FACTOID # 20: Brazil is the heliport capital of the world.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

FACTS & STATISTICS    Simple view

  1. Select countries to view: (hold down Control key and click to select several)

     

     

    Compare:

     

     

  1. Select fact or statistic: (* = graphable)

     

     

     

  2. (OPTIONAL) Compare to statistic: (both need to be graphable)

     

     

     

  3. View result as:

     

       
(OR) SEARCH ALL encyclopedia, stats & forums:   

Encyclopedia > Idylls of the King

The Idylls of the King (1856 - 1885) are a cycle of poems by Alfred, Lord Tennyson that express the legend of King Arthur in terms of the psychology and concerns of nineteenth-century England. The twelve poems, progressing from spring to the new year, follow the rise and fall of Arthur's kingdom and Arthur himself. Each of the sections relates a separate incident in Arthurian legend, with little transition from one to the next; all the stories are nevertheless linked by the central figure of Arthur. As a whole, the poem describes Arthur's attempt and failure to lift up mankind and create a perfect kingdom. Image File history File links Crystal_128_clock. ... Literary cycles are groups of stories grouped around common figures, based on mythical figures or loosely on historic ones. ... Poetry (ancient Greek: poieo = create) is an art form in which human language is used for its aesthetic qualities in addition to, or instead of, its notional and semantic content. ... Alfred, Lord Tennyson Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson (6 August 2054BC – 6 October 4392AD) was Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom after William Wordsworth and is one of the most popular English poets. ... A bronze Arthur in plate armour with visor raised and with jousting shield wearing Kastenbrust armour (early 15c) by Peter Vischer, typical of later anachronistic depictions of Arthur. ... Alternative meaning: Nineteenth Century (periodical) The 19th century lasted from 1801 to 1900 in the Gregorian calendar (using the Common Era system of year numbering). ... Motto: (French for God and my right) Anthem: God Save the King/Queen Capital London (de facto) Largest city London Official language(s) English (de facto) Unification    - by Athelstan AD 927  Area    - Total 130,395 km² (1st in UK)   50,346 sq mi  Population    - 2006 est. ...

Merlin advising King Arthur in Gustave Doré's illustration
Merlin advising King Arthur in Gustave Doré's illustration

Tennyson based his retelling primarily on Malory and the Mabinogion, but with many expansions, additions, and several adaptions, a notable example of which is the fate of Guinevere. In Malory she is sentenced to be burnt at the stake but spirited away by Lancelot; in the Idylls, Guinevere flees to a convent, is forgiven by Arthur, repents, and serves in the convent until she dies. Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (916x1210, 339 KB) Gustave Doré’s illustration of Lord Alfred Tennyson’s “Idylls of the King”, 1868. ... Image File history File links Download high-resolution version (916x1210, 339 KB) Gustave Doré’s illustration of Lord Alfred Tennyson’s “Idylls of the King”, 1868. ... Doré photographed by Felix Nadar. ... Le Morte dArthur (The Death of Arthur)—the title is actually spelled as Le Morte Darthur in the first printing and also in many many modern editions—is Sir Thomas Malorys compilation of some French and English Arthurian romances. ... The Mabinogion is a collection of prose stories from medieval Welsh manuscripts. ...


The Idylls are written in blank verse, except for the last verse of the last idyll, which is an alexandrine. Tennyson amended the traditional spellings of several names to fit the meter. Blank verse is a type of poetry, distinguished by having a regular meter, but no rhyme. ... An alexandrine is a line of poetic meter. ...


The Idylls were dedicated to the late Prince Albert. Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (in full Francis Charles Augustus Albert Emmanuel), later The Prince Consort, (26 August 1819 – 14 December 1861) was the husband and consort of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. ...

Contents

Publishing Chronology

  • 1859: The first set of Idylls, "Enid", "Vivien", "Elaine", and "Guinevere" is published. "Enid" was later divided into "The Marriage of Geraint" and "Geraint and Enid", and "Guinevere" was expanded.
  • 1869: The Holy Grail and Other Poems
  • 1871: "The Last Tournament" is published in Contemporary Review.
  • 1872: "Gareth and Lynette" is published.
  • 1885: The final idyll, "Balin and Balan", is published in Tiresias and Other Poems.

