[The Prince and The Pauper by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link book
The Prince and The Pauper

CHAPTER VII
8/9

Hanging upon hooks in the oaken wainscoting were the several pieces of a suit of shining steel armour, covered all over with beautiful designs exquisitely inlaid in gold.

This martial panoply belonged to the true prince--a recent present from Madam Parr the Queen.

Tom put on the greaves, the gauntlets, the plumed helmet, and such other pieces as he could don without assistance, and for a while was minded to call for help and complete the matter, but bethought him of the nuts he had brought away from dinner, and the joy it would be to eat them with no crowd to eye him, and no Grand Hereditaries to pester him with undesired services; so he restored the pretty things to their several places, and soon was cracking nuts, and feeling almost naturally happy for the first time since God for his sins had made him a prince.

When the nuts were all gone, he stumbled upon some inviting books in a closet, among them one about the etiquette of the English court.

This was a prize.


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