Take Up My Sword



"Take up our quarrel with the foe: To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high. If ye break faith with us who die ''We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders fields."

- John McCrae, "In Flanders Field"

The Hero has been progressing in his quest against the Big Bad. Then he dies. Wait! What?! That's not supposed to happen! (I guess in this story Anyone Can Die.)

Well, now what? Do we have a Downer Ending, and The Bad Guy Wins? No, no, we need a replacement Hero. Someone who will take up The Hero's sword (and other weapons) and go on to defeat the villain. This can be literal, invoking It Was a Gift, or metaphorical. When it's not only literal but the MacGuffin, see the subtrope I'm Dying, Please Take My MacGuffin.

Most often used at the beginning of a show, to explain exactly how some callow youth loser got the job of defeating the Big Bad. In this case it was a head fake that had you thinking the Obi Wan was actually The Hero. Occasionally done with the original Hero as a ghost or shade, unable to rest until someone completes his aborted quest.

When it happens later in the season (or in later seasons) it can be a real shocker. May feature in Dying to Be Replaced.

Occasionally used at the ending, to slightly sweeten the tragedy by showing that someone will continue the fight.

When it happens to superheroes or supervillains, it is often the case of Legacy Characters.

In military situations, often combines with a Field Promotion by the dying hero.

Related to Her Heart Will Go On, Determined Widow, Taking Up the Mantle and Bequeathed Power. In its darker forms, leads to Feuding Families, or may be a genesis to, or simply another stage in, the Cycle of Revenge.

If the hero remains alive but no longer is an active hero, for any reason, this is Passing the Torch. Also see Decoy Protagonist and The Chooser of the One.

When listing examples, remember that it has to be more than the literal "someone gives someone else a weapon" part to qualify.

Anime and Manga

 * Two of these in Death Note. They don't get along.
 * Simon from Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann.
 * Code Geass ends with an interesting literal and metaphorical variation:, leading to a Bittersweet Ending.
 * Mobile Suit Gundam 00 has.
 * In Shikabane Hime.
 * The Lensman anime opens with a Lensman crash landing in front of the hero, and passing his Lens along before he dies.
 * Strongly implied to be 's eventual destiny in Burst Angel, after.
 * In the fifth arc of Umineko no Naku Koro ni, As a result, Battler  An interesting example, considering that he's taking up the role of
 * In Naruto,
 * In Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's, Crow's duel disk and duel runner were originally owned by.
 * Heartcatch Precure plays this oddly - the Call to Adventure dream Tsubomi, Erika and Itsuki get implies Cure Moonlight died. Tsubomi even gets Moonlight's Kokoro Perfume. That's not the case - Moonlight is still alive, back in her civilian identity as Yuri and suffering from a very bitter Ten-Minute Retirement.
 * A non-lethal example occurs in Kirby: Right Back at Ya!, where one fight against a particularly powerful demon beast leaves Meta Knight in a coma that can only be cured if the demon dies. Naturally, Kirby grabs his sword and heads off to fight it.
 * A non-lethal example occurs in Kirby: Right Back at Ya!, where one fight against a particularly powerful demon beast leaves Meta Knight in a coma that can only be cured if the demon dies. Naturally, Kirby grabs his sword and heads off to fight it.

