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King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
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King Arthur
and the Knights
of the Round Table
Level 2
Retold by Deborah Tempest
Series Editors: Andy Hopkins and Jocelyn Potter
Pearson Education Limited
Edinburgh Gate, Harlow,
Essex CM20 2JE,
England and Associated Companies throughout the world.
ISBN-13: 978-0-582-42118-9 ISBN-10: 0-582-42118-7
This edition first published 2000
Fifth impression 2006
Copyright © Penguin Books Ltd 2000
Illustrations by John James
Cover design by Bender Richardson White
Typeset by Pantek Arts Ltd, Maidstone, Kent
Set in 11/14pt Bembo
Printed in China
SWTC/05
Alt rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in
any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior
written permission of the Publishers.
Published by Pearson Education Limited in association with Penguin Books Ltd, both companies being subsidiaries
of Pearson Pic
For a complete list of the titles available In the Penguin Readers series, please write to your local
Pearson Education office or to: Penguin Readers Marketing Department,
Pearson Education, Edinburgh Gate. Harlow, Essex CM20 2JE.
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CONTENTS
Page
Introduction
They went back to the place outside the church, and Sir Ector put the sword in the stone
again.
‘Now pull it out,’ he said to Arthur.
Arthur pulled it out. It came out as easily as a knife out of butter. Sir Ector saw this and
took Arthur’s hand.
‘You are my king,’ he said.
Only the next king can pull the sword out of the stone. Many people try, but they cannot
move the sword. Then young Arthur tries, and it comes out easily. Now he will be king. But
will he be a good king? Will his people love him? And will his life be happy?
The story of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table is very, very old. People
know that there was a king in Britain between the years 400 and 600. He fought the
Saxons, from countries in the north of Europe, and perhaps this king was Arthur. He lived,
perhaps, in Wales or in the west of England — in Somerset or Cornwall.
People wrote stories about this king hundreds of years later, but they made the stories
more interesting and more exciting. At that time people were interested in magic, knights
and their ladies. So people fight with swords and use magic in these stories.
Who wrote these first stories? Nobody really knows, but different people in France and
Britain wrote about King Arthur and his knights. Not every book about them has the same
people and stories in it. One book (1484), by Sir Thomas Malory, is very famous. He used
French stories about King Arthur and wrote them in English.
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