More William by Richmal Crompton
page 57 of 234 (24%)
page 57 of 234 (24%)
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THE KNIGHT AT ARMS
"A knight," said Miss Drew, who was struggling to inspire her class with enthusiasm for Tennyson's "Idylls of the King," "a knight was a person who spent his time going round succouring the oppressed." "Suckin' wot?" said William, bewildered. "Succour means to help. He spent his time helping anyone who was in trouble." "How much did he get for it?" asked William. "Nothing, of course," said Miss Drew, appalled by the base commercialism of the twentieth century. "He helped the poor because he _loved_ them, William. He had a lot of adventures and fighting and he helped beautiful, persecuted damsels." William's respect for the knight rose. "Of course," said Miss Drew hastily, "they needn't necessarily be beautiful, but, in most of the stories we have, they were beautiful." Followed some stories of fighting and adventure and the rescuing of beautiful damsels. The idea of the thing began to take hold of William's imagination. "I say," he said to his chum Ginger after school, "that knight thing sounds all right. Suckin'--I mean helpin' people an' fightin' an' all |
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