.
Anyways.
Yeah.
Apparently following POV chapters is pretty cool i hear but i hear uh
catalan in the chapters that noticast is discussing in a clash of kings there is kind of the moment
when she's praying right and she ignores the stranger she talks about all the different
aspects of the new gods she sees the mother and the the father and she sees the maiden and all these characters
she sees in her children and her dead husband and in Renly and Stannis and in Brienne even,
but she doesn't see the stranger and she doesn't pray to the stranger. It's the one she avoids and
it's the one that comes for her, right? Especially the night of Renly's death. And for Jaime in this
moment, Osmund is literally introduced as the stranger that he doesn't know
and doesn't see he's like oh it's
the most strange person in the group to him
and of course
as we know Osmond
is fucking Jamie's quote unquote
wife right his childhood
wife for all I know
so I think it's just such a very
like apt Osmond is
here as we're about to get into.
Osmond is just a shit Lord,
right?
Like he's like laying around and he's just like,
yeah,
I'm pretty fucking cool.
Jamie Lannister.
You're all right,
but you don't shit gold to me,
man.
And Jamie's like,
who are you?
No one fucking knows.
Yeah.
Well,
actually that is kind of what happens in this chapter. Like Jamie's like, no one fucking knows yeah well actually that is kind of what happens
in this chapter like Jamie's like no one
fucking knows you dude
yeah and right now
like in that same vein
Jamie's imagining like what would Arthur Dayne
say of this group
and he imagines that Arthur Dayne would be like
how is it that the king's guard has
fallen so low which I don't think sounds
one liner enough for Arthur Dayne in my opinion, most like.
And it was my doing, I would have to answer.
I opened the door and did nothing when the vermin began to crawl inside.
Which, wow, angst more, Jamie Lannister.
But also, like, it's a good line and it makes sense for Jamie because, like, he's very much in a way the fulcrum in which like
the stories genres and the tropes turn right like beginning of the book wow he's what a king should
look like thanks john oh my god he's sleeping with his twin sister like a few chapters later
like all the way that he he's like that big turning point in the beginning of the book series
and then throws the little boy out the window and then here we have him again as i have said
when we started jamie's chapters like he's one of the largest narrative arguments that george is
making as we see him begin to change and think even these questions and I do think it's really good to see this for Jaime's character specifically,
but I do want George to know
that there are some men that don't need to be explored.
For sure, and that's why he doesn't
give the mountain a POV.
Thank fucking God,
but he sure does give Daemon Targaryen his due.
That's true.
Anyways.
So Jaime decides that he's going to start this meeting he berates his men for letting joffrey die not even going to touch that obviously because we laughed for 80 years about it last week but
they touch on it themselves in this chapter yeah they all just fucking roasted his ass, and I'm roasting him, to be honest, in my head.
But he calls
Joffrey his sister's son
in his head here and out loud,
and he separates himself from Joffrey a ton
in this chapter. He's totally
compartmentalizing his kind of
lack of role in Joffrey's life
and the fact that he feels pretty much
nothing about this kid's death.
He's like, huh, my first son that I much nothing about this kid's death he's like huh
my first son that i feel nothing about because i wasn't allowed to actually see him as a son
ever until this exact moment ish yeah he's like i take no responsibility pretty much
and i just squirted the little fucker you know what i mean pretty? Pretty much, actually though. And then none of the other
kings are making motion. There's no throat clearing,
nothing, and he asks them, alright,
was it Tyrion
who poisoned them? And they mostly
just ignore his question except for Meryn
Trant, who's like, well, Tyrion
filled up Joffrey's cup with wine, so he probably
slipped it in then.
Whatever, Meryn.
Jaime questions the wine being poisoned,
and Blount says the imp emptied it on the floor
to get rid of the evidence,
and Mirren agrees.
He's like, yeah, he must have known it was poisoned by else,
but he'd do that.
Baelon Swan frowns at this, saying,
you know, there were many people on the dais,
and more people were watching the doves than the wine cup.
Yeah, and I love that Balin here is slightly team Tyrion.
Was not expecting that, right?
Like, he's like, I don't know.
It could have not been Tyrion.
Which does make sense because I think that Tyrion's one of the ones who helped him get this promotion, right?
Yeah.
So, who backed him.
So that might be part of it.
But Balin also is presented as, like, you know, kind of a decent, even during Tyrion's trial.
Jaime asks, all right, so like, who was on the dais?
And Merrin answers, him, the king's family, the brides, Maester Pycelle, the High Septon.
And Osmund jokes that, you know, the Septon was likely to poison him.
He's too holy by half.
I never liked the look of him.
Ooh, that feels like a nice nod toward the future sparrow
and a certain snake that's coming to King's Landing.
A snake?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's sitting in my sister's.
Yes!
Sometimes we do that in my household.
So Loras busts in at the end and he's like it was sansa she fled so
she's guilty and she had a motive obviously and she was spurned and i like this whole uh
just really interesting people that are being put forward here right being investigated in this
knives out whodunit going on uh this meeting went from like a total
departmental meeting to like a whodunit and ignoring the families especially because like
we know they have and will poison people and one of them did the poisoning they bring up people
that are very suspect or related maester pycelle's plot is strongly connected to poison as we know
in a game of Thrones with Jon
Arryn's death and his advice on that in Council, A Clash of Kings, Tyrion steals poison from
him for, you know, Cersei, and of course, Tyrion's trial just a bit ago in A Storm
of Swords, he was brought in as a total professional, and then we have the High Septon, who is basically
bankrolled by Tyrion, he was instilled by Tyrion, and he was gifted a gorgeous crown by Tywin.
Sansa, we know she didn't do this.
She was a vehicle for it.
And she's Tyrion's wife, immediate mentality there.
And of course, poisons a woman's weapon,
as we keep hearing, obviously,
although it keeps being used by a certain unemployed man.
