I'm happy to see so many of my musing laid down by someone else :-). I had thought about Gregor Clegane being the mountain blowing, but it's not the best possible answer.
Moqorro being the dark flame was the only thing I thought of.
Hadn't drawn the connection that mummer's dragon doesn't mean a fake dragon, as you said it could be interpreted as "the dragon who belongs to the mummer". (Varys). Thanks, I hadn't gotten there yet.
I'm happy to see so many people willing to consider that this may be another prophecy. Can't wait to hear more.
Yup, the sun rising in the west and setting in the east is almost certainly Quentyn. The seas going dry is what's happening to the Dothraki Sea (presumably due to the oncoming great winter). Mountains blowing in the wind is likely a reference to the pyramids burning, but it's also possibly a reference to Gregorstein: if he is defeated or destroyed in the trial of battle, it could refer to that (and timeline wise it might be concurrent with Dany's trip to the Dothraki sea).
For Quaithe's prophecy, the pale mare is the disease. 'After her come the others' could be a reference to the Others, or simply to the other parts of the prophecy. The kraken is Victarion, the lion is Tyrion, the mummer's dragon (Varys' dragon) is Aegon and the griffin is Jon Connington. Although neither Aegon nor Connington came to Meereen. The sun's son is Quentyn.
The perfumed seneschal is the ship bearing Moqorro and Tyrion to Slaver's Bay: its name translates as 'fragrant servant'. The other possibility (Dany's servant) seems rather over-obvious. Unless GRRM wants us to think that and the ship is a red herring
The 'dark flame' is likely Marwyn; he is (possibly) bearing a Valyrian candle (an obsidian - dark- flame) with him so he can stay in touch with Oldtown. More to the point, GRRM changed this chapter in edits from an earlier draft that much more explicitly pointed to Marwyn. However, there is also a theory that it's a reference to Moqorro (a dark-aspected follower of R'hllor, the flame). This may depend on if the ship theory is right; if it is, there's no reason to refer to Moqorro twice.
Moqorro being the dark flame was the only thing I thought of.
Hadn't drawn the connection that mummer's dragon doesn't mean a fake dragon, as you said it could be interpreted as "the dragon who belongs to the mummer". (Varys). Thanks, I hadn't gotten there yet.
I'm happy to see so many people willing to consider that this may be another prophecy. Can't wait to hear more.
“When the sun rises in the west and sets in the east. When the seas go dry and mountains blow in the wind like leaves. When your womb quickens again, and you bear a living child. Then he will return, and not before.” - Mirri Maz Duur</i
"Hear me, Daenerys Targaryen. The glass candles are burning. Soon comes the pale mare, and after her the others. Kraken and dark flame, lion and griffin, the sun’s son and the mummer’s dragon. Trust none of them. Remember the Undying. Beware the perfumed seneschal.”*
"Hear me, Daenerys Targaryen. The glass candles are burning. Soon comes the pale mare, and after her the others. Kraken and dark flame, lion and griffin, the sun’s son and the mummer’s dragon. Trust none of them. Remember the Undying. Beware the perfumed seneschal.”*
Yup, the sun rising in the west and setting in the east is almost certainly Quentyn. The seas going dry is what's happening to the Dothraki Sea (presumably due to the oncoming great winter). Mountains blowing in the wind is likely a reference to the pyramids burning, but it's also possibly a reference to Gregorstein: if he is defeated or destroyed in the trial of battle, it could refer to that (and timeline wise it might be concurrent with Dany's trip to the Dothraki sea).
For Quaithe's prophecy, the pale mare is the disease. 'After her come the others' could be a reference to the Others, or simply to the other parts of the prophecy. The kraken is Victarion, the lion is Tyrion, the mummer's dragon (Varys' dragon) is Aegon and the griffin is Jon Connington. Although neither Aegon nor Connington came to Meereen. The sun's son is Quentyn.
The perfumed seneschal is the ship bearing Moqorro and Tyrion to Slaver's Bay: its name translates as 'fragrant servant'. The other possibility (Dany's servant) seems rather over-obvious. Unless GRRM wants us to think that and the ship is a red herring
The 'dark flame' is likely Marwyn; he is (possibly) bearing a Valyrian candle (an obsidian - dark- flame) with him so he can stay in touch with Oldtown. More to the point, GRRM changed this chapter in edits from an earlier draft that much more explicitly pointed to Marwyn. However, there is also a theory that it's a reference to Moqorro (a dark-aspected follower of R'hllor, the flame). This may depend on if the ship theory is right; if it is, there's no reason to refer to Moqorro twice.
I always say, if you must mount the gallows, give a jest to the crowd, a coin to the hangman, and make the drop with a smile on your lips. ~Birgitte
When the sun rises in the west (Spoilers) aDwD
19/07/2011 07:24:28 PM
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We do have the official thread announced, ya know?
19/07/2011 11:12:01 PM
- 1049 Views
The official thread is not fun!
20/07/2011 06:51:13 AM
- 962 Views