Comic Books

 * In Justice Society of America, the murder of Mr. America and his family inspires his old FBI partner to take on the role.
 * In V for Vendetta, when takes his place, carrying out the major plan he was killed to prevent and then continuing the role. It's done rather terrifyingly.
 * Bucky Barnes came back from the dead only to see his former hero Steve Rogers get assassinated, in time to pick up his Mighty Shield.
 * Wally West takes up the mantle of The Flash to continue the legacy his uncle, Barry Allen, who is killed at the end of Crisis on Infinite Earths.
 * This is a mechanism built-in to the Green Lantern rings and it seems most Lanterns gain their ring immediately in the wake of their predecessor's death (Genre Savvy villains, e.g. in Justice, abused this rule by incapacitating the current GL without killing him, so that his successor isn't "activated"). Sometimes the Lanterns recruit and sometimes a dying Lantern gets to play the Take Up My Sword trope straight as Abin Sur did with Hal Jordan.
 * The Blue Beetle. Several times.
 * Batman does this twice. The first time, Bruce Wayne gives the Mantle of the Bat to Jean-Paul Valley, only to take it away after he goes nuts, and temporarily gives it to Dick Grayson. When Bruce was declared dead at the end of Final Crisis, Tim Drake and Jason Todd become Batman before Dick takes up the position (and keeps it long after Wayne returns) as Batman.
 * Interestingly, Dick has stayed as Batman even after Bruce's return to the costume. Bruce is out and about taking his operation global with Batman Incorporated while Dick is the Batman of Gotham.
 * The Death of Superman led to no less than four Supermen standing up to replace or impersonate him. Three were Anti Hero Substitutes; the fourth was as much of a Cape as the original (if not more so), and was regarded as a legitimate successor to Superman even after the original returned.
 * The Death of Spider-Man, Ultimate Spider-Man to be specific, led to new character Miles Morales to take up the mantle. The first arc of the new Ultimate Spider-Man series gave a Perspective Flip in which it's revealed that Miles had his power long before Peter ever died. He was adamant not to become a Super hero, however. After learning of Peter's death however, Miles was overcome with guilt due to his own inaction, and decided to carrying on his legacy.

Film
"Captain Murray: "I want you to have my sword. Maybe if the men see you carry it--" Sharpe: "They'll think I'm a proper officer." Captain Murray: "No, they'll think I liked you.""
 * The Princess Bride. After Domingo Montoya's death his son takes up the masterpiece of a sword that his father made for the Six-Fingered Man. The son later spent the rest of his life training to avenge his father's death. The rest, as they say, is Florinese history...
 * The Mask of Zorro: It isn't clear if the sword the new Zorro uses is in fact the same one as the one used by the original, but he received the mantle of Zorro all along.
 * In the Star Trek reboot, Spock (and later Kirk) take over from Pike.
 * 300:.
 * In Highlander, Ramirez finds and trains Connor MacLeod so that somebody would have a chance of defeating the Kurgan. When the Kurgan takes the aged immortal's head, Connor takes Ramirez's sword and uses it as his own from that point on, later using it to behead the Kurgan and fulfil his mentor's wish.
 * From "Sharpe's Rifles":


 * In Braveheart, the honor of course goes to Robert the Bruce, but Wallace's best friend gets the literal sword, and throws it, in an act of defiant symbolism, to what can be considered the climax of the entire musical store.

