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Everyman's Library: Ywain and Gawain - Sir Percyvell of Gales - The Anturs of Arther

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  • 210 pages
  • 8 hours of reading

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This is the first time that these Middle English romances have been made widely available in one volume. All feature the knight Gawain and deal with the theme of chivalrous conduct. Varying in length, tone and emphasis, together they provide a fascinating cross-section of the genre.Ywain and Gawain is the only Middle English romance that is certainly adapted from an original by Chrétian de Troyes. The action includes the adventure of the magic spring, the companionship of Ywain and a helpful lion, and the climactic single combat between Ywain and Gawain. Sir Percyvell of Gales is, by contrast, only intermittently close to Chrétian's romance of Perceval; with its younger, less sophisticated hero, it is often comic in tone. Much more serious is The Anturs of Arther, an alliterative poem from the North of England, that has links with Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and the Morte Arthure. It contains only two adventures but in compensation creates an unusually detailed picture of the Arthurian world.The texts are presented with marginal glosses and full explanatory notes. A selection of variants from other texts of The Anturs of Arther is also included.

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Everyman's Library: Ywain and Gawain - Sir Percyvell of Gales - The Anturs of Arther, Maldwyn Mills, Malcolm Andrew

Language
Released
1992
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(Paperback),
Book condition
Good
Price
€18.99

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Title
Everyman's Library: Ywain and Gawain - Sir Percyvell of Gales - The Anturs of Arther
Language
English
Released
1992
Format
Paperback
Pages
210
ISBN10
0460870777
ISBN13
9780460870771
Series
Description
This is the first time that these Middle English romances have been made widely available in one volume. All feature the knight Gawain and deal with the theme of chivalrous conduct. Varying in length, tone and emphasis, together they provide a fascinating cross-section of the genre.Ywain and Gawain is the only Middle English romance that is certainly adapted from an original by Chrétian de Troyes. The action includes the adventure of the magic spring, the companionship of Ywain and a helpful lion, and the climactic single combat between Ywain and Gawain. Sir Percyvell of Gales is, by contrast, only intermittently close to Chrétian's romance of Perceval; with its younger, less sophisticated hero, it is often comic in tone. Much more serious is The Anturs of Arther, an alliterative poem from the North of England, that has links with Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and the Morte Arthure. It contains only two adventures but in compensation creates an unusually detailed picture of the Arthurian world.The texts are presented with marginal glosses and full explanatory notes. A selection of variants from other texts of The Anturs of Arther is also included.