
Chapter One. - Sons of the King.
Chapter Two. - “Boys will be Boys.”
Chapter Three. - Fred is left behind.
Chapter Four. - A Bee in his Cell.
Chapter Five. - Beginning to be Great.
Chapter Six. - The Great White Horse.
A sun‑baked hillside in early medieval Berkshire sets the stage, where flocks of sheep graze under the watchful eyes of shepherds in simple Saxon garb. Here the king’s four fair‑haired sons roam the rolling downs, their days filled with games, lessons in swordplay, and the occasional archery practice crafted by the jarl Cerda. The landscape is tranquil, yet the distant rumour of fierce Norse raiders drifts across the sea, a reminder that peace is fragile.
Within the royal household, Queen Osburga worries that her boys devote too much time to the blade and too little to learning, while a rotund monk argues for a balance between scholarship and the necessary skill of defense. Their spirited debates reveal a kingdom caught between the desire for cultural refinement and the looming threat of invasion, setting the stage for the princes’ first real test of loyalty, courage, and the choices they must make as heirs to the throne.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (58K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-05-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1831–1909
A hugely productive Victorian storyteller, he wrote adventure tales, school stories, and historical fiction that kept generations of young readers turning pages. Before becoming a full-time author, he worked as a teacher, editor, and journalist, experiences that gave his fiction its lively, practical feel.
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