The Dedication was published in 1862, a year after the Prince Consort had died. The epilogue, "To the Queen," was published in 1873.


The Idylls

The Coming of Arthur

The first of the Idylls describes the period following Arthur's coronation, his ascension and marriage. The besieged Leodogran, King of Cameliard, appeals to Arthur for aid against the beasts and heathen hordes. Arthur vanquishes these and then the Barons who attack his legitimacy. Later he requests the hand of Leodogran's daughter, Guinevere, with whom he has fallen in love. Leodogran, grateful but also uncertain of Arthur’s lineage, questions his chamberlain, Arthur’s emissaries, and Arthur’s half sister Bellicent, receiving a different account from each. At last he is persuaded by a dream of Arthur crowned in heaven. Lancelot is sent to bring Guinevere, and she and Arthur wed in May. At the wedding feast, Arthur refuses to pay tribute to the Lords from Rome, declaring, “The old order changeth, yielding place to new.” King Leondegrance (sometimes Leodegrance, or some other minor variation) was, in Arthurian legend, the father of Queen Guinevere. ... Ή [[Image:Queen Guinevere. ... For other uses, see Lancelot (disambiguation). ...


Gareth and Lynette

Of all the Idylls, “Gareth and Lynette” is the sweetest and most innocent. Gareth, Bellicent and Lot’s last son, dreams of knighthood but is frustrated by his mother. After lengthy argument she clinches the matter, or so she thinks, by ordering him to serve as an anonymous scullion in Arthur’s kitchens for a year and a day. To her chagrin, he agrees. Upon his arrival at Camelot, disguised, a disguised Merlin greets him and tells him the city is never built at all, and therefore built forever, and warns him that Arthur will bind him by vows no man can keep. Gareth is angered by what seems mockery to him, but is himself rebuked for going in guise to the truthful Arthur. Sir Gareth was a Knight of the Round Table in Arthurian Legend. ... In Arthurian Legend, Lot (or Loth) is king of Lothian, Orkney, and sometimes Norway. ... Camelot is the most famous castle associated with the legendary King Arthur. ... Merlin is best known as the mighty wizard featured in Arthurian legend. ...


Arthur consents to the boy’s request for kitchen-vassalage, remarking that a better boon is deserved. After Gareth has served nobly and well for a month, Bellicent repents and frees him from his vow. Gareth is secretly knighted by Arthur, who orders Lancelot to keep a discreet eye on him. Gareth’s first quest comes in the form of the cantankerous Lynette, who begs Arthur for Lancelot’s help in freeing her sister Lyonors. Rather than Lancelot, she is given Gareth, still a kitchen servant. Indignant, she flees, and when Gareth catches up, abuses him sorely. On their journey he proves himself again and again, and still she calls him knave and scullion. Gareth remains courteous and gentle throughout. At the Castle Perilous, he overthrows the soi-disant knight of the Morning Star, knight of the Noonday Sun, knight of the Evening Star, and at last the most terrible knight of Death, who is revealed as a boy coerced by his brothers. Tennyson concludes: “And he [Malory] that told the tale in older times / Says that Sir Gareth wedded Lyonors, / But he, that told it later [Tennyson], says Lynette.”


The Marriage of Geraint

Rumors of Guinevere’s treacherous love have reached Sir Geraint, whose wife, Enid, is too closely associated with the Queen for his comfort. Geraint and Enid return to his princedom. There, forgetting his duties and reputation, he lavishes love on his wife. Enid hears the accusations of uxoriousness and is saddened. One summer morning, she mourns quietly that she is the cause of Geraint’s tarnishing name, and drops tears that wake Geraint in time to hear, “O me, I fear that I am no true wife.” He immediately suspects her of infidelity, summons their horses, refuses to answer her questions, and orders her to wear her meanest dress. As she takes it out she remembers their marriage, and the Idyll lapses into a flashback: Geraint is a character from Welsh folklore and Arthurian legend, a king of Dumnonia and a valiant warrior. ... Enide or Enid is a character from Arthurian legend. ...


