登陆注册
5590500000006

第6章 INTRODUCTION(6)

It would be impossible to exaggerate the enormous services which three great Welshmen of the twelfth century rendered to England and to the world -such services as we may securely hope will be emulated by Welshmen of the next generation,now that we have lived to witness what Mr.Theodore Watts-Dunton has called "the great recrudescence of Cymric energy."{5}The romantic literature of England owes its origin to Geoffrey of Monmouth;{6}Sir Galahad,the stainless knight,the mirror of Christian chivalry,as well as the nobler portions of the Arthurian romance,were the creation of Walter Map,the friend and "gossip"of Gerald;{7}and John Richard Green has truly called Gerald himself "the father of popular literature."{8}He began to write when he was only twenty;he continued to write till he was past the allotted span of life.He is the most "modern"as well as the most voluminous of all the mediaeval writers.Of all English writers,Miss Kate Norgate {9}has perhaps most justly estimated the real place of Gerald in English letters."Gerald's wide range of subjects,"she says,"is only less remarkable than the ease and freedom with which he treats them.Whatever he touches -history,archaeology,geography,natural science,politics,the social life and thought of the day,the physical peculiarities of Ireland and the manners and customs of its people,the picturesque scenery and traditions of his own native land,the scandals of the court and the cloister,the petty struggle for the primacy of Wales,and the great tragedy of the fall of the Angevin Empire -is all alike dealt with in the bold,dashing,offhand style of a modern newspaper or magazine article.His first important work,the 'Topography of Ireland,'is,with due allowance for the difference between the tastes of the twelfth century and those of the nineteenth,just such a series of sketches as a special correspondent in our own day might send from some newly-colonised island in the Pacific to satisfy or whet the curiosity of his readers at home."The deion aptly applies to all that Gerald wrote.If not a historian,he was at least a great journalist.His deions of Ireland have been subjected to much hostile criticism from the day they were written to our own times.They were assailed at the time,as Gerald himself tells us,for their unconventionality,for their departure from established custom,for the freedom and colloquialism of their style,for the audacity of their stories,and for the writer's daring in venturing to treat the manners and customs of a barbarous country as worthy the attention of the learned and the labours of the historian.Irish scholars,from the days of Dr.John Lynch,who published his "Cambrensis Eversus"in 1622,have unanimously denounced the work of the sensational journalist,born out of due time.His Irish books are confessedly partisan;the "Conquest of Ireland"was expressly designed as an eulogy of "the men of St.David's,"the writer's own kinsmen.But in spite of partisanship and prejudice,they must be regarded as a serious and valuable addition to our knowledge of the state of Ireland at the latter end of the twelfth century.Indeed,Professor Brewer does not hesitate to say that "to his industry we are exclusively indebted for all that is known of the state of Ireland during the whole of the Middle Ages,"and as to the "Topography,"Gerald "must take rank with the first who descried the value and in some respects the limits of deive geography."When he came to deal with the affairs of state on a larger stage,his methods were still that of the modern journalist.He was always an impressionist,a writer of personal sketches.His character sketches of the Plantagenet princes -of King Henry with his large round head and fat round belly,his fierce eyes,his tigerish temper,his learning,his licentiousness,his duplicity,and of Eleanor of Aquitaine,his vixenish and revengeful wife,the murderess of "Fair Rosamond"(who must have been known to Gerald,being the daughter of Walter of Clifford-on-the-Wye),and of the fierce brood that they reared -are of extraordinary interest.His impressions of the men and events of his time,his fund of anecdotes and bon mots,his references to trivial matters,which more dignified writers would never deign to mention,his sprightly and sometimes malicious gossip,invest his period with a reality which the greatest of fiction-writers has failed to rival.Gerald lived in the days of chivalry,days which have been crowned with a halo of deathless romance by the author of "Ivanhoe"and the "Talisman."He knew and was intimate with all the great actors of the time.He had lived in the Paris of St.Louis and Philip Augustus,and was never tired of exalting the House of Capet over the tyrannical and bloodthirsty House of Anjou.He had no love of England,for her Plantagenet kings or her Saxon serfs.During the French invasion in the time of King John his sympathies were openly with the Dauphin as against the "brood of vipers,"who were equally alien to English soil.For the Saxon,indeed,he felt the twofold hatred of Welshman and Norman.One of his opponents is denounced to the Pope as an "untriwe Sax,"and the Saxons are described as the slaves of the Normans,the mere hewers of wood and drawers of water for their conquerors.He met Innocent III.the greatest of Popes,in familiar converse,he jested and gossiped with him in slippered ease,he made him laugh at his endless stories of the glory of Wales,the iniquities of the Angevins,and the bad Latin of Archbishop Walter.He knew Richard Coeur-de-Lion,the flower of chivalry,and saw him as he was and "not through a glass darkly."He knew John,the cleverest and basest of his house.He knew and loved Stephen Langton,the precursor of a long line of statesmen who have made English liberty broad -based upon the people's will.He was a friend of St.Hugh of Lincoln,the sweetest and purest spirit in the Anglican Church of the Middle Ages,the one man who could disarm the wrath of the fierce king with a smile;and he was the friend and patron of Robert Grosstete,afterwards the great Bishop of Lincoln.He lived much in company with Ranulph de Glanville,the first English jurist,and he has "Boswellised"some of his conversations with him.He was intimate with Archbishop Baldwin,the saintly prelate who laid down his life in the Third Crusade on the burning plains of Palestine,heart-broken at the unbridled wickedness of the soldiers of the Cross.He was the near kinsman and confidant of the Cambro-Normans,who,landing in Leinster in 1165,effected what may be described as the first conquest of Ireland.There was scarcely a man of note in his day whom he had not seen and conversed with,or of whom he does not relate some piquant story.He had travelled much,and had observed closely.

