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W.P.Ker

Epic and Romance / Essays on Medieval Literature

  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    is a good representative of the heroic age
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    A gentleman adventurer on board his own ship, following out his own ideas, carrying his men with him by his own power of mind and temper, and not by means of any system of naval discipline to which he as well as they must be subordinate; surpassing his men in skill, knowledge, and ambition, but taking part with them and allowing them to take part in the enterprise
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    The art and pursuits of a gentleman in the heroic age are different from those of the churl, but not so far different as to keep them in different spheres. There is a community of prosaic interests. The great man is a good judge of cattle; he sails his own ship
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    the common pursuits of those below them. They have no such elaborate theory of conduct as is found in the chivalrous society of the Middle Ages.
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    The nobles have not yet discovered for themselves any form of occupation or mode of thought in virtue of which they are widely severed from the commons, nor have they invented any such ideal of life or conventional system of conduct as involves an ignorance or depreciation of the common pursuits of those below them
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    the peculiar ideas of medieval chivalry.
    The form of society in an heroic age is aristocratic and magnificent. At the same time, this aristocracy differs from that of later and more specialised forms of civilisation. It does not make an insuperable difference between gentle and simple. There is not the extreme division of labour that produces the contempt of the lord for the villain
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    To compare the imaginations and the phrases of any of these barbarous works with the poetry of Homer may be futile, but their contents may be compared without reference to their poetical qualities; and there is no question that the life depicted has many things in common with Homeric life, and agrees with Homer in ignorance of the peculiar ideas of medieval chivalry
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    All these three orders, whatever their faults may be, do something to represent a society which is "heroic"
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    the French Chansons de Geste
  • b5447446810has quoted2 years ago
    What the "heroic age" of the modern nations really was, may be learned from what is left of their heroic literature
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