Medieval English Literature


Gelesen von Christine Rottger

I have very little doubt in my own mind that why so many young men despise and even deride knowledge is because knowledge has been presented to them in so arid a form, so little connected with anything that concerns them in the remotest degree. We ought, I think, to wind our way slowly back into the past from the present; we ought to start with modern problems and modern ideas, and show people how they came into being; we ought to learn about the world, as it is, first, and climb the hill slowly. But what we do is to take the history of the past, Athens and Rome and Judæa, three glowing and shining realms, I readily admit; but we leave the gaps all unbridged, so that it seems remote, abstruse, and incomprehensible that men should ever have lived and thought so.
I was reading a few days ago a little book by Professor Ker, on mediæval English, and reading it with a species of rapture. It all came so freshly and pungently out of a full mind, penetrated with zest and enjoyment. One followed the little rill of literary craftsmanship so easily out of the plain to its high source among the hills, till I wondered why on earth I had not been told some of these delightful things long ago, that I might have seen how our great literature took shape. Such scraps of knowledge as I possess fell into shape, and I saw the whole as in a map outspread. (excerpted from Joyous Gard by Arthur Christopher Benson)

Kapitel

Introduction 18:03 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
The Anglo-Saxon Period 51:29 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
The Middle English Period (1150-1500) 1:02:43 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
The Romances 59:37 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
Songs and Ballads 30:37 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
Comic Poetry 23:08 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
Allegory 23:48 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
Sermons and Histories, In Verse and Prose 23:43 Gelesen von Christine Rottger
Chaucer, Note on Books, Supplementary Note by R.W. Chambers 52:01 Gelesen von Christine Rottger