Chapter 1
1.)Kay and the Wart are taught to be knights and latin.
2.)They are both brothers, but Wart is his foster brother.
3.) The chapter has sword fighting and wizards. These would be considered part of medieval life.
Chapter 2
4.)In the chapter, fantasy is shown through dragons and magicians.
Chapter 3
5.) Wart needs a tutor and Merlyn becomes his tutor. This is because he does magic.
Chapter 4
6.) The character is talked about being clever and not a follower or a leader in the chapter.
Chapter 5
7.) On page 52, Mr. P informs Wart that might is power in chapter 5.
Chapter 6
8.) Kay is enraged that the crow took the arrow. The Wart’s reaction is terrified about the crow.
Chapter 7
9.) Merlyn show the Wart the joust in which the jousting is not serious and pointless. In the fight, Pellinore and Grummore are not hurt.
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Chapter 9
11.) Kay is envious that Wart got to go on a adventure and Kay didn’t during the night. Merlyn tells Wart a story and teaches Wart that God’s ways are unalterable.
Chapter 10
12.) Robin Wood needs the two to help and go on a adventure to help rescue one of Robin Wood’s men. They have to travel to England to where the fairies live.
Chapter 11
13.) Kay and Wart are the only ones that can go into the castle where Robin Wood’s men is.
14.) A griffin rests in the tower of the castle when Kay and Wart are going to enter the castle.
Chapter 12
15.) Kay requests the griffin’s head that attacked Wart and that he killed. The Wart also requests to bring back Wat. This shows that Wart is kind and honorable. By Kay taking the head back, this shows him to be selfish and
UNIT 3 QUEST Please answer the questions. You may use your book and your notes to help you, but that is all. This is not an internet quiz! This is NOT a group assignment, it is individual. It is worth 35 points (each question is worth 5 points).
IV. BODY THREE a. Disney’s films also label the difference in social status, which creates a discriminating stereotype of how a wealthy person should treat less fortunate individuals. b. The last argument in this outline is the differences Disney’s film represents the gap between social and economic status. 1.
The land of stories: the wishing spell, the first of the Land of Stories series by Chris Colfer is a beautiful story for children of any age to rediscover the magic of the fairytale world. The story begins when 12-year-old twins, Alex and Conner Bailey receive a storybook from their grandmother. When the book starts shaking and glowing in the middle of the night, the inquisitive Alex begins to investigate the strange phenomenon, when she loses her balance and falls into the book, to which her frightened brother follows. They find themselves lost in the fairytale world; only their stories have moved on without the rest of the world.
13.) In the beginning, Herot was being savagely attacked by Grendel and lives were being taken for twelve straight winters. He was “so set on murder that no crime could ever be enough, no savage assault quench his lust for evil” (lines 50-53). Finally, the brave warrior Beowulf arrives to Herot and murders the devious Grendel. Seeking revenge, Grendel’s mom slyly arrives at Herot and snatches only one victim.
Beowulf’s Vengeance It is a fair night in Geatland, and Beowulf is celebrating his victory over Grendel's Mother in the mead hall Higlac built for his nephew. The mead hall is named The Court of Champions. "Let us celebrate my nephew’s great accomplishments of ridding the Danish people of their hideous creatures!" Higlac exclaims as he raises his mead cup to his subjects. Higlac by far was one of the fairest kings the Geats have had, after raids he gave each member a portion of the loot and made sure that everyone in the clan was cared for.
a. What purpose is served in the novel by the presence of Mrs. Hedges? Of Mr. Jones? Of Min? Mrs. Hedges is a product of the street, learned to conform to the street, and made it work for her success. She attempts to help Lutie, by showing her how not to be a part of “brawling, teeming” (251) life of the street.
Literary Analysis of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight The selection of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight follows the basic format of the adventure. The author emphasizes communion to show the loyalty and community between King Arthur and his knights. The symbolism behind the relationship between Sir Gawain to humans and the Green Knight to the merciful God further shows the relations of this medieval romance to the Bible.
Flannery O’Connor’s The King of the Birds is a narrative explaining the narrator’s obsession with different kinds of fowl over time. The reader follows the narrator from her first experience with a chicken, which caught the attention of reporters due to its ability to walk both backward and forward, to her collection of peahens and peacocks. At the mere age of five, the narrator’s chicken was featured in the news and from that moment she began to build her family of fowl. The expansive collection began with chickens, but soon the narrator found a breed of bird that was even more intriguing; peacocks.
1. How does Beowulf character compare with other heroes you know about? When compared against modern heroes, Beowulf comes off as a more of a rugged dirty character. When looking at heroes such as Captain America or Luke Skywalker, both of these characters are never pictured as dirty. Captain America, also known as Steve Rogers, is always pictured as clean and his suit never dirty, same thing with Luke Skywalker.
The Wart, the Roach, and the Monarch After reading The Once and Future King, by T.H White, the main character, the Wart goes through many transformations, this reflection will be reviewing chapter 5 and the lessons the Wart learns; compassion through the roach and swan and the dangers of a tyrannical government through Mr. P. The Wart’s first lesson starts out on a hot summer day by the moat of Ector’s castle. Merlin talks to the god Neptune and asks if he will turn the Wart into a fish, Neptune accepts and the Wart is off on his first lesson. “Snylrem stnemilpmoc ot enutpen dna lliw eh yldnik tpecca siht yob sa a hsif?” (White 45).
Discuss the imaginative response to the figure of Elizabeth I in The Faerie Queene Book III. What was possibly the most challenging disruption to the patriarchal society in sixteen century England was the presence of a dominant and influential queen on the throne, Elizabeth I who remained there for 45 years. Stephen Greenblatt tells us that Spenser glorified power, especially imperialistic power, and the poet 's life and career in Ireland and his myriad of attempts to achieve status and fame proposes to us that he had a absolute concern in flattering both the queen and her court, and many reasons to “present the party line in his epic romance”.(Villeponteaux) In this essay I would like to discuss the way female power is portrayed by the
The style of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is written with extreme imagery and detail. It's the kind of story that uses imagery and details to make it so that the reader almost feels the weather, sees the sights, and feels the emotion happening in each scene. He describes things with words I don't quite understand, but still with enough detail to make it seem very vivid. 2. Symbols: His pentangle: is a sign that Solomon composed to stand for truth, because it has five points and lines, all of which interlace with the other.
Follow the Code (An Analysis of King Arthur’s Code of Chivalry in Morte d’Arthur) The sword and the stone is a long lived story still being told since before 1471, over five hundred years now. There are many aspects of this story that can be analyzed for different purposes. This story of Morte d’Arthur scripted by Sir Thomas Malory displays a great example of the code of chivalry and the way it was admired in the time of King Arthur himself and the Knights of the Round Table.
Thesis: The role of the Anglo-Saxon Hero in Beowulf represents and defines the values of strength, intelligence, selfness, and courage. Beowulf himself models the culture of the Anglo-Saxon hero, as he is willing to face any odds, and fight to the death for their glory and people I. Strength and physical appearance A. Strength is clearly an important characteristic of heroes in Anglo-Saxon culture and heroic code. 1. The beginning of the story Beowulf is described as having the strength of "thirty men" in just one of his arms. 2.
The people from both realms flocked in the thousands, to be at The Landsmeet. The gates are open, allowing nobles to pass through while the untitled converge on the streets of Rosemore. Regent First Commander Cipher is standing like a statue near the entrance’s door of the castle, awaiting the arrival of King David Callaghan. He stood with several of his men, stagger behind him with their weapons in the readied position, when the king’s carriage appears, surrounded by a vast body of his forces.