secretmessageproductions:

Is Gavin getting to Nelly’s softer side? Or is Nelly about to bite back?


This is the 15th episode of The Campaign for Camelot, an Arthurian webseries set in a modern-day suburban school board election, told through the characters’ in-universe vlogs.

Subscribe to Secret Message Productions for updates: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPfPrQWOS2E2y7qnLm0FUtA

Watch from the beginning:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcv4wYI9yUldSAleN3_XU4WPZsXtCWuzr

Ragnelle and Gawain!

selfpublishingreview:

Adding complexity to both Arthur and his knights, and doing it through
the eyes of a priestess, is a clever twist that holds the reader’s
attention from the very start. Despite the magical nature of this
fiction, Wherrett’s book seems far more real and accessible than
standard myths. By removing some of the romanticized aspects of this
subject matter, the book says something far more powerful about
leadership, personal origins, and the concept of destiny. Lady of the
Lake
is a highly original take on Arthurian legend, and this sense of
originality makes the book a compelling read from start to finish.

Review: Lady of the Lake by Jennifer Wherrett ★★★★

effulgentpoet:

there was a spot for one brief shining moment that was known as Camelot:

UTHER PENDRAGON

Uther Pendragon is a legendary king of sub-Roman Britain and the father of King Arthur. A few minor references to Uther appear in Old Welsh poems, but his biography was first written down by Geoffrey of Monmouth in his Historia Regum Britanniae, and Geoffrey’s account of the character was used in most later versions. He is a fairly ambiguous individual throughout the literature, but is described as a strong king and a defender of the people. Merlin magically disguises Uther to look like his enemy Gorlois, enabling Uther to rape Gorlois’ wife Lady Igraine. This act of conception occurs the very night that Uther’s troops dispatch Gorlois. Uther’s epithet Pendragon (composed of Welsh pen, “head, chief, top” and dragon, “dragon; warrior”) literally means “Chief-Dragon” or “Head-Dragon”, but in a figurative sense “chief of warriors”. The name was misinterpreted by Geoffrey of Monmouth in Historia Regum Britanniae to mean “dragon’s head”. According to Geoffrey and works based on his version, Uther acquired the epithet when he witnessed a portentous dragon-shaped comet, which inspired him to use dragons on his standards. 

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