The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Harvard Classics, Volume 49, Epic and
Saga, by Various
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Title: The Harvard Classics, Volume 49, Epic and Saga
With Introductions And Notes
Author: Various
Release Date: November 11, 2004 [EBook #14019]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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THE HARVARD CLASSICS
EDITED BY CHARLES W. ELIOT LLD.
EPIC AND SAGA
THE SONG OF ROLAND
THE DESTRUCTION OF DA DERGA'S HOSTEL
WITH INTRODUCTIONS AND NOTES
VOLUME 49
1910
THE SONG OF ROLAND
TRANSLATED BY
JOHN O'HAGAN
_INTRODUCTORY NOTE_
_In the year 778 A.D., Charles the Great, King of the Franks, returned
from a military expedition into Spain, whither he had been led by
opportunities offered through dissensions among the Saracens who then
dominated that country. On the 15th of August, while his army was
marching through the passes of the Pyrenees, his rear-guard was attacked
and annihilated by the Basque inhabitants of the mountains, in the
valley of Roncesvaux About this disaster many popular songs, it is
supposed, soon sprang up; and the chief hero whom they celebrated was
Hrodland, Count of the Marches of Brittany.
There are indications that the earliest of these songs arose among the
Breton followers of Hrodland or Roland; but they spread to Maine, to
Anjou, to Normandy, until the theme became national. By the latter part
of the eleventh century, when the form of the "Song of Roland" which we
possess was probably composed, the historical germ of the story had
almost disappeared under the mass of legendary accretion. Charlemagne,
who was a man of thirty-six at the time of the actual Roncesvaux
incident, has become in the poem an old man with a flowing white beard,
credited with endless conquests; the Basques have disappeared, and the
Saracens have taken their place; the defeat is accounted for by the
invention of the treachery of Ganelon; the expedition of 777-778 has
become a campaign of seven years; Roland is made the nephew of
Charlemagne, leader
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