my Morden theory still made more sense, no matter what the Great Maker says.
So you believe you know the events in the story better than the guy who created those events in the first place? Wow!
my Morden theory still made more sense, no matter what the Great Maker says.
That makes the most sense, but then why wouldn't it have been 2 chances, not 3, that the seer mentioned?
If the one chance could only work by also taking the next, wouldn't that be considered one chance, not two?
Is it just JMS's consistant theme of the number 3 here?
Prophecy is a guess that comes true.
When it doesn't, it's a metaphor.
There's bound to be a few holes, especially if some of it is down to ones own interpretation.
You mean like the one about Morden not having died? If he didn't die, he *can't* be the one in the prophecy.
Jan
So you believe you know the events in the story better than the guy who created those events in the first place? Wow!
If he didn't die, he *can't* be the one in the prophecy.
Once Morden's been irrevocably corrupted/coerced by the Shadows
I had the landing of the Icarus in mind, and his subsequent transformation by the Shadows. The old Morden is "dead", so to speak. I think it doesn't matter that he got heated up sometime later ;-)
I had the landing of the Icarus in mind, and his subsequent transformation by the Shadows. The old Morden is "dead", so to speak. I think it doesn't matter that he got heated up sometime later ;-)
Morden didn't get transformed on Z'ha'dum
I guess you could also argue that it was the keeper that wanted to kill Sheridan at the time too, it was not actually Londo's decision.
And I think I agree with KoshFan that it makes more sense for it to be Morden, since Londo does actually kill him, and after failing to save G'Kar's eye this sets him nicely upon the path towards his one final chance for redemption.
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