British Literature: Week 7 - 9 Vocab
Feudalism: a method of organizing society consisting of three estates: clergymen, the noblemen who were granted fiefs by the King, and the peasant class who worked on the fief
Great Chain of Being: the metaphor used in the Middle Ages to describe the social hierarchy believed to be created by God
Chivalry: the code of conduct that bound and defined a knight's behavior
Mystery Plays: a play depicting events from the Bible
Morality Plays: play depicting representative characters in moral dilemmas with both the good and the evil parts of their character struggling for dominance
Medieval Romance: a narrative, in either prose or poetry, presenting a knight and his adventures
Pearl Poet: the unidentified author of Pearl, Patience, and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Alliterative Revival: a resurgent use of the alliterative verse form of oral Old English poetry such as Beowulf
Bob and Wheel: a group of five short lines at the end of an alliterative verse rhyming ABABA
Green Man: a character in ancient fertility myths representing spring and the renewal of life
Courtly Love: rules governing the behavior of knights and ladies in a ritualistic, formalized system of flirtation
Crags: rugged mass of rocks
Heaved: pull hard
Barrow: mound
Gnarled: twisted
Cleft: split
Befall: happen to
Kirk: church
Cleave: split
Scythe: hooked blade
Dawdle: be slow
Whetting: sharpen a blade
Reproof: expression of disapproval
Daunted: intimidated
Winced: involuntary shrink away
Aloft: lift overhead
Efficacious: effective
Staunch and Doughty: loyal and brave
Reproved: scolded
Covetousness: envy
Penance: payment for sin
Frame Story/Framework: a narrative that contains another narrative
Links: conversations among the various pilgrims between the stories to tie the stories together
Feudalism: a method of organizing society consisting of three estates: clergymen, the noblemen who were granted fiefs by the King, and the peasant class who worked on the fief
Great Chain of Being: the metaphor used in the Middle Ages to describe the social hierarchy believed to be created by God
Chivalry: the code of conduct that bound and defined a knight's behavior
Mystery Plays: a play depicting events from the Bible
Morality Plays: play depicting representative characters in moral dilemmas with both the good and the evil parts of their character struggling for dominance
Medieval Romance: a narrative, in either prose or poetry, presenting a knight and his adventures
Pearl Poet: the unidentified author of Pearl, Patience, and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Alliterative Revival: a resurgent use of the alliterative verse form of oral Old English poetry such as Beowulf
Bob and Wheel: a group of five short lines at the end of an alliterative verse rhyming ABABA
Green Man: a character in ancient fertility myths representing spring and the renewal of life
Courtly Love: rules governing the behavior of knights and ladies in a ritualistic, formalized system of flirtation
Crags: rugged mass of rocks
Heaved: pull hard
Barrow: mound
Gnarled: twisted
Cleft: split
Befall: happen to
Kirk: church
Cleave: split
Scythe: hooked blade
Dawdle: be slow
Whetting: sharpen a blade
Reproof: expression of disapproval
Daunted: intimidated
Winced: involuntary shrink away
Aloft: lift overhead
Efficacious: effective
Staunch and Doughty: loyal and brave
Reproved: scolded
Covetousness: envy
Penance: payment for sin
Frame Story/Framework: a narrative that contains another narrative
Links: conversations among the various pilgrims between the stories to tie the stories together