summary of the short story The prince and the judge
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Table of Contents
Book Summary
The Prince and the Pauper tells the tale of two boys who trade clothing one afternoon and, as a result, they trade lives as well. After many adventures, matters are set right again, with one of the boys resuming his rightful, royal position and the other boy accepting a position that recognizes his innate intelligence and good heartedness.
One of these boys is the long-awaited male heir to the throne of England, Edward Tudor, son of Henry VIII. The other boy is Tom Canty, the unloved son of a beggar and thief. Coincidentally, Tom Canty and Edward Tudor were born in London on the same day.
Tom Canty's life in Offal Court, off Pudding Lane, is a hard life in one of London's poorest neighborhoods. He is forced by his father to go out begging daily, and he is beaten severely if he returns empty-handed. Father Andrew, however, provides him some respite from this life by telling him tales about the nobility, while instructing him in morality, reading, writing, and Latin. Treasuring these tales, which tell of a considerably better life, Tom Canty imaginatively relives them in his daydreams.
One day, Tom's daydreaming leads him out of the city of London, past the palaces of the rich, and finally to Westminster, where he actually sees Edward Tudor at play on the other side of a fence. Simultaneously, the prince notices Tom when he sees a soldier roughly pulling the young boy away from the fence; the prince rebukes the soldier and invites Tom into the palace. Each of the boys is fascinated by the other's life — Tom, by the luxury and the cleanliness that Edward has, and Edward, by the freedom that Tom has. To get a "feeling" of the other's life, they exchange clothing and discover that they look very much alike.
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summary type karna ma bahut time laga hai ek like too banta hai
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The singer tells the story of Azdak the city judge and many of his unusual rulings. When a local policeman, Shauwa, comes to look for the Prince's rabbit, Azdak tells him to arrest him for catching a man. ... He, however, does not expose the fugitive at this point.
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