190 likes | 321 Views
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2013. Le Morte Darthur and Courtly Love. Obviously the usual other things, too, like sex, love, incest, patricide, magic, murder, rape, religion, and plain old stubbornness. What sort of world do Lancelot, Guinevere, and Arthur inhabit?. The World of Arthur
E N D
Le MorteDarthurand Courtly Love Obviously the usual other things, too, like sex, love, incest, patricide, magic, murder, rape, religion, and plain old stubbornness
What sort of world do Lancelot, Guinevere, and Arthur inhabit? • The World of Arthur • The World of Courtly Love
Where did Courtly Love arise? • In France first, particularly Provence. But there are 3 possibilities for its origin: • A. The Arabic poetry which the crusaders brought back from the Middle East. It was so beautiful and so centered on love that the French tried to model their poetry and ideas on it. • B. In a half-secular, half-religious world, Courtly Love is the secular form of Mariolatry, drawing many ideas from the worship of Mary. • C. During the Crusades, women were left in charge of the castles of Europe, and they developed these ideas when the men were off being knights in the Holy Land.
Rules of Courtly Love • The Ruler of the Court is no longer the Lord, but the Lady. The poetry is written to the Lady. • Courtly Love is ALWAYS extramarital love and it always seems to involve one level of betrayal. The Knight is loyal to his Lord. However, in courtly love, the Knight is in LOVE with the Lady (platonic, usually). Therefore, his love is a sort of betrayal. • The longing of the Knight will improve him through yearning and suffering pain. • Love is an excess – it carries you outside of yourself. • The Lady is always on a Pedestal. She may be semi-divine in the poetry, but she has no freedom. She’s an angel or saint.
Stories of King Arthur from our period • Lanval by Marie de France • Sir Gawain and Greene Knight
19th century versions • Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court (Twain) and Idylls of the King (Tennyson)
Recent versions • Once and Future King (T. H. White) which turned into Sword in the Stone and Camelot
Mists of Avalon and Crystal Cave (Zimmer Bradley & Stewart) and Hideous Strength
And movies, like Excalibur Monty Python and the Holy Grail
For men, and for Sir Thomas Malory, this is a century of war
Battle of Agincourt - 1415 • Probably 100-200 English dead. French losses are better known; the French themselves estimated these at between 8,000 and 11,000 of whom 1,200-1,800 were slaughtered prisoners. A generation of French nobles had been destroyed: there was hardly a French noble family who did not lose someone and countless family lines came to the end on the field of battle.
St. Crispin’s Day Speech • Henry V encourages the soldiers • And Crispin Crispian shall ne’er go by,From this day to the ending of the world,But we in it shall be remembered-We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;For he to-day that sheds his blood with meShall be my brother; be he ne’er so vile,This day shall gentle his condition;And gentlemen in England now-a-bedShall think themselves accurs’d they were not here,And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaksThat fought with us upon Saint Crispin’s day.
War of the Roses – 1455-85 • Lancasters (red roses) Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI vs. Yorks (white roses) Edward IV, Edward V (child), and Richard III. Not ended until Henry VII (father of Henry VIII), the first Tudor. • Malory himself switched back and forth and was caught out • Essentially a huge civil war (see Stevenson’s The Black Arrow) • Le MorteDarthurwas written by Malory in prison and published in 1485 by Caxton (first English press).
Le Morte Darthur in prose? • Partly in prose because Malory was translating French prose sources, as well as poetic ones. • It has the EFFECT of truth because all the histories (chronicles) were in prose, so one feels that one is reading a true history. • Prose brought different expectations of the writer and the reader. • (Moliere’s joke about prose in Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme)
Close reading of the bedroom scene? • For Lancelot, his social identity is his real identity. He doesn’t seem to care about whether he and Guinevere have betrayed the King, but instead, whether, if charged with treason, Guinevere would be found guilty. • He seems to have committed adultery, but believes that if he fights hard enough, his fighting will disprove that charge. • “God defend me from such a shame! But, Jesu Christ, be Thou my shield and mine armor!” • “For I promise you by my knighthood and ye will depart and make no more noise.”
What about Excalibur? • Arthur thinks the magic is in the sword. • Merlin tells him the magic is in the sheath. • Why must it be given back to the Lady of the Lake? • What does this say about Arthur’s values at the end of his life?