Dream of the Rood: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[The Day of Reckoning]]: Foretold in the end of the poem, in a rather optimistic way.
* [[The Day of Reckoning]]: Foretold in the end of the poem, in a rather optimistic way.
* [[Dream Sequence]]: The vision takes place in a dream (but this does not prevent the dreamer from believing in it).
* [[Dream Sequence]]: The vision takes place in a dream (but this does not prevent the dreamer from believing in it).
* [[Everythings Better With Sparkles]]: medieval people were REALLY convinced that this is true - when they wanted to make something beautiful, they used to coat it with [http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_4gMJoE4n0uY/S961QGMYrII/AAAAAAAACbA/42GMll0bRm8/s1600/SK_WS_XIII_1_104.JPG a lot of] [http://www.proprofs.com/flashcards/upload/a4426051.jpg gold and gems]. And they usually [http://www.oberlin.edu/images/Art335/335-143.JPG succeeded].
* [[Everything's Better With Sparkles]]: medieval people were REALLY convinced that this is true - when they wanted to make something beautiful, they used to coat it with [http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_4gMJoE4n0uY/S961QGMYrII/AAAAAAAACbA/42GMll0bRm8/s1600/SK_WS_XIII_1_104.JPG a lot of] [http://www.proprofs.com/flashcards/upload/a4426051.jpg gold and gems]. And they usually [http://www.oberlin.edu/images/Art335/335-143.JPG succeeded].
* [[Gem Encrusted]]: Because this is the 8th century, and [[Everythings Sparkly With Jewelry]].
* [[Gem Encrusted]]: Because this is the 8th century, and [[Everything's Sparkly With Jewelry]].
* [[Gold Makes Everything Shiny]]
* [[Gold Makes Everything Shiny]]
* [[God Is Good]]: Most probably [[Author Tract]].
* [[God Is Good]]: Most probably [[Author Tract]].

Revision as of 03:37, 10 January 2014

But he on rood that bleeding died,

Whose hands the nails did harshly smite,

Grant you may pass, when you are tried,

By innocence and not by right.
—Anonymous, "The Pearl", tr. JRR Tolkien.

One of the oldest (may have been written as early as in the 8th century) and most famous English poems (even though not exactly English), a description of a dream vision about the tree out of which was made the Christ's Cross. The tree, alternately glittering with gold and gems and streaming with blood, tells the story of the crucifixion of Christ, in which Christ is presented as an ideal of Anglo-Saxon warrior - beautiful, tough and courageous even in the face of death. The poem can be read as a literary fossil documenting the transitional stage from Germanic Pagan religion to full-fledged Christianity. JRR Tolkien was certainly familiar with the text, as it is one of the most important samples for the Old English scholars, so it is interesting to note that it contains the word 'middangeard', a linguistic ancestor of 'Middle-Earth'.

Exemplifies the following tropes: