Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight :: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Sir Gawain and The Green  nicknameThe story, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, was told in the14th century by an anonymous poet about a young knight on his  commencement adventure. In my analysis of Part 4, lines 2358 through 2350, I will  hold forth the significance of the number three, the tap, the asking of the Green Knight his name, and the  parking area belt. I will develop the theory that the author uses this story and these significant symbols to  shore out his Christian beliefs about the flesh and its weakness. The passage opens with the Green Knight explaining why he has not struck Gawain the first  cardinal  propagation because Gawain has kept the agreements. The agreement is that whatever the Green Knight wins in the woods, he will exchange with Sir Gawain for his earning in the castle at the end of  for each one day. The Green Knight explains that the reason that Gawain is tapped is because the third time he withheld a part of his earnings for the day (the green belt). The    Green Knight swings two times, stopping short on the third time, he  lights-out Gawain, scarring him  scarcely not chopping  polish off his head.There is great significance in the  situation that the events in this poem occur in multiples of three. Three times Gawain is tempted by the lovely lady, and on the third time, he succumbs to her temptations, by accepting the green belt. The hunts take place on three different days. The third day, Gawain withholds a portion of his earnings. The Green Knight swings at Gawain three times. He  deliberately misses the first two times. On the third time he taps him, leaving a scar. The significance of all these threes is that Christianity teaches the trilogy the Father, the Son, the Holy Ghost. Almost everything in life falls into groups threes man, women,  tyke three trimesters to the birth of a child the Sun, Moon and the Earth. The fact that the events unfold in counts of threes explains the depth with which the anonymous poet was  difficult    to connect this story and this passage to the bible and biblical events.The tap represents Gawains punishment for not exchanging his earnings. He is tapped instead of his head being chopped off because the Green Knight acknowledges the fact that he has told his wife, the lovely lady, to tempt Gawain and he understands why Gawain does not give up the green belt.  
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