From Sir Thomas Mallory & retold by one of America's great poets, Sidney Lanier
This review is from: The Boy's King Arthur (Dover Children's Classics) (Kindle Edition)
Adapted from Sir Thomas Mallory and retold by one of America's great poets, Sidney Lanier. This retelling of the King Arthur and the Knights of the Roundtable stories has been one of my favorite books since high school, when I found it in our high school library. I was not impressed with the title but looking inside, I was quickly disabused of the notion that it was a children's book and immediately wondered what kind of boy could read this. I then remembered that the America of the 18th and mid 19th centuries was a highly literate country, particularly among the middle and upper economic classes. Families were responsible for the education of their own children, usually by way of community schools and tutors. Educated children, particularly the boys, were often expected to learn Latin, sometimes Greek and to read classical literature with which most modern adults would have trouble. In short, today, this is very much a book for adults. It retains much of the archaic language of Mallory with more detail as to the activities of the knights. When I read this in high school I had to have frequent recourse to a good dictionary even though I was accustomed to reading authors such as Sir Walter Scott.