Sigh, I hate to be the Elizabethan English police here, but the correct declension is "thy companions". "Thine" is a reflexive pronoun, as in "The advantage is thine". It can also be used as the possessive as you intend it, but only before a noun that begins with a vowel, as in, "I will smite thine enemies."
Sorry, but one of my makes-me-see-red pet peeves is writers who attempt to invoke the trope of "Ye Olde English" and have no idea about how to use the grammar.
You can't just use any old "thee", "thine", etc. willy-nilly thinking that you can automatically invoke the trope. You need to understand grammar, declensions, and conjugations, and if you don't, then *please* don't make a fool of yourself by trying to use Ye Olde English.
You got lucky with your use of "thou art". The correct conjugation is in fact "I am, thou art, he/she/it is, we are, you are, they are."
"Thou must gather together thy companions....Afore thou mayest venture forth."
Comments
Several clean ones from the same artist
MORE!
http://penny-arcade.com/comic/2012/09/07
Because
http://qkme.me/3qtg57
Sorry, but one of my makes-me-see-red pet peeves is writers who attempt to invoke the trope of "Ye Olde English" and have no idea about how to use the grammar.
You can't just use any old "thee", "thine", etc. willy-nilly thinking that you can automatically invoke the trope. You need to understand grammar, declensions, and conjugations, and if you don't, then *please* don't make a fool of yourself by trying to use Ye Olde English.
You got lucky with your use of "thou art". The correct conjugation is in fact "I am, thou art, he/she/it is, we are, you are, they are."
"Thou must gather together thy companions....Afore thou mayest venture forth."