Sách nói: Havelok the Dane: A Legend of Old Grimsby and Lincoln
- Download PREFACE audio
- Download CHAPTER I - GRIM THE FISHER AND HIS SONS audio
- Download CHAPTER II - KING HODULF'S SECRET audio
- Download CHAPTER III - HAVELOK, SON OF GUNNAR audio
- Download CHAPTER IV - ACROSS THE SWAN'S PATH audio
- Download CHAPTER V - STORM AND SHIPWRECK audio
- Download CHAPTER VI - THE BEGINNING OF GRIMSBY TOWN audio
- Download CHAPTER VII - BROTHERHOOD audio
- Download CHAPTER VIII - BERTHUN THE COOK audio
- Download CHAPTER IX - CURAN THE PORTER audio
- Download CHAPTER X - KING ALSI OF LINDSEY audio
- Download CHAPTER XI - THE COMING OF THE PRINCESS audio
- Download CHAPTER XII - IN LINCOLN MARKETPLACE audio
- Download CHAPTER XIII - THE WITAN'S FEASTING audio
- Download CHAPTER XIV - THE CRAFT OF ALSI THE KING audio
- Download CHAPTER XV - THE FORTUNE OF CURAN THE PORTER audio
- Download CHAPTER XVI - A STRANGEST WEDDING audio
- Download CHAPTER XVII - HOW THE BRIDE WENT HOME audio
- Download CHAPTER XVIII - JARL SIGURD OF DENMARK audio
- Download CHAPTER XIX - THE LAST OF GRIFFIN OF WALES audio
- Download CHAPTER XX - THE OWNING OF THE HEIR audio
- Download CHAPTER XXI - THE TOKEN OF SACK AND ANCHOR audio
- Download CHAPTER XXII - KING ALSI'S WELCOME audio
- Download CHAPTER XXIII - BY TETFORD STREAM audio
- Download CHAPTER XXIV - PEACE, AND FAREWELL audio
Thể loại sách nói
Tác giả
Giới thiệu
Troy, Athens, Rome... each has its founding legend. So too does the Lincolnshire town of Grimsby, once the largest fishing port in the world.
Havelok the Dane probably derives from a folk-tale, orally passed down before assuming written form - first in Anglo-Norman French, later in Middle English verse (c. 1280-1300). It tells of the rescue of the Danish prince from a wicked regent, who has tried to procure Havelok's murder. Grim the fisher, the appointed hit-man, thwarts the plan by spiriting the lad to England, where Grim settles with his family on the coast, adopting Havelok as his foster-son and naming the new community after himself.
C.W. Whistler's clever adaptation of the tale (published in 1899) draws on the various medieval sources. The English poem is particularly suited to 'novelisation'. It abounds in homely detail, and the hero's progress from half-dead waif to the triumphant fulfillment of his strength and kingly destiny makes a satisfying arc for the development of plot and character. At the same time, the legend's origins in oral performance are suggested through the choice of a first-person narrator, namely Grim's sober-sided son Radbard, whose plain-spoken account conveys something of the older saga tradition.
Our reader, the gifted Tony Foster, has worked and travelled in Scandinavia. His subtly-inflected narration brings a truly Nordic flavour to this re-creation of life in sixth-century Britain.
Since Charles Whistler published his novel, both Grimsby and its local heroes have been celebrated from time to time - by Elton John in his album Caribou (1974) and recently in a folk rock musical by local band Merlin's Keep (2014). (Introductory summary by Martin Geeson)
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