Plot summary
King Ardus of Aragon and his wife, Margaret, have no children, so he pledges to go on crusade in the hope that God will grant him an heir. A son is conceived the night before he leaves for the Holy Land, though neither of them know it. During the king's absence his steward, Marrok, attempts to seduce the queen, who firmly rejects him. In retaliation, when the king comes home Marrok tells him that the queen was unfaithful while he was gone and that the child is not his. The king exiles the pregnant queen without explanation, and she leaves court accompanied by an old knight, Sir Roger, and his dog, True-Love. As they pass through the woods, Marrok and a company of his retainers attack the queen and Sir Roger who, despite his lack of armor, fights valiantly with the aid of True-Love but is killed. The dog tries to heal him and then buries him, refusing to leave his grave except for brief trips to the king's court in search of his master's killer. He finally finds Marrok and kills him, which reveals the steward's treachery to the king. Ardus hangs Marrok posthumously and gives him an ignominious burial. Sir Roger is buried with great honor, and True-Love remains at the gravesite until he dies. The queen escapes Marrok's attack and makes her way toThemes and motifs
''Sir Tryamour'' is a straightforward, relatively swift episodic narrative. The ornately detailed descriptions, supernatural elements and intense romantic relationships found in many romances are minimal or absent, while there is a focus on marital and familial relationships. The poem is composed of a number of literary and folktale themes and motifs common to Middle English romance, including separation and reunion, the knight in search of his unknown father, the need for an heir, the wrongly accused queen, the traitorous steward, the winning of a bride through combat, the seeking of knightly adventures and renown, and the display of prowess. Critics compare ''Sir Tryamour'' to other romances with similar themes, such as the search for a father in ''King Horn'' and ''Sir Degare'', and the calumniated queen in ''Octavian'', although many of the themes listed above may be found in a number of other romances, such as ''Ywain and Gawain'', ''Sir Launfal'', ''Havelok'' and ''Sir Amadace''. There are several types of situations that require combat: jousts and tournaments; judicial and challenge combats; attacks on protagonists; hostile sieges; and civil war. Some critics observe that martial combat dominates the romance and distinguishes it from others, but chivalric adventures involving the testing and use of prowess are common in romance. The seeming prevalence of combat may be attributed to the perceived lack of development of romantic relationships, causing an imbalance compared to other romances, and to the number of opponents faced by the hero, which is perhaps notable because they are individualized. Based on generic expectations, critics and readers familiar with romance may observe an underdevelopment of love in ''Sir Tryamour''. However, the ''Tryamour''-poet presents a range of love relationships, selfish and selfless, such as marital devotion, parental and familial love, lustful desire, and (especially) love between animal and master. The absence of romantic love between Helen and Tryamour could be attributed to the poet's concentration on combat at the expense of romantic love, but this is difficult to support considering the attention paid to Ardus and Margaret's relationship. There is another possible interpretation: that the relationship between Helen and Tryamour is defined not by romance but by pragmatism that fulfills their respective needs and goals. In the predecessors of Middle English romances, the twelfth-century courtly narratives such asCritical studies
*Pearsall, Derek. "The Development of Middle English Romance." ''Mediaeval Studies'' 27 (1965): 91-116. *Ramsey, Lee C. ''Chivalric Romances: Popular Literature in Medieval England''. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1983. 162-65. *There are few extensive studies of ''Sir Tryamour'', which may be attributed to several factors: the lack of editions, the corruption of the text, the use of stock themes, and a disparagement of the literary quality. Fellows, for example, finds that "stylistically ''Sir Tryamour'' leaves much to be desired." While Pearsall considers the poem a "rehash of conventional motifs," he finds it "skilful" and the plot "quite intricate." *The use of a number of stock themes is common to most romances; in fact, it was expected in order to validate the poem as authentic through the use of previous works and/or tales, and the concept of plagiarism was unknown. The poet's skill is demonstrated in his ability to weave the themes into a meaningful work that would both entertain and instruct the audience. ''Sir Tryamour'' was apparently successful judging by its popularity, being reprinted into the sixteenth century. *Opinion is divided over the assessment of Middle English romances, which have traditionally been categorized as "courtly," meaning of high quality and appealing to the aristocracy, and "popular," of lesser quality aimed at the lower classes. This has been reevaluated in recent years, but ''Sir Tryamour'' may be caught in the cycle of "popular" works considered to be of inferior quality compared to more sophisticated poems. Regardless of its source, the lacuna in critical study of ''Sir Tryamour'' should invite scholars' attention to this overlooked poem.Manuscripts
