- Gringolet
In
Arthurian legend , Gringolet is SirGawain 'shorse . A sturdy charger, Gringolet was known far and wide for his ability in combat. He appears in very many romances in several different languages, and the prominent translator and Arthurian scholar D.D.R. Owen suggested that that the French name Gringolet derived from either the Welsh "gwyn calet" ("white-hardy"), or "ceincaled" ("handsome-hardy"). His earliest appearance is inChrétien de Troyes ' "Erec and Enide "; in that poem he is borrowed bySir Kay to joust againstErec . Even Gringolet cannot prevent Kay from losing to the protagonist. In theLancelot-Grail Cycle, Gawain wins Gringolet from a Saxon warrior; a different story of the acquisition is given inWolfram von Eschenbach 's "Parzival ", where the horse bears the mark and comes from the stable of the Grail castle. In theMiddle English poem "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight ", Gawain sets out atop Gringolet in search of the Green Chapel. Lines 600-604 of the poem describe Gringolet's ornate appearance in being readied for the journey::"The bridle was embossed and bound with bright gold;":"So were the furnishings of the fore-harness and the fine skirts.":"The crupper and the caparison accorded with the saddle-bows,":"And all was arrayed on red with nails of richest gold,":"Which glittered and glanced like gleams of the sun."
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