The King Of Magic

Posted by TheSloneGal on December 17, 2010

A person was born in a beautiful place called The Kingston Gardens. He was the first of many settlers there. Larendeil was 4. He heard the word “Magic” and started to be interested in it. He learned after but wasn’t the greatest sorcerer at 4 of course. He learned well after and became powerful. He was known as The King of Kingston and defeating everybody in swords and magic. He was very handsome. He had sea green eyes and dark brown long hair to the neck. He discovered spiritual worlds like, Warness.

He fought there too. But that was just a first cause. He would be stalked by demons. Demons threaten him. They haunted him while he was sleeping. Seeing that he was a huge threat he wanted to hurt them.

He learned Magic about Demons. Soon he went mad. He entered the Demonic Realm. With the gift of bravery and magic he fought them and killed them. The Lord of the Demons challenged him.

“I will tear you apart” shouted Larendeil bravely!

So they fought. For hours falling off mountains and fighting in seas and traveling through forest. But Larendeil managed. Larendeil killed him with the almighty sword, Eldarin.

After that. He hid his prophesied name, Larendeil and adopted his own English name. He cast powerful wards over his house so no demon affected him. Later he dealt with Greek Mythology. Which people thought in Warness that he was a god. He disagreed but instead they named him “The King of Magic”.

Sent in by Edward Black, all rights reserved BestOfAllTopics.com


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THE STUDENT'S MYTHOLOGY:

A Compendium of Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Assyrian, Persian, Hindoo, Chinese, Thibetian, Scandinavian, Celtic, Aztec, and Peruvian Mythologies


The New National Geographic Treasury of Greek Mythology

The new National Geographic Treasury of Greek Mythology offers timeless stories of Greek myths in a beautiful new volume. Tales of gods and goddesses such as Zeus, Aphrodite, Apollo, and Athena and heroes and monsters such as Helen of Troy, Perseus, and Medusa will fascinate and engage children’s imaginations.

National Geographic completes the book with embellishments of each story: sidebars for each god, goddess, hero, and monster link the myths to constellations, geography, history, and culture to help young readers connect the stories to real life events, people, and places. A family tree and a “cast of characters” profile page help make relationships between the characters clear, and a mapping feature adds to the fun and fascination. Resource notes and ample back matter directing readers to more information round out this luminous book.

3 Responses to “The King Of Magic”

  1. The Unknown says:

    May I ask where you found this from?

  2. TheSloneGal says:

    It was summit into http://www.trueghosttales.com but we are a sister site of that site so I used this from one of our readers

  3. The Unknown says:

    Yes, I saw it before.

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