Legends of the Middle Ages eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 462 pages of information about Legends of the Middle Ages.

Legends of the Middle Ages eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 462 pages of information about Legends of the Middle Ages.

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 them in the brunt of war.”
                                Beowulf (Conybeare’s tr.).

The most ancient relic of literature of the spoken languages of modern Europe is undoubtedly the epic poem “Beowulf,” which is supposed to have been composed by the Anglo-Saxons previous to their invasion of England.  Although the poem probably belongs to the fifth century, the only existing manuscript is said to date from the ninth or tenth century.

This curious work, in rude alliterative verse (for rhyme was introduced in England only after the Norman Conquest), is the most valuable old English manuscript in the British Museum.  Although much damaged by fire, it has been carefully studied by learned men.  They have patiently restored the poem, the story of which is as follows: 

[Sidenote:  Origin of the Skioldungs.] Hrothgar (the modern Roger), King of Denmark, was a descendant of Odin, being the third monarch of the celebrated dynasty of the Skioldungs.  They proudly traced their ancestry to Skeaf, or Skiold, Odin’s son, who mysteriously drifted to their shores.  He was then but an infant, and lay in the middle of a boat, on a sheaf of ripe wheat, surrounded by priceless weapons and jewels.  As the people were seeking for a ruler, they immediately recognized the hand of Odin in this mysterious advent, proclaimed the child king, and obeyed him loyally as long as he lived.  When he felt death draw near, Skeaf, or Skiold, ordered a vessel to be prepared, lay down in the midst on a sheaf of grain or on a funeral pyre, and drifted out into the wide ocean, disappearing as mysteriously as he had come.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Legends of the Middle Ages from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.