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Hottest couple 🔥🔥🔥

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Hello! Goodbye! 😭
Jamie and Claire
1x07 | 8x10
I will find you. I promise. If I must endure two hundred years of purgatory, two hundred years of without you—then that is my punishment, which I have earned for my crimes. For I have lied, and killed, and stolen; betrayed and broken trust. But there is the one thing that shall lie in the balance. When I shall stand before God, I shall have one thing to say, to weigh against the rest… Lord, ye gave me a rare woman, and God! I loved her well...
1.01 | 2.13 | 8.10

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🥵🔥.
Do you ever wish you hadna seen that flower, touched that stone? Never.
y o u j u s t n e e d t o r e s t
pain gifset requested by @smashing-teacups 💜
"If you take away the one last thing that makes sense to me, then I will die. With you, right here, now."
The last Signature Head Touches™ of Outlander 🥹🥺

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8x10 | And the World Was All Around Us
Requested by @xmichaeljacksonx
Beautiful!
English / Español
Spoilers
BEES 🐝🐝🌸
Outlander has given us epic phrases and moments; so much so that I can recall them without even looking at the books, because their warmth has touched my heart. I've mentioned this before, but I could read and watch entire episodes of Jamie and Claire talking in bed, because in those moments of profound tenderness, their reflections are often filled with such beauty.
Of all the scripts not directly based on the book, this last episode gave us one of the most beautiful scenes between the two of them, in their bed, with one of the warmest declarations Jamie has ever made to Claire, which I've accompanied with this pair of GIFs made by sdreamersc82
Claire was telling Jamie about a pair of bees she found lying together on a flower. She thought they were dead, but no, they were just asleep, their legs intertwined, and she didn't know if they were resting or waiting for the sun to warm them. Claire thought it was very sweet that the bees were huddled together, and Jamie agreed. From then on, I was completely smitten (I'll say right now that this scene is among my favorites in the entire series) with everything they talked about. They were in that calm state before inevitable, life-changing events, where everything takes on new meaning, and you tell those who share that moment with you things that are deeply hidden in your heart. Claire and Jamie had already been together (and apart) for 37 years by this point, and yet they had things to tell each other and reflect on together. The full beauty of the meaning of that scene transcended when I saw how truly sweet it must have been to see those bees on the flower, as can be seen in the image I share below (credit to its author, I couldn't locate it).
The conversation moves on to other topics, but having watched the episode three times, the way it unfolds still strikes me as the most magical thing, because Claire has the opportunity to express (a) the importance of having built a home, and (b) to tell Jamie that she wasn't sorry for her life, and that she even got what she didn't know she wanted. And there, when she returns his question, telling him that she hoped he also got what he wanted, and he replies that no, he wants to sleep with her on a flower, embracing her with his feet, that's when I truly burst into tears, because it's a metaphor for what's to come. Jamie asks if that's what she wanted, a quiet life living only with the bees, and Claire declares that it wasn't just with them (implying that she wanted him with her, that she wanted her life just as she lived it), and to emphasize her point, she tells him that it seems they weren't meant to live a quiet life. The significance of that statement is immeasurable when I think of all the terrible things they endured. That statement confirms that Outlander is a story of loyalty, resilience, unconditional love, family, home, never giving up, honor, and commitment. I reiterate, it's not a perfect story, but for me, it's the most epic and beautiful love story there is. This doesn't happen in the books, but I acknowledge MBR, who wrote this beautiful script for Jamie and Claire in the series he helped develop.
Jamie and Claire have carried the weight of the world on their shoulders, and the thought of a peaceful life may be their truest longing. Jamie always fought for causes whose ultimate goal was to bring well-being to those around him, and Claire was born to serve. Their personalities alone made them perfect for each other, so life simply brought them together where they were meant to be. That's why I find Bees a beautiful book, because in part, it's about them fulfilling this longing; until a war threatens that possibility, and they must embark on this battle. Season 8 was well-structured in relation to the book because it presented its main events. It introduced the disastrous change we know about and developed the storyline from the cliffhanger. It also developed (with a script by Diana herself) some storylines whose endings we don't know because we don't yet have book 10. I believe they honored the books, and with the ending they chose, they honored the characters. So I'm satisfied. That's why I took all the clickbait headlines with a grain of salt, because I'm sure that the vast majority of the people behind the series are also satisfied.
