The Grail: From Celtic Myth to Christian SymbolPrinceton University Press, 2018/06/05 - 312 ページ The medieval legend of the Grail, a tale about the search for supreme mystical experience, has never ceased to intrigue writers and scholars by its wildly variegated forms: the settings have ranged from Britain to the Punjab to the Temple of Zeus at Dodona; the Grail itself has been described as the chalice used by Christ at the Last Supper, a stone with miraculous youth-preserving virtues, a vessel containing a man's head swimming in blood; the Grail has been kept in a castle by a beautiful damsel, seen floating through the air in Arthur's palace, and used as a talisman in the East to distinguish the chaste from the unchaste. In his classic exploration of the obscurities and contradictions in the major versions of this legend, Roger Sherman Loomis shows how the Grail, once a Celtic vessel of plenty, evolved into the Christian Grail with miraculous powers. Loomis bases his argument on historical examples involving the major motifs and characters in the legends, beginning with the Arthurian legend recounted in the 1180 French poem by Chrtien de Troyes. The principal texts fall into two classes: those that relate the adventures of the knights in King Arthur's time and those that account for the Grail's removal from the Holy Land to Britain. Written with verve and wit, Loomis's book builds suspense as he proceeds from one puzzle to the next in revealing the meaning behind the Grail and its legends. |
目次
| 1 | |
II The Origins and Growth of Arthurian Romance | 7 |
III Celtic Myths their Mutations and Combinations | 20 |
IV The First Grail Story the Conte del Graal of Chrétien de Troyes | 28 |
V The Grail Bearer the Question Test and the Fisher King | 46 |
the Corpse on the Bier and the Broken Sword | 65 |
the Waste Land and the Bleeding Lance | 74 |
the Mission of Revenge | 82 |
Combat and Scandal in the Castle of King Pelles | 146 |
Celtic StoryPatterns in Cistercian Allegory | 165 |
XIII Parzival the Spiritual Biography of a Knight | 196 |
XIV Joseph of Arimathea an Evangelist by Error | 223 |
XV Glastonbury School of Forgery and Isle of Avalon | 249 |
XVI The End of the Quest | 271 |
| 278 | |
| 283 | |