And everyone is framing Sansa
for this and other magical things like we talked about last episode in Jaime 7. So
before we get through the chapter I did want to know where you stand on who knows what of the
Tyrells. Does Loras know? Does Margaery know? I think Margaery knows and I don't know we'll talk
about that later but I think Loras could know.
And if so, how could Loras stand there and freak out about Brienne killing Renly, quote unquote, when he knows his family just killed this king?
Interesting. Just interesting.
Yeah, I've never really been sure if Loras knew or not, just because loris seems like he just seems so young compared
to the rest of his family and the way that he's written and the way he's like acting here like
i've often felt that marjorie mustn't know like she's drinking from the same cup that's super
risky if she doesn't know and that garland you i've gone back and forth like did garland was
garland the one who slipped the poison right like it passes from he knows and i think he did it you think loris did it no i mean garland i think
garland did it like slip the poison torn between if it's like garland or marjorie right like
obviously it goes from little finger to don toast to sansa's hair to elena to garland and then i
there i'm just like did garland slip it in and tell marjorie or did he
give it to marjorie to slip in right it's like only it's a it's a very slight difference but
like they're to me they're both in it and i think it's just it's it's just so funny like obviously
they're all part of this whole thing but everyone keeps going like poison is a woman's weapon which
people came to seem to like have completely thrown
out the window for Tyrion's trial
and people are like yeah I don't know
poison anyone can do it now
but like oh I thought
it was only women who were able to do
that pansy ass bitch thing
no now it's like anyone can do it
but like I mean obviously as we know
Littlefinger's actually the one who's been orchestrating
the big poison plots this whole time
yeah
just like him
to weaponize misogyny against us
I'm telling you
convenient
Jamie thinks this all seems sensible
that Tyrion might yet be innocent
little projecting there I think
and he thinks on Sansa wondering
how she would have gotten out of the castle.
And maybe Varys was who he needed to talk to.
Because Varys knew everything in this castle.
Varys fucking wishes.
Of course.
And he does talk to Varys, as we know.
He returns to bossy pants.
Via Tywin's lines ringing in his head.
He's like, I'm ready to command now.
Because Tywin said, you say you're the Lord Commander.
Go do your duty
yeah he also thinks this line of like these are not the brothers he had chosen but the ones he
had and it makes me think again of john's thoughts on bowen and awful and selador but also like
throwing it out there to be honest is this not just like how all siblings work in general? Like, does anyone actually choose their fucking blood relatives?
Like, really, in general, like, I, I feel like I'm thinking like the Baratheon brothers
must have felt the same.
I'm sure like the Cleganes feel the same about each other.
Like, you don't like somehow get to pick your blood relatives.
Yeah, it's not currently an offer they have for people.
No.
He tells them Tommen will sit the throne until he's old of age,
and that he won't die from poison.
And then he tells Boros that he looks like he enjoys food,
so he's going to enjoy all of Tommen's first bites of his food.
This feels very Janos and John, by the way.
I got these vibes majorly, and I loved this little quote.
Sir Osmond Kettleblack laughed aloud,
and the Knight of Flowers smiled,
but Sir Boros turned a deep beat red.
I'm no food taster!
I'm a Knight of the Kingsguard!
Totally Janos slant.
I would rather be a food taster, okay?
Anyways.
Same. guard. Totally Jano slint. I would rather be a food taster. Okay, anyways. He tells Boros that Cersei actually
enlightened me as to the time that you were
going to give up Tommen. Do you remember
this? Teterian sellswords, Boros?
And he thinks, you know what? Food
is actually less threatening.
And he tells him, it's alright though. Tommen likes
apple cakes. It's gonna go great.
Boros then is like whoa
you were a huge hypocrite how can you come at me for not doing my job when you never did yours
you were never the king's guardiast of them all which is what you were supposed to be and also
you're a cripple and you should be the food taster yes she's like, interesting. Yeah, Jamie is very controlled here.
I don't know that I would be.
Jamie smiles and he's like, I agree.
Very Tyrion, right?
You could totally tell they're brothers here.
Because again, how Tyrion handled Janos
and how Jamie is handling Blount.
He agrees.
He says, I am unfit to guard the king.
And he's like, take your sword out
and we'll find out how unfit either of us are. And then there's this passage. At the end, one of us will be dead and the king's guard will
be improved. He rose. Or if you prefer, you may return to your duties. Bah! Sir Boros hawked up a
glob of green phlegm, spat it at Jaime's feet and walked out, his sword still in its sheath.
The man is craven and a good thing,
because Jamie was bluffing.
Boros could totally probably fight him and knows he has to play the lord commander
in front of Boros and the rest of the men.
Also fascinating that Boros spat it at Jamie's feet
and not at Jamie.
There's a mild amount of respect.
But also, Jamie's move here,
is this not from The Princess Bride?
Yes, I suppose.
I don't know.
For me, it feels like it has the same energy.
Jaime has this line where he thinks
they feared the man I was, the man I am,
they pity.
And I'm, again, thinking of Jaime and Jon,
both in different positions in terms of
being lord commander and john actually tries to make people see reason he's like this is why we're
doing the things we're doing why won't anyone fucking listen to me uh except for uh janice
lynn he's not listening he's like all right we're just gonna behead him and jamie on the other hand
he's just like ordering people around because this is all he knows because he was raised as a lannister and
like this idea of people needing to fear the man that he was for like all this to work that's just
a very lannister thought process we see it from cersei during the black water that you know those
you rule must fear you and we see how tywin of course wielded that and that's contrasted with john
right he's very confused but kind of gets a learning from ned like it's a mix of both you
know gaining that respect having them love you the ones who serve you and jamie doesn't try to do that
at all yeah not at all this is all business here yeah he's doing what needs to be done it feels like yeah especially when he like turns
to the newcomer osmond osmond kettle black is that who you're speaking about indeed it is
so some of you some of you esteemed listeners may already have heard of a tinfoil theory that I really like and I've expanded
on. It's a very silly tinfoil theory. A lot of people have posted it on the old reddits and the
ljs and the pjs and the cjs and the yts and all the places you get your A Song of Ice and Fire
and Game of Thrones esteemed content. And this theory basically is the Kettleblacks, as we meet them, are members of House Wendt.
