The Bridal of Triermain by Sir Walter Scott (1813) is seldom mentioned as having a sleeping beauty in it, although not one that falls into the ATU 410 tale type. First of all, the full text of the work is available here. (It actually appears in many places on the web, but many of the versions are not the full narrative for some reason, perhaps from indiscriminate copying and pasting by website builders who didn't check the text.) Sir Walter Scott's waning popularity is one explanation. That it's not one of his more famous works is another. Yet it is interesting all the same.
I admit I am not overly familiar with his work beyond Ivanhoe, although he was always one of my favorite authors to collect when I played Authors as a child. (I doubt many of you would be surprised to learn that was one of my all time favorite games as a kid, would you? Although why Jane Austen didn't appear in the deck, I don't know! Hmmpf! At least we got Louisa May Alcott.)
Anyway, Scott was prolific and very familiar with folklore, using it to inform his own work which is part of what influenced The Bridal of Triermain. Here's more about it from The Walter Scott Digital Archive at The Bridal of Triermain.
CompositionAnd really, that's all I have to say about that. Other than that enchanted sleeping is a really common element of Arthurian tales. Hadn't ever really considered it until I worked on Sleeping Beauties: Sleeping Beauty and Snow White Tales From Around the World. But that would have been a whole other book, too.
Scott began writing the Bridal of Triermain in 1812 while still hard at work on Rokeby. It was a continuation of one of three anonymous fragments that he had printed in the Edinburgh Annual Register for 1809. Scott had been amused by the conjectures surrounding their authorship and thought it would be diverting to play a further hoax on the reviewers by publishing a lengthier anonymous composition. He particularly relished bamboozling the influential William Jeffrey, whom he thought lacking in true poetic sensibility. Many critics had believed Scott's friend William Erskine to be the author of the lines in the Register, and now Erskine agreed to play along with Scott's scheme, submitting a learned preface. Scott himself inserted allusions in the text of the poem designed to remind the reader of Erskine. He had hoped to mystify the critics further by publishing The Bridal of Triermain simultaneously with Rokeby. In the event, though, it did not appear until almost two months later on March 9, 1813.
Synopsis
The Bridal of Triermain interweaves three stories, all with a Lake District setting: the eighteenth-century courtship of Arthur and Lucy, the Arthurian Legend of 'Lyulph's Tale', and the twelfth-century romance of Sir Roland de Vaux.
In order to warn his aristocratic lover Lucy against excessive maidenly pride, the low-born poet Arthur recites 'Lyulph's Tale' in cantos I-II. He tells how how King Arthur is seduced by the enchantress Guendolen. When he abandons the pregnant Guendolen to resume his kingly duties, she swears revenge. Sixteen years later, the fruit of their union, Gyneth appears at Camelot to remind Arthur of his promise that should he and Guendolen produce a daughter, she would wed the bravest of the Knights of the Round Table. Arthur declares a tournament with Gyneth's hand as the prize but instructs her to halt the combat before lives are lost. As the instrument of her mother's wrath, however, she does nothing to end the ferocious fighting, until Merlin arises from a chasm in the ground to punish her. She is sentenced to slumber in Guendolen's enchanted castle until awakened by a knight as brave as any of the Round Table.
The poet Arthur's courtship of Lucy proves successful and, following their marriage, Lucy begs him to tell of Gyneth's fate. In the third and final canto, then, he recounts the quest of the twelfth-century knight Sir Roland de Vaux of Triermain. He has heard Gyneth's legend and sets out to find the enchanted castle. Having located it in the Valley of Saint John, he successfully passes through a series of allegorical dangers and temptations (Fear, Avarice, Sensuality, Ambition) to awaken Gyneth from her five hundred-year sleep and win her hand.
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