Speranza
From Wikipedia, "Francesca da Rimini":
"In the third act Francesca, in
her luxurious apartment, is reading the
story of Lancelot and Guinevere to
her women."
----
From Wikipedia, "Lancelot"
"Lancelot's
first appearance as a main character is in Chrétien de Troyes.
Best known
for his love affair with Arthur's wife Guinevere."
The Wikipedia entry
features a nice illustration, "Lancelot rode his way
with Guinevere unto
Joyous Gard" ("The Boy's King Arthur", p. 278).
from page 278 of The
Boy's King Arthur: Launcelot and Guinevere- "He rode
his way with the Queen
unto Joyous Gard."
The Wikipedia entry goes on:
"The problem is
that critics have been unable to agree on how to reconcile
[Lancelot's]
perfect “saintliness” with his obvious adultery with King
Arthur’s
Guinevere."
"How can the lovers’ consummation be considered a “saintly
affair” when it
is also adultery?"
"And against King Arthur, to whom
William Bowman Piper suggests all knights
owe selfless respect, according to
Arthurian politics."
"Raabe compares Lancelot’s quest for Guinevere in
“Lancelot, the Knight of
the Cart,” as a quest likening to Everyman’s quest
for salvation and
Christ’s quest for the human soul."
"Danielle
MacBain’s study of Thomas Malory’s “Le Morte d'Arthur,” claims
Lancelot’s
affair with Guinevere is often seen as parallel to that of
Tristram, or
Tristan, and Iseult. MacBain suggests that it is Lancelot who is
ultimately
identified with the tragedy of chance and human failing that is
responsible
for the downfall of the round table."
"Almost immediately upon his
arrival at King Arthur's court, Lancelot falls
in love with the
Queen."
"One of his very first adventures is rescuing Guinevere from
Arthur's
enemy, Meleagant."
"It is Galehaut is the one who finally
convinces Guinevere to return
Lancelot's affection, an action that at least
partially results in the fall of
Camelot."
"Lancelot's affair with
Guinevere is a destructive force, esulting in the
death of Gawain's
brothers and his two sons, the estrangement of Lancelot
and Gawain, and
Mordred's betrayal of King Arthur."
"Upon hearing the news of Arthur's
death, Lancelot finds that Guinevere has
become a nun."
"Guinevere
blames all the destruction of the Round Table upon her and
Lancelot's love,
which, indeed, according to Le Morte D'Arthur, is the seed of
all the
dismay that followed."
"Guinevere refuses to kiss Lancelot one last time,
tells him to return to
his lands, and that he will never see her face
again."
"Instead, Lancelot declares that if she will take upon her a life
of
penitence, then so will he."
"Lancelot then retires to a
hermitage to live the remainder of his life in
penitence with eight of his
kin, including Sir Bors, joining him.
Eventually he becomes a priest, later
conducting rites over the deceased body of
Guinevere (who has become an
abbess)."
"As she had indicated, he never saw her face again in life. She
had prayed
that she might die before he arrived, and so she did,
half-an-hour before
his arrival (he had been told to go due to a dream he
had had the night
before)."
"After Guinivere's death, Lancelot and
his fellow knights escort her body
to be interred beside King Arthur (it
was in the same place that Gawain's
skull was kept)."
"Lancelot,
distraught for the loss of his beloved king and queen, begins to
fail. In
fact, even before this time, Le Morte D' Arthur states that he
had lost a
cubit of height due to his penitent fastings and prayers."
"Six weeks
after the death of the Guinevere, Lancelot dies."
"It is implied that he
wished to be buried beside the king and queen;
however, because he had some
time before made a vow to be buried at Joyous Gard,
he asks that he be
buried there so as not to break his word."
---
"It is possible
that originally Lancelot's tale did not include an affair
with Guinevere,
as the German Lanzelet knows nothing of it."
The good thing will be perhaps to see how the thing --
D'Annunzio's tragedy
-- is turned into a metrical scheme to fit the episode,
when, to repeat
the Wikipedia reference,
"in the third act
Francesca, in her luxurious apartment, Francesca is
reading the story of
Lancelot and Guinevere to her women."
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