It's tinfoil 101.
The theory goes the Kettleblacks are the lost members mentioned in the tourney at Harrenhal.
There are totally cons against the theory.
I know it's tinfoil, but some of this shit is so lined up that if it's an accident, it's
like a hysterical accident
like completely ridiculous and my read isn't that oswell went is alive i know a lot of people like
to theorize that uh i don't think he's alive and walking around but maybe his brother or his
nephews sure are so like i've said many people have gone into this before but i think i've added
some fun stuff to it.
I don't think anyone's really brought some of this up.
So Eliana, I'm hoping that maybe I can convince you today that there's something there.
All right. All right. Let's do this.
All right.
So the Kettlebacks don't land in these books until A Clash of Kings.
They are sellswords in the capital hired by Cersei to replace the Redguard,
Vylar's guard. If you remember, Tyrion sends a man named Vylar, the Redguard captain, and some
men to the Riverlands to escort Cleos back, bringing Robb's guard back as well. Later,
he's called Tywin's captain of guards in the appendices, and his status is kind of unknown
on whether he was killed by Edmure before the Siege of Riverrun in Feast, and his status is kind of unknown on whether he was
killed by Edmure before the Siege of Riverrun in Feast, or if he was freed.
But before Clash of Kings, and before any mention of the Kettleblacks, I want to talk
about House Wendt because they were raised out of Harrenhal, Lady Wendt yielded to Tywin
because she had no men to defend it.
No men, which is interesting because we learned that there are
at least six people in house went during the tourney at heron hall the father the lord was
walter went and in brand two a storm of swords we learned that the daughter of the castle was queen
of love and beauty at the tourney and she had four brothers and an uncle to defend her. So her four brothers and her uncle, you guessed it, Oswell Wendt,
but all four sons of Harrenhal were defeated on the first day of the tourney.
In A Game of Thrones Tyrion VII, we learn about Lady Wendt yielding Harrenhal.
Tyrion is discussing this with Kevin, and's plot as we know is very much wrapped up
in that framework of the tourney at Harrenhal hosted by the Wentz they do exist Game of Thrones
erasure is real and we get a little detail about them in the World of Ice and Fire a couple little
details the tourney was announced by Walter Wentz Lord Harrenhal, late in the year 280 AC, not long after a visit from
his younger brother, Sir Oswell Wendt, a knight of the Kingsguard. We then learn that Lord Wendt was
offering prizes thrice as large as those given at the Great Lannisport tourney of 272 AC, which was
hosted by Tywin Lannister. Of course, this tourney was kind of implied to be bankrolled by Tywin Lannister
in the World of Ice and Fire.
And we know from his stance at Duskendale on Aerys
that he had a better king in mind in Rhaegar.
He raised a hand to indicate Prince Rhaegar
in a council in the Aerys II chapter
of the World of Ice and Fire.
And also in Aerys II's chapter
in the World of Ice and Fire,
we learned that Aerres' loyalists
would probably not have liked
if Rhaegar had, you know,
chosen to go against his
father, and that Ares might even
disinherit him if he did
so, and name Viserys the heir.
Later in the World of Ice and Fire, we learn
about the Lothsteds, which we talked
about a little bit ago in Jamie 6,
when Jamie was having the shield of House Lothsten with a bat on it just a couple episodes ago.
And we learn that knights in service of the Lothstens were House Wendt.
They were given Harrenhal as a reward for helping bring down the Lothstens.
They were given Harrenhal as a reward for helping bring down the Lothstens,
and they hold this seat to the day, but the World of Ice and Fire quotes,
tragedy has marked them.
So, with this framework in mind around Jaime's chapters,
I want to move forward with this back and forth conversation we got here in Jaime VIII, A Storm of Swords.
We won't get into it fully, we will just get into a little bit of it.
I've highlighted the most important bits, in my opinion, and Eliana, you are going to help me.
Yes, I am. I've fought in tourneys, melees, and battles throughout the Seven Kingdoms.
I know of every hedge knight, freerider, and upjump squad of any skill who has ever resumed
to break a lance in the lists. So how is it that I have never heard of you sir osmond he had a great wide smile on his
face did sir osmond as if he and jamie were old comrades in arms playing some jolly little game
i'm a soldier though not no tourney knight where had you served before my sister found you? Here and there, my lord.
I will ask once more.
Where have you served?
In the stepstones.
Some in the disputed lands.
There's always fighting there.
I rode with the gallant men.
We fought for Lys and some for Tyrosh.
How did you come by your knighthood?
On a battlefield.
Who knighted you?
Sir Robert...
Stone. He's dead now,
my lord. To be sure.
Sir Robert Stone
might have been some bastard
from the Vale, he supposed, selling his sword
in the Disputed Lands.
On the other hand, he might be no more than a name
Sir Osman cobbled together from a dead
king in a castle wall.
Interesting. We have a couple things
to pull from this.
When the Kettleblacks appear at the start
of the War of the Five Kings out of nowhere,
Osmund and Oswell are
the only ones with a real backstory.
Osmund has fought on the battlefield
across the Narrow Sea with a
company called the Gallant Men
fought in the disputed lands first for Lys then Tyrosh and we've talked a lot here at Girls Gone
Canada about exiles across the narrow sea and there are many right there's Blackfire supporters
Blackfires Oberyn after he killed Edgar Ironwood for example was sent over to Lys Viserys and
Daenerys probably one of the
biggest examples smuggled out by willem derry and in theon one spoilers for the winds of winter this
is a sample chapter george released uh there is a line from stannis nothing really plot spoiler
just saying where he's talking about daemon blackfirere and he says, By this logic, because we know Stannis is likely wrong here,
because two Targaryens are coming from across the Narrow Sea right into Westeros.
