When they left and came back, they were always free, for Arthur, for going home, for the truest hope in their hearts---freedom. Maybe they will never return to their hometown, but, as Guinevere said, the hometown in the knight's heart is actually freedom, from beginning to end.
In fact, for Arthur, his hope is not to return to Rome, but to gain freedom, for himself, for his father, and for the brothers who were born and died together since childhood. Are we too? ! Reading, working, living, and struggling all come from the realization of the dream in the heart, the desire, the pursuit, and the freedom that can be controlled by oneself!
When Arthur said helplessly to serve Rome again, he was in pain, because he knew that he had once again deprived his brothers of the right to pursue freedom, and even their lives.
When Arthur knew that his most trusted elder had been put to death by the Holy See he believed at any cost, he was the most desperate, end of the hope. Only then did he understand how illusory and unreal he believed in Rome. reality. Maybe Arthur's father realized all of this, so he fell in love with the British girl deeply and desperately, and stayed in the land that didn't seem to belong to but actually existed.
When Arthur's brothers sacrificed one by one, perhaps they understood that their sacrifices were exchanged for the true freedom of all the masses under the so-called Roman rule.
Moved by these true warriors, by these people who strive for freedom, by these people of different races to realize their ideals, by these knights who find the true meaning of freedom at the last moment because of brotherhood NS.
Family, love, and friendship, every affection is so precious; brotherhood is not because of blood, but because of that sincerity, that perseverance, and that pursuit. There is a confidant in the sea, and the end of the world is close to each other; a confidant will die But no regrets, this kind of emotion, everything else is precious.
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