preview

Essay On Symbolism In Sir Gawain And The Green Knight

Decent Essays

The magic in the story is tied to the change of seasons and a cycle of natural regeneration that allows the healing of Green knight after he was beheaded. Gawain meets Morgan La Faye alongside with lady Bertilak but she had changed her looks and looked much older. The poem combines natural and supernatural powers, which order and define men’s lives through growth, death, and rebirth, against the artificial world created by magic. This suggests that the Arthurian chivalric code exists in blankness, separated from the real nature of things. The green girdle that was originally supposed to offer a defense against the magic of the green knight, changes in significance by the end of the poem, when Gawain realizes that it as a symbol of his own failings, of the inherent failings of human nature that no chivalric code can overcome. Christianity and Christian ideas appear everywhere in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Arthurian chivalry is founded in Christian ideals, as it is symbolized by the pentangle painted onto Gawain’s shield, with the face of Mary in the center. The timeline of the events are close to the Christian holidays. When Gawain is on the verge of …show more content…

Unlike Grendel’s mother, who threatened men by acting like a man, Lady Bertilak is dangerous because she can tempt her femininity and sexuality to tempt the opposite sex. When she comes to Gawain the third time, she uses her body to seduce Gawain into sin: “Her face and fair throat [were] freely displayed / Her bosom all but bare, and her back as well” (ll. 197). The woman is also very clever, speaking with “artful words” and twisting his meaning to confuse and “hem him about” (ll. 198). Eve, who wore no clothes in the Garden, spoke to her husband and convinced him to eat from the Tree of Knowledge. Like Adam, Gawain cannot resist accepting her offer of the

Get Access