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Perceval, Or, The Story of the Grail
Perceval, Or, The Story of the Grail | Chrétien (de Troyes), Chrétien de Troyes
9 posts | 9 read | 5 to read
In this verse translation of Perceval; or, The Story of the Grail, Ruth Harwood Cline restores to life the thematically crucial Arthurian tale of the education of a knight in his search for the Holy Grail. Cline's translation, faithful to the highly synthetic, deliberately ornate nature of medieval French, follows Perceval from his home in Wales, through his rich and raucous adventures as a member of the fraternity of knights, to his climactic meeting with the Fisher King. Paralyzed by his first glimpse of the Grail, Perceval fails to save the ailing king. Distraught, the knight begins a new quest for the Grail, a journey on the road of penitence and faith. Perceval's venture, the true test of his knighthood, ends without conclusion; the death of author Chrétien de Troyes left unsaid and undetermined the success of Perceval's quest.
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Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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A selection of medieval French wisdom:

“When a man fails to honour ladies, his own honour must be dead.â€

“Any wise man fears open spitefulness, whether it be in seriousness or in jest.â€

“The dead with the dead, the living with the living.â€

“Fortune has hair in front but is bald behind.â€

“How wretched is the man who sees the perfect opportunity and still waits for a better one.â€

Bookwomble “The world is becoming very stingy now, because no-one's respected if he isn't rich. But I value wealth very little indeed, for it can bring no-one any good: a curse on worldly wealth.†3y
TheKidUpstairs Fortune sounds like some sort of reverse mullet situation... 3y
Bookwomble @TheKidUpstairs Ha,ha! It does indeed! 😄 I do like the humour in that quote. 3y
21 likes3 comments
review
Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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Pickpick

Chrètian's intentions for the revelation of the mysteries of the Holy Grail can't be known due to his ill grace in dying before completing his story. I like his setup, and don't think the Continuations quite capture his genius, enjoyable additions though they are.
There are layers of meaning: in this reading what struck me most is the repetition of situations and behaviours, as Perceval closes in on the mysteries, and is either distracted by 👇ðŸ¼

Bookwomble ... worldly issues or, when confronted by the outward manifestations of the Grail Procession, is unable to pierce the veil to grasp its hidden spiritual significance. A lesson about life, our tendency to be caught up in doing, forgetting about being. 3y
23 likes1 comment
review
Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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Pickpick

Finished the Continuation of Gerbert de Montreuil, which is quite repetitive & ends exactly where the 2nd Continuation left off, with Perceval having witnessed the Grail Procession & about to ask the Grail Questions. As there's 31 pages to go, I'm assuming the answers won't be immediately given!
Gerbert was a professional minstrel & coincidentally minstrels get good press in his part of the story. I'm enjoying this, but glad to be on the last leg.

Bookwomble The painting is "Parsifal" by Rogelio de Egusquiza. 3y
Bookwomble Ah, the answers were immediately given. More adventures to be achieved, and hopefully some tying up of loose ends. I 3y
20 likes2 comments
review
Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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Pickpick

I've finished Chrètian's "Perceval", left incomplete circa 1185 when he died, & on to the anonymously written First Continuation. I can well understand why there was an appetite for the story to be continued, as the mystery of the Grail ceremony was not revealed by Chrétian, nor the outcome of various other adventures. Nobody likes a show to be cancelled when plot threads are still hanging! "Perceval: Season Two" is a bit more rambling, though.

Bookwomble The painting is Jean Delville's "Parsifal". 3y
Leftcoastzen Amazing painting 3y
Bookwomble @Leftcoastzen Isn't it! I don't know that much about Delville, but do, somewhere, have a book with a reproduction of his painting, "The Treasures of Satan", which is fantastic, and worth a quick internet search ? 3y
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Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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"There's nothing good to be said about wicked men; but finding a worthy man is quite an event, for they are few & far between! And when one really comes to know some of those thought to be worthy men, one often finds, to put it plainly, nothing in them but a bag of wind. The wicked often deceive people & turn their heads by appearances: there are some very stupid folk who praise a man for his apparent worth, not according to his deeds or wisdom."

Bookwomble Mediaeval truth bomb: still relevant 🧠3y
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quote
Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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"A man does ill to forget a shame or injury done to him - the pain passes but the shame remains in a staunch and vigorous man, but in a man of little worth it dies away and cools."

Mediaeval toxic masculinity, resulting in "honour" killings, revenge plots and generational vendetta. The basis of later European aristocratic culture?

quote
Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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"She clad and dressed him in the Welsh fashion, where shoes and leggings, I believe, are in one piece; and he had a hooded tunic of deer-hide, stitched tight all around...He was dressed in the style and manner of the Welsh, with shoes of coarse hide on his feet, and wherever he went he always bore three javelins: he wanted to take them with him now, but his mother took two of them because he would have looked too Welsh." ??????? ??

Bookwomble Chrétian really had it in for the Welsh, making a few links to Perceval's uncouthness and his Welsh heritage. I like these descriptions of his clothing and weapons, though, his rough hide clothing and simple javelins in contrast with the metal armour and sophisticated sword he will soon acquire. 3y
Bookwomble Browsing the internet for medieval Welsh stuff (as you do) I came across this video about the traditional Welsh instrument, the crwth, which kinda fits the feel of the story
https://youtu.be/GcdXN7Wl0fY
3y
Leftcoastzen ðŸ‘😃love this post 3y
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Bookwomble @Leftcoastzen Diolch yn fawr iawn 😠(Thank you very much ðŸ˜) 3y
Leniverse Da iawn. This is hysterical. The more javelins the more Welsh? 😆 3y
Bookwomble @Leniverse Javelins are basically pointy sticks, rather than high class lances and swords, so ok for provincial Welsh plebs, but definitely infra dig for your fashionable knight errant from Arthur's court 🙂 3y
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blurb
Bookwomble
Perceval: The Story of the Grail | Nigel Bryant, Chrétien de Troyes
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I'm not 100% sure I'm in the right frame of mind to read this, but it's been on my shelf since 1986, so perhaps its time has come!

The last of Chrétien de Troyes' Arthurian romances, unfinished at the time of his death in 1185, left the mystery of the Grail unanswered. This edition also contains the four Continuations made by different authors in the few decades after Chrétien's death, for a chivalric audience evidently avid to know the ending.

review
ofbooksandme
Perceval, Or, The Story of the Grail | Chrétien (de Troyes), Chrétien de Troyes
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Pickpick

This time in #Medievalbooks one for everyone: Perceval. If you like stories about The Knights of the Round Table, Chrétien de Troyes is your guy. He pretty much invented all the things we now know (including the famous Lancelot and his affair with Guinevere). Perceval is his last book and he kind of died before finishing it and explaining what the Grail is. That gave way to the many stories and Christian speculations!
🌟🌟🌟🌟

ofbooksandme A bit of plot: Perceval is a teenager and a pretty bad knight overall. He's also a bit...slow...he has no idea how to interpret what he hears and takes everything literal. Which leads to some pretty funny moments. Per advice from his mom, he goes out to seek adventure and become a true knight of Arthur's court. One of the funniest, weirdest and perhaps most poetic and cryptic of Chrétien's stories. 5y
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