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Now We Are Six/The Knight Whose Armour Didn’t Squeak

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Now We Are Six
by Alan Alexander Milne
The Knight Whose Armour Didn’t Squeak
4130464Now We Are Six — The Knight Whose Armour Didn’t SqueakAlan Alexander Milne


Of all the Knights in AppledoreThe wisest was Sir Thomas Tom.He multiplied as far as four,And knew what nine was taken fromTo make eleven. He could writeA letter to another Knight.

No other Knight in all the landCould do the things which he could do.Not only did he understandThe way to polish swords, but knewWhat remedy a Knight should seekWhose armour had begun to squeak.
And, if he didn’t fight too much,It wasn’t that he did not careFor blips and buffetings and such,But felt that it was hardly fairTo risk, by frequent injuries,A brain as delicate as his.

His castle (Castle Tom) was setConveniently on a hill;And daily, when it wasn’t wet,He paced the battlements untilSome smaller Knight who couldn’t swimShould reach the moat and challenge him.


Or sometimes, feeling full of fight,He hurried out to scour the plain;And, seeing some approaching Knight,He either hurried home again,Or hid; and, when the foe was past,Blew a triumphant trumpet-blast.


One day when good Sir Thomas TomWas resting in a handy ditch,The noises he was hiding from,Though very much the noises whichHe’d always hidden from before,Seemed somehow less. . . . Or was it more?
The trotting horse, the trumpet’s blast,The whistling sword, the armour’s squeak,These, and especially the last,Had clattered by him all the week.Was this the same, or was it not?Something was different. But what?
Sir Thomas raised a cautious earAnd listened as Sir Hugh went by,And suddenly he seemed to hear(Or not to hear) the reason whyThis stranger made a nicer soundThan other Knights who lived around.
Sir Thomas watched the way he went—His rage was such he couldn’t speak,For years they’d called him down in KentThe Knight Whose Armour Didn’t Squeak! Yet here and now he looked uponAnother Knight whose squeak had gone.

He rushed to where his horse was tied;He spurred it to a rapid trot.The only fear he felt insideAbout his enemy was not“How sharp his sword?” “How stout his heart?”But “Has he got too long a start?”
Sir Hugh was singing, hand on hip,When something sudden came along,And caught him a terrific blipRight in the middle of his song.“A thunderstorm!” he thought. “Of course!”And toppled gently off his horse.

Then said the good Sir Thomas Tom,Dismounting with a friendly air,“Allow me to extract you fromThe heavy armour that you wear.At times like these the bravest KnightMay find his armour much too tight.”

A hundred yards or so beyondThe scene of brave Sir Hugh’s defeatSir Thomas found a useful pond,And, careful not to wet his feet,He brought the armour to the brink,And flung it in . . . and watched it sink.
So ever after, more and more,The men of Kent would proudly speakOf Thomas Tom of Appledore,“The Knight Whose Armour Didn’t Squeak”Whilst Hugh, the Knight who gave him best,Squeaks just as badly as the rest.