While Geraint and the Queen wait for the hunt, a knight, lady, and dwarf ride by. The dwarf whips one of the Queen’s maidens and then strikes Geraint, who promises to revenge the insult to the Queen. He comes to a town preparing for a tourney and is offered shelter in Earl Yniol’s decayed castle, where the Earl and his daughter Enid reside. The Earl explains that the dwarf’s master is his nephew Edyrn, the “sparrow-hawk,” the host of the tourney and Enid’s suitor, who has usurped his earldom. Geraint jousts in the tourney, overthrows the sparrow-hawk, and wins Enid. He orders Edyrn to return to Camelot and ask the Queen’s forgiveness; there, Edyrn repents and rises. Enid’s mother prepares a rich dress for her, but Geraint orders her to wear her meanest, in which he first saw her, so that the Queen herself might dress her. This is supposedly a test, which Enid passes, and the two are wed. Yniol is the father of Enid in Arthurian legend, appearing in Geraint and Enid. ...


Geraint and Enid

Geraint and Enid have set out on their horses, she in her ancient dress and riding before him. He has ordered her to keep her silence. Several times she disobeys, warning him of ambushes ahead. He answers her angrily and fights through all of them and has Enid drive a growing herd of the bandits’ horses. At last they come to the castle of Earl Limours, a former suitor of Enid, where they are entertained. Limours appeals to Enid for her love, but she deceives him, remaining faithful to her sullen husband, and manages their escape. Limours rides after them, and Geraint knocks him from his saddle, but sustains a serious wound. A little later, he faints. The Earl Doorm comes across the two and has Geraint carried to his castle, a place more of beast than man. Doorm offers to marry Enid and strikes her when she refuses. Her cry rouses Geraint, who kills Doorm. Finally Geraint is convinced and apologizes for doubting her.


Balin and Balan

The brothers Balin “the Savage” and Balan return to Arthur’s hall from Balin’s three years of exile, and are welcomed back warmly. When Arthur’s envoys return, they report the death one of Arthur’s knights by, according to a woodsman, a demon in the woods. Balan offers to hunt the demon, and before he departs warns Balin against his terrible rages, which were the cause of their exile. Balin tries to learn courtesy and gentleness from Lancelot, but despairs and concludes that Lancelot’s courtesy is beyond his reach. Instead, he takes the Queen’s crown for his shield, and several times it reminds him to restrain his temper. Sir Balin le Savage, also known as the Knight with Two Swords, is a character in Arthurian legend. ... Balan can refer to: Several communes in France: Balan, in the Ain département Balan, in the Ardennes département Bălan, a city in Romania An alternate spelling for the demon Balam, see Balam (demon) This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages...


Then one summer morning Balin beholds an ambiguous exchange between Lancelot and the Queen that fills him with confusion. He leaves Camelot and eventually comes upon the castle of Pellam and Garlon. When Garlon casts aspersions on the Queen, Balin kills him and flees. Ashamed, he hangs his crowned shield in a tree, where Vivien and her squire find it, and then Balin himself. She spins lies to Balin that confirm his suspicions about Guinevere. He shrieks, tears down his shield, and tramples it. In that same wood, Balan hears the cry and believes he has found his demon. The brothers clash and only too late recognize each other. Dying, Balan assures Balin that their Queen is pure and good. King Pellam of Listeneise is the name that Malory gives to the Maimed King in his rendition of the tale of Sir Balin, at whose hands Pellam suffers the Dolorous Stroke. ... Look up vivien in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...