One might be a Blackfyre and one is a real dragon.
We'll see.
But exiles come back by this logic.
So maybe you're wrong, Stannis.
People aren't hiding from the rebellion.
We've seen this with John Connington, who himself went into exile.
There's your biggest exile example.
We also know that a bastard knight from the Vale knighted Osmund Kettleblack.
And this very chapter, Jaime Jamie 8, is placed next to
Sansa 6 in A Storm of Swords. We have this interesting exchange with Peter Baelish and
Sansa on the Merling King, their getaway ship. The chapter where Sansa learns that she is to act as a
bastard from the Vale, a lane stone. Of course, Sansa's mother, Catelyn, also has some house-went ties.
On her mother there, Minissa went, nay, Tully's line.
The exact relation is unknown.
Oswell, come up here and let the Lady Sansa have a look at you.
The old man appeared a few moments later, grinning and bowing.
Sansa eyed him uncertainly.
What am I supposed to see?
Do you know him? asked Peter. No. Look closer. She studied the old man's line, windburnt face,
hook nose, white hair, and huge knuckly hands. There was something familiar about him, yet Sansa had to shake her head.
I don't. I never saw Oswald before I got into his boat, I'm certain.
Oswald grinned, showing a mouth of crooked teeth. No, but my lady might have met my three sons. It was the three sons and that smile, too.
Kettle black, Sansa's eyes went wide. You're a kettle black.
kettle black sans eyes went wide you're a kettle black interesting i like that passage because if this is a thing george is telling us to draw our eyes
to the page look closer little finger says uh just a fun, especially because it comes directly after Jaime VIII.
These chapters are very much next to each other.
Sansa VI is the chapter where she becomes a Lainstone at the end.
And in all likelihood, Walter Wendt, the Lord of Harrenhal at the time, is likely dead now.
Oswell, Wendt, I do not think is alive.
Oswell, Osmund, Osfrid, and Osney Cuddleblack, in my opinion, would likely
be the four unnamed brothers from the tournament, with maybe the eldest brother of these four
brothers parading as Oswell to honor his uncle. But here's where it's interesting. It seems that
each of these men actually have different motivations. Our friend Aziz from History of
Westeros, as we discussed earlier, said that two of them were employed by Littlefinger, but I don't know if I agree with that.
Oswald has been in Littlefinger's employ for a while that we learn.
A good snatch if he is a Wendt, especially because Lysa is a Tully, part Wendt, and eventually Sansa landing in the Vale.
part went and eventually sansa landing in the veil osmund is cersei's main brother that she likes to fuck of the kettle blacks and seems to be sizing jamie up during all of this but cersei
has also bedded osney who's the brother that sells her out and feast after he's tortured by the
sparrow osfred and osmund get thrown in a cell kevin plans two options for them. They either get to plea innocent
and fight Sir Robert Strong
and likely die, or go to the wall
guilty. Interestingly
enough, there's another little parallel
with Cersei who's hooking up with these very
strong men.
Eh? Eh? Eh?
Eh? You see what I did there? Yes, I do.
If these guys are
wents, these dark haired, bulky, muscly men are Wentz.
Secretly.
And they're hooking up with a queen who, you know, is seeking more power and a throne.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Just put it out there.
From Harrenhal?
Yeah, from Harrenhal.
Exactly.
So, truth be told, the biggest reveal we would likely see from these options,
and you might find surprise in this, would be in Sansa's plot.
I've mentioned before a pretty minor theory that Sansa's reveal to the Veil Lords
will actually mirror Catelyn V in A Game of Thrones.
You in the corner, she said to an older man she had not noticed until now.
Is that the black bat of Harrenhal I see embroidered on your surcoat, sir?
The man got to his feet.
It is my lady.
And his lady went a true and honest friend to my father, Lord Hoster Tully of Riverrun.
She is, the man replied stoutly.
It would be such a great fit for this theory,
if it's more than tinfoil, if the reveal from Sansa's plot in the Vale came that the bastard
knight Robert Stone that knighted the Kettleblack men really was just that they were probably not
knighted by some fake man in the Vale, or if they were, it was their eldest brother. And hey, it might be just fun tinfoil, but it's a fun exploration of the text.
So I don't really think you get to be the wend calling the kettle black in this situation, you know?
Yeah, I think I can see a lot of it.
And like you said, it'd be really interesting if it came through in Sansa's plot, especially like this.
I was trying to like, see if there are any Roberts, like, did he hesitate?
Right? And was it a different Robert? Yes, it was a different robert it's sir robert stone yeah like there i think there was a robert somewhere
and he's like wait wait yeah well and that's another good thought though um and i mean there
are so in retrospect if this was bankrolled by ty, the whole tourney at Harrenhal was bankrolled by Tywin, that means that the Wentz have been in cahoots with the Lannisters before for power.
So having two of these brothers kind of like show up and try to get Cersei power, you know, or power through Cersei, it makes sense.
You know, it's not they don't have to be power players.
They don't have to all be good. But it does seem that Littlefinger having someone in his employ that could or could not be.
And don't get me wrong.
There's cons to this theory.
Like, Oswell does not speak like someone who's highborn.
So at first, I used to think maybe it could be like Lord Walter went and three of the brothers and maybe one died or something.
And I'm like, no, it fits better if it's the brothers as all four.
It really does.
So it's an idea.
But like I said, they seem like they might not be high born and yada yada.
But at the same time, the people that take Harrenhal aren't always high born.
