The City Watch is led by
the rather drunk Captain Samuel Vimes, introduced in a bar, drunk, and unable
to remember his own name. Vimes has this
cynical attitude about him throughout the book, attributed to the fact that he
was born two drinks too sober, and unable to find any enjoyment out of
life. It’s because of his mismanagement
and the fact that Ankh-Morpork has organized crime that the Watch has fallen
apart after all of these years. Yet,
with his laziness and cynicism, Vimes still doesn’t want to see the city fall
apart and is ready to go to almost any lengths to save the city. He even gets a love interest in the form of
Lady Sybil Ramkin, a breeder of swamp dragons, aristocrat, and all around swell
woman. Ramkin’s role in the novel, apart
from the understated romance, is to be the motivator to the Watch. She is responsible for giving them a new
headquarters when it burns down because of the dragon and is the one who gives
them the confidence to fight back against the dragon, and as Ramkin and Vimes
fall in love, the solution to the novel is the dragon mascot of the Watch
(Errol) and the dragon king fall in love.
The behavior of the
dragons in the novel is reflective of dragons of classic literature, especially
Beowulf and The Hobbit, with a nature of hoarding for gold and wisher of virgin
sacrifice. They like to burn things down
and have short fuses overall. Yet the
dragon’s reappearance leads to some great gags from Pratchett involving people
selling merchandise as the city burns. Our
protagonist of the novel is Carrot, a volunteer to the Watch. Carrot was raised by dwarves and identifies
as one, in spite of his six foot, six inch height, causing him to have a strong
sense of justice and a literal mind.
Tell him to throw the book at someone, he will do just that. His adoptive parents volunteered him for the
Watch and he immediately gets in trouble for arresting the head of the Thieves
Guild. He’s read all the laws of
Ankh-Morpork and that thick book is what guides him through his everyday life. He’s the one who initially teaches the Watch
what it means to be in the Watch. There
are also a couple of supporting characters in the novel who all have their own
little quirks and things. There are more
members of the Watch who all have their own problems: they steal things off
murder victims. There are also plenty of
normal citizens, especially merchants which Pratchett uses to help give the
story some sense of a life. There really
isn’t all that much more to say about the novel except that it is the first of
the works of Terry Pratchett that are worth a 10/10.
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