Merlin and Vivien

Having boasted to King Mark that she will return with the hearts of Arthur’s knights in her hand, Vivien begs and receives shelter in Guinevere’s retinue. While in Camelot, she sows rumors of the Queen’s affair. She fails to seduce the King, and is mocked, and turns her attentions to Merlin. When he, troubled by visions of impending doom, wanders out of Arthur’s court, she follows. She intends to wheedle out of Merlin a spell that will trap him forever, supposing that his defeat would be her glory. She protests her love to Merlin, declaring he cannot love her if he doubts her. When he mentions that Arthur’s knights have been gossiping about her, she slanders every one of them, and every accusation is met by Merlin but one: that of Lancelot, which he admits to be true. Worn down, he allows himself to be seduced, tells Vivien the charm, and is imprisoned in the oak. Mark of Cornwall (Latin Marcus Cunomorus, Cornish Margh, Welsh March or Cynfawr) was a king of Kernyw (Cornwall) in the early 6th century AD. He is most famous as the uncle of Tristan and husband of Iseult, who engage in a secret affair behind his back. ...


Lancelot and Elaine

Long ago, Arthur happened upon a skeleton wearing a crown of nine diamonds. At eight tourneys over eight years, Arthur has awarded the diamonds one by one to the Lancelot, who plans to give all nine to Guinevere. Guinevere decides to stay back from the ninth tournament, and Lancelot tells Arthur he will stay with her. Once the others have left, she berates him for making cause for slander. She says she cannot love the too-perfect Arthur. Lancelot decides to go disguised to the tournament. He borrows armor and arms from the Lord of Astolat, and as a finishing touch, agrees to wear his daughter Elaine’s favor, which he has never done for any woman. Elaine has fallen in love with him. Here the Idyll repeats Malory’s account of the tournament and its aftermath. Astolat is a legendary city of Great Britain which is named in Arthurian legends. ... A figure in Arthurian legend, Elaine was the figure of unrequited love later solemnized in Alfred Tennysons poem The Lady of Shalott. ...


After Lancelot has taken leave of Elaine, and she has died, he returns to Camelot to present the nine diamonds to Guinevere. In a fit of jealous fury she hurls them out the window into the river, just as Elaine’s funeral barge passes below. Elaine’s body is brought into the hall and her letter read, at which the lords and ladies weep. Guinevere privately asks Lancelot’s forgiveness. The knight muses that Elaine loved him more than the Queen, wonders if the Queen’s love has all rotted to jealousy, and wishes he was never born.


The Holy Grail

This Idyll is told in flashback by Sir Percivale, now a monk, to his fellow monk Ambrosius. His pious sister had beheld the Grail and named Galahad her “knight of heaven,” declaring that he, too, would also see. When, one summer night that Arthur is absent, Galahad sits in the Siege Perilous, the hall is shaken with thunder and the covered Grail passes through the hall. Percivale swears that he will quest for it a year and a day, and all the knights echo his vow. Arthur returns and hears the news with horror. Galahad, he says, will see the Grail, and perhaps Percivale and Lancelot also, but the other knights are better in physical service than spiritual. The Round Table disperses. Percivale travels through a surreal, allegorical landscape until he meets Galahad in a hermitage. Together they continue until Percivale can no longer follow, and he watches Galahad depart to a heavenly city in a boat like a silver star. After the questing, only a remnant of the knights return to Camelot. Percival or Perceval is one of King Arthurs legendary Knights of the Round Table. ... Le Morte dArthur (The Death of Arthur)—the title is actually spelled as Le Morte Darthur in the first printing and also in many many modern editions—is Sir Thomas Malorys compilation of some French and English Arthurian romances. ... A portrait of Sir Galahad by George Frederick Watts. ... In Arthurian legend, the Siege Perilous was a specially reserved seat at the Round Table which was kept vacant by Merlin for the knight who was destined to quest for and return with the Holy Grail. ...


