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Nathan Matlack
7 October 2003
Lonely Pride: an analysis of Kay
The character of Kay in T. ... White’s “The Sword in the Stone” is simple minded, full of pride, and combative. ... Kay , lacking the knowledge of any other method, vents his anger by bullying the Wart. ...
Kay is a dim character and his blunt remarks actually act as comic relief throughout the novel. “I thought all Robin Woods men wore hose and jerkins of Lincoln green,” said Kay in one of his more humorous statements (White, 97). ... Kay notices how much time Merlyn spends teaching the Wart but he has too much pride to admit that he feels left out. ... A prime example of this is when Kay is asking the Wart about where he had been the night that Arthur was turned into a falcon. ...
“Beast,” said Kay. ... (White, 87)
This section goes on to show Kay complain to Wart that Merlyn does everything for him and not Kay.
Approximate Word count = 764 Approximate Pages = 3.1 (250 words per page double spaced)
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