Thadlerian
Riftsound resident
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2005
- Messages
- 989
(SPOILERS) - of course.
What I'm thinking of is the sparrows, and how they're suddenly swarming Westeros. It makes me wonder if Martin is making a commentary on the real world of 2005. The mass emergence of dangerous fanatics, not unlike what we've seen in more than one religion of the Earth these latest years.
Three points:
1: The sudden emergence of these "sparrows". I don't know if I've ever seen them in aSoIaF in the earlier books, but now there seems to be thousands of them.
2: The arming of the fanatics (or, rather, repealing their weapons ban). Righteous monks running around with crossbows and longswords. I'd have The Mountain babysit my kids rather than encounter one of them
3: King's Landing turning, in effect, into a theocracy.
What I wonder is whether Martin intended the storyline this way from the beginning, or may it be a comment on the development of today's world?
What I'm thinking of is the sparrows, and how they're suddenly swarming Westeros. It makes me wonder if Martin is making a commentary on the real world of 2005. The mass emergence of dangerous fanatics, not unlike what we've seen in more than one religion of the Earth these latest years.
Three points:
1: The sudden emergence of these "sparrows". I don't know if I've ever seen them in aSoIaF in the earlier books, but now there seems to be thousands of them.
2: The arming of the fanatics (or, rather, repealing their weapons ban). Righteous monks running around with crossbows and longswords. I'd have The Mountain babysit my kids rather than encounter one of them
3: King's Landing turning, in effect, into a theocracy.
What I wonder is whether Martin intended the storyline this way from the beginning, or may it be a comment on the development of today's world?