• Sir Gawain & the Green Knight (first and second stanzas)
    Jun 3 2022

    Modern English prose translation

    When the siege and the assault were ended at Troy,

    The city battered and burnt to brands and ashes,

    The man that the plots of treason there wrought

    Was tried for his treachery, the veriest on earth.

    It was Aeneas the prince and his noble kin 5

    Who then subdued provinces, and lords became

    Of well nigh all the wealth in the western isles.

    Afterwards noble Romulus hastened to Rome,

    With great pride that city he founds first,

    And names it with his own name, as it now has; 10

    Tirius to Tuscany goes and establishes houses,

    Langaberde in Lombardy sets up homes,

    And far over the French flood Felix Brutus

    On many banks full broad Britain he settles

    with joy; 15

    Where war and distress and wonder

    By turns has dwelt therein,

    And often both bliss and blunder

    Full rapidly has shifted since.

    And when this Britain had been founded by this noble lord, 20

    Bold men were bred therein, who loved warfare,

    In many a past time trouble that wrought.

    More wonders in this land have occurred here often

    Than in any other that I know, since that same time.

    But of all who here dwelt, of Britain’s kings, 25

    Ever was Arthur the noblest, as I have heard tell.

    Therefore an adventure in the land I mean to show,

    That a marvel in sight some men hold it,

    And a prodigious adventure of Arthur’s wonders.

    If you will listen to this lay but a little while 30

    I shall tell it at once, as I heard it in town,

    with tongue,

    As it is fixed and set down

    In story bold and strong,

    With loyal letters locked, 35

    In land as it has been long.

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    2 mins
  • Prologue to the Canterbury Tales
    Jun 3 2022

    Modern English Prose Translation (lines 1-18):

    When April with its sweet showers

    The drought of March has pierced to the root,

    And bathed every vein in such liquid

    By which virtue engendered is the flower,

    When the West Wind with its sweet breath 5

    Has inspired in every wood and heath

    The tender shoots, and the young sun

    Has in the sign of the Ram half its course run,

    And little birds make melody,

    That sleep al the night with open eye 10

    (So nature urges them in their hearts),

    Then long folk to go on pilgrimages,

    And palmers to seek strange shores,

    To distant shrines, known in sundry lands;

    And specially from every shires end 15

    Of England to Canterbury they go,

    The holy blissful martyr to seek,

    Who has helped them when they were sick.

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    1 min
  • Linguistic and Social Change and the Unchanging Human Heart (Troilus & Criseyde, Book II, lines 22-28)
    Jun 3 2022
    Dr. Robert Rice reads the Linguistic and Social Change, and the Unchanging Human Heart ( from Troilus & Criseyde, Book II, lines 22-28.)
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    1 min
  • Pater Noster and Ave Maria (Middle English)
    Jun 3 2022

    Modern English Translation:

    Pater Noster
    Our Father who art in heaven

    hallowed be thy name;

    thy kingdom come.

    thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven;

    give is this day our daily bread,

    and forgive us our trespasses

    as we forgive those

    who trespass against us,

    and lead is not into temptation

    but deliver us from evil. Amen.

    Ave Maria
    Hail, Mary, full of grace!

    The Lord is with thee.

    Blessed art thou among women,

    And blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.

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    1 min
  • The Battle of Brunanburh (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle)
    Jun 3 2022

    Modern English Translation:

    Here King Ezelstan, lord of men,

    ring-giver of warriors, and his brother also,

    Eadmund the Fzeling, everlasting glory

    achieved in battle by the edges of swords

    near Brunanburh. They cleaved the shield-wall,

    hewed the war-lindens with the leavings of hammers,

    the offspring of Eadward, as befitted their descent

    from noble ancestors, that they often in battle

    against each enemy should defend the land,

    treasure and homes. The enemy perished, 10

    Scots people and Vikings

    fell doomed. The field flowed

    with the blood of warriors, since the sun rose

    in the morning time, the glorious star

    glided over the ground, God’s bright candle,

    the eternal Lord’s, until the noble creature

    sank in setting. There lay many a man

    gored by spears, a man of the north

    shot over the shield; just as the Scots also,

    weary, sated with war. The West Saxons went forth 20

    the long day with picked troops

    on the tracks of the hated people,

    fiercely cutting down from behind those in flight

    with file-sharpened swords. The Mercians did not refuse

    hard hand-play with any hero

    who with Olaf over the sea’s surge

    in a ship’s bosom sought land,

    doomed in battle. Five young kings lay

    on that battlefield,

    put to sleep by swords; likewise seven 30

    jarls of Olaf, and countless numbers of the army,

    Vikings and Scots. There was put to flight

    the prince of the Northmen, compelled by necessity

    to the prow of his ship with little company;

    the ship pushed to sea, the king went out

    on the fallow flood: he saved his life.