And so we arrive at this moment. With Claire exhausted from her long vigil around Jamie's body, and him lying in peace. It wasn't for nothing that she said time and again that he should rest, and then, that this is his home (because she is his home) when Roger told her they should take him home to bury his body. There, in that moment, they were like those two bees lying together, who at first thought were dead, but no, they were only resting 🥹🥹🥹. It was a beauty I hadn't imagined. Jamie's ghost came to provide Claire with her stage, because in life she told him no, that she didn't regret going to pick those flowers, nor touching the stones, because after that, there was her story, which they showed us in those flashbacks. There, lying in rest, they lived their lives anew, not to change history—because yes, Jamie Fraser died—but to change their own little story, because yes, Claire, with her healing power, with her blue aura (and yes, there was blue light), brought the love of her life back; she snatched him from death so that, now, they could live the peaceful life they longed for. It was pure magic and pure poetry, all of it transformed from an event that was already in the book. They gave a true ending and a true closure to a story that has yet to reach its true conclusion.
And here I am, incredibly excited, because Outlander, which I love with all my heart, will have two endings. The happiness I felt early yesterday morning was indescribable, because all I could think about was how beautifully they concluded the series, a beauty I never thought possible, tying everything up perfectly. But what's more, I'll have the chance to experience another ending, the one in the book. And wonderfully, the two stories won't overlap; the ending we saw already happened in the original story, but we still have a journey to explore in the pages of book 10, full of possibilities and the overwhelming certainty that Outlander isn't over yet. I think they've captured a beautiful concept of eternity, where no matter what fate awaits Jamie and Claire, it will be perfect. Long live Outlander.
ABEJAS 🐝🐝🌸
Outlander nos ha dejado frases y momentos, épicos; tantos, que puedo recordarlos sin ir a revisar los libros, porque su calidez se metió en mi corazón. Ya lo había mencionado, pero yo podría leer y ver, episodios enteros de Jamie y Claire, conversando en su cama, porque en esos momentos de extrema ternura, sus reflexiones suelen estar cargadas de muchísima belleza.
De todos los guiones que no están basados directamente en el libro, este último capítulo nos regaló una de las escenas más hermosas de ambos, en su cama, con una de las declaraciones más cálidas que ha hecho Jamie a Claire, y que acompaño con este par de gif de arriba, hechos por sdreamersc82
Claire le contaba a Jamie, acerca de un par de abejas que encontró yaciendo en una flor, juntas, ella pensó que estaban muertas, pero no, sólo estaban dormidas, sosteniéndose por sus patas, y que no sabe si estaban descansando o esperando que saliera el sol para calentarlas. Le pareció muy dulce que estuvieran acurrucadas, y Jamie se lo avala. De allí en más, yo sólo podía estar derretida de amor absoluto (desde ya voy diciendo que esa escena está entre mis favoritas de la serie entera) con todo lo que conversaron, porque estaban en ese estado de calma previo a eventos inevitables que cambian la vida, en los que todo cobra un nuevo sentido, y le dices a quienes comparten contigo ese momento, cosas que están muy guardadas en tu corazón. Claire y Jamie ya tenían, para este momento, 37 años juntos (y separados), y sin embargo, tenían cosas que contarse, y que reflexionar juntos. Toda la belleza del significado de esa escena, trascendió cuando vi, cuan efectivamente dulce, debió de ser ver a esas abejas en la flor, tal como se aprecia en la imagen que compartí más arriba (crédito a su autor, no pude ubicarlo)
El hilo de la conversación pasa por otros temas, pero habiendo visto el capítulo ya 3 veces, la manera en la que se teje la misma, me sigue pareciendo la cosa más mágica, porque Claire tiene la oportunidad de manifestar (a) la importancia de haber constituido su hogar, y (b) de decirle a Jamie que no estaba arrepentida de su vida, y que obtuvo incluso lo que no sabía que quería. Y allí, cuando ella le devuelve su pregunta, diciéndole que esperaba que él también haya obtenido lo que quería, y él le responde que no, que quiere dormir con ella en una flor, abrazándola con sus pies, es cuando realmente rompí en llanto, porque es una metáfora de lo que está por venir. Jamie pregunta si eso deseaba, tener una vida tranquila viviendo sólo con las abejas y Claire declara que no sólo con ellas (dándole a entender que lo quería a él con ella, que quería su vida tal cual la vivió), y para resaltar su punto le dice que al parecer no estaban destinados a vivir una vida tranquila. La trascendentalidad de esa declaración, no tiene fin, cuando pienso en todas las cosas terribles que vivieron. Esa declaración confirma que Outlander es una historia de lealtad, de resiliencia, de amor incondicional, de familia, de hogar, de no redirse, de honor, de compromiso; lo reitero, no es una historia perfecta, pero es para mí, la historia de amor más épica y hermosa que existe. Ésto no sucede en los libros, pero le reconozco a MBR, que escribió este guión precioso para Jamie y Claire, en la serie que ayudó a desarrollar.
