PatrickStormborn, on 22 February 2012 - 11:38 AM, said:
I don't know why you think you're an expert on Martin's quotes (from 1998/99), anyway. He said she probably wouldn't survive another funeral pyre, and I believe him. But he never says "she won't ever have a fire-proof moment again", and he never specifies if she could be somewhat resistant to flames from her dragons. Arguing over decade-old quotes is futile -- particularly when they can be interpreted either way.
First, to the bolded part: yeah, he did. He was asked if bonding to a dragon made a Targaryen immune to fire, and he said this was an opportunity to clarify a misconception, Targaryens are not immune to fire, and Dany's pyre incident was a unique thing. There is no possible way to interpret that as "Dany could actually be somewhat resistant to flames from her dragons." Because that's what the person who asked the question in the first place
was asking---about the relationship between fire, dragons, and the Targaryens.
And the notion of there being a principled difference between "immune" and "somewhat resistant" has always seemed rather absurd to me. How are you "somewhat resistant" to fire in this context? You get second-degree burns instead of third-degree burns? You're still burned! And if you don't get burned, that's "immune", not "resistant".
Second, he actually answered the question of Targaryen fire resistance---once after the publication of AGOT, again after the publication of ACOK. He didn't have to clarify the nature of this funeral pyre and the fact that Targaryens are not immune to fire. He could have just smiled and refused to answer, as he's done so many times elsewhere. He took the time to address what he called a "misconception", so ignoring what he said (or pretending he wasn't answering in the context of Dany, when both times he says he was specifically addressing Dany's pyre) seems disingenous. People haven't been asking him this question since then, from what I can see, so it's not like he's suddenly clammed up since then.
PatrickStormborn, on 22 February 2012 - 11:38 AM, said:
One point I'd like to make about posters who oppose Daenerys
Perhaps framing your arguments in terms of
arguments, not posters, would be the constructive way to go about it.
PatrickStormborn, on 22 February 2012 - 11:38 AM, said:
is that they seem to almost completely write off her hatching of the dragons as "luck", or just seem to think it's not going anywhere.
It was luck. (Just because it came from luck, not skill, doesn't mean it didn't
happen, so I don't know where the idea that it's being "written off" comes from.) When you get a wacky idea and it works, that doesn't mean you have special abilities in that area, it doesn't mean you actually know why it worked in the first place, it simply means you did something once.
The Others had risen long before that pyre, magic already existed in plenty of places (and apparently had for quite a while---Qarth and beyond the Wall, for example), and plenty of people other than Dany were doing, and have still been doing, magical things. The difference is that those people (Bran, Bloodraven, etc.)
keep doing magical things. Dany is hardly the great magic-user of this series. At best she might have had some prophetic dreams, but hell, so have half the characters we've seen thus far. Riding Drogon, as I've said before, has perfectly logical non-magical implications---Drogon responds to displays of fearlessness, he's known Dany since he was a baby, and we never see Dany making him go somewhere he doesn't (very clearly) already want to go. She hatched the eggs once, but there's plenty of evidence, and you apparently agree, that she couldn't replicate it. A "skill" that you can't exercise repeatedly isn't actually a skill. It's the definition of
luck.
I'm also reminded of the incomparable Dolorous Edd and the fate of poor Watt:
Quote
"I never win anything," Dolorous Edd complained. "The gods always smiled on Watt, though. When the wildlings knocked him off the Bridge of Skulls, somehow he landed in a nice deep pool of water. How lucky was that, missing all those rocks?"
"Was it a long fall?" Grenn wanted to know. "Did landing in the pool of water save his life?"
"No," said Dolorous Edd. "He was dead already, from that axe in his head. Still, it was pretty lucky, missing the rocks."
Just because something incredible happens to you, that doesn't mean you've now made Fate your bitch. Doing something that can only be done once doesn't make Dany inherently wonderful, or superhuman, or basically give her GRRM's equivalent of divine protection. It simply means that there's no do-over if those dragons die. And dragons, as we all know, can be killed.
Dany can't just rely on being able to pull the pyre trick again, because she has no way of knowing why it worked in the first place, and because GRRM has specifically said it was a unique, wonderous, magical event. But her thoughts in her final chapter heavily imply that she associates the situation in the pit, where she suffered burns and the fire wasn't close enough to her body to even singe her clothes, to an event where she suffered no burns and the fire was strong enough and encompassing enough that her clothes were incinerated. That she could analogize the two events, given the very explicit differences between them, tells me that she's seeing what she wants to see.
And who's saying Dany and the dragons aren't going somewhere? If there's one thing we've seen in the past five books, it's that things around Dany seem to constantly get destroyed, yet she herself keeps plugging along, to brand new things . . . that then get destroyed. Wherever she goes, she brings ruin. Never intentionally, but tell that to Drogo and the people of his khalasar, the warlocks of Qarth, the people of Astapor. Put her in Westeros, and based on the thematic trajectory of her story arc, she's going to do some very impactful things. Some very destructive, but definitely impactful, things. (And rather than say "oh, she's going to destroy the Others"---Dany pretty consistently, yet inadvertently, destroys the things she tries to save. The only way I can see her actually destroying the Others is if she heads to Westeros and tries to rescue the dang Others.)
PatrickStormborn, on 22 February 2012 - 11:38 AM, said:
I think people should try to remember that walking into a funeral pyre and coming out with three dragons is not normal in the world of asoiaf.
Who said it was normal? But plenty of people in ASOIAF are doing non-normal things. She hatched three dragon's eggs---and dragons are forces of destruction. Fire and blood. It was miraculous, but it wasn't a sign of divine approval of Dany herself or her personal actions, or an indication that she's meant as a savior. Dragons destroy, they don't heal, they don't build, they don't bring peace. In mummers' shows, dragons are what the heroes fight, they're not the heroes themselves. Not to mention, Dany brought forces of terrible destruction back into the world, and the idea that she gained any kind of ability to "not be harmed" via this act---from hatching creatures whose raison d'etre is causing harm---seems thematically illogical to me.
PatrickStormborn, on 22 February 2012 - 11:38 AM, said:
It was an extremely magical event that can never be replicated -- by anyone. There was a lot going on at that point: the long summer was nearly over, the red comet was in the sky, Dany had just lost her son and husband and was barren, the Others had risen, etc.
First, for the fifteenth time, you actually don't know she's barren.

Mirri Maz Duur wasn't exactly an unimpeachable source here, and getting pregnant in a medieval-type world requires (heterosexual) sex, which Dany hadn't actually been having until ADWD.
Second, I guess I'm unclear on what you're arguing here. This was a unique event that can't be replicated, and she was only fireproof because of the ritual, as Targaryens are not immune to fire. So . . . how on earth
could Dany have been immune to fire in the dang pit?
Edited by tze, 22 February 2012 - 01:55 PM.