- Rowanne: I've seen you cross a brook on the run a dozen times. If you you can dance upon stones you can certainly dance upon...
- Harold: My boy, the true worth of a man is measured by the courage in his heart, not the silks on his back. This ia s subject on which I speak with authority. You see, I too am the son of a peasant.
- Harold: Someday I suspect the enemies will fall to their knees and beg for mercy just at the sight of you. Yes, my boy, you'll be among Camelot's greatest knights. No doubt about it. Just as long as you never lose faith in yourself. You can be anything you want.
- Sir Gawain: Harold, knight of legend, will you accept this challenge?
- Harold: I accept with pleasure, Sir Gawain.
- Sir Gawain: The pleasure will be mine.
- Sir Gawain: It's time, sir, that I tell you this. On occasion I have been known to boast of my valor in battle. But there is one encounter of which I have never spoken. Thirty men against thirty more at the Battle of Halidun. Throughout that battle, I fought at the shoulder of an able knight and a good friend. His name was Sir Hector of York. And he carried the golden lion upon his shield. I'll await the rest of his armor, sir. The horse, however, is yours to keep. I expect you to ride it from Camelot, and never return.