Why someone becomes a hero According to Campbell, each hero needs to have only four things in the story: special birth, early recognition, wonderful actions, loss of power. Hamlet is the hero who follows this basic outline. "The story of King Arthur and Roundtable Conference" is one of the most appropriate stories in this prototype. Unique birth is what every hero seems to have in common. Arthur was born as King Yusha Pendragon and Mrs. Ignena at "Arthur's Story and Roundtable Conference".
At the beginning of the school year, gold was separated from his white friend for the local apartheid law. His friend went to an all white school which is an unlimited king. On the contrary, Kim has an obligation to go to a full black school. Shortly thereafter, his friend's father forbade him from playing with the king again. This is an early ugly lesson in the practice of American racial discrimination, the experience of actually hurting the king. But he is not the only one who witnesses racial inequality. Kim often looks at his father's unfair systemic struggle. In one example, his father jumped out of the department store after being told to wait for service at the back of the building. On another occasion, when the police insulted him as a "boy", his father refused to pay the traffic ticket. His father was obviously irritated by the system, but he was obliged to process it periodically.
In addition to inducing the hostility of almost everyone other than the king, everyone was quiet for several years. When was the 1320 start to break down? Ireland's lieutenant Roger Mortimer is controversing the Despensers family of the last century. After returning to London he was afraid to discover that his enemy is a sweet kiss as he had everything he wanted. William de Braose, a banker economically and morally bankrupt, sold the Gower peninsula on the coast of southern Wales. The king's brothers already paid the first installment. Roger Mortimer also wants it. Hugh De Spencer currently owns most of the castles and mansions of South Wales and likes to add Gower to his collection. Of course, Edward never dreams of disagreement with him. De Braose eventually sold them. Edward decided that the deal is illegal because the land of the transaction needed to acquire a royal license in the UK.