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The fight at the Fist[b] is a battle during the conflict beyond the Wall. It is the first open confrontation between men and White Walkers since the Long Night, over eight thousand years ago.

History[]

Prelude[]

While Sam, Grenn, and Edd are collecting animal feces to burn as firewood near to the Fist of the First Men, they hear a blast from a horn, and Sam immediately assumes that the Ranging party, with Jon Snow and Qhorin, has returned. A second blast sounds, and Grenn and Edd draw their swords, assuming it is wildlings. Finally a third blast sounds, signalling White Walkers. Grenn and Edd run, leaving Samwell behind as a snowstorm begins to blow in.

Sam hides behind a rock because he is unable to catch up to his comrades. An army of undead wights marches beside him, heading towards the Fist of the First Men. A White Walker and wights walk march past the rock without noticing Sam, the White Walker letting out a shriek to urge on the wights towards the Night's Watch encampment atop the Fist of the First Men.[1]

Battle[]

The camp of the Night's Watch on the Fist is overrun by a horde of wights led by White Walkers.[1]

Aftermath[]

Nightswatch 3x01

The survivors march away from the Fist of the First Men

Out of the 300 brothers, about 200 have been killed.[2] Sam runs through a blizzard in search of safety. He sees another brother ahead, but soon discovers that he has been decapitated. Just then, a wight approaches Sam and is just about to attack him with an axe, when Ghost saves him by attacking the wight. Mormont then appears and asks Sam if he sent off the messenger-ravens he was instructed to release. Sam tells him that he wasn't able to in the confusion of the attack which angers Mormont. The survivors begin their way back to the Wall to warn of the coming danger.[1]

HorseCorpses 3x03

The aftermath of the fight at the Fist.

The wildling Orell scouts the Fist of the First Men by warging into his eagle. He discovers the Fist is filled with dead "crows".[2]

Mance Rayder, along with Jon Snow, Tormund, Orell, and Ygritte, inspects the Fist, finding only the mutilated remains of the horses arranged in a spiral pattern. All the corpses of the black brothers Orell had discovered are gone. Jon says that about three hundred men were camped at the Fist. Mance warns him that they have now been raised as undead wights.[3]

Behind the scenes[]

The battle plays out different in the novel than in the TV series. Much of the battle is actually described, albeit in flashback, but due to budget restraints it happens "off screen" in the TV series, like the Battle of Oxcross and the battle on the Green Fork. Also, unlike in the show, during the battle Sam sends messages by ravens about the impending attack. Neither Ghost nor Rast take part in the battle, as the direwolf had accompanied Jon Snow, while Rast had remained at Castle Black.

In the books[]

In the A Song of Ice and Fire books, the fight at the Fist is a lopsided loss for the Night's Watch. It is the second stage of the great ranging.

Background[]

A ranging force of 200 brothers from Castle Black, led by Lord Commander Jeor Mormont, reaches the Fist of the First Men. The rangers fortify the place, in case the wildlings attack them, and wait for Qhorin Halfhand's force of 100 men from the Shadow Tower. During the stay, Jon and Ghost find a hidden bundle of dragonglass weapons and an old warhorn.

Qhorin and his men arrive. Qhorin reports Mormont that they ran into a party of wildlings and killed most of them. The lone wildling survivor revealed that Mance Rayder was in the Frostfangs, searching for some magic to bring down the Wall.[c] Qhorin advises Mormont to send three scouting parties of five men each into the mountains to discover what Mance was looking for, led by him and the rangers Thoren Smallwood and Jarman Buckwell. Mormont agrees. Jon and Ghost join Qhorin's party.

Smallwood's party is the first (and only) to return. He reports that Mance Rayder has gathered a huge army, between 20,000 - 30,000 people, more than half of them were women and children, ten days away from the Fist. Mormont and the senior officers discuss the situation, agruing whether to attack the wildlings or return to Castle Black and take defensive position. Finally, Mormont decides to attack, reasoning that most of the wildlings are not fighters and are undisciplined, so the fact they outnumber the ranging force by 100:1 will be insignificant; if the ranging force perishes, well, this is the duty of the Watch.

Chett the steward and thirteen more brothers (among them Lark, Dirk, Ollo Lophand, Clubfoot Carl, Small Paul and Sweet Donnel Hill) decide to defect. They plan to murder Mormont, several of the rangers and Sam, to prevent him from sending messeges by ravens about their desertion. However, it begins to snow a few hours before they intend to set their plan into motion. Chett realizes that the plan is foiled: in fresh snow they will be easily followed and will not make good time. Enraged, he decides to cut his losses by killing Sam. Just as he approaches Sam, a triple horn blast sounds - signalling that the Others have been sighted.

