Pride and deceit were the main theme in this
chapter.
PRIDE: The chapter began with Ned and
Catelyn’s discussion of the former’s acceptance/refusal to being hand of the
king. As Ned argued to refuse his closest comrade, Catelyn insisted that the
king would not understand his reasons and his refusal would eventually put
their house in danger. We get a glimpse of Cat’s pride in bringing her house
honor when she talked about Sansa’s betrothal to the crown prince and her
supposed marriage to Brandon Stark, Ned’s older brother who was killed by the
Mad King Aerys.
DECEIT: As we continue reading, Maester Luwin
makes an unexpected appearance bearing a lens, a symbolism that every character
and reader should look more closely as events unfold and a controversial letter
from the Lady Lysa Arryn of the Eyrie. The first taste of deceit was thrown to
us in this chapter, a concept that GRRM greatly utilized in writing the whole
series. Lysa sends a hidden letter in a language only she and Cat could
understand and revealed that the Lannisters murdered the late hand, Jon Arryn. This
event made me believe that the Lannisters were the antagonists of the series,
when they are in fact just players in a game played by characters who claim
loyalty to the realm. Lysa’s cunning way of sending the message also hints of
her sly nature, a fact that will later on be revealed in A Feast for Crows. Due
to this event, Ned was urged by both Cat and Maester Luwin to go south to find
out the truth about Jon Arryn’s death; this makes me conclude that everything
that was brought upon house Stark is Cat’s fault.
PRIDE and DECEIT: We are later introduced to
Ser Arthur Dayne of the Kingsguard also known as the Sword of the Morning. Ser
Arthur is one of the deadliest and finest knights of Aery’s seven and Prince
Rhaegar’s closest friend, it is believed that Ned slew him in the Tower of Joy
in single combat, a contradiction to Ned’s statement that Ser Arthur would’ve
killed him if not for Howland Reed (This establishes the Bran-Jojen connection).
After Ser Arthur Dayne, Lady Ashara Dayne was introduced, a beautiful maiden
who is believed to be the mother of the bastard Jon Snow. Again, a devious way
to conceal the true identity of Jon’s mother/truth behind R+L=J, a theory that we
all probably accept as true (verified by Ned’s own statement “He is my blood,
and that is all you need to know” regarding Jon Snow). This part of Cat’s POV
emphasizes on her pride as a mother (something that will eventually transcend
to something bigger and powerful) and how that eventually sends Jon to the
wall.
CONCLUSION: Does anyone else blame Cat for
falling into Littlefinger’s trap (The first step to start the game that is
about to be played, yes he knows her that well)? If only Ned stayed north, none
of this would’ve happened and the series wouldn’t be as interesting. So thank
you, Catelyn Stark.
Cat made a lot of stupid mistakes, but I don't think it's right to say that she's to blame for everything that happens. Littlefinger, I'm convinced, arranged for all of this to happen, and would have found other ways to throw things into chaos.
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, I certainly blame Catelyn for her later decision to arrest Tyrion - the first of two incredibly stupid mistakes that do end up with half her family being killed in awful ways. Littlefinger may have manipulated that too, but not even he could have expected her to do something so incredibly rash and provocative. Believing her sister's assertion, on the other hand, was pretty reasonable - she didn't know at the time that Lysa had gone crazy, or that she was under Littlefinger's influence.
I guess blaming everything on her is too much but she did confess herself - how the Gods are punishing her family for not keeping her promise to try to love Jon. Starks and promises, tsk.
DeleteThat's show canon, not book canon. I honestly did not blame Cat for the Stark's problems. Appointment as Hand of the King IS a great honor, and I would want the head of my House to take the job as well. Sometimes we as readers judge characters for actions they take not having all the information available to us. We know Petyr Baelish for what he is, but Catelyn had not seen him in nearly twenty years.
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