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Listing Bookmarks

List of Bookmarks

  1. Public Bookmark 28

    Summary

    [Crossover with Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle.] Merlin couldn't have picked a worse time to finally tell Arthur about his magic. In the wake of the battle against the immortal army, a strange visitor disrupts the court, calling himself the Green Knight and proposing a test of the court's integrity. Although Uther turns him away, several of Camelot's northern allies end up mysteriously beheaded over the next few months, and Arthur, Merlin and the knights set out to investigate. They encounter more than they'd bargained for on the way—a reckless young boy, a lady in search of a husband, a centuries-old fairytale that holds more than a grain of truth... and a challenge that ends up being more than just a game.

    11 Feb 2012

  2. Public Bookmark 2

    Summary

    A double-drabble, more or less, in verse. Gawain has a few words to say for himself.

    31 Dec 2011

  3. Public Bookmark 3

    26 Nov 2011

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  4. Public Bookmark 1

    Summary

    In which the Green Knight proposes a beheading game, all the men in Camelot go bonkers, and it is, at long last, Gwen and Morgana’s turn to save the day.

    31 Oct 2011

  5. Public Bookmark 1

    Summary

    Gawain has difficulty recognizing the Green Knight past his varied identities. The Green Knight makes overtures.

    5 Feb 2011

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  6. Public Bookmark 7

    Summary

    The Yuletide bonfires were burning low when the ghost of Gawain the Good, who in life had been the first knight of King Arthur's Round Table, finally came home again.

    30 Dec 2010

  7. Rec 6

    Summary

    Sir Gawain has already learned one lesson today, but Bertilak and his lady have more left to teach him.

    3 Jan 2010

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    Notes

    In verse!

  8. Rec 5

    Summary

    Lady Bertilak was not the first temptation Sir Gawain met on his quest for the Green Chapel -- nor the deadliest.

    27 Dec 2009

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    Notes

    Written in actual alliterative verse, this is a 'missing scene' from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Evocative, rich language, wonderful intertextual allusion, and incredibly witty!