Knights Templar

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    Gawain and the Green Knight, a romantic poem by the Pearl Poet, a mysterious individual known as the Green Knight presents a challenge. With no one steps up to the challenge, Sir Gawain, a member of the Round Table, accepts it. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight exchange equal blows with a year and a day apart according to the deal. The journey follows after the beginning of the deal to test Gawain’s virtues of knighthood and prove that he is a model knight. Sir Gawain is an ideal knight because he…

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    Description: In the article, "Carnival, Pagan, and Christian symbolism in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," Laura Kenny discusses the important symbolism between religions in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. She uses holly, the color green, and the pentangle to support her arguments. Kenny starts off using holly as an example of symbolism. She supports her statement by adding, "...a popular character of Paganism is the Holly King, dressed in green..." She goes on to discuss the color green and…

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    Normally when someone gets their head cut off, they die. This is not the case in “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.” King Arthur, along with his knights, family, and friends, are all gathered at a new years party with a lot of meat. Seriously there is a lot of meat. At the entrance, a stranger arrives and everything about him is green. His body, his armor, and even his horse, yes his horse is green. I’m not certain if his particular hue indicates a deeper meaning or if it is just for…

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    Green Knight” the Green Knight challenges Sir Gawain by presenting him with trials that test his ability to follow the code of chivalry. Sir Gawain ultimately fails to abide by the code because humans cannot achieve perfection. However, Sir Gawain grows as character because of his failure. In the poem “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” the author uses supernatural elements to test Sir Gawain’s strengths and weaknesses, illuminating the hero’s progression towards maturity. The Green Knight tests…

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    In the poem “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”, there are three good symbols such as the Green Knight that challenges Gawain, the ax that the Green Knight had, and the green sash that the Green Knight’s wife gave to Gawain. First of all, The Green Knight and what he symbolizes. The Green Knight symbolizes having a second chance in life. When Gawain first meets the Green Knight he…

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    experienced in the past. In Arthurs W. Franks “Letting Stories Breath: A Socio-Narratology”, he brings up the concept of how stories affect people’s reality and what is their true meaning. His excerpts are tied into Beowulf, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and The Wife of Bath’s Tale in different ways. Each story is different but one thing they have in common is that they all influenced the readers’ thoughts. This impact is what associates all three stories to Arthurs W. Frank’s assertions.…

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    Holy Grail, a group of knights, led by King Arthur, go on a quest, given to them by God, to find the Holy Grail. After a little debate, they split up, going on their own way, but eventually find each other again, where they approached the Bridge of Death. Once getting past the guardian of the Bridge, King Arthur and Sir Bedevere the Wise find the Grail, just to have the police apprehend them. This movie is a significant, modern example of satire, which burlesques the knights and customs of the…

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    Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Comparison Sir Gawain involved himself in a dangerous game when a stranger wandered into King Arthur’s hall. The stranger is called “the Green Knight” because both he and his steed are green. He came seeking adventure by requesting someone brave to play his game. The game calls for someone to strike the Green Knight with an ax, then in one year and a day the person who struck the Green Knight must find him and accept a strike from him. Originally, King Arthur…

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    hypothesized that the devil is actually guised as the Green Knight. Similar to the manner the serpent deceives Adam and Eve by saying that they “will not die” and they will be “like God, knowing good and evil,” the Green Knight entices Sir Gawain into taking the challenge by degrading the honor of his fellow knights (The New Oxford Annotated Bible 14). Sir Gawain stated he was “the most wanting in wisdom” and was the weakest of the knights marking his lack of knowledge and experience in the…

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    lack of a strong central government. Knights served as heroes to a kingdom and were especially honored in such times of turmoil. Among this dark period of history came poetry filled with adventure, drama, and mystery. Written in the 14th century and not discovered until the 1800’s, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight became a poetic masterpiece. Sir Gawain served his king bravely, courageously, and never declined a challenge, demonstrating the components of a true knight. The suit of armor may…

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