The Book of the Epic: The World's Great Epics Told in Story
E-text prepared by Ted Garvin, Cathy Smith, and the Project Gutenberg
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The World's Great Epics Told in Story
Author of Myths of Greece and Rome , Myths of Northern Lands , Legends of the Middle Ages , etc.
With an Introduction by J. Berg Esenwein, Litt. D.
With Sixteen Illustrations from the Masters of Painting
1913
Every now and then in our reading we come suddenly face to face with first things,—the very elemental sources beyond which no man may go. There is a distinct satisfaction in dealing with such beginnings, and, when they are those of literature, the sense of freshness is nothing short of inspiring. To share the same lofty outlook, to breathe the same high air with those who first sensed a whole era of creative thoughts, is the next thing to being the gods' chosen medium for those primal expressions.
All this is not to say that the epic is the oldest form of literary expression, but it is the expression of the oldest literary ideas, for, even when the epic is not at all primitive in form, it deals essentially with elemental moods and ideals. Epical poetry is poetic not because it is metrical and conformative to rhythmical standards,—though it usually is both,—but it is poetry because of the high sweep of its emotional outlook, the bigness of its thought, the untamed passion of its language, and the musical flow of its utterance.
Here, then, we have a veritable source book of the oldest ideas of the race; but not only that—we are also led into the penetralia of the earliest thought of many separate nations, for when the epic is national, it is true to the earliest genius of the people whose spirit it depicts.
To be sure, much of literature, and particularly the literature of the epic, is true rather to the tone of a nation than to its literal history—by which I mean that Achilles was more really a Greek hero than any Greek who ever lived, because he was the apotheosis of Greek chivalry, and as such was the expression of the Greeks rather than merely a Greek. The Iliad and the Odyssey are not merely epics of Greece—they are Greek.
H. A. Guerber
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THE BOOK OF THE EPIC
INTRODUCTION
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
FOREWORD
THE BOOK OF THE EPIC
THE ILIAD
THE ODYSSEY
LATIN EPICS
THE AENEID
FRENCH EPICS
THE SONG OF ROLAND[8]
AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE
SPANISH EPICS
THE CID
PORTUGUESE EPICS
THE LUSIAD
ITALIAN EPICS
DIVINE COMEDY
PURGATORY
PARADISE
THE ORLANDOS
GERUSALEMME LIBERATA, OR JERUSALEM DELIVERED
EPICS OF THE BRITISH ISLES
BEOWULF[21]
THE ARTHURIAN CYCLE
ROBIN HOOD
THE FAERIE QUEENE
BOOK II. THE LEGEND OF SIR GUYON, OR OF TEMPERANCE
BOOK III. THE STORY OF BRITOMART,—CHASTITY
BOOK IV. LEGEND OF COMBEL AND TRIAMOND, OR OF FRIENDSHIP
BOOK V. THE LEGEND OF SIR ARTEGALL,—JUSTICE
BOOK VI. LEGEND OF SIR CALIDORE, OR OF COURTESY
PARADISE LOST
Book I. After intimating he intends "no middle flight," but proposes to "justify the ways of God to man," Milton states the fall was due to the serpent, who, in revenge for being cast out of heaven with his hosts, induced the mother of mankind to sin. He adds how, hurled from the ethereal sky to the bottomless pit, Satan lands in a burning lake of asphalt. There, oppressed by the sense of lost happiness and lasting pain, he casts his eyes about him, and, flames making the darkness visible, beholds those enveloped in his doom suffering the same dire pangs. Full of immortal hate, unconquerable will, and a determination never to submit or yield, Satan, confident his companions will not fail him, and enriched by past experiences, determines to continue disputing the mastery of heaven from the Almighty.
PARADISE REGAINED
GERMAN EPICS
THE NIBELUNGENLIED[29]
STORY OF THE HOLY GRAIL
EPICS OF THE NETHERLANDS
SCANDINAVIAN EPICS
THE VOLSUNGA SAGA[34]
RUSSIAN AND FINNISH EPICS
THE KALEVALA, OR THE LAND OF HEROES
THE EPICS OF CENTRAL EUROPE AND OF THE BALKAN PENINSULA
HEBREW AND EARLY CHRISTIAN EPICS
ARABIAN AND PERSIAN EPICS
THE SHAH-NAMEH, OR EPIC OF KINGS
INDIAN EPICS
THE RAMAYANA
THE MAHABHARATA
THE STORY OF THE DELUGE
THE STORY OF NALA AND DAMAYANTI
THE STORY OF SAVITRI AND SATYAVAN
CHINESE AND JAPANESE POETRY
AMERICAN EPICS
INDEX OF NAMES
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z