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This line in Game of Thrones season 7 episode 2 all but confirms a theory about the show's entire existence and ending

Sharpen your quill, Sam

Christopher Hooton
Tuesday 25 July 2017 11:16 EDT
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Samwell Tarly might seem like a peripheral character in Game of Thrones at the moment, but this incredibly convincing theory, if true, makes him perhaps the show's most important figure, and season 6 and 7 have given us two very important pieces of evidence for it.

The first came in season 6 episode 10 when Sam first entered the library of the Citadel.

You'll remember a spinning sun device looming over him, the same device that forms the 'Game of Thrones' logo in the titles, suggesting it is pretty important.

Then, in season 7 episode 2, Archmaester Marwyn (Jim Broadbent) discussed the importance of documenting history in books so that its mistakes might not be repeated.

He admits that a little "style" is necessary for making people engage with history though, which leads Sam to question the archmaester's less-than-catchy working title of his book on the period, A Chronicle of the Wars of Following the Death of King Robert I.

"Mm, possibly something a bit more poetic?" Sam nervously suggests.

How about, say, A Song of Ice and Fire?

And what if Marwyn doesn't live to finish the chronicle and Sam is left to? This would make him the author of A Song of Ice and Fire by Samwell Tarly - the recollection of all the events we will have witnessed over the show's eight seasons - and who better to tell it than an honest man, one close to Jon Snow and privy to his recounted White Walker experiences?

It's really been staring us in the face for a while now, with Sam actor John Bradley even hinting at all this in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter from 2016, in which he said:

"If you take the logic of the story now, the story of Westeros and the story of the battle for the Iron Throne, it would be a book in that library."

"The visual motif of that is you're about to be told a story - the sense of an idea of being told a story, and people gaining that knowledge, the way Sam is absorbing knowledge in the library."

This theory also yields about the best guess at Game of Thrones' final shot: Sam closing the book, having just written its final chapter.

Update: If Sam is essentially George R. R. Martin, then I guess Gilly is the internet, heckling "come on mate, finish the damn book" in the background.

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