A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, Part 9. by Mark Twain
As the Yankee's marriage and modern world take root, the shadow of the Interdict falls over Camelot.
The concluding movement of Twain's 1889 classic turns intimate and ominous, Hank nursing a sick child at Sandy's side even as the forces of Church and old order gather against everything he has built. Read it for the poignant, thunderous finale of literature's great time-travel satire.
- In its time
- Published in 1889, during the 1880s, lost races and dying earths.
- Reading it
- 46 min read (a novelette, room for a turn or two).
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