قراءة كتاب Epic and Romance: Essays on Medieval Literature

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Epic and Romance: Essays on Medieval Literature

Epic and Romance: Essays on Medieval Literature

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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149 The incidents of the death of Hogni clear in Atlakviða, apparently confused and ill recollected in the other two poems 150 But it turns out that these two poems had each a view of its own which made it impossible to use the original story 152 Atlamál, the work of a critical author, making his selection of incidents from heroic tradition
the largest epic work in Northern poetry, and the last of its school 153
155 The "Poetic Edda," a collection of deliberate experiments in poetry and not of casual popular variants 156

VI

Beowulf

Beowulf claims to be a single complete work 158
Want of unity: a story and a sequel 159
More unity in Beowulf than in some Greek epics. The first 2200 lines form a complete story, not ill composed 160
Homeric method of episodes and allusions in Beowulf
and Waldere
162
163
Triviality of the main plot in both parts of Beowulf—tragic significance in some of the allusions 165
The characters in Beowulf abstract types 165
The adventures and sentiments commonplace, especially in the fight with the dragon 168
Adventure of Grendel not pure fantasy 169
Grendel's mother more romantic 172
Beowulf is able to give epic dignity to a commonplace set of romantic adventures 173

 

CHAPTER III

THE ICELANDIC SAGAS

I

Iceland and the Heroic Age

The close of Teutonic Epic—in Germany the old forms were lost, but not the old stories, in the later Middle Ages 179
England kept the alliterative verse through the Middle Ages 180
Heroic themes in Danish ballads, and elsewhere 181
Place of Iceland in the heroic tradition—a new heroic literature in prose 182

II

Matter and Form

The Sagas are not pure fiction 184
Difficulty of giving form to genealogical details 185
Miscellaneous incidents 186
Literary value of the historical basis—the characters well known and recognisable 187
The coherent Sagas—the tragic motive 189

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