12-11-2016, 04:07 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-11-2016, 04:13 PM by Adriano Neres Rodrigues.)
(12-11-2016, 03:12 PM)irukandji Wrote: Yep, he should have killed her. His mother would still be alive if he had done that in the first place.
I want to create debates. You agreed with my post too fast.
But do you really believe there were not another option?
(12-11-2016, 03:46 PM)New Guy Wrote: Hi Adriano,
I enjoyed your post. Nick was put into a major dilemma.
He is THE Grimm, but he is not like some of his ancestors. He kills not for what they are (Wesen) but for what they do (crimes and violence). Those Wesen who coexist in peace with Kehrseites are safe. Those who commit violent acts of crime may pay with their lives.
The dilemma with Juliette was that she was his lover and the woman he wanted to marry. She became a hexenbiest and turned to violence and crime. Nick was not able to abandon his love for Juliette and could not kill her. Any other hexenbiest would have encountered the swift blade of the Dēcapitāre.
Your position that "accepting" Juliette as a hexenbiest would result in her death creates a whole new concept from "accepting" her hexenbiest, kissing her lipless corpse face and letting her slide into vilence and crime.
Note that the hexenbiest Adalind was an antagonist, but Nick never considered killing her.
N G
New Guy...
My point about accepting Juliette as hexanbiest is not only about hexanbiest. As you said, Adelaind is a hexanbiest but she never tryed to kill Nick. They acted as enemies but the kind of enemy that try to use each other in their plans. Think about Sean using Nick in his plans about protecting himself from the royals.
Juliette actions were more destructive about Nick. Nick took too much time to realize that. Don't you think?
“If two people agree on everything, one of them is unnecessary.”
— Attributed to Winston Churchill
— Attributed to Winston Churchill