They just get it, obviously, as reflected with Peter Baelish.
always highborn they like just get it obviously as reflected with peter balish and the irony that peter balish thinks he has all these men that are in his employ like oswell who may or may not be a
went peter has oswell's home what if sansa just promises him he could have his home back
yeah and it's like i have more uh license to do this than Peter Baelish who's like never been there and be like
I don't know dude, my grandfather's
Hoster Tully
my other grandmother
is Manisa Wendt
I have the blood
and she has black leather wings
yeah, so
I can see it
interesting, okay, well
I'm glad we leveled. That was my
big performance, everyone. Rate,
review, subscribe.
Oh my god.
Thank you everyone for listening to
Girls Gone Canon.
That was the episode? No.
Yeah, in
this episode, Jamie's actually wondering
what Cersei was thinking when she gave Osmund a cloak.
But is at least relieved that he knows how to use a sword and shield.
He lets him leave and calls Ser Meryn up.
And he's like, so, I heard you're into beating little girls.
And he's like, alright, Meryn, show me in the white book where in our vows it says to beat Sansa Stark.
Where is that in our job description?
And Maren's like, well, I swore to obey his grace.
And Jaime's like, all right, well, now you answer only to me, Tywin, and Cersei, no one else.
And Maren questions obeying the king.
And Jaime's like, like uh first of all your
boss is literally eight fucking years old and our duty is to protect him including from himself
this is a big change in the king's guard I think people don't really notice right away uh before
Jamie lived in this world where he must ignore what's happening the men continued that while he was gone obviously
they listened to joffrey but now that jamie's back he's actually trying to enact this change
and i think that's pretty big that jamie does work to enact small changes and affect small
changes as much as he can and this is one of them yeah it's like john trying to enact changes but
it it's interesting because jamie's doing it a little more subtly.
Right.
And is framing it as a protecting the King from himself,
but it is,
it is like a change in the way things were done,
which is like,
you follow the King unquestioningly.
And so,
yeah,
he's like,
it's protecting the King from himself,
but also,
you know,
not just protecting everyone else from the King, which is what happened to Jaime, but also Meryn Trant is trash.
Ser Meryn Trash is what I have for everyone today.
And I don't want to play devil's advocate now that I just praised Jaime like just a few seconds ago and i guess like as an auntie no i'm just kidding i just praised him a
second ago but i also do want to point out that like yes jamie is enacting this change but he's
still enacting this change and saying me my dad and cersei are in charge and in a feast for crows
he goes to the riverlands and he enacts change but he says me and cersei are in charge like it's the lannister
name that he is enacting it in so it's like jamie you're doing good things or you have a good
motivation for once to do something but you're still doing it for the incorrect reason which
he doesn't know any other reason at this point but yeah i mean like tywin and
cersei have been his guiding star for a long time and also he hasn't started thinking completely
like wait what if i don't think that tywin and cersei are right about everything yet he's like
not there yet that's like end of feast for crows yeah it takes a while to get there, and that's part of the journey.
Jamie turns it into terms that even an idiot like Maren Trant could understand.
If Tommen wants you to saddle his horse, cool.
If he wants to kill his horse, come talk to me.
Man, too little too late on that Joff train there.
You can tell he's super overcompensating for Tommen.
But yeah, I think you're right.
And also, Jamie straight up wasn't there
for any of Joffrey's reign.
Yeah, at all.
He was like, in a cell. You don't know what it was like.
That's the thing is, yes,
you can be pissed at
these men for beating Sansa, because I am too.
But at the same time, you weren't there.
Yeah, but I
do think Jaime would have been able to push
back on Joffrey. I mean, Tywin was able to do it and obviously as we see Joffrey listens to
good fighting men like Sandor he's like oh
Sandor's cool
so anyway but yeah he was locked up in a cell
he turns to Balen Swan he congratulates him on his honor.
And he's like, you're the least shitty of all these guys.
And then he asks him some real questions.
He's like, except for your brother, Donald.
Donald rode with Renly.
Then he rode with Stannis.
And your father didn't even take a side.
So what gives, Balan?
And Balan's like, hey, dad's too old to fight.
And Donald yielded and pledged to Joffrey like many other hostages and that was a very notable moment many other hostages
uh jamie insinuates donald fell down the king tray and hit every branch except for stark and
grayjoy on the way down and he wonders where exactly donald loyalty lies. And Balin is like, Donald is loyal to Tommen.
But Jaime's like, it's not Donald I'm worried about.
It's you.
What will you do if Donald comes face to face with you in the throne room with your king between the two of you?
What would you do?
Maybe project, Jaime?
Maybe that's what you'll do?
I want to tell Jaime, it's okay. it's okay i read fire and blood we saw this happen all the time and bail and swan will probably
just like do what everyone else in fire and blood did right stay loyal then have a really sad moment
between him and his brothers on the other side then they die together i read it you know i get it
and his brother's on the other side, then they die together. I read it, you know?
I get it.
And Balan backs me up.
Balan Swan is also like, I too read Fire and Blood
Jamie Lannister. That's never
gonna happen. And Jamie's like, but
it could, cause it happened to
me. And
Balan's like, on my sword, on my honor,
on my father's name, I swear
I shall not do as you did.
Jamie laughed. Good. Return honor on my father's name i swear i shall not do as you did jamie laughed good return to your duties and tell sir donald to add a weather vane to his shield oh good fair weather burn and now jamie
has to deal with the knight of flowers himself loris tyrell slim as a sword life and fit sir kind of thinks this is a tourney and his tilt has just been called while you're operating it that way.
Kinda.
Jamie pulls his dick out on the table and he's like
yes, Loras, you're hot shit
but I was hotter, younger
and dumber shit before you were
at age 15 on the king's card.
I was better than you, Sir Loras.