Pelleas and Ettare

In an ironic echo of “Gareth and Lynette”, the young, idealistic Pelleas meets and falls in love with the lady Ettare. She thinks he is a fool, but treats him well at first because she wishes to hear herself proclaimed the “Queen of Beauty” at the tournament. For the sake of the young knight, Arthur declares it a “Tournament of Youth”, barring his veteran warriors. Pelleas wins the title and circlet for Ettare, who immediately ends her kindness to him. He follows her to her castle, where for a sight of her he docilely allows himself to be bound and maltreated by her knights, although he can and does overthrow them all. Gawain observes this one day and is outraged. He offers to court Ettare for Pelleas, and borrows his arms and shield. When admitted to the castle, he announces that he has killed Pelleas. Three nights later, Pelleas enters the castle in search of Gawain and his news. He passes a pavilion of Ettare’s knights, asleep, and then a pavilion of her maidens, and then comes to a pavilion where he finds Ettare in Gawain’s arms. He leaves his sword across their throats. When Ettare wakes, she curses Gawain and turns her love to Pelleas and pines away. Pelleas, disillusioned with Arthur’s court, leaves Camelot to become the Red King in the North. Pelleas is a Knight of the Round Table in Arthurian legend. ... Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Sir Gawain (Gwalchmai, Gawan, Gauvain, Walewein etc. ...


The Last Tournament

Guinevere once fostered an infant that Arthur and Lancelot had found in an eagle’s nest, a ruby necklace wrapped around its neck. After the child died, Guinevere gave the jewels to Arthur to make a tournament prize. Before the tournament, however, a mutilated peasant stumbles into the hall. He has been mauled by the Red Knight in the North, who has set up his own Round Table with lawless knights and harlots. Arthur leaves Lancelot to oversee the tournament, taking a company to purge the evil. “The Tournament of the Dead Innocence” becomes a farce, discourtesies everywhere, rules broken, insults flung. Sir Tristram wins the rubies and, breaking tradition, declares to the ladies that the “Queen of Beauty” is not present. Arthur’s fool, Dagonet, mocks Tristram. In the north, meanwhile, Arthur’s knights, too full of rage and disgust to heed their King, trample the Red Knight and massacre his men and women and set his tower ablaze. Tristan and Iseult as depicted by Herbert Draper (1864 -1920). ... Wikipedia does not yet have an article with this exact name. ...


Tristram gives the rubies to Queen Isolt, Mark’s wife, who is furious that he has married Isolt of Brittany. They taunt each other, but at the last he puts the necklace about her neck and bends to kiss her. Mark rises up behind him and splits his skull. Iseult of Ireland as portrayed Sophia Myles in Tristan & Isolde, 2006. ... Iseult of Ireland as portrayed Sophia Myles in Tristan & Isolde, 2006. ...


Guinevere

Guinevere has fled to the convent at Almesbury. On the night that she and Lancelot had determined to part forever, Modred, tipped off by Vivien, watched and listened with witnesses to their farewells. Guinevere rejects Lancelot's offer of sanctuary in his castle overseas, rather riding and taking anonymous shelter in the convent. She takes a little novice for her friend. But when rumors of Modred's usurption and war between Arthur and Lancelot reach the convent, the novice's prattling pricks the Queen's conscience. She describes the glorious kingdom in her father's day, "before the coming of the sinful Queen", and hurts in trying to comfort.


The King comes. She hears his steps and falls on her face. He stands over her and mourns her, himself, and his kingdom, reproaches her, and forgives her. She watches him go and repents, hoping that they will be reunited in heaven. She serves in the abbey, is chosen Abbess, and dies three years later.