Literature

 * A Song of Ice and Fire apart from several literal heirloom swords, has various examples of quests being passed on.
 * After Viserys, Daenerys takes up the quest to lead the khalasar on a war of conquest and eventually regain the Iron Throne.
 * The Lord Commander of the Night's Watch grooms Jon Snow for leadership, and gives him a Valyrian steel bastard sword as a token of his esteem.
 * was released for a secret exchange of captives, only to find that the captives that would have been traded for him had already escaped on their own and vanished. He was unable to hunt for them himself due to and passed the quest on to Brienne of Tarth, along with a sword which had been
 * As mentioned in the Film section, Sharpe receives his dying captains old cavalry troopers sword (bear in mind both are infantrymen and it is 35 inches long) in Sharpe's Rifles.
 * Sam in The Lord of the Rings becomes the Ringbearer after Frodo seemingly dies. However, they later meet again, and Sam, so to say, "gives the sword back" to Frodo.
 * The Wheel of Time: Faile promises this to Perrin- it's a Borderlander thing.
 * Lan is an even better example of this, as he was given his fathers sword while still in the cradle!
 * What about Rand? In a really weird form of it since the person encouraging him to take up his sword is Rand's past life.
 * There's a version of it in Green Rider by Kristen Britain, where a fallen messenger gives a girl his magic brooch and Cool Horse so she can carry his message for him.
 * Not quite the same, but in The Dresden Files, Harry is given two Swords of the Cross on separate occasions to find replacements for their original wielders.
 * In Dan Abnett's Xenos, Voke, who may be dying, asks Eisenhorn to sponsor a protegee of his, if necessary. Besides providing for the future, this is also a gesture of respect, because of their conflicts earlier in the novel and Voke's then expressed opinions of Eisenhorn's methods. (Turns out not to be necessary.)
 * In Dan Abnett's Warhammer 40,000 novel Brothers of the Snake, several marines in Damocles die on different occasions. On the first, Priad is told that he must take up leadership and receives the claw which the leader of the squad always carries; on the second, the survivors seek new ones to take their place.
 * Throughout the Redwall series, various characters have gotten messages from Martin, either written down or in dreams, telling them to take up his sword and defend Redwall Abbey.
 * In Graham McNeill's Warhammer 40,000 Ultramarines short story "Chains Of Command", Captain Idaeus hands his sword to Uriel before he makes his Heroic Sacrifice to bring down a bridge.
 * At the time of this writing, amazon.com's reviews of Those Who Walk in Darkness by John Ridley are evenly balanced between 1-star and 5-star, largely because of the Villain Protagonist Bullet O'Rourke, a Noble Bigot with a Badge who unintentionally sets in motion the story's conflict. Halfway through the sequel, What Fire Cannot Burn, And no, it's not a Changing of the Guard—Bullet spends the first half of the second book as the lead.
 * Fear Street Cheerleaders by R. L. Stine does this
 * In Animorphs, an injured Elfangor gives the kids the power to morph only minutes before Visser 3 eats him. And it's made more literal since one of the kids, Tobias, is Elfangor's son, though he doesn't find that out until later. Elfangor realized it, though Tobias has his doubts.
 * In Simon Spurrier's Warhammer 40,000 Night Lords novel Lord of the Night's Backstory, the Night Haunter had named Sahaal his heir and decreed that he should receive the Corona Nox as a symbol of that. Which was why it's being lost was so important.
 * In a villainous example, this is what Tigerstar intends for Brambleclaw, Hawkfrost, Tawnypelt for a short time, Jayfeather for a short time, and Lionblaze.
 * In the beginning of Cyteen by C.J Cherryh, Ariane Emory dies. Before she died, she had been working on a project to clone herself, and the project is continued after she dies.
 * In Guardians of Ga'Hoole, Soren takes up the battle claws of Ezylryb after the old owl's death. He wears them during the final battle against Nyra's forces.

Live-Action TV
"Peter Davison: To days to come. David Tennant: All my love to long ago."
 * Leo in Power Rangers Lost Galaxy took his brother Mike's sword as he was about to fall to a pit, and became the Red Ranger. His brother had the sword for about 5 minutes, but that's besides the point...
 * Lost Galaxy actually has two more examples of this. Both the Magna Defender and Kendrix had Heroic Sacrifices, and their spirits came back to officially bestow their swords and powers on successors (Mike and Karone, respectively).
 * Robert of Huntingdon (played by Jason Connery) succeeds Michael Praed's Robin of Sherwood as 'the Hooded Man' and bearer of the magic sword Albion.
 * Xena: Warrior Princess: Gabrielle turns heroine after Xena dies.
 * She was a heroine for the whole series, even if she was a sidekick. There is a literal 'take up my chakram' scene, though.
 * Gary from Early Edition gives a little girl a Swiss Army knife with her initials, the same one Lucius Snow gave to him.
 * Not quite so dramatic, but in The Magnificent Seven, Mary Travis runs her husband's newspaper after his murder. (Not a spoiler, as he's dead before the pilot episode.) And she is very much a crusader.
 * Perhaps ER may count as well, even if it's not a superhero series: when Mark (protagonist of the first eight seasons) has his last day at the hospital, his last words before leaving are "you set the tone, Carter." After he dies, Dr. Carter "inherits" Mark's stethoscope.
 * Wild Bill Hickok from Deadwood is introduced as though he would be a major character, acting as a sort of surrogate sheriff for the town., Seth Bullock took on the role of the town's conscience,  . Similarly, after  , his widow (who had previously shown little interest in anything other than  ), rose to the occasion and fought to secure her late husband's gold claim and to try and get some kind of justice against his killers.
 * Kamen Rider Double's movie shows how Sokichi Narumi died and passed his Cool Hat on to his assistant, protagonist Shotaro.
 * Kind of given a part two in the second Double movie, where
 * Each of the final three episodes of Lost features an instance of this.  This can be assumed to be a pattern that started long before the events of the show and will continue long after the final episode.
 * Combined with Passing the Torch in Doctor Who's "Time Crash", which, despite the time differential (it aired two years after the revival premiered), can be seen as Classic Who passing the torch to New Who.


