The Book HubThe Book Hub

Home

Search

Genres

Languages

Your Library

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Weston Translation Version 2)

Audiobook

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Weston Translation Version 2)

The Gawain Poet

This poem celebrates Christmas by exploring the mystery of Christ's mission on earth: his death, resurrection, and second coming as judge of all human souls. Sir Gawain is cast in the role of Everyman. At the feast of the New Year, an unarmed green giant rides his green horse into the banqueting hall of King Arthur and challenges any member of the assembled company to behead him with a huge axe and then to submit to the same treatment from his victim the next year. Gawain volunteers to prevent Arthur from accepting this challenge, fairly confident that the challenger will be unfit to return the blow. However, when the green knight rides out of the hall carrying his severed head, Gawain must wait a year under what amounts to a sentence of death. At the end of this period his quest for the green knight leads him first through perilous adventures comparable to the life-threatening dangers confronting all mortals in their earthly sojourn and then, when his travels are at an end, through a series of temptations that represent allegorically the spiritual challenges determining not the time of death but the fortunes of the soul after death. The spot where Gawain then meets his foe closely resembles a graveyard superintended by the green knight, now converted, in effect, from a victim into a judge, as Christ was murdered by mankind but survived to be our judge at the end of time. A couple early footnotes may help in appreciating two details in the conclusion of the tale: First, Catholics believe that to perform the sacrament of Confession while intending to commit another sin deprives the priest's absolution of effect. Second, it was generally believed, in the Middle Ages and even today, that evil spirits cannot cross running water. This belief appears in "Tam o’Shanter," "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," and The Lord of the Rings. (Summary by Thomas Copeland)

Year of Publication: 1898Genres: Culture & Heritage Fiction , Christian Fiction , Myths, Legends & Fairy Tales
Running Time: 02 hours 00 minute 08 seconds
#Chapter Name
1
The Nights
Preface
Thomas A. Copeland
8:19
2
The Nights
Section 1
Thomas A. Copeland
21:53
3
The Nights
Section 2
Thomas A. Copeland
29:12
4
The Nights
Section 3
Thomas A. Copeland
35:12
5
The Nights
Section 4
Thomas A. Copeland
25:32

Ratings & reviews

Rate this audiobook

Be the first to review this audiobook.

More like this

Grimms' Fairy Tales

Grimms' Fairy Tales

Jacob & Wilhelm Grimm

Adventures of Pinocchio

Adventures of Pinocchio

Carlo Collodi

Aesop's Fables, Volume 01 (Fables 1-25)

Aesop's Fables, Volume 01 (Fables 1-25)

Aesop

Andersen's Fairy Tales (Version 2)

Andersen's Fairy Tales (Version 2)

Hans Christian Andersen

Andersen's Fairy Tales

Andersen's Fairy Tales

Hans Christian Andersen

Grimms' Fairy Tales (version 2)

Grimms' Fairy Tales (version 2)

Jacob & Wilhelm Grimm

Fábulas de Esopo, Vol. 1

Fábulas de Esopo, Vol. 1

Aesop

English Fairy Tales

English Fairy Tales

Joseph Jacobs

American Indian Fairy Tales

American Indian Fairy Tales

William Trowbridge Larned

Fábulas de Esopo, Vol. 2

Fábulas de Esopo, Vol. 2

Aesop

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (version 3)

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (version 3)

Lewis Carroll

Aesop's Fables, Volume 03 (Fables 51-75)

Aesop's Fables, Volume 03 (Fables 51-75)

Aesop

Märchen 1

Märchen 1

Jacob & Wilhelm Grimm

Adventures of Pinocchio (version 2)

Adventures of Pinocchio (version 2)

Carlo Collodi