I was bigger, I was was stronger and i was quicker and now you're older
the boy said my lord he had to laugh this is too absurd tyrian would mock me unmercifully
if he could hear me now compare cocks with this green boy older and wiser, sir. You should learn from me. As you learned
from Sir Boros and Sir Merrin,
that arrow hit too
close to the mark.
I learned from the White Bull
and Barristan the Bold,
Jamie snapped. I learned from Sir Arthur Dane,
the Sword of the Morning, who could have slain all
five of you with his left hand while he was taking
a piss with the right. I learned from
Prince Lewin of Dorord and Sir Oswell
Wendt and Sir Jonathan Derry.
Good men, everyone.
Dead men, everyone.
He's
me, Jamie realized suddenly.
I'm speaking to myself as I was.
All cocksure arrogance and empty
chivalry. This is what it
does to you. To be too good,
too young.
I know that the line's
not written that way, but I don't know why
I just felt right to deliver it that way.
It is,
though.
Yeah. Lorce's line just then, though,
kind of reminds me of, goddammit,
a thing Jorah Mormont says
about Rhaegar to Dany.
Valiantly, nobly died?
Yeah.
Yeah, dude fucking dies.
Jaime does try a different approach.
He's like, all right, how do I reach these kids?
How do I connect with the youths?
How do I reach these kids?
He asks who wore Renly's armor on the Blackwater,
and Loras is all sullen, and's like it was Garland. Renly's tall and broad and I don't fit his armor. And then he's like Littlefinger
suggested it. He thought it would frighten Stannis's men and it did. Jamie asks which also
that's such like a big hint of what's really happening in King's Landing right there.
Littlefinger suggested it.
Interesting.
The Tyrells listen to Littlefinger.
That's a hint, Jaime, right there.
But Jaime is so concerned with other things in this meeting and trying to take back his lord commandership and get a hold on his crew.
And everything is uncertain.
And Tywin and Cersei both hate him and his life's
in shambles right and he's really confused about his sexual and heart attraction to brienne his
heart's attraction um so these little clues like little finger suggested it are just going by the
wayside much like john right with the things that were suggested to him, or with
you know, like Bowen Marsh and everyone
saying things to him, and him just going
hoo hoo, you guys should just kill me.
Yeah, at least
Jamie wasn't telling everyone, you should just kill me.
At least he was not
doing that. That's what happens
when you're 30 years old, you know, you're like,
wait, wait, hold on, back up.
Jamie asks what he did with renly and loris says he buried him with his own hands in a place that renly had showed
him when he squired at storm's end uh loris declares he will defend king tommen with all
of his strength but he will never betray renly by word or deed. He was the king that should have been.
He was the best of them.
Yeah, and Jaime actually notes that the arrogance fled from Loras
when he spoke of Renly.
And then he knows that Loras is speaking the truth of what he thinks
and that the boy was still good.
Proud, but good.
And, you know, I just want to say like to be fair you know this is a story
very much about young people losing people that they loved too early we started off right in the
game of thrones with the stark daughters and their dad ned being killed right in front of them
we see it with john and egret dying in his arms and we see it with denarius and drogo which
i think is maybe one of the more apt comparisons considering that there are a lot of ways in which
it's a problematic relationship just as you know nick uh fox a few weeks ago brought out uh brought
up that there might be problematic circumstances surrounding renly and loris and their relationship
and we don't have Loras's
POV in this story and to be honest it's actually one of the POVs I do wish we had
there are quite a few on my list um and in many ways I think though through the other characters
in the story we already know what's going on with Loras's perspective right because like
what happened to Jamie when he was Loras'
age was disillusioning, realizing
oh shit, I didn't actually get this job
on Merritt. I mean, I'm sure Loras
knows that, right? He knows what his family's
scheming. But what happened
to Loras was as heartbreaking
for him
for his
first love, whether or not
it's problematic, like from his perspective, that was his first love whether or not it's problematic like from his perspective that was
his first love as it was for john and denarius and like we're i i'm you know we propose different
lenses through which to read the story and i'm gonna put forth this one for loris
that is something really great to look at is loris's disillusionment changing as well um
really great to look at is Loras's disillusionment changing as well um no matter what the situation was if he was groomed by Renly or not like Loras was good at fighting that's what he's good at just
like Jaime and that heartbreak um it almost makes me wonder I like the idea of Loras not knowing
all of his family's machinations in a way it reminds me of Jamie a lot in that way Jamie never is in on the scheming Tyrion always has a scheme Cersei always has a
scheme Tywin always has a scheme and Jamie is always the last one to know about their schemes
and the first one affected by them a lot of times right yeah obviously not counting some of the
Tyrion stuff and Tysha of of course, in her own right.
It's just interesting because it does feel like
Jaime is left out of it because
he has that dual loyalty, right?
Like, yes, above everything,
he has always put his family, Cersei,
everyone first.
He's always tried to put his family first,
even with the Kingsguard ship. But they everyone first. He's always tried to put his family first, even with the Kingsguard
ship, but
they come first.
Yeah, and it seems like no one
reminded Jaime during his time there at the
Kingsguard. They told him to just shut up and obey,
but no one tried to remind him.
When they were reminding him, like, your job as a Kingsguard
is to just
do what you're told. There's a reason why he was more drawn
to his family. It's because they weren't burning people alive at that time.
I mean, instead, his dad was drowning people alive.
But, you know, same difference.
Maybe Jamie wasn't willing to think that deeply about it.
And he didn't see it directly in front of his own eyes, right?
It wasn't visceral for him the way that Ares's was.
It doesn't make it better, but like...
Anyway.
You know what I'm saying.
Yes, I do.
Jamie asks Loras to take a second, examine the facts.
Let's look at the elephant
in the room, Loras.
Let's just change the subject.
Let's talk about Brienne.
Let's change the subject.
Talk about the girl that's on my mind.