Jamie y Claire, han cargado el peso del mundo sobre sus hombros, y pensar en una vida tranquila puede ser su verdadero anhelo. Jamie siempre luchó por causas cuyo fin último, era generar bienestar a quiénes le rodeaban, y Claire nació para servir. Ya sólo por sus carácteres, estaban hechos el uno para el otro, así que la vida, sólo los puso juntos, allí donde debían estar. Es por eso que Bees me parece un libro precioso, porque en parte son ellos cumpliendo este anhelo; hasta que una guerra amenaza esa posibilidad, y deben embarcarse en esta batalla. La T8 estuvo bien planteada respecto al libro, porque presentó sus eventos principales. Introdujo el cambio nefasto que conocemos, y desarrolló la historia planteada a partir del cliffhanger, además desarrolló (con guion de la misma Diana), algunas historias de las cuáles no conocemos el desenlace, porque aún no tenemos el libro 10. Yo considero que honraron los libros, y con el final planteado, honraron a los personajes. Así que estoy satisfecha. Por eso todos los titulares de clickbait, me los tomé con cuidado, porque estoy segura que la gran mayoría de las personas que están detrás de la serie, también están satisfechas.
Y así llegamos a ese momento cumbre, que vemos más arriba. Con Claire agotada por su larga vigilia alrededor del cuerpo de Jamie, y él, yaciendo en paz. No era en vano que ella decía una y otra vez que él debía descansar, y luego, que aquí está su hogar (porque ella es su hogar) cuando Roger le dijo que debían llevarlo a casa para enterrar su cuerpo. Allí, en ese momento, ellos eran esas dos abejas que yacian juntas, y que al principio pensaban que estaban muertas, pero no, sólo descansaban 🥹🥹🥹. Fue de una belleza, que no imaginé. El fantasma de Jamie, fue a servirle su escenario a Claire, porque en vida ella le dijo que no, que no se arrepentía de haber ido a buscar esas flores, ni de haber tocado las piedras, porque después de eso, estaba su historia, la cual nos mostraron en esos flashbacks. Allí, yaciendo, en su descanso, vivieron sus vidas de nuevo, no para cambiar la historia, porque sí, Jamie Fraser, murió, sino para cambiar su pequeña propia historia, porque sí, Claire, con su poder sanador, con su aura azul (y sí, sí hubo luz azul) trajo al amor de su vida, de vuelta; se lo arrebató a la muerte, para, ahora sí, vivir la vida tranquila que anhelaban. Fue pura magia y pura poesía, y todo, transformando un evento que estaba en el libro. Le dieron un verdadero final y un verdadero cierre, a una historia que aún no ha firmado su verdadero final.
Y aquí estoy, emocionadísima, porque de Outlander, que amo con mi corazón, tendré dos finales. La felicidad que sentía ayer en la madrugada, era inexplicable, porque sólo pensaba que habían concluido la serie con una belleza que no creí posible, poniendo todo en su lugar, pero además, tendré la posibilidad de asistir a otro final, el del libro. Y de una forma maravillosa, ambas historias no se solaparán; el final que vimos, ya sucedió en la historia original, pero aún nos queda una camino por recorrer en las páginas del libro 10, lleno de muchas posibilidades y esa enorme certeza de que aún Outlander, no terminó. Creo que condensaron un concepto de eternidad, precioso, en el que sin importar cual sea el destino, será perfecto para Jamie y Claire. Larga vida para Outlander.
😭
Video edit by me
He is my home..
Outlander | 8x10

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Jamie and Claire
1x07 | 8x10
Visual languages, literary allusions, and the Outlander finale. Or, Frank was wrong and Jamie and Claire were right. As always.
This episode is very callback rich, to put it mildly. When they’re in bed together on their last morning at the house, Jamie more or less asks Claire if she regrets not buying the vase. She tells him, unequivocally, that she doesn’t. And they talk about bees sleeping together who just need rest, but seem dead. Jamie quotes the Yeats poem, which in book canon is part of a conversation with Bree. Frank and Bree thought Claire wanted to live in the woods alone. Jamie and Bree now know differently. Because Bree knows who she is. And Jamie has always understood Claire.
