1847 - Walbran, John Richard - Harrogate Visitors Hand Book: Difference between revisions
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{{AlItemTop|About=Robin Hood; Curtal Friar|DatePrefix=|Date=|DateSuffix=|AuthorPrefix=[|Author=|AuthorSuffix=]; [Smith, Alfred]|Title=The Harrogate Visitors Hand Book|PlainTitle=|AlCat1=Fountains Abbey (Ripon)|AlCat2=Robin Hood and the Curtal Friar|Link1=1851 - Walbran, John Richard - Guide to Ripon, Fountains Abbey}} | {{AlItemTop|About=Robin Hood; Curtal Friar|DatePrefix=|Date=|DateSuffix=|AuthorPrefix=[|Author=|AuthorSuffix=]; [Smith, Alfred]|Title=The Harrogate Visitors Hand Book|PlainTitle=|AlCat1=Fountains Abbey (Ripon)|AlCat2=Robin Hood and the Curtal Friar|Link1=1851 - Walbran, John Richard - Guide to Ripon, Fountains Abbey}} | ||
{{#display_map:54.109553,-1.581548|width=34%|service=leaflet|enablefullscreen=yes}}<div class="pnMapLegend">Ruins of Fountains Abbey.</div> | {{#display_map:54.109553,-1.581548|width=34%|service=leaflet|enablefullscreen=yes}}<div class="pnMapLegend">Ruins of Fountains Abbey.</div> | ||
<!-- [[File:_FILENAME.jpg|thumb|right|500px|_LEGEND (photo: [_URL _LINKTEXT].)]] --><div class="no-img"><p id="byline">By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-11-25. Revised by {{#realname:{{REVISIONUSER}}}}, {{REVISIONYEAR}}-{{REVISIONMONTH}}-{{REVISIONDAY2}}.</p> | <!-- [[File:_FILENAME.jpg|thumb|right|500px|_LEGEND (photo: [_URL _LINKTEXT].)]] --><div class="no-img"> | ||
<p id="byline">By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-11-25. Revised by {{#realname:{{REVISIONUSER}}}}, {{REVISIONYEAR}}-{{REVISIONMONTH}}-{{REVISIONDAY2}}.</p> | |||
== Allusion == | == Allusion == | ||
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Revision as of 04:34, 17 May 2020
By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-11-25. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-05-17.
Allusion
The picturesque effect, the magnitude, and the beautiful architecture of these ruins are not their only claim on our attention. They powerfully appeal to the mind by their association with ages past, the palmy days of monastic prosperity — the abbey, a place of learning when all around was ignorance &hdash; exercising an unbounded influence over the minds of men, when dominion elsewhere was held by force — entire in its magnificence, "when the castles of the nobility were dungeons, and the mansions of the gentry little better than hovels." Even a favourite legend of our boyhood has its locality here; and if we should task imagination to restore this roofless and tenantless pile, and people it with grave Cistercians, habited in coarse white robes and long black hoods, some gayer person- [p. 27:] ages in Lincoln green might intrude upon the scene, and the foreground be enlivened by the aquatic adventure of Robin Hood, and the merry outlaws' encounter with the Curtal Friar and the Ban-Dogs of Fountains.[1]
Lists
- Not included in Dobson, R. B., ed.; Taylor, J., ed. Rymes of Robyn Hood: an Introduction to the English Outlaw (London, 1976), pp. 293-11.
- Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy, compil. 'References to Robin Hood up to 1600', in: Knight, Stephen. Robin Hood: A Complete Study of the English Outlaw (Oxford, UK; Cambridge, Massachusetts: Blackwell, 1994), pp. 262-88.
Sources
- [Walbran, John Richard]; [Smith, Alfred]. The Harrogate Visitors Hand Book (Ripon, 1847); see pp. 26-27,
Notes