 * The Sarah Jane Adventures can also be seen as this. It is, essentially, Sarah Jane taking on the Doctor's role of defending the earth. Somewhat subverted in that the Doctor isn't actually dead. But he's not always there when the earth needs saving. And that's where Sarah Jane and her team come in.
 * In the Red Dwarf episode "Stoke Me a Clipper", Arnold Rimmer reluctantly becomes the next "Ace" when the previous one shows up.
 * Highlander episode 'Homeland'. After Duncan was cast out of his clan, it was attacked by a Viking named Kanwulf, and his father was killed. Duncan came back and took up his father's sword to go after the guy. Unfortunately, he didn't know the rules of immortality at the time, so he didn't behead Kanwulf and the guy survived. Duncan, however, became a legend. "He came back from the grave, took up his father's sword and slew the Viking." When Kanwulf returns in the present day to terrorize the village until his sacred ax is found, Duncan repeats the legend, taking his father's sword from the inn/tavern where it had hung and finally ending Kanwulf for good.

Mythology

 * Older Than Feudalism, when Elijah passed his prophetic mantle to Elisha.
 * Hercules passing on his bow and arrows (tipped in the blood of the Hydra) to Philoktetes.

Theatre

 * In Wicked, Elphaba hands the Grimmerie off to Glinda before "melting."
 * In The Ring of the Nibelung the sword Notung is first placed in a tree by Wotan for his son Siegmund to find, after it shatters in Siegmund's final fight the shards are picked up and handed over to his sister Sieglind. The shards wind up in the possession of their son Siegfried, who reforges them.

Video Games
""You are the proof that I existed.""
 * In the Final Fantasy VII prequel Crisis Core, Zack Fair puts Buster Sword into Cloud's hand and and tells him to live "for the both of us".