Probably the most valuable of all his works,from the strictly historical point of view,are the "Itinerary"and "Deion of Wales,"which are reprinted in the present volume.{10}Here he is impartial in his evidence,and judicial in his decisions.If he errs at all,it is not through racial prejudice."I am sprung,"he once told the Pope in a letter,"from the princes of Wales and from the barons of the Marches,and when I see injustice in either race,I hate it."The text is that of Sir Richard Colt Hoare,who published an English translation,chiefly from the texts of Camden and Wharton,in 1806.

The valuable historical notes have been curtailed,as being too elaborate for such a volume as this,and a few notes have been added by the present editor.These will be found within brackets.

Hoare's translation,and also translations (edited by Mr.Foster)of the Irish books have been published in Bohn's Antiquarian Library.

The first of the seven volumes of the Latin text of Gerald,published in the Rolls Series,appeared in 1861.The first four volumes were edited by Professor Brewer;the next two by Mr.Dimmock;and the seventh by Professor Freeman.

W.LLEWELYN WILLIAMS.January 1908.

The following is a list of the more important of the works of Gerald:-Topographia Hibernica,Expugnatio Hibernica,Itinerarium Kambriae,Deio Kambriae,Gemma Ecclesiastica,Libellus Invectionum,De Rebus a se Gestis,Dialogus de jure et statu Menevensis Ecclesiae,De Instructione Principum,De Legendis Sanctorum,Symbolum Electorum.

同类推荐
  • 佛华严入如来德智不思议境界经

    佛华严入如来德智不思议境界经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 渊骞

    渊骞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 三十六计

    三十六计

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 华严道场起止大略

    华严道场起止大略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说月光菩萨经

    佛说月光菩萨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 戏法罗

    戏法罗

    老荣、老柴、老渣、老月、老合,此五老谓之五花。金、皮、彩、挂、评、团、调、柳,谓之八门。五花八门谓之江湖。写一个真实存在却并不为人熟知的江湖;写几个真实存在却并不为人熟知的行当;写几种真实存在却并不为人熟知的手艺。写几位真实存在却并不为人熟知的手艺人;写几件真实存在却并不为人所熟知的事情。吴州戏法罗、湖南鬼马张、江东快手刘、西南傅家、北方穆派、华北韩家门、京城单义堂……徐徐揭开一副真实存在的江湖彩门画卷。公布个读者群:558430470
  • 皇后大道

    皇后大道

    吴君,女,中国作协会员。曾获首届中国小说双年奖、广东新人新作奖。长篇小说《我们不是一个人类》被媒体评为2004年最值得记忆五部长篇之一。出版多本中篇小说集。根据其中篇小说《亲爱的深圳》改编的电影已在国内及北美地区发行放映。
  • 田园之家有悍妻

