sir kay
He is described as a young knight who is quite selfish putting the sword under his pretense for he did not actually take out the sword - Squire Arthur did
Merlin arranged for the King of England, after Uther's death, to be decided by a test. In a church graveyard was a stone, and in it a sword with the words on either side "Take me up" and "Cast me away". All knights tried to draw the sword from the stone but couldn't. Arthur wasn't allowed to try as he was only a squire. At the tournament, Kay is missing his sword as Arthur, as Kay's squire, has forgotten it. He runs back to the inn but it's closed, so he spots the sword in the church graveyard and draws it, promising to return it. He takes it to Kay, who recognises it. After, Kay is asked by his father, Sir Ector, if he drew it and he says he did. They return to the graveyard and the sword is placed back in the stone and Kay is instructed to draw it again. Naturally, he can't. Arthur is then told to try and he draws the sword easily.
He was a prince, the King's son. He pulled the sword from the stone, which recognized him as King.
If you mean boy by King Arthur, his nickname was squire, for being under Sir Kay until retrieving the sword.
Princess
princess is for max health and armor baddoggie is to get rid some of the wolves stimulations is to make the grapple animations longer fishsticks is to start at zora's hideout
Wart was unable to bring back Sir Kay's sword because the Inn was locked where Sir Kay had left it.
Sir Kay claimed he pulled the sword out of the stone, but it was actually King Arthur who was able to successfully pull the sword from the stone.
Arthur's brother in "The Sword in the Stone" is Kay. He is also known as Sir Kay, a knight in King Arthur's court.
Arthur pulled the sword in the stone for Sir Kay because Arthur could not retrieve Kay's sword that he had forgotten in the haste of the tournement. Arthur did not want to come back empty handed so he searched for a sword that his brother could use until he came to the on in the anvil.
Sir Kay?
sir kay
He is described as a young knight who is quite selfish putting the sword under his pretense for he did not actually take out the sword - Squire Arthur did
He shoved it in his azz.
Aloha: 'alopeke [alo-pay-kay]
Merlin arranged for the King of England, after Uther's death, to be decided by a test. In a church graveyard was a stone, and in it a sword with the words on either side "Take me up" and "Cast me away". All knights tried to draw the sword from the stone but couldn't. Arthur wasn't allowed to try as he was only a squire. At the tournament, Kay is missing his sword as Arthur, as Kay's squire, has forgotten it. He runs back to the inn but it's closed, so he spots the sword in the church graveyard and draws it, promising to return it. He takes it to Kay, who recognises it. After, Kay is asked by his father, Sir Ector, if he drew it and he says he did. They return to the graveyard and the sword is placed back in the stone and Kay is instructed to draw it again. Naturally, he can't. Arthur is then told to try and he draws the sword easily.