Frank was wrong is the episode theme in so many ways. Frank looks at Bree and claims to love her, but also knows she is a constant reminder of Jamie, part of why Claire can’t forget him. Jamie looks at Bree and sees Claire: their love for each other, Claire’s own capacity for love and sacrifice and care. He is still grateful to Frank, and most of all still able to look at Bree and see only good. His daughter is a person in her own right but also another way to see the love of his life. And to see the light of the moon, too, of course. (My headcanon is that Claire’s name was also inspired by Debussy’s Claire de Lune).
Where is Jamie when he asks if Claire can forgive him for bringing her here? Near water, like in The Reckoning, and Alamance. He is restless, tapping his fingers, until she takes his hand. Which she does when he admits he’s terrified of not seeing their oldest grandson again. He asks her to remember him, and we transition to one of the most joyful love scenes we’ve seen. Jamie smiles repeatedly. Whatever is ahead, the delight of being with Claire overpowers it. After, the camera lingers on their strewn clothes: their passion is the same as always.
We’ve seen a lot of Claire and Jamie’s battlefield farewells. This one is about contrasts. Jamie doesn’t promise it won’t be today. He tells Claire he loves her in Gaelic, and she says it back in the same language, the language of his heart, her heart’s home. She doesn’t need an interpreter anymore, is not an Outlander in the same way. He bows like before Prestonpans; the weight of history, their history, is still the weight of love.
Notably, Claire doesn’t bow her head in the prayer before battle. For her, faith without works is dead, which lucky for Claire is not Saint Paul, it’s from the book of James: she will go where Jamie goes and do her job. Roger is a historian, but he’s not like Frank: he follows Claire’s lead. He also understands her allusion to Tennyson’s Lady of Shalott, a woman who can see the world only in a mirror. Probably also an allusion to Claire’s least fave, St. Paul, who wrote about seeing “through a glass, darkly.”
Roger tells her to hope the curse doesn’t break, because when it does the mirror cracks and the lady dies. It’s an Arthurian story. Lancelot’s also in it. Claire and Jamie are always mythical, whether they are invoking Orpheus and Eurydice (Wentworth) or The Odyssey and its separated married couple. Incidentally, the Mirror Crack’d, a line from that Tennyson poem, is also an Agatha Christie novel, which I will come back to in a minute.
Jamie tells Claire he’s only afraid of not seeing his home again. She assures him they’ll see the Ridge, and he just nods. Because he doesn’t mean a place. He means *her.* Roger suggests taking Jamie’s body home and Claire says “he is home.” Her eyes shut, her breath gusts out. She glows blue. And then we are in 1945 Inverness and see the ghost. Because the bees are only sleeping, and so are Jamie and Claire.
I watched part of “Sassenach” yesterday and what struck me most was Claire and Frank admitting they struggled to remember each other. Jamie goes to Claire because he remembers everything. And, as he’s admitted, because there are people he would enjoy haunting.
Frank was and is wrong: he’s not seeing Claire’s wartime past in the stranger outside the window. He is seeing her future and her forever. One he can’t write about accurately because he underestimates her at every turn and doesn’t give her choices. Like Tom Christie (whose name is clearly an Agatha callback) Frank claims to love Claire and writes about her, only to be incorrect. Frank, like Tom, doesn’t understand her. He silences her story. Jamie lets her tell it. And Jamie only goes to the stones because he already knows Claire would do it all again. Because he asked her what she wanted. He always does. And he lets himself haunt Frank, even if it’s not the main point. Because it’s fun. And he keeps his promise not to scare Claire.
Jamie goes back to 1945 Inverness for more than a prank. He touches the stones. He calls Claire back to him; he can’t travel to her but he can trust her. She has the spyglass again in this episode. He can trust her vision and her heart.—she will see the flowers and find him. And then the flashbacks begin, which I am convinced Jamie and Claire both see. Because neither of them has forgotten a thing.
Claire told Richardson she didn’t know what it was that brought her to the past the first time, just that she is meant to be part of history. We know now what brought her. It was love. And memory. And because she told Jamie what she wanted, and he always gives it to her. Their love is not in Frank’s book, is only captured in Claire’s journal, what she calls “our history.” Claire makes such a tender and anguished face when Jamie tells her he hasn’t had everything he wants, only to relax when he admits it’s just that he hasn’t slept in a flower holding her feet. She makes it up to him in the end.
Wherever they go next—they’re alive, it’s not an afterlife, Claire’s too practical for that—history doesn’t capture it. They’re finally free of official records. It’s all a love story from here on out. Because the world is all around them. It’s just the two of them now.