The Works of Walter Scott, Esq: Sir TristramLongman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, William Miller and John Murray, London; and for A. Constable and Company and John Ballantyne and Company Edinburgh, 1813 - Ballads, Scots |
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Page iv
... tion with the Tweed . It appears that this small village was once a place of some importance , and , at least occasionally , honoured with the royal resi- dence . The foundation charter of Melrose Abbey , granted by King David I ...
... tion with the Tweed . It appears that this small village was once a place of some importance , and , at least occasionally , honoured with the royal resi- dence . The foundation charter of Melrose Abbey , granted by King David I ...
Page xi
... tion , the Rhymer must have been born about the end of the twelfth century ; and , as he certainly survived 1286 , his life must have been extended to ninety years and upwards . The anecdotes which have been transmitted to our time ...
... tion , the Rhymer must have been born about the end of the twelfth century ; and , as he certainly survived 1286 , his life must have been extended to ninety years and upwards . The anecdotes which have been transmitted to our time ...
Page xviii
... tion of Scotland . The poem is printed at length in Pinkerton's Poems , from the Maitland MS . vol . I. , and in the Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border , vol . II . p . 282. A later bard has composed a string of prophecies , not uttered ...
... tion of Scotland . The poem is printed at length in Pinkerton's Poems , from the Maitland MS . vol . I. , and in the Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border , vol . II . p . 282. A later bard has composed a string of prophecies , not uttered ...
Page xxii
... tion with moderate attention , they must have seen , that the author does not assert that they were com- posed by Thomas the Rhymer . He only says , that , walking " upon a land beside a ley , " he saw certain emblematical visions ...
... tion with moderate attention , they must have seen , that the author does not assert that they were com- posed by Thomas the Rhymer . He only says , that , walking " upon a land beside a ley , " he saw certain emblematical visions ...
Page xxxvii
... tion of the Gala and the Tweed , and running thence south- westward through the upper part of Roxburghshire , and into Liddesdale . It is called the Cat - Rael , or Cat - rail , and has certainly been a land - mark betwixt the Gothic ...
... tion of the Gala and the Tweed , and running thence south- westward through the upper part of Roxburghshire , and into Liddesdale . It is called the Cat - Rael , or Cat - rail , and has certainly been a land - mark betwixt the Gothic ...
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Common terms and phrases
adventure ancient Anglo-Norman Arthur bard bede Beliagog betwixt bidene bigan bitvene blithe brast Brengwain Canados castle chevrefoil chivalry Cornwall court dede dere Douk doun dragon fair forest fragments French Ganhardin geaunt gode gret Guenever Gwalzmai harp hath heighe hert hight Hodain Inglond Kaherdin King Arthur King Mark knight Lancelot Lancelot du Lac land lede lete leuedi lithe lond lord lover Meriadok minstrels Moraunt Morgan never nought oway oyain poem prose folio Quath queen quen rede Rhymer Rohant romance of Sir Rouland sayd schal sche schip schuld Scotland Scottish seems seighe seyd Sir Tristrem slain sone sorwe stanza swete Swiche swithe sword tale teld thai thare ther Thomas of Erceldoune Thomas the Rhymer thou thurch tion Tramtris trem trewe Trystan Urgan wald wele wene wife withouten wold wounded yede Ysolt Ysonde
Popular passages
Page 373 - ... with sword. And thou wert the goodliest person that ever came among press of knights. And thou wert the meekest man, and the gentlest, that ever ate in hall among ladies. And thou wert the sternest knight to thy mortal foe that ever put spear in the rest.
Page lxiii - I made noght for no disours, Ne for no seggours, no harpours, Bot for the luf of symple men, That strange Inglis cannot ken ; For many it ere that strange Inglis, In ryme wate never what it is ; And hot thai wist what it mente, Ellis methought it were all schente.
Page 301 - I saw his sieves purfiled at the bond With gris, and that the finest of the lond. And for to fasten his hood under his chinne, He hadde of gold ywrought a curious pinne : A love-knotte in the greter end ther was. His bed was balled, and shone as any glas, And eke his face, as it hadde been anoint.
Page 82 - X. An heye man he was like, Thei he wer wounded sare ; His gles weren so sellike, That wonder thought hem thare. His harp, his croude was rike ; His tables, his ches he bare; Thai swore, bi Seyn Patrike, Swiche seighe thai neuer are, Er than : — " Yif he in hele ware, He were a miri man.
Page xlix - Saxon language was abandoned to the lowest of the people, and while the conquerors only deigned to employ their native French, the mixed language, now called English, only existed as a kind of lingua franca, to conduct the necessary intercourse between the victors and the vanquished. It was not till the reign of Henry III., that this dialect had assumed a shape fit for the purposes of the poet ;* and even then, it is most probable that English poetry, if any such existed, was abandoned to the peasants...
Page xlvii - Tristrem were first sung. But it is plain, that, had Thomas translated from the French, the Anglo-Norman minstrel would have had no occasion to refer to a translator, when the original was in his own language, and within his immediate reach. What attached authenticity to Thomas's work seems, therefore, to have been the purity of his British materials, by which he brought back to its original simplicity, a story, -which had been altered and perverted into a thousand forms, by the diseurs of Normandy....
Page 48 - His sones knightes he made. LXXIV. His frendes glad were thai, No blame hem no man for thi, Of his coming to say, Al in to Ermonie : Till it was on a day, Morgan was fast by, Tristrem bi gan to say, — " With Morgan speke wil Y, And spede ; So long idel we ly Miself mai do mi nede.
Page 276 - Cast on the wildest of the Cyclad Isles, Where never human foot had mark'd the shore, These ruffians left me — Yet believe me, Areas, Such is the rooted love we bear mankind, All ruffians as they were, I never heard A sound so dismal as their parting oars.
Page 341 - In our forefathers tyme, whan Papistrie, as a standyng poole, couered and ouerflowed all England, fewe bookes were read in our long, sauyng certaine bookes of Cheualrie, as they sayd, for pastime and pleasure, which, as some say, were made in Monasteries, by idle Monkes or wanton Chanons: as 'one for example, Morte Arthure...
Page lxxx - The History of Tristrem was not, so far as I know, translated into English as a separate work ; but his adventures make a part of the collection, called the Morte Arthur, containing great part of the history of the Round Table, extracted at hazard, and without much art or combination, from the various French prose folios on that favourite topic.