George R. R. Martin did not write Mirri Maz Duur’s prophecy to be a simple biological curse. He wrote it to torment Daenerys—and the reader—with conditional hope. The moment Dany sees the sun rise in the west or the seas go dry, she might just find that her womb has quickened.
Book readers often point to Daenerys’s final chapter in A Dance with Dragons (Chapter 71) as the strongest evidence that she fertile. can dany get pregnant
The answer is far from a simple binary. To understand Daenerys’s reproductive potential, one must navigate a labyrinth of prophecy, magic, symbolism, and conflicting character statements. This article explores the curse of Mirri Maz Duur, the symbolic evidence of fertility, and the narrative implications of the "Stallion Who Mounts the World." George R