Mrs. Alana Haughaboo
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Today's Assignment

Day 24: Senior English

10/22/2018

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CCRS

  • 3. Analyze the impact of the author’s choices regarding how to develop and relate elements of a story or drama (e.g., where a story is set, how the action is ordered, how the characters are introduced and developed). [RL.11-12.3]
  • 20f. Provide a concluding statement or section that follows from and supports the information or explanation presented (e.g., articulating implications or the significance of the topic). [W.11-12.2f]

Agenda

  1. Attendance
  2. Return vocabulary cards--TEST NEXT CLASS
  3. Finish "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight"
  4. Respond to the following prompts on notebook paper:  (1.) How does this story fit into the category of a medieval romance?  (2.) How does this story fit into the category of a romance?  (3.) List three archetypal story/narrative elements you found in this story.  (4.) Describe Sir Gawain and how he developed over the story.

Homework

Study for your vocabulary test

The Missing Piece from "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight"

​Time passes, and autumn arrives. On the Day of All Saints, Gawain prepares to leave Camelot and find the Green Knight. He puts on his best armor, mounts his horse, Gringolet, and starts off toward North Wales, traveling through the wilderness of northwest Britain. Gawain encounters all sorts of beasts, suffers from hunger and cold, and grows more desperate as the days pass. On Christmas Day, he prays to find a place to hear Mass, then looks up to see a castle shimmering in the distance.
The lord of the castle welcomes Gawain warmly, introducing him to his lady and to the old woman who sits beside her. For sport, the host (whose name is later revealed to be Bertilak) strikes a deal with Gawain: the host will go out hunting with his men every day, and when he returns in the evening, he will exchange his winnings for anything Gawain has managed to acquire by staying behind at the castle. Gawain happily agrees to the pact, and goes to bed.
 
The first day, the lord hunts a herd of does, while Gawain sleeps late in his bedchambers. On the morning of the first day, the lord’s wife sneaks into Gawain’s chambers and attempts to seduce him. Gawain puts her off, but before she leaves she steals one kiss from him. That evening, when the host gives Gawain the venison he has captured, Gawain kisses him, since he has won one kiss from the lady.
The second day, the lord hunts a wild boar. The lady again enters Gawain’s chambers, and this time she kisses Gawain twice. That evening Gawain gives the host the two kisses in exchange for the boar’s head.
 
The third day, the lord hunts a fox, and the lady kisses Gawain three times. She also asks him for a love token, such as a ring or a glove. Gawain refuses to give her anything and refuses to take anything from her, until the lady mentions her girdle. The green silk girdle she wears around her waist is no ordinary piece of cloth, the lady claims, but possesses the magical ability to protect the person who wears it from death.
Intrigued, Gawain accepts the cloth, but when it comes time to exchange his winnings with the host, Gawain gives the three kisses but does not mention the lady’s green girdle. The host gives Gawain the fox skin he won that day, and they all go to bed happy, but weighed down with the fact that Gawain must leave for the Green Chapel the following morning to find the Green Knight.
 
New Year’s Day arrives, and Gawain dons his armor, including the girdle, then sets off with Gringolet to seek the Green Knight. A guide accompanies him out of the estate grounds. When they reach the border of the forest, the guide promises not to tell anyone if Gawain decides to give up the quest. Gawain refuses, determined to meet his fate head-on. 
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    Alana Haughaboo

    Austin High School teacher

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  • Home
    • Contact
    • Poetry Out Loud
    • Philosophy
    • Resume
    • Quotes
    • About Me
    • ACT Academy >
      • English
      • Reading
  • Seniors
    • Anglo-Saxons
    • 12 Vocabulary
    • The Canterbury Tales >
      • CT Assignments
    • King Arthur Legends
    • Renaissance >
      • Sonnets
      • Macbeth >
        • Macbeth Assignments
    • Research Paper
    • The Importance of Being Earnest
    • Things Fall Apart
    • Mythology >
      • Mythology Themes and Assignments
      • Mythology Notes
      • Mythology Additional Reading
      • Romantic Poetry
    • WorkKeys Practice
    • EXAM INFO
  • AP Lit and Comp
    • Resources
    • AP Lit Vocabulary
    • AP Lit Summer Reading
    • Course Readings
    • Definition Paper
    • Poetry
  • Today's Assignment