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Faculty and students at 91黑料, New England, gathered in Dolben Auditorium last Friday evening for the second installment in this year鈥檚 St. Vincent de Paul Lecture and Concert Series, a lecture about the poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

Guest speaker  has her doctorate in English and American literature from Washington University and has particular interest in studying and teaching medieval literature, writing, and poetry. She teaches at Thomas More College and is the wife of its president, Dr. William Fahey. 

鈥淭he delight of literature is anything but an escape,鈥 began Dr. Fahey. 鈥淭he delight of great literature is at once an imaginative delight, an aesthetic delight, and an intellectual delight.鈥 She illustrated the importance of form and meaning in literature, as well as the value of the ability to recognize these. Contrary to the contemporary concept of good literature having an identifiable theme, the attentive reader should look for the meaning 鈥 鈥渢he embodiment of the story itself鈥 鈥 as opposed to the individualistic and self-determined 鈥渢heme.鈥 Reading good literature can thus be work instead of an escape, but certainly a delightful kind of work. 

With meaning explained, Dr. Fahey turned to form and its correlation with the former. She explored passages of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight in both modern translations and the original Middle English, examining the significance of the words used and the general form of the work, stressing the importance of translation true to the original words, as the words bring understanding of the meaning of the story. 鈥淭here is a certain suitability to good words,鈥 she explained, 鈥渨hich can hardly be replaced by 鈥榬ecognizable鈥 speech without losing some of the meaning.鈥

 

Dr. Fahey

 

In the poem, the author refers to his work as one of 鈥渢he best books of romance,鈥 and Dr. Fahey spoke on the truth and rationale behind this bold claim. Contextually, the word 鈥渞omance鈥 takes on the archaic meaning, as simply a story of heroism or adventure. In this light, the poem can be viewed as one of the best books of romance, and Sir Gawain as being the best knight. Within the story, he follows the human and Christian arc: sin, repentance, forgiveness, renewal. There is transformation in redemption, and as Gawain is faced with temptation in the poem and overcomes it, 鈥渉e passes the great knightly test鈥 and proves his position as a member of the Brotherhood under Christ.

91黑料 students read Sir Gawain and the Green Knight in their sophomore year, so they were intrigued to hear Dr. Fahey鈥檚 astute observations about the poem. 鈥淚 thought it was interesting,鈥 remarked Gabriel Stec (鈥27). 鈥淒r. Fahey showed that, by not taking into consideration the intention of the story, you鈥檙e not as able to read or judge the piece itself, because you鈥檙e too blinded by your own ideologies.鈥