- Nov 12, 2008
- 1,465
- 85
I knew that was coming and still sad as hell. I don't even know what to do with myself right now
|I
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I knew that was coming and still sad as hell. I don't even know what to do with myself right now
So it was a coupe?
Hogwarts' caretaker is ruthless.
PM me or hit me in the book thread idk what you're talking about.
When reading I never thought Arya was dead. Few friends thought she might have but I think it stated the Hound hit her with the flat of the axe he had.In the book , Arya has a chapter where she sees the commotion going on in the castle and she runs towards it but before she reaches there, she gets clubbed in the back of her head by an axe and the scene cuts off so you think Arya might have died too. The episode shows it but doesnt do it like a cliffhanger which the book does. It would have been a good cliffhanger scene to leave the episode out on
Also in the book, Robs wife isn't present for the the Red Wedding so she lives. Seeing her get shanked right in the belly :x
I knew what was coming and i still feel sick
Even w/o that, your suppose to be under the host's protection in their home, which Frey decided to break. That's been explained before, and Frey even said it to Robb when they first arrived.They should've explained the significance of them eating the bread and salt. Could've had Catelyn have a short convo with Robb about it the night before. Basically if you eat the bread and salt of your host then everything is good. They are obligated to do you no harm and vice versa.
Yep.. Even w/o that, your suppose to be under the host's protection in their home, which Frey decided to break. That's been explained before, and Frey even said it to Robb when they first arrived.
The guest right is a sacred law of hospitality. When a guest, be he common born or noble, eats the food and drinks the drink off a host's table beneath the host's roof, the guest right is invoked. Bread and salt are the traditional provisions.
When invoked, neither the guest can harm his host nor the host harm his guest for the length of the guest's stay.[sup][1][/sup] For either to do so would be to break a sacred covenant that is believed to invoke the wrath of the Gods both old and new. Both the teachings of the Old Gods and the Faith of the Seven hold to this. Even robber lords and wreckers are bound by the ancient laws of hospitality. [sup][2][/sup]
Also in the book, Robs wife isn't present for the the Red Wedding so she lives. Seeing her get shanked right in the belly :x
I knew what was coming and i still feel sick
Why kill his wife though?
I've read in ASOIAF Forum that she's still alive.
I'm so happy about the idiot Robb Stark's death.
The kid hasn't learned anything from his dad.
Why kill his wife though?