 * Angeal does the same thing to Zack earlier in the game. Only he made Zach be the one to kill him, first. Hello, trauma.
 * Played super-straight in Final Fantasy V, and even within the game mechanic. When  replaces   in your party following the latter's death, she gets all his old abilities and exp and suchlike.
 * Subverted in Tales of Monkey Island. At the end of chapter 4,
 * In Super Robot Wars Original Generation Gaiden its revealed that Fighter Roar tried to use a kamikaze attack on Dark Brain and is now without a body. He then merges with Kouta so that Kouta can become the new Fighter Roar with the first Roar being his Obi Wan.
 * After Galuf's Heroic Sacrifice/Crowning Moment of Awesome in Final Fantasy V, his equipment and stats pass on to his granddaughter, Krile, who takes his place in the party.
 * In Ace Attorney Investigations, Kay takes up the position of Yatagarasu from
 * Several more, Phoenix succeeds Mia who then entrusts him with the safety and happiness of her little sister and Phoenix later trains Apollo to be the kind of lawyer he was.
 * Also, Mia
 * The Crucible in Mass Effect 3 is an ancient weapon against the Reapers that was never finished before its creators where wiped out.
 * A variation of sorts occurs at the end of Legacy of Kain: Defiance.
 * Of course, we can't forget Link taking his uncle's sword in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past where he finds his uncle dying in the sewers of Hyrule Castle, is told to take his sword and save Princess Zelda.
 * Fail to acquire the Mega Buster upgrade in Mega Man X, and Zero will relinquish his own for you to use after his Heroic Sacrifice.
 * Subversion:.
 * Inversion of the above example: midway through the first Boss fight in Mega Man Zero, X, now the Obi Wan himself, literally passes Zero's sword back to him. It's a blatant Continuity Nod.
 * In Mega Man ZX, Zero and X return as equipable "biometals" that can impart their form unto a new user, who then not only takes up their sword, but also their body.
 * And waaay before that is Proto Man giving his shield to Mega Man after a Bonus Boss Battle. However, it's only temporary, of course...
 * In Mega Man Legends 2, the part needed for the blade arm weapon is called, "Zetsabre", with its description going something like, "an ancient and mysterious weapon." An alternate translation give the name as "Z-Sabre". Any guesses as to who's weapon that was?
 * In Chrono Trigger, Frog eventually takes up the legendary Masamune in memory of his brother-in-arms Cyrus, who was killed just as the sword was recovered.
 * In Jeanne D'Arc, It doesn't end well for the replacement.
 * The entire 2nd half of Fire Emblem 4
 * Cave Story:
 * The big Reveal of the heavily Mind Screwed Metal Gear Solid series turns out to be that
 * Kingdom Hearts: Birth By Sleep:
 * Strange Journey has this with Commander Gore begging you to save humanity and not give in to the angels or the demons.
 * With a generation system, Romancing SaGa 2 is considered this whenever a generation changes or when the team leader is killed, notably the first lord, Leon. He gets killed off by a bad guy during the prologue chapter, passing all his ability and skill to his wimp son Gellard, who's taking a whole new level in badass. He then off to revange his father.
 * A variation in The Last Story:.
 * In Phantasy Star IV,
 * Dragon Quest V, Pankraz's trying to find his wife, and passes on the job to his son, setting up one of the main objectives of the game.
 * In Muramasa: The Demon Blade, Kisuke received his sword style this way from Jinkuro's master, who was already dead.
 * Happens several times in the Call of Duty Modern Warfare games. In 1,, although that's a weaker example, since you were already playing as Soap, who the story shifts to, anyway. In 2,   3 is the only game in the series to (mostly) lack this trope- a few characters die while you play as them, but you only play as them for one level anyway, and nobody new replaces them.
 * A literal case occurs in Alone in the Dark 2. A captain killed by the Big Bad claimed that he would die by the captain's sword. In the final battle, you need to get the sword (Which has been stuck in the planking of the ship's quarterdeck for centuries and is still in usable condition for some reason) to win the fight.

Web Comics

 * Breakfast of the Gods: Alfie takes up the Capt'n's sword, via Seadog.
 * Tiger inherits his powers this way in Spinnerette. He was already a cop, so he didn't inherit the purpose.

Western Animation

 * In the animated Transformers movie, Optimus Prime gives the Matrix of Leadership to Ultra Magnus, though Hot Rod ends up with it by the end.
 * Magnus just couldn't deal with that now.
 * In ReBoot, Bob gives Enzo a copy of his Guardian Code and uniform just in case something happens to him during the Web invasion. Sure enough, Bob gets betrayed by Megabyte and exiled to the Web, and it's up to Enzo to take Bob's place as guardian of Mainframe. Enzo even gets to use Bob's (broken) Glitch for a while. However Give Back My Sword occurs later when Bob returns and takes Glitch back without even asking for it.
 * Mind you, Glitch was still broken at the time, and Enzo had grown up as a virus-hunting warrior without using it.
 * They tried to do this with Matrix's backup clone, little Enzo. Fortunately for everyone, Little Enzo refused.