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The early chroniclers of Britain presented the island as the promised land of the Roman goddess Diana. Later, a new literary concept of the island was promoted: the promised land of the Holy Grail. This book explores the conflict between Goddess and Grail - a rift less about paganism versus Christianity and more about religious literalism versus spiritual imagination.
Starting with William Blake's lost painting The Ancient Britons, this book shows how the visionary artist and poet reworked the Matter of Britain--the corpus of legends presenting an alternative history of Britain--into his own mythology. He thus adds to a tradition of Arthurian epic begun by Layamon in the 13th century and continued by Edmund Spenser in the 16th, in which a Romano-Celtic warlord becomes an icon of the English imagination. This book shows how Britain became the promised land of a pagan goddess where mythical events are as important as those of history, and how the figure of Arthur is transformed into a British Messiah whose Christian realm is in continuous interaction with the Otherworld of Faerie, an imagined place between the spiritual and the earthly. Arthur as perceived through Blake's vision is the earthly embodiment of the fallen Albion; this exploration of the mythic underpinnings of the English sense of nationhood reveals an imaginative consciousness that links us to "human existence itself."
An in-depth look at the themes of the Grail Quest, and at Gawain, a complex figure who holds opposites in balance.
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