A Clash of Kings – Stannis

A Clash of Kings – Stannis

For the second picture from the A Clash of Kings prologue, we introduce King Stannis Baratheon! Stannis is fun to draw because he’s a bundle of intensity. Even better it’s a chance to draw the painted table. Mr. Martin does a good job describing it and the room it’s in.

Despite being very happy with this sketch, I have to confess to two mistakes. The first mistake comes from jumping the gun again. The quote I chose to illustrate had Stannis shouting at his wife, Selyse. This would have made for a very different scene. Fortunately, I was able to replace the quote with Mr. Martin’s description of Stannis.

The second may or may not be a mistake, but I have to mention it. Mr. Martin describes Stannis wearing wool breaches and a leather jerkin. Mr. Martin never said what Stannis was wearing under his jerkin. I was complaining about this all the way through my drawing. Of course the minute I finish this picture, I find two pictures of jerkins of the right period with sleeves!

For today's A Clash of Kings illustration, Stannis broods over the painted table.wpmorse a song of ice and fire pen and ink dragonstone Westeros

Stannis Baratheon, Lord of Dragonstone and by the grace of the gods rightful heir to the Iron Throne of the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros, was broad of shoulder and sinewy of limb, with a tightness to his face and flesh that spoke of leather cured in the sun until it was as tough as steel. Hard was the word men used when they spoke of Stannis, and hard he was. Though he was not yet five-and-thirty, only a fringe of thin black hair remained on his head, circling behind his ears like the shadow of a crown. His brother, the late King Robert, had grown a beard in his final years. Maester Cressen had never seen it, but they said it was a wild thing, thick and fierce. As if in answer, Stannis kept his own whiskers cropped tight and short. They lay like a blue-black shadow across his square jaw and the bony hollows of his cheeks. His eyes were open wounds beneath his heavy brows, a blue as dark as the sea by night. His mouth would have given despair to even the drollest of fools; it was a mouth made for frowns and scowls and sharply worded commands, all thin pale lips and clenched muscles, a mouth that had forgotten how to smile and had never known how to laugh. Sometimes when the world grew very still and silent of a night, Maester Cressen fancied he could hear Lord Stannis grinding his teeth half a castle away.