Ebook {Epub PDF} The Ill-Made Knight by T.H. White
T. H. White. The Ill-Made Knight. With decorations by the author. London: Collins, Hardback, Good, no DJ. Red boards a little marked and sunned at the spine; some fading to the title on the spine. Binding strong but slightly out of square. Small ownership signature . · ― T.H. White, The Ill-Made Knight You might think a novel that basically focuses on a love-triangle (a quadrilateral if you include God), several affairs, a man's struggle between his love for a woman, love for God, love for his best friend, would not hold the interest of a 13 and an year old for long, but this is T.H. White/5. ― T.H. White, quote from The Ill-Made Knight “The author says people are guilty of "wrecking the present because the future was bound to be a wreck.” ― T.H. White, quote from The Ill-Made Knight “The increasingly cynical court thought Arthur, "hypocritical, as all decent men must be if you assume decency cannot exist.”.
The Ill-Made Knight 3 T.H. White Arthur and the well, and the dumb-bells which were to make him worthy of Arthur, and the ache in his tired arms from swinging them--all these were at the back of the boy's mind as he tilted the tin hat backward and forward between his fingers, but there was a more insistent thought in his head also. "The Ill-Made Knight" is the third book in the epic novel The Once and Future King, by T. H. White. It was first published in , but is usually found today only in collected editions of all four books of the novel. Much of The Ill-Made Knight takes place in the fabled Camelot, full of blue castle tops, red banners and white castle bricks. These two stories are the second and third parts of T. H. White's classic and individual fantasy novel of the Arthurian legend. Arthur has become king, Guinevere and Launcelot (The Ill-Made Knight) fall in love, and the kingdom is threatened from the north. Neville Jason reads with measured authority.
― T.H. White, quote from The Ill-Made Knight “The increasingly cynical court thought Arthur, "hypocritical, as all decent men must be if you assume decency cannot exist.” “We have invented a moral sense which is rotting now that we can't give it employment, and when a moral sense begins to rot, it is worse than when you had none. Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. T. H. White. The Ill-Made Knight. With decorations by the author. London: Collins, Hardback, Good, no DJ. Red boards a little marked and sunned at the spine; some fading to the title on the spine. Binding strong but slightly out of square. The Ill-Made Knight 4 T.H. White stables were built. The Armoury was one of these rooms. It stood between the stables, for fifty horses, and the cowsheds. The best family armour--the bits which were actually in use-- was kept in a little room in the castle itself, and it was only the arms of the troops, and.
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