The battle[]

The Watch is attacked by a large horde of wights, among them reanimated corpses of animals, most notably a snow bear. The fortifications, which would have slowed down human attackers, prove to be useless against the undead creatures. Mormont orders Sam to send one bird to Castle Black and another to the Shadow Tower, which he does - without specifying in the messages which enemy attacks them. Eddison Tollett tells Sam "Would you wake me, please? I am having this terrible nightmare". Terrified of the battle, Sam forgets to send any other messages off before setting the rest of the ravens free when the battle is lost.

Since their arrows have no effect against the undead attackers, Mormont orders his archers to use fire arrows, slowing the wights but not stopping them, and soon are out of arrows. The Watch is quickly overrun. Thoren Smallwood charges at the undead bear. His swing nearly takes the bear's head off, then the bear takes his. Ottyn Wythers is also killed, when a riderless horse kicks him in the face. After suffering heavy casualties, Mormont orders to form a spearhead and retreat.

The retreat[]

Only sixty-one men manage to cut their way free out of the Fist, part of those are killed by the pursuing wights during the retreat. Of the forty-four survivors, twelve are critically injured and are put on horses while the able men hold torches to guard the flanks and rear. Only the stragglers are attacked by the wights.

During the retreat, Sam collapses, totally exhausted, emotionally and physically. Only Grenn stays with him and urges him to move on, but in vain. Small Paul, who was a member of Chett's gang, carries Sam on his back. Due to the delay, the three fall behind the other survivors, and one of the Others attacks them. Grenn waves a torch at the Other, and the latter slashes the torch with its sword. Paul charges at the Other with his axe, but he is no match against the deadly creature, who easily kills him. As Paul collapses, his weight tears the sword from its killer; Sam desperately stabs it with his dragonglass dagger, without knowing if it has any affect. To Sam and Grenn's amazement, the Other is destroyed. Sam tells Grenn to pick the dagger, and eventually they catch up with the rest of the survivors.[d]

Aftermath[]

Eventually the survivors reach Craster's Keep, where the next disaster occurs. The combined effect is that nearly a third of the entire Night's Watch, including most of its officers and best warriors, is wiped out.

The message Sam sent to Castle Black reaches its destination, but there is nothing those who remained there can do to help Mormont and his troops, except sending distress messages to the five kings (thinking that the enemies mentioned in the message are the wildlings, while Sam meant the Others), pleading for them to send reinforcements.

Some of the brothers who were killed at the Fist, among them Chett, Lark and Paul, became wights. They attack Sam and Gilly at an abandoned village, after they escape from Craster's Keep. A mysterious rider, known as "Coldhands", and his pack of ravens save Sam and Gilly.

When Jon and the wildlings reach the Fist, they find more than a hundred dead horses scattered around (not in a specific pattern). The wildlings strip the horses of anything useful. Jon does not see any human bodies, and fears that Sam and the rest of the ranging force were all killed and turned into wights.

Vision[]

Stannis has seen a vision of the battle in the flames: "The ashes were white, rising in the updraft, yet all at once it seemed as if they were falling. Snow, I thought. Then the sparks in the air seemed to circle, to become a ring of torches, and I was looking through the fire down on some high hill in a forest. The cinders had become men in black behind the torches, and there were shapes moving through the snow. For all the heat of the fire, I felt a cold so terrible I shivered."[4]


References[]

Notes[]

  1. In "Winter Is Coming," which takes place in 298 AC, Sansa Stark tells Cersei Lannister that she is 13 years old and Bran Stark tells Jaime Lannister that he is 10 years old. Arya Stark was born between Sansa and Bran, making her either 11 or 12 in Season 1. The rest of the Stark children have been aged up by 2 years from their book ages, so it can be assumed that she is 11 in Season 1. Arya is 18 in Season 8 according to HBO, which means at least 7 years occur in the span of the series; therefore, each season of Game of Thrones must roughly correspond to a year in-universe, placing the events of Season 2 in 299 AC.
  2. Conjecture based on information from A Song of Ice and Fire; may be subject to change.
  3. Ygritte reveals to Jon the magic they were looking for is the Horn of Winter, which according to a legend was used by Joramun.
  4. This scene was moved around in the TV series to occur after Sam fled Craster's Keep with Gilly.

External links[]


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