Having two characters travel together for days or even months is an essential part of the HBO series, as it forces these characters to work together even if they hate each other. These duos have managed to bring out the best in each other and some comedic moments to relieve the fans of traumatic times in the otherwise grim series.
This duo was an unlikely one to come about given the Hound killed Arya's friend Mycah in Season 1 and she proceeded to put the Hound on her kill list. But their story really begins after the Hound kidnaps Arya to ransom her off to Robb Stark who is later killed at the Red Wedding.
Their journey then continues with Arya as a captive as the Hound attempts to find different ways to ransom off Arya. It's questionable that these two ever formed a true friendship as their attempted murders of each other and constant fighting acted as the foundation of their relationship.
But that's what made these two characters together so interesting. The Hound's bluntness and Arya's determination constantly battle each other but they're forced to be together because they don't have a purpose beyond their travels together.
Some of their greatest moments are when they put their differences aside and work together, such as disguising themselves as a hog farmer and his daughter, and fighting Lannister soldiers together in a tavern. Podrick Payne and Brienne of Tarth's relationship first developed with some distance as Jaime Lannister forced the young squire onto Brienne, who didn't feel she needed a squire.
Podrick's persistence to work with Brienne became an annoyance to her, only because she felt he would slow her down. Their relationship started off pretty rocky with Podrick calling Brienne "Ser" and showing no display of actual squire knowledge or skills, but they eventually found the value in one another. Also, like her father, Daenerys' madness was her downfall: her burning of King's Landing which even triggered the wildfire caches Aerys had hidden all those years ago is what ultimately led to people turning away from her.
Daenerys was killed by one of her most trusted allies, Jon Snow, who used that trust to get close enough to stab her like Aerys before her. It was a decision that didn't necessarily sit right with every fan, especially considering Daenerys' half-baked journey toward becoming the Mad Queen. Shortly after Daenerys' death came a symbolic breaking of the wheel, when Drogon unleashed his grief by melting the Iron Throne into a puddle of molten steel.
The throne had been built years earlier by Daenerys' ancestor, Aegon I, who conquered Westeros with the help of his sister-wives and established himself as the first Targaryen king. It was appropriate that Daenerys' death should herald the destruction of the Iron Throne since she and Jon were the last of the Targaryen line, and Jon's punishment for her murder is to join the Night's Watch again - taking no wife and fathering no children.
The reign of the Targaryens was truly over. Many assumed that if Jon were to kill Daenerys, he would be crowned King of Westeros.
Instead, he was taken prisoner by the Unsullied, and it was left to the lords and ladies of the Seven Kingdoms to choose a new ruler - no longer beholden to any rules of bloodline or inheritance.
Tyrion suggested that "Bran the Broken" would be the best choice since his story of being crippled as a child, then going on a great journey north of the Wall and becoming the Three-Eyed Raven was powerful enough to make people believe in him as a ruler.
Though Bran didn't particularly want to be king, he had already seen that it was his destiny, and the assembled council elected Bran Stark as the new ruler of the Six Kingdoms.
Only six, rather than seven, because Sansa's condition for giving Bran her vote was that the North would remain independent - as its people had already decided back when they chose Robb Stark to be the King in the North, and later Jon Snow to succeed him. Game of Thrones ended with Sansa being hailed as the Queen in the North - something that was foreshadowed when Daenerys' attack on King's Landing split the map in the Red Keep down the middle, dividing the North from the southern kingdoms.
As with Daenerys' death, this ending brought the story full circle. Game of Thrones season 1 was about the fall of the Stark family: Bran being thrown out of a window, Ned being executed, the Stark household in King's Landing slaughtered, Sansa taken prisoner by a monster, and Arya forced to flee in the guise of a peasant boy called Arry.
The Starks had suffered tragedy after tragedy, losing family members and at one point having their ancestral home burned. Fans had been waiting a long time to see them finally get back on top, so having a Stark ruling in both the North and the Six Kingdoms felt like just desserts. The final book in George R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series will be titled A Dream of Spring , and fans saw that dream in the form of Game of Thrones ' green plant protruding from the snow as Jon heads north with the Wildlings.
Much of Game of Thrones had been building up to the worst and longest winter in a while since the characters had previously been enjoying a seven-year summer, and the seasons tend to balance themselves out. However, it seemed as though the defeat of the Night King and the White Walkers may have given Westeros its shortest winter yet.
Some fans argued that the reveal of Jon's heritage was pointless since it never amounted to anything, and he was banished from Westeros after killing Daenerys; he would never become king and only a handful of people knew the truth about him by the end of Game of Thrones. However, the discovery that Daenerys had a rival for the throne is ultimately part of what tipped her over into madness, leading Jon to eventually kill her. Moreover, Westeros finally rejecting the system of kings and queens inheriting the throne wouldn't carry as much weight if there wasn't a "rightful" king who didn't get to claim his birthright.
Of course, Jon never wanted to become king anyway, and his return to the Night's Watch also brought his story full circle - and not just because Jon venturing beyond the Wall mirrors the very first scene of the show. In Game of Thrones season 1, all Jon wanted to do was take the black and man the Wall with his fellow brothers of the Night's Watch. During his time with the Night's Watch, he realized that the Wildlings weren't the real enemy, and eventually, both the Night's Watch and the Wall itself crumbled.
However, as Tormund observed, Jon has the North in him, and there's a definite sense as he heads into the woods beyond the Wall that he's where he's supposed to be after feeling like a bit of an outsider for so long. Despite leaving the remaining Starks behind, Jon Snow finally seemed like he was at peace.
It is coiled like a stone serpent through a grove of black-barked trees with inky blue leaves which are used to make Shade of the evening. Daenerys saw no vision of Drogo and their son. She saw many visions, some of them of the past, others are presumed to be foreshadowing of future events:.
Following the visions, the Undying Ones suddenly attacked Daenerys. Drogon saved her by setting the room on fire and attacking the Undying, ripping their rotten flesh apart. Daenerys and Drogon escaped from the burning house. Pyat Pree was angry at Daenerys for burning the palace. He drew a knife and charged at her, but was stopped by Drogon, Jhogo and Rakharo.
Although Daenerys defeated the Undying Ones, soon she learned that as a result of burning the palace, the whole city has grown hostile to her overnight. Pyat Pree gathered the surviving warlocks together to work ill on her.
Thus she had to leave Qarth. Game of Thrones Wiki. Game of Thrones Wiki Explore.
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