Although the tragedy of the stark family is distressing, I just want to say: deserve it!
Robb had beheaded the head of the Karstark family before, and it's incredible that his son didn't plot against Robb but instead went to Theon.
Talking about the previous hero Edd, he is a well-known hero, but when he stepped into the city of King's Landing where Lanister opened his cobwebs, he became an idiot who made people unable to complain, my friends have always remembered this. One sentence:
Edd's language: Please don't lie to me, because I'm stupid and will believe it!
Yes, Edd is stupid. He has absolutely no idea who to believe and who not to believe in the council, and he won't use his brain to catch Cersei's spy first like Tyrion did. What about him, he dug up the truth and immediately confronted the parties. Digging my own grave, doing my own way in the parliament, not knowing and winning people's hearts, being played by Littlefinger (to be honest, I was also deceived, I didn't expect Rob's suicide note to be torn up as waste paper), and always insisted Stupid justice, and then, before going to the guillotine, actually naively believed Lanister's casual remarks and said something against his heart, and ended up with a trumped-up accusation and infamy.
Then said Robb, originally he had the strongest backing, the strong army, the oath that his father had established in his life, but he did not learn from his father's unjust death, exposing his greatest weakness: self-righteousness.
Self-righteous, self-noble, self-righteous, self-righteous, self-righteous, self-righteous and able to win the call of all sides by virtue of Edd's previous reputation.
His self-superiority towards Theon led to Theon's betrayal, although Theon was not that good, so forget about it.
Robb was a righteous man like his father, and executed the great-grandson of the Karstark family who killed someone who was not so important in the Lanister family, regardless of the war situation at the time. It reminds me of the Nights' watch runaway that Edd executed at the beginning, they really used justice and self-discipline too much.
In the end, I just want to mourn for the innocent Talisa, the stillborn child, Robb's wolf, the innocent soldier who was obedient, the most tragic figure in the Stark tragedy.
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