I really like the tone, the way the story is told and the narrative structure of the fable, and I also like it. However, with the arrangement of the chapters, people will inevitably consider the relationship before and after, and the meaning of the chapte

Oswaldo 2022-03-22 09:02:57

I really like the tone, the way the story is told and the narrative structure of the fable, and I also like it. However, with the arrangement of the chapters, people will inevitably consider the relationship between the front and the back and the meaning of the chapters, but in the end, I still can't guess, I don't understand, maybe I really don't know much about the knight culture abroad.

The story tells that at a Christmas celebration in the kingdom, a green knight suddenly appeared, and he asked the king to send a heroic knight to compete with him, but what the knight did to the green knight today, etc. A year later at Christmas, he needs to walk all the way north to find a church where the Green Knight will wait for him and then do what the Knights did to the Green Knights today. Only then did the king show his favor to the king's sister's son to stand up and be willing to be this heroic knight. The king also took out his own sword as a weapon for him. The king's sister's son, the male protagonist, took a sword and stance to win the enemy, but the green knight got off his horse, knelt down on one knee, and waited with his eyes closed. The male protagonist stepped forward and cut off the green knight's head. But the green knight didn't die, his torso picked up his head, and then he mounted his horse and left. The green knight should have been sent by the king's sister. I feel it is to give my son a chance to win the trust of the king and his subjects, and to make enough money for the male protagonist to succeed in the future. The male protagonist should also know some news, otherwise he will come forward It's a little too heroic.

The one-year period is almost here, and the male protagonist prepares it. He takes the belt prepared by his mother with a spell, hangs the bell that his girlfriend gave him, and sets off with the sword and the axe left by the green knight. But not far away, he met a child, he asked him for directions, the child told him how to go, and asked him for a reward. I don't want the male protagonist to go far before he was ambushed by the little boy and his accomplices, and was robbed of horses, luggage, and even the belt with a spell given by his mother. The camera moves, and the male protagonist who is tied in place becomes a pile of bones. What does this mean? not understand! Then after another turn, the male protagonist cut the rope with his sword and broke free. He ran and ran, found a house, ran in and slept on the bed in the house. In the middle of the night, a woman woke him up and asked him why he was sleeping in her bed. The male protagonist quickly apologized and wanted to leave in a hurry. The woman refused and asked him to help go to the bottom of the lake and fish her head up. The male protagonist had no choice but to do as he did, and took the picked up head as the head of the woman's corpse. He continued to go to the church that the green knight said, and met a fox who did not want to leave with him. He gave the fox some food when he was eating, and also slept with the fox. He met a lot of giants in a canyon, and his request to let them carry him for a while was rejected. Came to a castle again and was rescued by the castle owner. The castle owner's wife looked exactly the same as the man's girlfriend, which almost made the man lost. The castle director is very friendly to the male protagonist and often gives his prey to the male protagonist. The wife of the director of the castle is very good at talking to the male lead, sharing with her her feelings about copying and reading books, and taking pictures of the male lead with Xiaokong Imaging. But in the end, he had an intimacy with the male protagonist, which scared the male protagonist away. On the way to escape, he met the owner of the castle, and he gave the male owner a fox he caught, the one that the male owner has always been with. The male protagonist finally came to the church, and the green knight woke up and wanted to fulfill his promise to cut off the male protagonist's head, but the male protagonist had no courage and he ran away. He ran out of the church just in time to see the horse that he had been robbed, and he rode on it and ran back to his kingdom, and because he kept his promise, he got the throne. But after becoming a king, he began to lose his original intention, abandoned his first love girlfriend who gave birth to a child for him, and married a young and beautiful wife. The country also began to turmoil. The charm belt, the head fell off. It turned out that everything was just a dream, and maybe even the male protagonist was unwilling to be such a timid, ungrateful, and chaotic bad guy. He finally mustered up the courage and was willing to accept a knife from the green knight...

I really like the emotional struggle of the male protagonist when he accepts the knife at the end. I always feel that the male protagonists in the story are brave and fearless, very much more than ordinary people, but the male protagonist in this drama is flesh and blood, just like ordinary people, I think it is very real . Everyone has a heart to become a hero, no matter whether they are ready or not, but if they want to wear a crown, they must bear the weight. Many people become heroes only to find that everything is not easy, they need to pay, and there are too many places to try, but At this time, I have to retreat, change my mind, and lose face, that kind of entanglement, that kind of powerlessness, I really feel the same. And the puppet show is well done, so that everyone can see at a glance the mission accomplished by the male lead and the risks he has to take; and the small hole imaging used by the wife of the castle owner is exquisitely done.

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Extended Reading

The Green Knight quotes

  • Gawain: Honor. That is why a knight does what he does.

  • The Lord: Have you ever seen a hawk kill a horse?