Often one to relaxation on its abundance of winged beasts, Home of the Dragon has upped the quota of one other loyal creature this season: Westerosi canine.
The canine rely in Season 2 is not sky-high (like these dragons), however there’s been sufficient appearances of four-legged buddies to get my consideration. (If there is a canine in it, I am going to watch it, however they’d higher not die). Early within the season, audiences tossed apart their reactions to informal little one homicide to as an alternative berate a doomed ratcatcher for randomly kicking his canine.
And in episode 4, “The Red Dragon and the Gold,” there is a superb however fleeting second involving three canine within the Harrenhal council room. However these canine aren’t from any of the surreal visions in episode 3 and episode 4 plaguing Daemon (Matt Smith). In response to keen-eyed viewers on X (previously Twitter), they appear to be an Easter egg pointing to the way forward for the largest, most cursed citadel within the Seven Kingdoms, and the numerous completely different homes who will maintain Harrenhal in the course of the Recreation of Thrones years. This is what all of it means.
What do the canine imply in Home of the Dragon, Season 2, episode 4?
Originally of the episode, after a disastrous assembly between Daemon and Oscar Tully (Archie Barnes), we get a shot of three big canine that resemble wolfhounds or deerhounds, sitting illuminated by the citadel’s little or no gentle. We have seen the hounds within the background of Harrenhal scenes earlier than, however right here, they’re overtly symbolic.
Matt Smith in “House of the Dragon.”
Credit score: Ollie Upton / HBO
X person @TheJoeMagician posted in regards to the second, figuring out the canine as one in all two related Easter eggs within the episode, representing characters essential to the way forward for Harrenhal.
“The three dogs, House Clegane for Gregor Clegane and the Black Goat for Vargo Hoat. Both characters who in the future hold Harrenhal. Daemon seeing the future?” they wrote.
Mashable High Tales
The three canine characterize the sigil for Home Clegane, a picture made for the unnamed founding father of the Lannister-loyal home, who was the kennelmaster at Casterly Rock. The story goes, he and Lord Tytos Lannister have been on a hunt once they encountered a lion, and three canine died defending them (heroes!). For his pooch-assisted rescue, he was given a title and land to begin his personal home. Recreation of Thrones followers will recognise this home as that of Ser Gregor Clegane (“The Mountain”) and his brother Sandor Clegane (“The Hound”). The violent, brutal Gregor particularly will develop into Castellan of Harrenhal down the monitor, so this query about Daemon seeing the longer term appears fairly spot-on. Particularly due to the goat.
What does the black goat imply?
Earlier in the identical scene in episode 4, Daemon is marching by the halls with Ser Simon Sturdy (Sir Simon Russell Beale), the present Castellan of Harrenhal, when he sees a black goat. It may characterize Vargo Hoat, who, like Lionel Messi and Serena Williams however with none of their expertise or decency, is known as The Goat.
A sword for rent, he betrays the Lannisters in trade for Harrenhal in Recreation of Thrones. Within the present, Vargo was changed by the character Locke (Noah Taylor). He is the man who cuts off Jaime Lannister’s hand. Notably, in A Feast for Crows, Gregor Clegane chops off Vargo’s limbs and serves them again to him as… roast goat. Once we see the goat in Home of the Dragon, as X person @erinwallaceyay factors out, it is standing amongst a number of items of chopped wooden. The dismemberment imagery is not delicate.
Each Home Clegane and Vargo Hoat meet sticky ends related to the Harrenhal curse, which Mashable’s Belen Edwards has defined for you right here. Daemon seeing photos — whether or not actual or imagined — of homes related to grave misfortune cannot be a superb signal, as Daemon himself was informed he’d meet his demise within the citadel by the mysterious Alys Rivers (Gayle Rankin) on arrival.
There’s much more animal sigil symbolism within the Harrenhal scenes, as @TheJoeMagician additionally factors out; when Daemon first arrives at Harrenhal in episode 3, he is greeted by a cauldron of bats flying into the evening. These nocturnal mammals may characterize two Riverlands homes who later have management of Harrenhal one after the opposite. Home Lothston‘s crest is one bat on gold and white, whereas Home Whent is 9 bats on gold.
So, Daemon is getting a little bit of a subliminal future historical past lesson at Harrenhal, very like we’re seeing within the Home of the Dragon opening credit. However that is not all his imaginative and prescient means; fortunately, we have a whole explainer for that.
New episodes of Home of the Dragon air Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO and Max.