*Cambridge University Library Ff. 2.38, mid-fifteenth century *Bodleian MS (Rawlinson), sixteenth century, fragment *Percy Folio MS British Library Add. 27879, c. 1642-50Editions
*''Bishop Percy's Folio Manuscript: Ballads and Romances''. Vol. II. Ed. John W. Hales and Frederick J. Furnivall. London: 1868. 78-135. *''The Romance of Syr Tryamoure''. Ed. James Orchard Halliwell. London: Percy Society, 1846. *''Syr Tryamowre'': A Metrical Romance. Ed. Anna Johanna Schmidt. Utrecht: Broekhoff, 1937. *''Syr Tryamowre. Of Love and Chivalry: An Anthology of Middle English Romance''. Ed. Jennifer Fellows. London: J.M. Dent, 1993. *''Sir Tryamour. Four Middle English Romances''. Ed. Harriet Hudson. TEAMS Middle English Texts Series. Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute Publications, 1996. There were at least two early printed editions of ''Sir Tryamour'' in the mid-sixteenth century by Willyam Copland. The earliest is preserved in the British Museum, and the later at the Bodleian Library in Oxford. The Percy MS appears to derive from Copland's editions, as may the Rawlinson fragment.Schmidt 3, Halliwell 61. The 75-line Rawlinson fragment is printed in Halliwell's edition, pp. 61-63. Fragments have also been found in two sixteenth-century printed editions, including one byNotes
References
In addition to the TEAMS printed and online editions, there are a number of standard scholarly anthologies of Middle English romances, a few of which are listed below. *''The Breton Lays in Middle English''. Ed. Thomas C. Rumble. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1965. *''Middle English Metrical Romances''. Ed. Walter Hoyt French and Charles Brockway Hale. 1930. New York: Russell & Russell Inc., 1964. *''Middle English Romances''. Ed. Stephen H. A. Shepherd. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1995. *''Middle English Verse Romances''. Ed. Donald B. Sands. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1966. *''The Poems of the Pearl Manuscript''. Ed. Malcolm Andrew and Ronald Waldron. Berkeley: U of California P, 1978. *''Six Middle English Romances''. Ed. and introd. Maldwyn Mills. London: J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd, 1973.Suggested readings
The following readings are suggested for general background of Middle English romances and the culture in which they were created. *Barron, W. R. J. ''English Medieval Romance''. London: Longman, 1987. *Barber, Richard. ''The Knight and Chivalry''. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 1970. Rev. 1995. *Bloch, R. Howard and Stephen G. Nichols, eds. ''Medievalism and the Modernist Temper''. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1996. *Coss, Peter. ''The Knight in Medieval England 1000-1400''. Conshohocken, PA: Combined Books, 1996. *Crane, Susan. ''Insular Romance: Politics, Faith, and Culture in Anglo-Norman and Middle English Literature''. Berkeley: U of California P, 1986. *Goldberg, P. J. P. ''Medieval England: A Social History 1250-1550''. London: Hodder Arnold, 2004. *Green, Richard Firth. ''A Crisis of Truth: Literature and Law in Ricardian England''. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 1999. *Keen, Maurice. ''England in the Later Middle Ages''. London: Routledge, 1973. *—. ''Chivalry''. New Haven: Yale UP, 1984. *Knight, Stephen. "The Social Function of the Middle English Romances." ''Medieval Literature: Criticism, Ideology, and History''. Ed. David Aers. Brighton, Sussex: Harvester Press Ltd, 1986. 99-122. *McDonald, Nicola. ''Pulp Fictions of Medieval England''. Manchester: Manchester UP, 2004. *McKisack, May. ''The Fourteenth Century 1307-1399''. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1959. *Mehl, Dieter. ''The Middle English Romances of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries''. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1967. *Mills, Maldwyn, Jennifer Fellows, et al., eds. ''Romance in Medieval England''. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1991. *Pearsall, Derek. "The Development of Middle English Romance." ''Studies in Medieval English Romances: Some New Approaches''. Ed. Derek Brewer. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1988. 11-35. *Putter, Ad, and Jane Gilbert, eds. ''The Spirit of Medieval English Popular Romance''. Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2000. *Robertson, D. W. ''Essays in Medieval Culture''. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1980. *Saunders, Corinne, ed. ''Cultural Encounters in the Romance of Medieval England''. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2005.External links
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