In bones who is gormogons apprentice




















He decides that the time has finally come for him to re-enter society. Brennan agreed to re-examine the evidence on Ray Porter's remains to find the real killer and Booth agreed to help release Zack believing that he has served his time.

Trying to exonerate Zack, Hodgins finds microbial evidence that Brennan missed pointing towards the true killer of Ray Porter. However, Cam refuses to accept it and accuses Hodgins of tampering with evidence to get Zack freed. Despite telling Hodgins she won't accept the evidence, Cam goes over it after he furiously leaves.

In an attempt to overturn Zack's sentence, Booth summons Dr. Gordon Wyatt to observe Sweets's notes on his meetings with Zack when the Gormogon case hits a dead end. While Wyatt can't find anything, he instead suggested to Hodgins that they locate the body of the Apprentice instead and search it for evidence in Ray Porter 's murder.

Wyatt deduced that in the eyes of Gormogon, The Apprentice failed him as he wasn't as good as Zack, so he wouldn't treat the body with reverence. Gormogon wouldn't have cannibalized on his remains because they were probably poisonous to him, symbolically.

He also wouldn't be deposited into some shallow grave since Gormogon was a slave to carrying out ritualistic rites during his crime spree like the Freemasons. The bones wouldn't have been added to the Silver Skeleton of the Widow's Son because he was a traitor. Hodgins also stated that the remains of the Apprentice had to be somewhere in the D.

Hodgins and Wyatt searched through the historical information in the Gormogon Vault for clues with no luck at first. However, only the name has any relevance on the show, as Hodgins borrows it to refer to the killer for his dual reverence for and apparent dislike of secret societies and fraternal orders, including the Knights of Columbus.

Hodgins and Sweets understanding of typical practices among orders, such as the master-apprentice relationship, ritualistic meals, and sacred geometry inform the ongoing investigation of the murders.

Two skeleton sculptures have been found, one of which was constructed by Arthur Graves and the current Gormogon, the other by Jason Harkness and the current Gormogon. The former was completely made of bone, while the latter was still mostly silver. Not all the victims have yet been identified, but at least bone in each sculpture was added for its significance to its owner.

The three victims named below all lost their fathers at young ages, making them "widows sons" and thus doubly symbolic as a sacrifice to the Gormogon. They were all involved with a trip to the Anatolian region of Turkey, and associated with the Knights of Columbus.

I don't think having the audience metaphorically puke is what they had in mind. I haven't looked at ratings for Bones this season but from reading various forums, I was far from alone in my dislike for this arc.

Basically it was nonsensical. I'm not sure they can dig themselves deeper. I mean this was so bad it was one of those shows where you actively wish they had trotted out the cliched "It was only a dream". Of course, as it turned out he was right and Sweets isn't a bad guy. In the latest season, he's been played very well as comic relief. I don't know what they did or didn't plan to do with the storyline, but I'd like to think they realized that the actor had good chemistry with the cast and fit in better as a minor regular.

Like I said, I've seen through the first three episodes actually four, since the first is a two parter , of this season Season 4. Sweets, like there's something bad lurking out there. Who knows, maybe after seeing: I'll change my mind about Dr. Did the actor want off the show, and then decide he wanted to come back? I mean first he's there, then he goes to Iraq, then he's back, then he's gone to to the insane asylum, and is now back as what, recurring guest star consulting from the asylum??

Which is all the more reason for him to NOT be the killer. Yeah, they knew for a while that there was a mole, but it was Zack being able to save Hodgins that was supposed to be the hint that he knew too much about what was going on.

But is that from the time it was aired, or a later rerun or DVD release? They can go back and change things to match the story now, so just because someone saw something once doesn't mean it exists anymore.

Gormogon's main weapon of choice appears to be a intricately decorated dagger called a Cannelure. In reality, "Cannelure" is a term used by the French for a Fuller Dagger. After murdering The Apprentice for failing him by not being as good of an apprentice as Zack Addy , the Gormogon disposed of his remains using a Masonic ritual regarding betrayal.

The Gormogon placed the Apprentice's body into a reverse Masonic coffin and buried it under an Acacia Tree on the western part of the original boundary of Washington, DC. Though the Acacia Tree symbolized the immortality of the human soul, it was also poisonous and inedible, the perfect place to dispose of an outcast apprentice. Due to the Apprentice's failure, he would've been considered poisonousness and inedible, symbolically.

The Gormogon also could not add him to the Widow's Son skeleton as the Apprentice was effectively a traitor to the Gormogon for his failures and wouldn't be deposited into some shallow grave somewhere due to the Gormogon's obsessive need to follow rituals with his murders. The Gormogon's were an Anti-Freemasonry order of the 18th century.

They are mentioned in scattered writings of the era, and accusations of association with them may have been used as a political weapon, as the very existence of the order involved a rejection of Masonic ideas.

Hodgins' and Sweets' understanding of typical practices among orders, such as the Master-Apprentice relationship, ritualistic cannibalistic meals, and sacred geography used in the architecture of Washington D. Two skeleton sculptures have been found, one of which was constructed by Arthur Graves and the current Gormogon and was completely made out of bone implying that he had killed several people to put it together , the other by Jason Harkness and the current Gormogon.

Not all the victims have yet been identified, but at least one bone in each sculpture was added for its significance to its owner.



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