The Poetical Works of Sir Walter Scott, Bart. ..., Volume 5A. and C. Black, 1880 - Ballads, Scots |
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Page v
... Sir Tristrem " edited by Sir Walter Scott do not correspond with De Brunne's description of the romance that " over gestes had the steem . " Its English is not more quaint than that of De Brunne himself ; it contains no names more ...
... Sir Tristrem " edited by Sir Walter Scott do not correspond with De Brunne's description of the romance that " over gestes had the steem . " Its English is not more quaint than that of De Brunne himself ; it contains no names more ...
Page vii
... Sir Tristrem . ” But even were it true that Sir Tristrem's quaint Inglis bears no traces of a northern dialect , in what way could this touch the question at issue ? The poem is admitted to have passed from reciter to reciter before it ...
... Sir Tristrem . ” But even were it true that Sir Tristrem's quaint Inglis bears no traces of a northern dialect , in what way could this touch the question at issue ? The poem is admitted to have passed from reciter to reciter before it ...
Page 8
... Tristrem about the age of thirty , the date of the composition will be about 1250 . Such was the reasoning which the Editor had founded upon the few facts which history and ancient records afford concerning the Rhymer ... SIR TRISTREM .
... Tristrem about the age of thirty , the date of the composition will be about 1250 . Such was the reasoning which the Editor had founded upon the few facts which history and ancient records afford concerning the Rhymer ... SIR TRISTREM .
Page 40
... while both differ essentially from the French prose romance , after- wards published . There seems room to believe that these fragments were part of a poem , com- posed ( as is believed ) by Raoul de Beauvais 40 SIR TRISTREM .
... while both differ essentially from the French prose romance , after- wards published . There seems room to believe that these fragments were part of a poem , com- posed ( as is believed ) by Raoul de Beauvais 40 SIR TRISTREM .
Page 46
... Tristrem , with which the Anglo - Nor- man romancers were unacquainted . The author of the Fragments quotes the authority of Breri , apparently an Armorican , to whom were known . all the tales of the Kings and Earls of ... SIR TRISTREM .
... Tristrem , with which the Anglo - Nor- man romancers were unacquainted . The author of the Fragments quotes the authority of Breri , apparently an Armorican , to whom were known . all the tales of the Kings and Earls of ... SIR TRISTREM .
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Common terms and phrases
adventure ancient Anglo-Norman Arthur bard bede Beliagog betwixt bidene bigan bitvene Brengwain Brittany Canados castle Chevrefoil chivalry Cornwall court dede dere Douke dragon fair folio forest Fragments French Ganhardin gode gret Guenever Gwalzmai harp hath haue heighe hert hight Hodain Kaherdin King Arthur King Mark knight Lancelot du Lac lede lete leuedi lithe lond lord loue lover Meriadok metrical minstrels Moraunt Morgan neuer nought oghain outen oway poem prose Quath Queen Quen rede Rhymer Rohand romance of Sir Rouland schal sche schip schuld Scotland Scottish seems seighe seyd Sir Tristrem Sir Walter Scott slain sone sorwe sothe to say stanza swete Swiche swithe tale thai thare ther Thomas of Erceldoune Thomas the Rhymer thou thurch Tramtris trem trewe Trystan Vrgan wald wele wene wold wounded yede Ysolt Ysonde
Popular passages
Page 461 - And thou were the truest friend to thy lover that ever bestrad horse. And thou were the truest lover of a sinful man that ever loved woman. And thou were the kindest man that ever struck with sword.
Page 436 - This is good stuff for wise men to laugh at, or honest men to take pleasure at: yet I know, when God's Bible was banished the court, and Morte Arthur received into the prince's chamber.
Page 436 - 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 85 - ... later age, but more especially in the popular romances, a tedious circumlocutory style is perhaps the most general feature. Circumstantial to a degree of extreme minuteness, and diffuse beyond the limits of patience, the minstrels never touch upon an incident without introducing a prolix description.* This was a natural consequence of the multiplication of romantic fictions. It was impossible for the imagination of the minstrels to introduce the variety demanded by their audience, by the invention...
Page 202 - VII. In his schip was that day, Al maner of gle ; And al maner of lay, In lond that might be : To the Quen tho, seyd thay, Morauntes soster the fre, Y wounded swiche a man lay, That sorwe it was to se, And care ; — " A miri man were he, Gif he olive were.
Page 107 - ... century. The pages are divided into two columns, unless where the verses, being Alexandrine, occupy the whole breadth of the quarto. In two or three instances there occurs a variation of the hand-writing ; but as the poems regularly follow each other, there is no reason to believe that such alterations indicate an earlier or later date than may be reasonably ascribed to the rest of the work ; although the Satire against Simonie, No.
Page 81 - 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.
Page 64 - I made it not for to be praysed, Bot at the lewed men were aysed. If it were made in ryme couwee, Or in strangere, or enterlace, That rede Inglis it ere inowe That couthe not have coppled a kowc.
Page 461 - ... 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 457 - Then anon they heard cracking and crying of thunder, that them thought the place should all to-drive. In the midst of this blast entered a sunbeam more clearer by seven times than ever they saw day, and all they were alighted of the grace of the Holy Ghost. Then began every knight to behold other, and either saw other, by their seeming, fairer than ever they saw afore.