It's probably not what he actually is, but imagine Ten hearing an enemy (especially one like Davros) call him out for being essentially immoral. Never mind the hypocracy present; Ten probably just thought that "Even he knows how bad I am." The fact Rose doesn't say anything in response (the fact she was there at all, even) made matters worse.
Is this before or after Rose and the Doctor are in separate pillars of light (which in itself reminds me of the Lonely God metaphor: “let the fiery, cloudy pillar / lead me all my journey through”)?
I personally hold Davros responsible for making Ten do what he does at the end of the episode; without all the vindication of his (self-loathing) thoughts that Davros gave him, I doubt he could have left her.
Can you tell I've thought way too much about this?
no subject
Date: 2008-08-02 05:09 pm (UTC)Thanks,
redscharlach makes them.
Cheers for that, will go on a look-see.
It's probably not what he actually is, but imagine Ten hearing an enemy (especially one like Davros) call him out for being essentially immoral. Never mind the hypocracy present; Ten probably just thought that "Even he knows how bad I am." The fact Rose doesn't say anything in response (the fact she was there at all, even) made matters worse.
Is this before or after Rose and the Doctor are in separate pillars of light (which in itself reminds me of the Lonely God metaphor: “let the fiery, cloudy pillar / lead me all my journey through”)?
I personally hold Davros responsible for making Ten do what he does at the end of the episode; without all the vindication of his (self-loathing) thoughts that Davros gave him, I doubt he could have left her.
Can you tell I've thought way too much about this?
Thinking is good :)