Overview

In twelve poems, the legend recounts how Arthur was born through the trickery of Merlin and how he meets his future wife Guinevere and becomes king. He creates Camelot, an ideal kingdom where he is loyally served by his knights of the Round Table. His best and most honored knight is Sir Lancelot, the epitome of courtesy, who turns traitor in his illicit love for the Queen. It is this affair that eventually splits the Round Table and brings about the disastrous last battle in which Arthur kills Modred and in turn receives a mortal wound. Sir Bedivere carries the King to a lake on the borders of Avalon where Arthur first received Excalibur from the Lady of the Lake. Arthur orders Bedivere to throw the sword into the lake in order to fulfill a prophecy written on the blade. Sir Bedivere resists twice, but on the third time obeys and is rewarded by the sight of a white arm rising from the water to catch the sword. The wounded Arthur is finally carried away on a magical ship with three queens and sails away to Avalon, with Sir Bedivere watching, as the new sun rises on a new year. Merlin Ambrosius (Welsh: Myrddin Emrys (Merlin the Wise); also known as Myrddin Wyllt (Merlin the Wild), Merlin Caledonensis (Scottish Merlin), Merlinus, and Merlyn) is the personage best known as the mighty wizard featured in Arthurian legends, starting with Geoffrey of Monmouths Historia Regum Britanniae. ... Ή [[Image:Queen Guinevere. ... Camelot is the most famous castle associated with the legendary King Arthur. ... Knights of the Round Table were those men awarded the highest order of Chivalry at the Court of King Arthur in the literary cycle the Matter of Britain. ... For other uses, see Lancelot (disambiguation). ... The Post-Vulgate Cycle is one of the major Old French prose cycles of Arthurian literature. ... How Sir Bedivere Cast the Sword Excalibur into the Water. ... Avalon (probably from the Celtic word abal: apple; see Etymology below) is a legendary island somewhere in the British Isles, famous for its beautiful apples. ... How Sir Bedivere Cast the Sword Excalibur into the Water. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...


The Idylls are titled:

  • The Coming of Arthur
  • Gareth and Lynette
  • The Marriage of Geraint
  • Geraint and Enid
  • Balin and Balan
  • Merlin and Vivien
  • Lancelot and Elaine
  • The Holy Grail
  • Pelleas and Ettarre
  • The Last Tournament
  • Guinevere
  • The Passing of Arthur

The dramatic narratives are not an epic either in structure or tone, but derive elegaic sadness from the idylls of Theocritus. The epic is a broadly defined genre of poetry, and one of the major forms of narrative literature. ... Elegy was originally used for a type of poetic metre (Elegiac metre), but is also used for a poem of mourning, from the Greek elegos, a reflection on the death of someone or on a sorrow generally. ... An idyll is a short poem, descriptive of rustic life, written in the style of Theocrituss short pastoral poems, the Idylls. ... Theocritus (Greek Θεόκριτος), the creator of Ancient Greek bucolic poetry, flourished in the 3rd century BC. Little is known of him beyond what can be inferred from his writings. ...


Idylls of the King is often read as an allegory of the social conflicts and malaises of mid-Victorian era in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. An allegory (from Greek αλλος, allos, other, and αγορευειν, agoreuein, to speak in public) is a figurative mode of representation conveying a meaning other than (and in addition to) the literal. ... Queen Victoria (shown here on the morning of her Ascension to the Throne, 20 June 1837) gave her name to the historic era The Victorian Era of the United Kingdom marked the height of the British industrial revolution and the apex of the British Empire. ... Motto: Dieu et mon droit (French: God and my right)1 Anthem: God Save the King/Queen Territory of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Capital London Language(s) English Gaelic Welsh (Wales) Scottish Gaelic (parts of Scotland) Government Constitutional monarchy Monarch  - 1801–1820 George III  - 1920–1922...


The work was in part written in the Hanbury Arms in Caerleon; a plaque commemorates the event. Caerleon (Welsh: ) (grid reference ST323914, ) is a suburban village situated on the River Usk on the northern outskirts of the city of Newport. ...


Citations

Lord Tennyson, Alfred; edited by J.M. Gray (1983). Idylls of the King. Penguin Classics. ISBN 0140422536.  Penguin Books is a British publisher founded in 1935 by Allen Lane. ...


External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Idylls of the King

  Results from FactBites:
 
Idylls of the King - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (554 words)
The Idylls of the King is a sequence of poems by Alfred, Lord Tennyson that expresses the legend of King Arthur in terms of the psychology and concerns of nineteenth-century England.
Idylls of the King is often read as an allegory of the social conflicts and malaises of mid-Victorian era United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
Idylls of the King by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, illustrated by Gustave Doré
King Arthur: Literature of the Legends--Tennyson's Idylls of the King (1872 words)
King Arthur: Literature of the Legends--Tennyson's Idylls of the King
The giant of the Victorian era was Alfred, Lord Tennyson, whose Idylls of the King constitute an epic in poem form.
Idylls of the King was written a little at a time but can be taken as a whole.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.