He's like, I cannot reach this kid at all. He's like, I want to talk about Brienne. Let's change the subject. Talk about the girl that's on my mind. He's like, I cannot reach this kid at all.
He's like, I want to talk about my crush.
Yes, and Loras immediately is like, no, fuck her.
She pulled tricks in the melee to win and become a Kingsguard member for Redley.
And Jaime's like, interesting, then you should be buddies,
because I know another knight who's fond of cheating loris in the hands tourney jamie asks so what what trickery did brienne use and loris is like
well you see and that's because brienne didn't actually use trickery it's just like she was a
woman and she was in armor and he didn't know that it was brienne in there and she fought fair square
and she didn't reveal herself and she beat his ass anyways we won't go into it but
his grace put a rainbow cloak around her shoulders and she killed him or let him die
brienne is not a doctor okay just like jamie not a doctor i don't know what he would have done if
joffrey were there again not and of course this
is coming up in jamie's chapter right she killed him or let him die that's one of the biggest things
between their characters that they do share is their king dying on their watch and loris then
comes out and claims well maybe all of the guard was conspiring which is outrageous king's guard conspiring
against their king i've never heard of that happening in a song of ice and fire especially
not with when anyways um jamie remarks there's a big difference between these situations and he's
like how could you have let joffrey die were you a part of it but loris pay attention gets stiff at this and he puffs himself up and he
gets all like scowly and then jamie ignores that and starts defending brienne instead again like i
said earlier this seems like a hint that maybe loris does know he got stiff being kind of like half uh called a killer right he kind of was all
what do you mean i killed her what do you mean the time i killed her what what makes you think
maybe loris knew jamie is distracted by brienne worried about other things yeah i think that can
go it can be read either way yeah like either l knew. I wouldn't be surprised if he did, but at the same time, I wouldn't be surprised if he wasn't included in it because of how much, like, Jaime he is, right?
He's younger.
Clearly impulsive.
Yeah.
And he ends up giving up secrets in a sense.
He gives up Garland Tyrell's secret.
Maybe his family's like, I don't know.
I don't know if we can trust Loras with secrets right now, everyone.
So, I don't know.
I also want to point out, I noticed
this person's name, Ser Parmen,
and I just want to say his name reminds me of Parmesan,
and that's it. That's the
note. Jamie
says Brienne grieves for Renly,
the same as Loras does,
and Jamie comments, you know,
you know what's really different about
when you kill a king
and you mean to do it versus when you
didn't. Jaime's like I
actually never grieved for Ares would you
believe
and then he calls
Rhaen loyal, stubborn
ugly and then she swore to bring him
safely to King's Landing and here I am
right before you! Me!
Jaime Lannister!
Golden hand, but just almost.
He shakes his head
finally, and he's like, Loras, show me
how you'd fight a shadow. And Loras
is like, immediately returns
right to that same outlook
that we discussed earlier with Sansa.
Catelyn and Brienne fled,
which makes them guilty. Interesting, because the Ty and Brienne fled, which makes them guilty.
Interesting, because the Tyrells
stayed, but they're not guilty.
It's framed really well
in this lens. The chapter starts with
Loras claiming Sansa's guilty.
He stiffens up when it's kind of
jokingly implied by Jaime he
was complicit in Joffrey's death for
completely different reasons.
Then it leads to him
blaming Brienne and Catelyn. But at the end of this chapter here, Loras basically unravels and
admits, yes, you're right. It couldn't have been Brienne. I kind of knew all along. Now that we
bring it up, it probably wasn't Brienne. And he kind of just backs off of it and backpedals at
the end a little because of Jaime talking him down. And I think it's really interesting in looking at that examination of whether Loras knew or not that these are just two events, same chapter that start and end with that.
because Loras is like, okay, as you said, you know, well, why would they run if they weren't guilty, especially against Jaime's own sins of, you know, like, he actually did break his vows
and kill his king, as everyone has pointed out. And that's the thing, right? Jaime's like, you
know, not only did I not grieve for Aerys, he doesn't say this, right? But it's, we know from
Jaime's chapters, Jaime didn't run from it. Like they just found him there standing over Ares and he's like,
yeah,
I fucking did it.
I'm going to go sit in the pointy chair now while I wait for everyone to
recoup and then come back.
Cause whatever,
it doesn't even matter anymore.
Right.
He didn't even wear his white armor,
which is something that he calls out to earlier when he's talking to Balan Swan.
Like, what would you do in your white cloak?
He didn't even wear the armor.
Yeah, like, Jaime knew what he was doing.
He didn't run from it at all.
He's like, there's no fucking point.
Right, and so and then coming back again to the other lens of looking at Lor for drogo's death is it miri mazdor and like her tent of shadows
which now i'm gonna just throw this out there and leave it uh renly's tent of shadows throwing it
out there uh i don't think it's just miri right that's why people are having discussions drogo
think it's just Neri, right? That's why people are having discussions. Drogo,
smearing fucking mud all over his wound
instead of using the poultice.
Smearing dirt all
over himself? You know, maybe
that's what you do to avoid disease.
I don't know, we're in a pandemic.
Daenerys, smothering her beloved
with a pillow after realizing that maybe
you cannot call the dead
back to life, even though, you know, it turns out
maybe you can, as we find out
in this book whatever not saying at all that loris i'm not saying at all that loris is to blame but
like that there's an absolute need that happens in grief right like that's part of that process
where you find someone or something to blame as zanaris does for drogo and I think that's a very human emotion for Loras. It's hard, he's
so young, right? He's so immature
and
it's different people deal with
that in different ways,
right? Like, it contrasts with Jon, right?
And even with Jaime, like, these are people
who are a little different. Jaime kind of externalizes
things until now. Jon's someone who
internalizes blame very
very easily. He's like's like oh it wasn't my
arrow but it basically should have been like he knows it's not that but he blames himself and
thinks i killed egret right and he deals with it as self-hate and punishment because just having
somewhere to direct that blame whether it's yourself or someone else just makes it easier
to deal with yeah and i mean that's the first time John's, I mean,
John's never been allowed to externalize blame.
