Knights Templar

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    At the beginning of the story Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, the story takes place around Christmas time and New Year’s. In the first scene, “Many good knights and gay his guests were there, Arrayed of the Round Table rightful brothers, With feasting and fellowship and carefree mirth.”(Pg.4, lines 38-40) The characters are seated around King Arthur’s round table celebrating the holiday. There is food, carol-dancing, and gift giving. Also this is all happening in December, one of the coldest…

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    The green knight barged in on King Arthur while they were having a celebration. King Arthur greets the odd green skinned knight and offered him some food he rudefully declined it and said “No so help me 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…

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    What you think the Green Knight was trying to prove? The major theme of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is the hero’s passage to maturity. The Green Knight took Sir Gawain through three tests to see how he would do and was he mature enough for them. Gawain took King Arthur’s place, turn down advantages, and knew his fate. The Green Knight wanted Gawain to be better. The Green Knight made Sir Gawain mature, and let him show his honor, by accepting the challenge, refusing gifts, and seeing his…

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    In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, the Green Knight is Bertilak of Hautdesert, the lord of the house in which Gawain lodges in the story, and his purpose was to challenge to the Knights of the Round Table in order to test their mettle. In the story, the Green Knight comes to Camelot with a challenge for the knights of the Round Table. One of them must take his axe and cut off his head, and if they cannot, they must meet him in a year and let him try and cut of their head. King Arthur rises to…

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    The two authors of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight part four, Marie Borroff and Simon Armitage, both did a good job translation of the story and they each were well written. They both had their own techniques in writing and put their own personal touches on it. Marie’s version was definitely more difficult to read. Simon’s was extremely easier to read and I was able to follow along and understand what I was reading. In Simon’s, as the Knight gets ready to hit Gawain, you are able to understand…

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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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    In “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”, Gawain is perceived as a chivalrous character. Gawain is mainly concerned about his protection and honor as a knight. However, Gawain encounters a test where he has to choose whether to be truthful. Bertilak’s wife gives Gawain the girdle, but he withholds this information instead of giving it up. Since Gawain chose not to tell the truth, he failed to comply with the rules of the game and also disrespected the meaning of his shield. Although Gawain was not…

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    “You always have a green light that burns all night at the end of your dock”(Fitzgerald 98). This famous quote is one of many ways that F. Scott Fitzgerald used colors in his popular novel The Great Gatsby. Color symbolism is a branch of the Archetypal lense that uses colors to describe different people and their personalities throughout literature. Colors, including green, yellow, white, and red are used to symbolise hope, caution, innocence, and anger through what people see, the cars they…

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    lessons while on a dare? In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, we see Sir Gawain go through just that. While on a journey to keep his word, we witness Gawain be faced with countless trials without his knowing. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight was created back in the late 14th century. We witness much of the culture that was featured during that time, in this story such as knights, kings, magic etc. In this story we witness a self-depreciating knight of the round table embark on a journey to keep…

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    of the obvious differences between them is that Gawain is extremely righteous especially compared to Beowulf. While on his journey to see the Green Knight, Gawain stays at the castle of Lord Bertilak and his wife attempts to seduce him, he remains chaste and refuses to sleep with her as to not commit adultery. Religion is a huge staple in the knights of the round table since it was just shortly after the Black Plague had killed 60% of the population of Europe, so they thought that it was a…

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