A crown should not be worn upon the head. A sceptre should not be carried in Kings' hands. But a crown should be wrought into a golden chain, and a sceptre driven stake-wise into the ground so that a King may be chained to it by the ankle. Then he would know that he might not stray away into the beautiful desert and might never see the palm trees by the wells. O Thalanna, Thalanna, how I hate this city with its narrow, narrow ways, and evening after evening drunken men playing skabash in the scandalous gambling house of that old scoundrel Skarmi. O that I might marry the child of some unkingly house that generation to generation had never known a city, and that we might ride from here down the long track through the desert, always we two alone till we came to the tents of the Arabs. And the crown—some foolish, greedy man should be given it to his sorrow. And all this may not be, for a King is yet a King.
3 Books To Know Fantasy Literature
Lord Dunsany, George MacDonald, William Morris, August Nemo
bookFifty-One Tales
Lord Dunsany
bookTales of War
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Strange Journeys of Colonel Polders : A Novel
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Time and the Gods
Lord Dunsany
audiobookEssential Novelists - Lord Dunsany : the father of fantasy
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Three Infernal Jokes
Lord Dunsany
bookBig Book of Best Short Stories - Specials - Fantasy : Volume 7
Kenneth Grahame, Lord Dunsany, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Oscar Wilde, John Kendrick Bangs, August Nemo
bookThe Tents of the Arabs
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Lord Dunsany Collection
Lord Dunsany
bookTales of War
Lord Dunsany
bookFive Plays
Lord Dunsany
book