Du er ikke logget ind
Beskrivelse
Brave chivalrous loyally faithful to his plighted word scrupulously heedful of his own and others' honour Gawain stands before us in this poem. We take up Malory or Tennyson and in spite of their charm of style in spite of the halo of religious mysticism in which they have striven to enwrap their characters we lay them down with a feeling of dissatisfaction. How did the Gawain of their imagination this empty-headed empty-hearted worldling cruel murderer and treacherous friend ever come to be the typical English hero? For such Gawain certainly was even more than Arthur himself. Then we turn back to these faded pages and read the quaintly earnest words in which the old writer reveals the hidden meaning of that mystic symbol the pentangle and vindicates Gawain's title to claim it as his badge-and we smile perhaps; but we cease to wonder at the widespread popularity of King Arthur's famous nephew or at the immense body of romance that claims him as its hero.