    Likewise there all the old man in flight came

    to his northern kin, Costontinus,
    grey battle warrior; he had no cause to exult

    in the meeting of swords; he was stripped of kinsmen, 40

    deprived of friends on the battlefield,

    slain in strife; and he left his son

    on the field of slaughter, destroyed by wounds,

    young at war. He had no need to boast,

    the grey-haired warrior, in the clash of swords,

    the malicious old man, no more than did Olaf;

    with their remnant of warriors; they had no cause for laughter

    that they had the better on the battle field

    in the clash of banners, the encounter of spears,

    the meeting of men, the exchange of blows 50

    of those who on the field of slaughter

    with Edward’s sons played.

    Then departed the Northmen, the dreary survivors of spears,

    in nailed ships onto Dingesmere

    over deep water to seek Dublin,

    and again Ireland, ashamed in spirit.

    Likewise the brothers both together,

    king and atheling, sought their kinsmen,

    the land of West Saxons, exulting in war.

    They left behind them to enjoy corpses 60

    the dark-coated one, the black raven,

    the horn-beaked one and the dun-coated one,

    the eagle white from behind, to enjoy the carrion,

    the greedy war-hawk, and the grey beast,

    the wolf in the forest. Never was there greater slaughter

    on this island ever yet

    of folk felled before this

    by the sword’s edge, of which books tell us,

    by wise old men, since from the east hither

    Angles and Saxons came up 70

    over the broad seas seeking Britain,

    proud war-smiths, they overcame the Welsh,

    noble warriors, eager for glory, conquered the land.

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    4 mins
  • Grendel's Approach (from Beowulf, lines 702b-738)
    Jun 3 2022

    Modern English prose translation:

    Came on dark night

    the shadow-walker striding. The bowmen slept,

    who were to hold the gabled hall,

    all but one. It was l known to men

    that the demonic foe might not, if the Lord dis not wish it,

    bring them under the shadows;

    but he wakeful, wrathful in indignation,

    awaited enraged the outcome of battle.

    Then came off the moor under misty hills 710

    Grendel going, he bore God’s anger;

    the evil ravager intended to ensnare some

    of mankind in that high hall.

    He waded under the clouds until he knew

    clearly the gold hall of men,

    shining in gold. That was not the first time

    that he had sought Hrothgar’s house;

    never he in the days of his life before or since

    did he harder luck or hall-thanes find.

    Came then to the hall the warrior striding, 720

    deprived of joys. The door, firm with forged bands,

    immediately sprang open as he touched it with his hands;

    then hostile minded he ripped open, since he was enraged,

    the mouth of the hall. Quickly thereafter

    the fiend trod the patterned floor,

    went angrily; there stood out from his eyes,

    most like fire, an eerie light.

    He saw in the hall many a warrior,

    a sleeping band of kinsmen all together,

    a company of young warriors. Then his spirit laughed; 730

    the dire adversary believed that, before dawn came,

    he would separate life from the body

    of each of them, for he was in expectation

    of a plentiful feast. It was no longer his fate

    that he might consume of mankind anymore

    after that night. The mighty kinsman of Hygelac

    watched how the criminal assailant

    under sudden attack would act.

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    3 mins
  • The Prologue to Beowulf (lines 1-52)
    Jun 3 2022
    Dr. Robert Rice reads the prologue to Beowulf.
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    3 mins
  • The Dream of the Rood (lines 1-38)
    Jun 3 2022

    Modern English prose translation

    Listen! I intend to tell the choicest of dreams

    which I dreamt in the middle of the night

    while speech-bearers* dwelt at rest. *A kening for ‘men’

    It seemed to me that I saw a most wondrous tree

    born aloft in the air, enveloped with light, 5

    the brightest of beams. That beacon was completely

    stippled with gold; gems stood

    fair at the corners of the earth, five of which there were

    up on the crossbeam. Beheld it there all the angels of the Lord,

    fair from their creation. Nor indeed was that a criminal’s gallows. 10

    But there beheld it holy spirits,

    men over the earth, and all this glorious creation.

    Wondrous was that victory-beam, and I was stained with sins,

    deeply wounded with wrongdoings. I saw the Tree of Glory,

    worthily adorned, beautifully shining, 15

    garnished with gold; jewels had covered worthily the tree of the forest.

    Nevertheless, through that gold I was able to perceive

    the ancient strife of wretches, when it first began

    to bleed on the right side. I was struck completely through with sorrows. 20

    Fearful I was before that fair vision. I saw that bright beacon

    change clothing and colors. Awhile it was with wetness drenched,

    soaked with the flow of blood, awhile with treasure bedecked.

    Yet I lying there a long while

    beheld in penitent sorrow the Savior’s tree, 25

    until I heard that it uttered speech.

    Began then to speak words the most blest of woods.

    “It was years ago, (I remember it yet),

    that I was hewn down at the forest’s edge,

    removed from my trunk. There mighty enemies seized me, 30

    made me there into a spectacle, ordered me to bear their criminals.

    Men bore me then on their shoulders, until they set me on a hill;

    fastened me there enemies enow. Then I saw the Lord of mankind

    hasten with great zeal when that He would ascend me.

    There I dared not then against the Lord’s word 35

    bow or break, when I saw trembling

    the surface of the earth. I might all

    the foes have felled, nevertheless I stood fast.

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    3 mins