Wiki of Westeros

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Wiki of Westeros
Wiki of Westeros
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{{Character
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|Title = [[File:Night'sWatchicon.jpg|40px|left]] The Rat Cook [[File:Night'sWatchicon.jpg|40px|right]]
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|Image =
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|Season = [[Season 3|3]]
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|Mentioned = "[[Mhysa]]"
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|Titles=
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|Aka =
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|Status= [[:Category:Status: Dead|Deceased]]
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|Place = [[Nightfort]]
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|Allegiance =[[Night's Watch]]}}
 
{{Quote|It wasn't for murder the gods cursed the Rat Cook, or for serving the King's son in a pie... he killed a guest beneath his roof... that's something the gods can't forgive.|[[Bran Stark]]|Mhysa}}
 
{{Quote|It wasn't for murder the gods cursed the Rat Cook, or for serving the King's son in a pie... he killed a guest beneath his roof... that's something the gods can't forgive.|[[Bran Stark]]|Mhysa}}
 
 
The '''rat cook''' is the subject of legends and myths in the [[Seven Kingdoms]].
 
The '''rat cook''' is the subject of legends and myths in the [[Seven Kingdoms]].
   

Revision as of 00:03, 26 June 2013

"It wasn't for murder the gods cursed the Rat Cook, or for serving the King's son in a pie... he killed a guest beneath his roof... that's something the gods can't forgive."
Bran Stark[src]

The rat cook is the subject of legends and myths in the Seven Kingdoms.

According to these legends, a king once paid a visit on the Nightfort, then the chief castle on the Wall. As revenge against some offense the king had committed (Bran Stark cannot remember the exact reason when he recounts the tale), the cook killed the king's son and served his flesh in a pie to the unknowing king. The king enjoyed the pie so much he asked for a second helping.

The gods cursed the cook by turning him into a fat, white rat which could only survive by feasting on its young. He was condemned to run the halls of the Nightfort. The gods were not offended by the murder (as a man has a right to vengeance), nor even by cooking the son and cannibalistically feeding him to his own father. What the gods could not forgive and cursed the cook for was that he broke the laws of hospitality and protection, which are held to be sacred above all others.[1]

In the books

The story is much the same in the A Song of Ice and Fire novels, except that the king in the story is identified as an Andal ruler, not the King in the North. It is extremely well-known in the North and there is even a popular song about it.

See also

References