Crowley attempts to persuade Aziraphale that they should try and stop the end of the world from happening by influencing the Antichrist (named On Warlock's eleventh birthday, Aziraphale puts on a magic show at the party whilst he and Crowley wait for the appearance of the Crowley later bumps into Aziraphale standing by Noah’s ark and is slightly put off by the coming Flood, remarking it was something he thought “his side” would be doing. Crowley visits a tavern in Rome after doing some tempting where he once again runs into Aziraphale. After the angel mentions that Crowley is, deep down, a bit of a good person, Crowley responds that Aziraphale was deep down, enough of a bastard to be worth knowing. RELATED: Good Omens: D&D Alignments Of The Main Characters. Aziraphale refuses, believing Crowley wants it as a ‘suicide pill’, and storms off.
But the fandom has many questions, especially pertaining to the partnership of Aziraphale and Crowley. Like any mortal gardener, Crowley mists them with a “green plastic plant mister” once a week.
They are “the only things in the flat [he] devote [s] any personal attention to”. Gaiman adapted the 1990 comic fantasy novel into a … All original content, including the artwork, is the property of the Good Omens Lexicon and its contributors, and may not be reproduced without permission. He also uses a miracle to save Aziraphale’s prophecy books, which touched Aziraphale. Crowley, as Aziraphale, goes to the angel's bookshop to find Adam had reset reality and restored it, additionally leaving a new collection of books. Crowley states he didn’t so much as Fall as “saunter vaguely downwards” and that he didn’t mean to Fall he just “hung out with the wrong people”.
The demon steps inside the column of Hellfire meant for Aziraphale, which can't harm him because he is a demon.
Crowley restarts time to watch as Satan bursts through the Earth. He is a straight-up demon. He also spits fire, scaring Back on Earth, he freezes time to switch back appearances with Aziraphale in the park.
Crowley later changed his name from Crawley to Crowley sometime before Jesus’ death where he again bumps into Aziraphale. In 1941, Crowley rescues Aziraphale from being shot by Nazi spies, wincing painfully when he steps on the consecrated ground of the church they were in.
He just couldn’t cut it…'”. When Crowley asks what Jesus said to make everyone so mad, Aziraphale replies, "be kind to each other." Not much is known about Crowley before he Fell, though he does make a few references to his time as an angel.
At some point, Crowley met Jesus and showed him the Kingdoms of the world because, according to him, as a carpenter, Jesus didn’t have many travel prospects. He has a flair for the dramatic and can be a heavy drinker. Crowley rarely thinks things through, as many of his own plans end up backfiring on him. He is disturbed that the Flood will kill the local children, stating that "You can't kill kids". He somewhat attempts to be evil in his own way, but is actually quite morally decent in human terms. He seems to not take his job seriously and doesn't really partake in "normal demon" things. Near the end of the novel, when Hell has just finished threatening Crowley over the sound system of his DISCLAIMER: All material related to Good Omens is the property of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. He is abducted by a group of angels and taken to Heaven. In the 1960s, Crowley organizes a mission to rob a church with some criminals to get Holy Water. He is sarcastic but overall rather friendly and lovable, especially compared to other demons.
He also talks to his plants — something he heard about “in the early seventies, on Radio Four” and thought to be “an excellent idea” — although he does not so much talk to his plants as he “put[s] the fear of God into them”; or “more precisely, the fear of Crowley”.Every once in a while, Crowley picks a plant that is not growing too well and carries it around the flat to the other plants, telling them “‘Say goodbye to your friend. He's the snake that tempted Eve in the Garden of Eden, naturally.
He also has a soft spot for Aziraphale, thinking of him as his best friend and more and typically going out of his way to save or help him. He meets up with Aziraphale, as Crowley, in the park they frequent. Crowley is one of the main characters in Amazon series Good Omens. It’s also implied that he joined Lucifer’s Rebellion because he was bored or Fell because he asked too many questions about the Great Plan. During the reign of King Arthur, Crowley poses as the Black Knight to cause unrest and disturbance in the peaceful time where he is eventually confronted by Aziraphale. He has been on Earth for at least 6,000 years. As they board a bus back to London, Aziraphale shows Crowley the prophecy he had caught telling them they would face fire and need to choose faces wisely.
Because of this, his plants are “the most luxurious, verdant, and beautiful in London” (241), but “also the most terrified”.The plants are only referred to as “houseplants” (240), with the exception of one “luxuriant rubber plant” (244).Crowley’s treatment of his houseplants is fitting with his image as a ruthless demon, but may also have deeper roots (no pun intended) in Crowley’s psychological make-up. Aziraphale gives him a thermos of Holy Water so he won’t have to go through with the robbery of the church and suggests they go on a picnic or have lunch at the Ritz at some point. He meets a member of the Witchfinder Army whom he would come to use the skills of. Crowley maintains to Hell that everything is perfectly fine and he contacts the Witchfinder Army to try and find the missing Crowley tries once more to convince Aziraphale to join him but after the angel snubs him Crowley yells at him and drives home angrily. He didn't so much fall from Heaven so much as saunter vaguely downwards. The novel states that Aziraphale is "gayer than a treeful of monkeys on nitrous oxide.’ So his sexuality is acknowledged, and he and Crowley obviously have feelings for each other. Crowley’s Houseplants One of Crowley ‘s hobbies is, rather unexpectedly for a demon, gardening. He has snake eyes — and a penchant for designer sunglasses. He then takes the plant out of the flat, and brings home “a large, empty flower pot” which he “leave[s] somewhere conspicuously around the flat”. Crowley rushes to Aziraphale’s bookshop only to find it in flames with Aziraphale nowhere to be found.