Nless_JurnE
Junior Member
no that's not why well the part about Lancelot, Guinevere, and Arthur could be right but I think that they used the Once and Future King because it symbolizes justice and chivalry in the world. In the book, Arthur uses might for right meaning that he influences the knights of his round table to use their anger, rage, and need for bloodshed for the good of the people like with Xavier and the X-men. Magneto would be the people before Arthur's reign in England like people who use their might to harm others, in this case, the humans.
this isn't really part of the X-men but to make it clear what the Once and Future King by T.H. White is about:
Part 1: The Sword in the Stone
in this section, Arthur is going through a bildungsroman. He meets Marlyn along the way and Marlyn becomes his mentor, turning him into different animals to learn what is good and what is bad such as in one time, Arthur learns that power can be corrupting and another would be that war is created by invisible boundaries. Later on, as the title suggests, he becomes the King of England by pulling out the sword in the stone. The reason why Marlyn turns him into animals is so that he learns things that will make him a good king, a just king to the people of England. Arthur does not go to some mythical or fantasy place to be reborn.(this part is titled like so because as the title suggests, he pulls out the sword in the stone which can only be pulled out by the legal and rightful heir to the throne of King of England)
Part 2: The Queen of Air and Darkness
This is when Arthur is a young king, around 17 or 18 years old. Marlyn is still with him and Marlyn teaches him how to think like looking into the deeper meaning of things to help the good of the people. This is what helped him be a good king. Because Marlyn taught him how to think, he thought of using Might for Right and by using this idea, he creates the Knights of the Round Table. Also, he ends up accidentally sleeping with his half sister because she is a cold-hearted woman who is also a witch and makes Arthur fall in love with him by using a spell. This later causes trouble in a later part. He also learns that the former king was his father(also said in part 1) and that the woman he slept with is his half-sister. (this part is called like so because the half-sister is the Queen of Air and Darkness and I won't go into detail why though)
Part 3: The Ill-made Knight
This is the part when Lancelot comes into play. Arthur promises Lancelot a position in his Round Table when Lancelot is a young boy. Lancelot is the protagonist of this part and it talks about how he strives to be the best knight in the world and the most perfect knight. However he falls in love with the queen(Guinevere) and his chastity is stolen by another woman who later gives birth to his son. Arthur's table is falling apart because England has now become a fair and just land and sends the knights off to look for the grail. During this quest, Lancelot finds out that his son is the perfect knight he has been striving for and also becomes devoted to god, forgetting he and Guinevere's love affair. Later on, he realizes he loves the queen to much and goes back to her and due to a miracle, he becomes the best knight in the world except he dreads the fact he is because of god. (This part is called the ill-made Knight which is Lancelot.)
Part 4: The Candle in the Wind
This is the part when Lancelot and Guinevere's relationship is revealed and is punished for it due to the son that was conceived with incest between Arthur and his half-sister. The son, Mordred strives for revenge against Arthur and uses Lancelot to do it. Lancelot and Arthur's friendship is broken because of his nephews and Mordred. His Round Table ends up being broken and he is but an old man imprisoned in his justice for the people. Later, Mordred finally carries out his revenge by declaring Arthur is dead when Arthur is away at war and proclaims his title as the new King of England. He proposes to Guinevere as a part of his revenge. Upon hearing this, Arthur runs back to England and Lancelot comes along to help later. Their relationship doesn't actually reform in the story though. In the last chapter, Arthur passes on his great idea of justice, chivalry, and honor and the idea of the Round Table of Knights to a young page named Tom. Tom is suppose to fight in the final battle between Arthur and Mordred but Arthur wanted someone to deliver his great idea to all the people, to remember his legacy. So he tell the page to go back home and grow up to be a man, telling everyone about Arthur's great idea. Then he remembers his lessons when he was a boy that he learned from Marlyn and knows for sure that he will come back one day with a Round Table with no boundaries and finish his great idea. Also, he knows that he cant do it know because he knows he is destined to die the next day in war. (The part is called like so because Arthur compares his idea to a candle in the wind that flickers sometimes and only he has protected it so it won't go out. He passes on the candle to a page so that the fire will grow strong.)
Title explanation
This book is called the Once and Future King because as you know, Arthur was suppose to be a great and righteous King of England. Because he was so great, but did not finish his great idea, he is thought to return to the world one day to carry out and finish his great idea.
This is just a rough outline of the book, not that great in detail and of course isn't that great of a summary but its sort of like the basic idea of it. This book is really great, I recommend it, i also heard JFK based his presidency on this book and I'm glad he did cause this book relates to reality very much and can teach you many things. (sorry for making it so long too)