I think Jamie got freaked when one of his men stabbed Ned. Presumably Robert might not care if Ned got locked up for a while, but he’s still probably not going to turn the other way when he gets stabbed. And its not like Robert is super-fond of Jamie in the first place.
So once Ned was injured, Jamie decided not to dig himself a deeper hole by hauling him off to captivity.
Honestly, the difference in the two is that in one situation the important guy is Jaime’s hostage and in the other he’s still free and alive.
As for Cat, her legal authority was because she is a daughter of the head of one powerful noble house and the wife of the lord of another. She had enough swords around of people sworn to her. If she can prove her accusations (or “prove” them) things might be unpleasant, but under control. She fails to, and well…
Technically, I think he hit him with the hilt of his sword. Pummeled him with his pommel.
And Jaime wouldn’t kill his own man for that - he’s not a cartoon villain. Administering discipline is fine, but lords can’t expect loyalty from their troops if they start killing them out of hand.
I agree. However, Jaime is a hothead - say the kind that would go pick a fight in the street with the lord of one of the big seven noble houses. In front of another member of the Council. And a big time friend of the king.
Jaime isn’t a cartoon villain, but he still doesn’t think things through.
I think Jamie was mostly pissed at at the leg-stabber because he’d obviously wanted that fight, badly, for a long time. He’d been implying as much since his first appearance.
Having him call the guard a “kill-stealing fucktard!1!” probably would have been inappropriate, though.
I suspect Theon’s highly visible kraken was probably the result of which actors were willing to show it, and which weren’t. Brutus from Rome did the same, while none of the other main characters did, despite the fact that Mark Anthony’s and Titus Pullo’s both saw much more use.
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I feel kinda bad for him. Everyone’s giving him crap. At least he was provoking the redhead. This time.
My best guess, Taomist, is that the Westeros lords know Viserys is alone and incompetent and not a threat. However, Dany wed the ruler of a large body of horsemen and her child will grow up to command them (I think). You are threat when you"ve got an army.
The title would seem to suggest it has to be the episode where Viserys gets his crown. One of the highlights of the book. That’s all I’ll say outside the spoiler thread.