Merlin sends her funeral pire afloat across the lake where he had earlier deposited Excalibur for safe keeping. In the last episode of season 3, he sees Freya in the waters of Avalon given to him by the Fisher King. Merlin uses it to save Camelot from the immortal army and when he is done, deposits it in a stone as in the 2nd iconic image of Excalibur.
I am sure we will see Freya again No comments:. See full terms and conditions and this month's choices. Lady of the Lake Fact 2 Similar to the fact above, the Lady of the Lake is more of a title than a specific person. Lady of the Lake Fact 3 This is less of a fact and more of a theory. Lady of the Lake Fact 4 Of all the facts, this is my favorite. They make some very compelling arguments here. Bonus King Arthur Fact! Are you sufficiently excited to read Cursed now?
Be sure to check out these books to read if you loved Cursed on Netflix! Cursed Lady of the Lake. Siobhan Vivian's Favorite Lady Bosses. E-mail is invalid. Available Until Nov. He stared at the scene in horror, at one point locking eyes with Freya, who gazed at him sadly as the knights moved in for the kill. Desperate to save her, Merlin used his magic to send a stone gargoyle toppling from a wall.
It distracted the knights long enough for Freya to escape, and Merlin quickly ran after her The Lady of the Lake. Merlin mourns Freya at the Lake of Avalon. Merlin followed Freya back to their hiding place in the catacombs.
Though still in her Bastet form, she made no move to attack him, instead appearing gentle and calm. When the effects of the curse began to wear off, Freya retreated deeper into the tunnels, where she regained her human form, naked, badly injured, and crying.
As Merlin covered her with his jacket, she tearfully explained what had happened to her, how she had once killed a man in self defense and been cursed by his mother in retaliation, forcing her to kill forevermore. Knowing that her wound was too serious to heal, Freya asked Merlin to leave her.
Instead, he dressed her in the gown he'd stolen for her from Morgana's wardrobe and carried her to the Lake of Avalon , which he knew would remind her of the childhood home she'd spoken of so fondly. Pleased that he'd remembered, Freya seemed to be at peace with her fate. Though he hadn't been able to heal her, she assured Merlin that he'd already saved her, that he'd made her feel loved, and with her last breath promised him that one day she would repay his kindness.
She died seconds later in Merlin's arms. Heartbroken, Merlin placed her body in a boat lined with ferns and pushed it out onto the lake. When it was some distance away, he used his magic to set it aflame, giving her a Viking funeral. He watched the boat burn for a moment, and then returned to Camelot The Lady of the Lake.
Freya appears to Merlin in the water. A little over a year later, when Merlin accompanied Arthur on his quest to recover the Fisher King's trident, the Fisher King gave him a glass vial containing water from the Lake of Avalon.
He warned him that Albion's time of need was near and that Merlin alone could save her, but that he would need help, and that the water would provide that help The Eye of the Phoenix. When Morgause and Morgana conquered Camelot with their immortal army , Merlin took the vial with him when he, Arthur, and their allies went into hiding. He experimented with the water using his magic and various spells, but to no avail.
Whatever help the water could provide remained a mystery, and he eventually dozed off with the vial still in hand. Sometime later, Merlin was startled awake by the sound of Gwaine getting up in the night, and in his surprise the vial slipped from his fingers and shattered on the cave floor.
Horrified, Merlin watched helplessly as the water began to trickle away. Much to his surprise, however, breaking the glass had freed Albion's last hope rather than destroyed it. The water took on an ethereal glow and formed a small puddle in a crevice of rock. An image then formed in the water, and Merlin watched in shock and delight as it was revealed to be Freya.
As Merlin struggled to comprehend this turn of events, Freya told him that she'd missed him, and gently deflected his questions by saying that they didn't have long. She explained that the Cup of Life had not only made Morgana's army immortal but transformed them into the living dead, and there was only one thing that could slay that which was already dead: the sword Excalibur , which Merlin had hidden at the bottom of the Lake of Avalon. She urged him to come to the lake, where she would give him the sword herself.
Freya hands Excalibur to Merlin. The next day, Merlin asked the dragon Kilgharrah to take him to the Lake of Avalon. He took a small boat out to the middle of the lake, anxiously scanning the waves for any sign of Freya. After a moment the sword Excalibur emerged from the water, held in Freya's hand, and Merlin smiled The Coming of Arthur.
Roughly four years later, after Arthur died while en route to the Lake of Avalon, Merlin returned Excalibur to Freya's care. Somber and grieved, he cast the sword into the lake and watched as Freya caught it in her hand and drew it back under the water The Diamond of the Day.
There is also the idea that it was Arthur who caught the sword because the arm looks male and muscular. At the time that Merlin met her, Freya was a sad and nervous girl who had spent most of her life on the run. She was guarded and somewhat defensive at first, and didn't understand why Merlin would help her when he didn't even know her.
She later told him that she couldn't always trust people. She also seemed rather skittish and fearful, flinching away from Merlin both when he offered her his jacket and when he woke her by placing a hand on her shoulder. As they got to know each other, however, Freya began to exhibit a more soft-spoken and sweet personality. She appeared to enjoy Merlin's attempts to make her smile and was deeply grateful for all the things he was doing for her. She proved to be quite selfless, willingly giving up her dream of a life with Merlin because she believed he would have a better life in Camelot than he would forever on the run with her.
It was because of this belief that she attempted to escape Camelot on her own, a move which ultimately cost her her life. She was also very loyal, and later returned from the dead in order to keep a promise she'd made to Merlin.
Freya was deeply traumatized by her curse both physically and emotionally and hated herself for what it made her do, at one point referring to herself as a monster.
0コメント