Yeah.
And Jamie kind of has been,
that's been his whole life being able to,
and we see that with a lot of characters.
You look at Sansa when she is a little younger in the story and she blames
ladies death on everyone.
Right.
She blames it on Arya.
She's like,
it's all Arya's fault.
Joffrey would never have done it.
Joffrey would never have done it. But then in the end,
you come to the same conclusion,
just like Loras did. Loras came to the conclusion,
wow, it
wasn't really...
Oh, wow. And then he realizes
in horror what he's done.
Because he starts to think on this
night, and he's like well
the gorget was cut through
with one clean stroke
Brienne's really strong freakishly
but she couldn't do that that's fine
steel it's super nice steel
and if she couldn't cut through the steel
how could a shadow
Jamie is like great
questions go ask Brienne these
you can either release her, accuse her
but I'm asking you on your
honor as a knight, judge her fairly
I'm gonna throw it out there
Jamie's asking Loras Tyrell to deal with
Brienne what Catelyn Stark did to Jamie
she came in, she accused
heared out his truth, it was a horrible
truth, but the truth
and then judged or released him but C Catelyn, you know, somehow
did both.
Yeah, that's actually a really good point.
Then released him.
Oh, that's a great kind of parallel
in a way. Jaime is kind of asking him
please, you know,
justice, mercy.
Yeah.
He's experienced it now.
Loras makes to leave leave but it turns out he kind of likes talking to his new old boss and tells him renly thought brienne was absurd in woman's mail pretending to
be a knight and jamie says well if he'd seen her in pink satin and mirish lace he wouldn't have
complained i asked him why he kept her close if he thought
her so grotesque. He said that
all his other knights wanted things of him,
castles or honors or riches.
But all that Brienne wanted
was to die for him.
When I saw him all bloody, with her fled and
the three of them unharmed,
if she's innocent,
then Robar and Eamon...
He could not seem to say the words.
Jamie had not stopped to consider that aspect of it.
I would have done the same, sir.
The lie came easy, but Sir Loras seemed grateful for it.
Hmm.
Oh, Jamie, that was very chivalrously done.
It was.
Sweet boy.
Sweet boy, that was very kindly done to help Loras.
His emotional intelligence is increasing, right? Cause like, he can tell. Cause Loras is
rejecting the idea that he and Jamie at the beginning were alike at all because he's like,
you're old! I'm young! And-
Yeah.
But in this moment-
Common ground!
Exactly. He's like, all he needs right now as jamie was saying you know we're like is for jamie to actually meet him here and be like him and i don't know is this what
being a brother is like i don't know what siblings um i mean a brother of the king's guard and that's
the rough part is that like we see jamie excelling at this, just like we see John actually doing a great job, not a great job by his men's standards, obviously, but
doing a good job in our opinion on the watch and for it to be kind of taken away from them.
He does a great job when it's the personal things, right?
And he's being a brother to like Pip, Gran, Sam and stuff.
I also want to throw
out another line here
as another way to look at this
from Sansa1 in Feast.
If a lie was
kindly meant, there is no harm
in it. Obviously
different context there, but
I also was thinking a lot
about the line when she thinks about
Eleanor and the rest of the Tyrell girls during Storm when she thinks they are young, they've never seen war, they don't know what it's like.
They're just young girls, you know, their heads are full of songs like mine once was.
And that's how Jaime really enters this chapter.
But then, like you said, it closes out with that, if a lie was kindly meant, there's no harm in it.
And it's not the last time Jamie thinks this.
He reflects on this for a while after Loras leaves,
thinking that even after these brothers
didn't save Joffrey or protect him,
he didn't think about killing these guys until recently, right?
He thinks, what am I if I do not lift the hand i have left
to avenge my own blood and seed what am i if not easily bought into the myths of toxic masculinity
that i need to express my anger through violence all the time especially now that i can no longer
but anyway this is coming for the guy who like like, a book ago was, like, balls out,
charging at Robb Stark, cutting through 20 men,
like, I'm out of it! I got this!
I don't got this.
Uh, yeah, that right there is called
character development, Eliana.
Wow.
Yeah.
And I mean, like, yeah.
We'll come back to Loras another time.
He thinks about killing Boros, just to get rid of him at least,
and looks at his stump, thinking, man, I need to cover this.
He thinks maybe he'll get a golden hand,
one that Cersei would like to stroke her hair, hold her close with.
Then he thinks, his hand could wait, though.
There were other things to tend to first.
There were other debts to pay.
Yeah, Jamie.
And we so know about that.
Save the accessories for later.
Pay off your house loan to Tom Nook first.
Pay off your inclines and bridges.
Oh, fuck that. It's the opposite.
I'm torn, because I'm like, I want more rooms to put all my things in
so hard
so many bells
they make you swear and swear
so many bells
they make you dig and dig
they do
oh that was Jamie 8
a storm of swords
I feel like that was heavy
it was heavy
it's actually like a kind of swords I feel like that was heavy it was heavy it's actually like a
kind of short chapter but here
we are with like a two hour episode
fuck
yeah but I'm glad
I think we covered a lot and
next week is of course
a very good chapter right
we get a sword
sword like you said
if we want to yell certain words
or talk about stone heart framework
it begins next chapter
for sure even stronger
than the clash Catalan chapters
so I'm ready for that
I'm excited for next week
yeah definitely
and that'll close out yeah as you said
our storm chapters and we transition to
feast so much so much to discuss
yes
and of course you know if you want to
keep up with whenever those chapters come out
or any other things like
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As always, thanks again for listening. I've been one of your hosts chloe and i've been another one of your hosts eliana see you next week all bye