![]() ![]() A sword that may look Second-Best, and Second-hand, but carries the memories of a thousand lost fights, a history lesson in itself. It is spinning now, in the black starlit waters of my dream, right above your head, dear reader. And in my dream I am the one throwing the sword. Now that I am so very old, I am dreaming once again. How to train your dragon last lines of each book, 2/ 2 httyd books httyd books spoilers How to Seize a Dragon's Jewel How to Betray a Dragon's Hero How to Fight a Dragon's Fury spoilers how to seize a dragon's jewel spoilers how to betray a dragon's hero spoilers how to fight a dragon's fury spoilers ![]() Perhaps Cressida Cowell gave us a hint as to the Wodensfang’s betrayal early on. ![]() Perhaps he did know what the red herring meant and just didn’t mention it. ![]() But in How to Fight a Dragon’s Fury the Wodensfang states he’d known all along that the dragon jewel that Hiccup found was not the authentic one and that he didn’t say anything because he promised Grimbeard not to interfere with fate. This could just mean he was underground when the phrase was coined in the books. Someone would think that in his decades of life the Wodensfang would have heard the expression before, given that Hiccup the First taught him language and he’d been relatively involved in human history for a time. In How to Seize a Dragon’s Jewel Hiccup has to point out to the Wodensfang that the fish on the map was a red herring and its significance in the human world. ![]()
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