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    Characterization of Sir Gawain The success of a literary work is directly related to the strength of the protagonist. Some stories characterize the hero so strongly that the tale remains relevant to humankind for centuries. The poem “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”, author unknown, is an excellent example of this circumstance. Sir Gawain can be characterized in many different ways, and the believability of his character makes the poem “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” very relevant today. The…

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    God on high, my errand is hardly to sit at ease in your castle. Then the green knight challenges king Arthur and he says someone must volunteer to take the challenge. Nobody wanted to volunteer and King Arthur got really mad until one person named Sir Gawain wanted to volunteer. Arthur grants Gawain’s request to take on the green knight’s challenge. The green knight asks Gawain to identify himself and to agree to their pact. Arthur and his Knights are gathered to celebrate Christmas and a New…

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    first to run into challenges and achieve perfection. Sir Gawain, a knight from King Arthur's court Camelot, is proclaimed a perfect knight after his tempting journey. In the well-known poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, this acclaimed knight’s commitment to following the Code of Chivalry was tested for a whole year. Significantly, in the poem, the Green Knight arrives in Camelot and challenges the knights to a dare,…

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    Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is the tale of King Arthur’s knight and nephew, Gawain, and his quest to fulfill a challenge that is proposed to him by a mysterious stranger known as the Green Knight. On his way to find the Green Knight, Gawain unknowingly receives various moral tests given to him by a lord named Bertilak, who offers Gawain a place to stay in his castle during his travels. The Sir Gawain and the Green Knight poem was written in the late 14th-century. Although the poem is a…

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    statement may be true. This thought is displayed in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, written by Pearl Poet and translated by Jessie L. Weston. Although Sir Gawain survived the challenge, he feels that he has lost the battle with the Green Knight. He tells the Green Knight that his downfall and of all mankind’s problems can be blamed on women. Gawain placing the blame of his downfall on women is an accurate yet fallacious argument. To begin with, when Sir Gawain is speaking with the Green…

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    theme in the story. It represents the ideal qualities of a medieval knight during the 1300-1400s, the values of chivalry are including loyalty, courage, justice, mercy, faith...and in this poem, it specifically determines the values and actions of Sir Gawain and other characters. These ideals of chivalry are carried together in Gawain’s shield and the pentangle which represents the five virtues of knights.Gawain’s faithfulness to these virtues is tested throughout his journey. He keeps loyal…

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    Throughout Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Sir Gawain, one of King Arthur’s knights, is tested on his chivalric qualities through tests. Just two of the many qualities include bravery and honesty which Sir Gawain showed through the trials. These qualities were tested by the Green Knight, who later reveals himself as Sir Bertilak. The code of honor had many superior qualities that the knights were supposed to exhibit, but it is proved to be flawed by not allowing room for human imperfections…

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    This week’s discussion focuses upon Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. I will herein go beyond the recitations of the story itself and address the story “between the lines:” Morgan le Fay hated King Arthur, and especially Queen Guinevere. Arthur was the half-brother of Morgan. Arthur was born as the result of a “magical” deception of Merlin, his Uncle (and the understood “Wizard of the Realm”). Morgan bemoaned that her father, the Duke of Cornwall, was killed so Arthur’s father, Uther Pendragon,…

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    (Thesis statement): Although on the surface Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is not an overtly Christian story it is obvious that the author held Christianity in high regard due to Sir Gawain’s shield and the religious imagery it holds. The author takes care in explaining, with great detail, the shield that Sir Gawain is given to carry during his adventures. This shows us the importance of not only the shield, the knight’s main form of defense, but also of the imagery on said shield. “Then they…

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    There are many main themes in the story of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, but three of the most important ones are the themes of salvation, morality, and truth. These themes help connect Christianity to Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. These themes are so important to the story of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight because the whole book is set around salvation, morality, truth, and any other themes. All of these themes tie in to one another and help connect other parts of many of the King Arthur…

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