CliffsNotes on

Le Morte d'Arthur

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About the Author

The Life of Malory
Malory and the Legend of Arthur

About the Work

Introduction
A Brief Synopsis
List of Characters
The Text

Summaries and Commentaries

Book I. The Tale of King Arthur: Merlin
Book I. The Tale of King Arthur: The Knight with the Two Swords
Book I. The Tale of King Arthur: Tor and Pellanor
Book I. The Tale of King Arthur: The Death of Merlin and the War with the Five Kings; Arthur and Accolon; Gawain, Ywain, and Marhault
Book II: Arthur and King Lucius
Book III: Sir Launcelot Du Lake
Book IV: The Tale of Sir Gareth
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Isode (Isolde) the Fair
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Lamerok of Wales; Sir La Cote Male Tale
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Tristram’s Madness and Exile; The Castle of Maidens
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: The Round Table
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: King Mark
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Alexander the Orphan
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: The Tournament at Surluse
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Joyous Gard
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: The Red City
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: The Tournament at Lonezep
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Sir Palomydes
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Launcelot and Elayne
Book V. Sir Tristram De Lyones: Conclusion
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: The Departure
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: The Miracles
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: Sir Percival
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: Sir Launcelot
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: Sir Gawain
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: Sir Bors
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: Sir Galahad
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: The Castle of Corbenic
Book VI. The Tale of the Holy Grail: The Miracle of Galahad
Book VII. Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere: The Poisoned Apple
Book VII. Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere: The Fair Maid of Astalot
Book VII. Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere: The Great Tournament
Book VII. Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere: The Knight of the Cart
Book VII. Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere: The Healing of Sir Urry
Book VIII. The Death of King Arthur: Slander and Strife
Book VIII. The Death of King Arthur: The Vengeance of SirGawain
Book VIII. The Death of King Arthur: The Siege of Benwick
Book VIII. The Death of King Arthur: The Day of Destiny
Book VIII. The Death of King Arthur: The Death of Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere

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Essay Questions

    1.     It has sometimes been argued that Le Morte Darthur was not originally intended as a unified legend, but was merely a sequence of unrelated tales. Accordingly, Eugéne Vinaver, in his great edition of Malory, used the title The Works of Sir Thomas Malory. (Professor Vinaver has since modified his position on the tales.) The present set of Cliffs Notes on Le Morte Darthur assumes that the legend is unified, partly because that is the opinion which has won general acceptance; but the reader need not be limited by the point of view adopted in the Notes. What arguments can be advanced for and against an interpretation of Malory’s “works” as coherent legend?

    2.     Discuss Malory’s narrative method, commenting on his apparent lack of interest in chronology of the sort usually found in the modern novel; his juxtaposition of plots and situations which serve to comment upon one another; his fondness for presenting crucial events offstage (such as the murders of Lot, Pellanor, Tristram, and Lamerok).

    3.     Trace Malory’s development of Gawain’s character. Is the characterization consistent? If it can be said that Gawain has certain consistent defects, can it also be said that he has consistent virtues?

    4.     Merlin sets up Arthur’s kingdom partly through the agency of the Archbishop of Canterbury; the archbishop (sometimes called simply the bishop) also plays a part in the conclusion of the Morte Darthur. Is there any significance in this? Is there any significance in the fact that, like many of Arthur’s knights, the archbishop at last becomes a hermit?

    5.     In the Grail section, both dreams and physical events are interpreted allegorically. Elsewhere, Malory and his characters rest content, for the most part, with the outer appearance of things. To what extent, if any, do earlier and later adventures have allegorical as well as literary meaning?

    6.     Discuss Malory’s use of symbolic settings in Le Morte Darthur—for instance, Tentagil, the Castle of Maidens, Joyous Gard, Benwick, the Castle of Corbenic, and so forth.

    7.     Discuss the interrelationship of the following motifs in Malory’s work: courtly love, married love, the knightly vow of friendship, fealty, revenge, the ravishing of maidens, the murder of knights, Christian devotion, diabolism.

    8.     In what way does the feud between Lot’s house and Pellanor’s house contribute to the fall of the Round Table?

    9.     In Le Morte Darthur, the medieval Christian ideal of renunciation of the world and the Renaissance concern with legitimate and illegitimate ambition stand in nervous equilibrium. Discuss this thesis as a means of accounting for Malory’s ambivalent attitudes toward Launcelot, Gawain, Dynadin, and Tristram.

    10.     Point out specific instances of Malory’s comic treatment of King Mark, Dynadin, and others, and comment on how the humor modifies Malory’s theme.

    11.     What are the differences, for Malory, between ordinary people, witches or sorcerers, and devils?

    12.     Discuss Le Morte Darthur as a book for courtiers; as a book on kingship.

    13.    In “The Day of Destiny” Malory writes:

        Lo, ye all Englysshemen, se ye nat what a myschyff here was? For he that was the moste kynge and nobelyst knyght of the worlde, and moste loved the felyshup of noble knyghtes, and by hym they all were upholdyn, and yet myght nat thes Englyshemen holde them contente with hym. Lo thus was the olde custom and usayges of thys londe, and men say that we of thys londe have nat yet loste that custom.

        In what specific ways does Malory’s book “ended the ninth yere of the reygne of King Edward the Fourth” comment on the contemporaneous political situation?

    14.     Discuss the survival of pagan myth in Le Morte Darthur. To what extent do pagan myths seem to be more or less consciously manipulated here? (Consider Gawain’s waxing and waning powers, the myth of the Wasteland and the king wounded in the thigh, etc.)

    15.     Either by close analysis of one tale in relation to its nearest sources or by examination of one tale and the studies of sources listed in the bibliography, show exactly what Malory did in composing any given tale, and point out the relevance of Malory’s additions or deletions to the theme of Le Morte Darthur.


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