Yes Ingrid I enjoyed seeing all of you too.
Red-headed Wildling girl? Ygritte.
Yes Ingrid I enjoyed seeing all of you too.
Red-headed Wildling girl? Ygritte.
For anyone who's read the book, if you can answer this without giving away any major spoilers, is Stannis Baratheon's daughter part dragon or something? What's up with her face? At first I thought it was supposed to be some sort of birth defect. But then I thought it looked like she had scales on the side of her face. She seems like a sweet kid (being ever so nice to the imprisoned "Onion Knight"), but I wonder if she'll be breathing fire when she gets older. Does anybody know what her deal is?
Rose Leslie is a good actress. But I noticed when she was on Downton Abbey, her heavy Scottish accent is a bit tough for my American ears to follow sometimes.
Have you heard her real accent? That fried my brain good, having only heard her Wildling/North West drawl.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPdPTY_-icQ
I've read all I could about the history of England from the Anglo kings until Cromwell. Always was a great interest of mine.
All the Kings, Queens, and people surrounding the courts throughout those times. It's really better than anything Hollywood could devise.
This story is for me like another interesting history to learn about, even though its fiction it has all the elements.
Where's Englandland?I've read all I could about the history of England from the Anglo kings until Cromwell. Always was a great interest of mine.
All the Kings, Queens, and people surrounding the courts throughout those times. It's really better than anything Hollywood could devise.
This story is for me like another interesting history to learn about, even though its fiction it has all the elements.
Have you seen The Tudors?
"By what right does the wolf judge the lion?"
I didn't expect Brienne's ass to look so good. lol That was a shock.
Shireen had the disease "greyscale" as an infant. From the ASOIAF wikia :
When it infects children, greyscale generally leaves children malformed and disabled but alive. It is generally fatal to adults. The disease is contracted by touch and slowly turns the flesh (small patches in children and the entire body in adults) of the victim to stone. It is said that the disease also drives its adult victims insane.
From "Dance" : The curse was oft seen in children, especially in damp, cold climes. The afflicted flesh stiffened, calcified, and cracked, though <<spoiler, character name removed>> had read that greyscale's progress could be stayed by limes, mustard poultices, and scalding-hot baths (the maesters said) or by prayer, sacrifice, and fasting (the septons insisted). Then the disease passed, leaving its young victims disfigured but alive. Maesters and septons alike agreed that children marked by greyscale could never be touched by the rarer mortal form of the affliction, nor by its terrible swift cousin, the grey plague. "Damp is said to be the culprit," he said. "Foul humors in the air. Not curses."
"Kissed By Fire" is simply a Wildling reference to having red hair. In Wildling superstition they are thought to be lucky.