    田园之家有悍妻

    【全文完结】穿越到一个挻着大肚子女人身上,正被人扫地出门!恶毒的大嫂;贪财的左邻;眸光短浅的右邻;有继母就有继父;无耻的继弟弟妹妹们;孕妇难为,孩子没出生,王怡咬咬牙先忍了,等孩子出生了,嗯哼……“候爷妾,地位也不底了,比农家妇高出不知道多少,你知足吧。”“娘亲,你不要我的吗?”儿子哭着问,好算计啊,儿子是娘心头肉啊,儿子一求指不定她就同意,忍辱负重的腾了正妻位?滚滚滚,男人神马的一边凉快去,她带着儿子也能过得好。新文《空间农女:彪悍俏媳妇野汉子》,坑品有保障,欢迎姐妹们去跳坑
  • 仙山有路

    仙山有路

    这本书想写一个不怎么聪明,或者说是大智若愚的女子,有着各种各样的缺点,又简单单纯,坚持本我,重生后在修仙之路上蹒跚而行的故事。幸其际遇不错,最终实现了自己想要的修仙生活。且在众多复杂多思的聪明人中搅得是乌烟瘴气,人仰马翻。众人无语感叹:比起坏蛋,有时笨蛋的杀伤力更大啊。
  • 女神,迷宫与天空之城

    女神,迷宫与天空之城

    传说,在地下的地下,有一个神秘的神殿。在这个神殿中,又有一股神秘的力量,正是这股神秘的力量,托起了整个天空之城。这一天,神殿的巫女突然死亡,需要一个新的巫女前去继任。一个名为玛娜的纯洁少女被选中,是福还是祸?更为蹊跷的是,护送队伍只能是女人,还要是女强人。因此,这个国家最强的女剑士莉莉安被选中了,这份光荣的任务会不会有生命危险?伴随他们启程,黑色势力也开始蠢蠢欲动,一行人会遇到什么样的障碍和挑战?巫女突然死亡背后的真相又是什么?
  • 病世子,娶我吧

    病世子,娶我吧

    穿越成父不详、母不知所踪的杜家表小姐,君无忧认了,被上至官员富商、下至市井流氓亲切地称作小土匪,君无忧也认了,舅母苛待、姐妹嘲讽,君无忧也可以不在意,反正姐会赚钱,可是,舅母居然想毁她清白,逼她嫁给一个好色纨绔?!表姐不想嫁给娘娘腔也算计着要她代嫁?!这下君无忧可就不能忍了,怎么办?赶紧找人嫁了吧。可是莫名其妙的一道圣旨竟然将她许配给了据说自己病得活不长,还克妻绝子的定国王世子!君无忧这下真觉得自己命苦了。老天!人家刚刚跟一绝世美男求婚成功好不好?第一次见面,她趁醉强吻了他,第二次见面,她忘了他还大胆的向他求婚,第三次见面,死女人,你再忘了我试试?!精彩片段——求婚记君无忧:你娶妻了么?某男:没有。君无忧:那好,你娶我吧!某男:你没看见我是个废人吗?君无忧:没事儿,我不嫌弃你,虽然我倾国倾城、活泼可爱、心地善良还聪明伶俐,而且还会赚钱。某男:好。诶?真的?某男:既然你都倾国倾城、活泼可爱、心地善良还聪明伶俐,而且还会赚钱,我也就勉强不嫌弃你了。
  • 重生在一九九八年

    重生在一九九八年

    虽然是穿越小说,但是除了穿越元素,其他百分之九十的内容都是来源于生活,取材于现实之中。而我也只是负责把这些故事串在一起而已。也许有的读者会认为有些段子充满槽点,可是生活有时候就是如此荒诞不经,会常常让人觉得不可思议。
  • 重造天下

    重造天下

    明末史诗,明末的清明上河图。注重文史,注重语言。
  • 武林英雄榜

    武林英雄榜

    有人的地方就有江湖,有江湖的地方就有恩怨。为什么要拿起那把剑?我不是为了名利,而是为了我在乎的人不再需要拿起那把剑。
  • 卫先生,再见!

    卫先生,再见!

    佛说:虽有虎门之患,心存甘伏。佛又说:且破心头一点痴,十里何处不加持,圆明佛眼常相照,只是当人不自知。年少时的久夕甘伏,痴,且不自知。