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Legends of the Middle Ages
Narrated with Special Reference to Literature and Art

Legends of the Middle Ages Narrated with Special Reference to Literature and Art

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The Project Gutenberg EBook of Legends of the Middle Ages, by H.A. Guerber

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net

Title: Legends of the Middle Ages Narrated with Special Reference to Literature and Art

Author: H.A. Guerber

Release Date: May 27, 2004 [EBook #12455]

Language: English

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEGENDS OF THE MIDDLE AGES ***

Produced by Ted Garvin, Robert Morse and PG Distributed Proofreaders

[Illustration: CORONATION OF CHARLEMAGNE.—Levy.]

LEGENDS OF THE MIDDLE AGES

NARRATED WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO LITERATURE AND ART

BY H.A. GUERBER

    "Saddle the Hippogriffs, ye Muses nine,
    And straight we'll ride to the land of old Romance"
                                                 WIELAND

1896

DEDICATED TO MY SISTER ADELE E. GUERBER

    "Men lykyn jestis for to here,
    And romans rede in diuers manere

    "Of Brute that baron bold of hond,
    The first conqueroure of Englond;
    Of kyng Artour that was so riche,
    Was non in his tyme him liche.

    "How kyng Charlis and Rowlond fawght
    With sarzyns nold they be cawght;
    Of Tristrem and of Ysoude the swete,
    How they with love first gan mete;

    "Stories of diuerce thynggis,
    Of pryncis, prelatis, and of kynggis;
    Many songgis of diuers ryme,
    As english, frensh, and latyne."
                              Curser Mundi.

PREFACE.

The object of this work is to familiarize young students with the legends which form the staple of mediaeval literature.

While they may owe more than is apparent at first sight to the classical writings of the palmy days of Greece and Rome, these legends are very characteristic of the people who told them, and they are the best exponents of the customs, manners, and beliefs of the time to which they belong. They have been repeated in poetry and prose with endless variations, and some of our greatest modern writers have deemed them worthy of a new dress, as is seen in Tennyson's "Idyls of the King," Goethe's "Reineke Fuchs," Tegnér's "Frithiof Saga," Wieland's "Oberon," Morris's "Story of Sigurd," and many shorter works by these and less noted writers.

These mediaeval legends form a sort of literary quarry, from which, consciously or unconsciously, each writer takes some stones wherewith to build his own edifice. Many allusions in the literature of our own day lose much of their force simply because these legends are not available to the general reader.

It is the aim of this volume to bring them within reach of all, and to condense them so that they may readily be understood. Of course in so limited a space only an outline of each legend can be given, with a few short quotations from ancient and modern writings to illustrate the style of the poem in which they are embodied, or to lend additional force to some point in the story.

This book is, therefore, not a manual of mediaeval literature, or a series of critical essays, but rather a synopsis of some of the epics and romances which formed the main part of the culture of those days. Very little prominence has been given to the obscure early versions, all disquisitions have been carefully avoided, and explanations have been given only where they seemed essential.

The wealth and variety of imagination displayed in these legends will, I hope, prove that the epoch to which they belong has been greatly maligned by the term "dark ages," often applied to it. Such was the favor which the legendary style of composition enjoyed with our ancestors that several of the poems analyzed in this volume were among the first books printed for general circulation in Europe.

Previous to the invention of printing, however, they were familiar to rich and poor, thanks to the scalds, bards, trouvères, troubadours, minstrels, and minnesingers, who, like the rhapsodists of Greece, spent their lives in wandering from place to place, relating or reciting these tales to all they met in castle, cottage, and inn.

A chapter on the Romance literature of the period in the different countries of Europe, and a complete index, will, it is hoped, fit this volume for handy reference in schools and libraries, where the author trusts it may soon find its own place and win a warm welcome.

CONTENTS.

I. BEOWULF

II. GUDRUN
III. REYNARD THE FOX
IV. THE NIBELUNGENLIED
V. LANGODARDIAN CYCLE OF MYTHS
VI. THE AMBLINGS
VII. DIETRICH VON BERN
VIII. CHARLEMAGNE AND HIS PALADINS
IX THE SONS OF AYMON
X. HUON OF BORDEAUX
XI. TITUREL AND THE HOLY GRAIL
XII. MERLIN
XIII. THE ROUND TABLE
XIV. TRISTAN AND ISEULT
XV. THE STORY OF FRITHIOF
XVI. RAGNAR LODBROK
XVII. THE CID
XVIII. GENERAL SURVEY OF ROMANCE LITERATURE

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

CORONATION OF CHARLEMAGNE—Lévy

FUNERAL OF A NORTHERN CHIEF—Cormon

GUDRUN AND THE SWAN—Kepler

BROWN THE BEAR CAUGHT IN THE LOG—Wagner

REYNARD PREPARING FOR BATTLE—Kaulbach

GUNTHER WINNING HIS BRIDE—Keller

SIEGFRIED'S BODY BORNE HOME BY THE HUNTSMEN—Pixis

ASPRIAN SLAYING THE LION—Keller

FALKE KILLS THE GIANT—Keller

THE VICTORIOUS HUNS—Checa

THE TOMB OF THEODORIC

THE DEATH OF ROLAND—Keller

HUON BEFORE THE POPE—Gabriel Max

HUON AND AMANDA LEAP OVERBOARD—Gabriel Max

PARZIVAL UNCOVERING THE HOLY GRAIL—Pixis

ARRIVAL OF LOHENGRIN—Pixis

THE BEGUILING OF MERLIN—Burne-Jones

SIR LANCELOT DU LAC—Sir John Gilbert

ELAINE—Rosenthal

ISEULT SIGNALS TRISTAN—Pixis

THE LOVERS AT BALDER'S SHRINE—Kepler

FRITHIOF AT THE COURT OF KING RING—Kepler

STRATEGY OF HASTINGS—Keller

THE CID'S LAST VICTORY—Rochegrosse

LEGENDS OF THE MIDDLE AGES.

CHAPTER I.

BEOWULF.

    "List! we have learnt a tale of other years,
    Of kings and warrior Danes, a wondrous tale,
    How aethelings bore

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