In peace, may you leave this shore. In love, may you find the next. Safe passage on your travels, until our final journey to the ground. May we meet again.
1. “May we meet again.” This is the phrase used by the Sky People (those that grew up on the Ark space station) to show their respects to the dead or to say goodbye to their loved ones who have passed.
“Your fight is over” allows Grounders to pay tribute to the strength and fighting skills of their departed peers.
Clarke radios Bellamy every single day for 2,199 days, just to talk to him, and tells him that he shouldn't feel bad about leaving her behind - he "did what [he] had to do".
Octavia, Raven, Murphy, Emori, Indra, Gaia, Levitt, Jackson, Miller, Niylah, Echo, Hope, and Jordan have all chosen to live the rest of their lives with Clarke on Earth. And that's the end—a happy ending.
Lexa leads her people in a chant of "blood must have blood" in Grounder language Trigedasleng "Jus drein jus daun!" A half scared, half blood thirsty look comes over Clarke before she joins in the chant.
Among the Grounders, Clarke's reputation spread, eventually gaining her the moniker of Wanheda, the Commander of Death.
Grounders (or Outsiders, as they are known by the Mountain Men) are groups of people who were born on Earth rather than in space or in Mount Weather. The Grounders are descendants of humans who survived the nuclear apocalypse 97 years ago, due to their enhanced tolerance to nuclear radiation.
She is deserving of her title, The Commander of Death. That is who she is. Clarke's last words before Jake was floated was “I love you”, her last words before she slid the knife into Finn's chest was “I love you too”, and now her last words to Lexa is “I love you”.
JASON ROTHENBERG: We wanted the moral of the story to be, simply stated, "Until we stop fighting, we're doomed." Until we stop killing each other in the name of country or tribe or even family, we're doomed to keep repeating that cycle of violence.
AZGEDA/ICE NATION
Of all the specific Grounders clans, the Ice Nation of Azgeda is likely the most intimidating. They're a people that constantly live in harsh winters, they aren't above treachery, and they are fierce combatants.
Though the Final Conclave made Octavia the new Grounder leader, she wasn't a true commander. By Grounder tradition, that title can only go to a Nightblood. Understandably, when it seemed like Nightbloods were extinct or unwilling, they had to pick a new leader.
Anya is a supporting character in The CW post-apocalyptic sci-fi The 100. She was the leader of a tribe in Trikru, also known as Woods Clan.
Clarke (Eliza Taylor) and Lexa (Alycia Debnam-Carey) in The 100. IGN: Clarke and Lexa's kiss was obviously a very important scene for a lot of reasons.
What Clarke did at Mount Weather not only weakened Lexa's command (and made the Ice Nation emboldened to rise up for war), but it also made Clarke incredibly strong. So strong that they're calling her Wanheda, which is Trigedasleng for "Commander of Death."
Along with the rest of Clarke's friends, Octavia chooses to return to human form in order to live out life on Earth alongside her new boyfriend Levitt, so that Clarke will not be alone forever.
Trigedasleng is a constructed language (conlang) developed by David J. Peterson for use on the CW show The 100.
“I love you” is Ai hod yu in. If you wanted to say it to multiple people, replace the yu with yo.
With the plan in place, the Grounders and Sky People together begin chanting, “Jus drein jus daun!” (blood must have blood).
In "The Last War", humanity achieves transcendence with the following exceptions: Clarke Griffin is the first being to have ever committed murder in the test. Because of this, the Judge does not allow her to transcend.
Apparently, transcension is a choice. Madi chose it because she knew that Clarke wouldn't want her to live without anyone her own age, but all of Clarke's other friends—Raven, Octavia, Murphy, Emori, Jackson, Miller, Jordan, Niylah, Levitt, Indra and Gaia—chose to stay behind with her.
Asked by Collider why he was bringing the original series to an end, meanwhile, the showrunner said, "[100 episodes is] a long time to be telling the story of one group of characters. We also didn't want to overstay our welcome and be a show that was making episodes into Season 10 and 12, and beyond, just to do it."
By the end of The 100, she is either 33 or 34. Octavia's physical age by the end of the show is ultimately higher than Bellamy's or Clarke's. The decade she spent aging with Hope and Diyoza on Skyring makes her older than Bellamy who is around 29 or 30 years old in the last season of The 100.