Analyses The Lord of the Rings and shows that this work can be seen in the light of the Quest of the Holy Grail. Points out the common features between them. Explains how quests become the Quest; Sam grows from a fool to a wiseman like Percival does and attains his part in the Quest; Frodo comes to know pity and how it helps the achievement of the Quest, and then his unhealed wounds reveal that Frodo is a Maimed King as well. Frodo, however, has no Galahad or Percival who cures his wounds, so he must sail from the Middle-earth with his wounds like King Arthur, and the recovery of the Shire becomes Sam\u27s work, thus Sam fills the part of Percival and becomes the Mayor just like Percival is enthroned designated by the Grail
Frodo and Sam from J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the RingsIllustrated by Bg Callahan (Issue 1, p.37)h...
Finds connections between The Lord of the Rings and Tolkien’s long professional engagement with the ...
The titular knights in The Faery Queene are figures who continue to develop. Spenser says in Letter ...
Suggests Browning’s poem as a source for Frodo’s quest in The Lord of the Rings. Sees echoes of the ...
This is a tentative study of Tolkien\u27s The Lord of the Rings in comparison with Sir Gawain and th...
This PhD thesis intends to explore the possible influences and rewritings of Arthurian legends in J....
J.R.R. Tolkien's beloved Lord of the Rings has been considered one of the greatest works of English ...
Studies the inner quest that takes Frodo from isolation to community in The Lord of the Rings
Interpreting the meaning and significance of Sam Gamgee\u27s final words in The Lord of the Rings
Considers Sam the true hero of The Lord of the Rings; shows him to be the “focal point of two main m...
Urges us to take a step back from the well-known and thoroughly examined Ring Quest in The Lord of t...
There are many kinds of hero in The Lord of the Rings and not all of them are what would be consider...
Analyzes the key scene at the Cracks of Doom, which the reader sees through Sam’s viewpoint, for hin...
“‘Dyrne Langað’: Secret Longing and Homo-amory in Beowulf and J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings...
There are many speculations on J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy as a religious allegor...
Frodo and Sam from J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the RingsIllustrated by Bg Callahan (Issue 1, p.37)h...
Finds connections between The Lord of the Rings and Tolkien’s long professional engagement with the ...
The titular knights in The Faery Queene are figures who continue to develop. Spenser says in Letter ...
Suggests Browning’s poem as a source for Frodo’s quest in The Lord of the Rings. Sees echoes of the ...
This is a tentative study of Tolkien\u27s The Lord of the Rings in comparison with Sir Gawain and th...
This PhD thesis intends to explore the possible influences and rewritings of Arthurian legends in J....
J.R.R. Tolkien's beloved Lord of the Rings has been considered one of the greatest works of English ...
Studies the inner quest that takes Frodo from isolation to community in The Lord of the Rings
Interpreting the meaning and significance of Sam Gamgee\u27s final words in The Lord of the Rings
Considers Sam the true hero of The Lord of the Rings; shows him to be the “focal point of two main m...
Urges us to take a step back from the well-known and thoroughly examined Ring Quest in The Lord of t...
There are many kinds of hero in The Lord of the Rings and not all of them are what would be consider...
Analyzes the key scene at the Cracks of Doom, which the reader sees through Sam’s viewpoint, for hin...
“‘Dyrne Langað’: Secret Longing and Homo-amory in Beowulf and J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings...
There are many speculations on J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy as a religious allegor...
Frodo and Sam from J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the RingsIllustrated by Bg Callahan (Issue 1, p.37)h...
Finds connections between The Lord of the Rings and Tolkien’s long professional engagement with the ...
The titular knights in The Faery Queene are figures who continue to develop. Spenser says in Letter ...