sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2007-09-01 01:24 pm

And autumn is his bridle

"So all through that winter he came to me. And he came at night. I was never alone in my chamber, but he came through doors and windows and walls, and lay with me. I never saw him again, but heard his voice and felt his body. Then, in the summer, when I was heavy with child, he left me . . . They will tell you how my father beat me and shut me up, and how when the child was born he would not give him a name fit for a Christian prince, but, because he was born in September, named him for the sky-god, the wanderer, who has no house but the woven air. But I called him Merlin always, because on the day of his birth a wild falcon flew in through the window and perched above the bed, and looked at me with my lover's eyes."
—Mary Stewart, The Crystal Cave (1970)
ext_27060: Sumer is icomen in; llude sing cucu! (Default)

[identity profile] rymenhild.livejournal.com 2007-09-01 06:06 pm (UTC)(link)
"I know only this: that, when I was in our private apartments with my sister nuns, some one used to come to me in the form of a most handsome young man. He would often hold me tightly in his arms and kiss me. When he had been some little time with me he would disappear, so that I could no longer see him. Many times, too, when I was sitting alone, he would talk to me, without becoming visible; and when he came to see me in this way he would often make love with me, as a man would do, and in that way he made me pregnant. You must decide in your wisdom, my Lord, who was the father of this lad, for apart from what I have told, I have never had relations with a man."

Geoffrey of Monmouth, The History of the Kings of Britain, trans. Lewis Thorpe

[identity profile] palecast.livejournal.com 2007-09-01 06:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved this book. Discovered it in my teens, consumed it, and it engendered a lifelong passion for all things Arthurian. Then all my family read it too. It is still my favourite book in this vast field.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2007-09-01 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
That's what I was going to say!

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2007-09-01 07:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Did you get my e-mail?

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2007-09-01 08:42 pm (UTC)(link)
[livejournal.com profile] palecast beat me to the punch!

That's an amazing excerpt, though.
genarti: Knees-down view of woman on tiptoe next to bookshelves (raven why'd you make the sky)

[personal profile] genarti 2007-09-01 08:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I love that book so very, very much.

My attention wanders in the later books, when it gets into the Arthurian love-triangle stuff -- my patience for love triangles of betrayal and doomed passion tends to be limited, which is why my fascination with Arthurian tales waxes and wanes -- but, oh, I have loved The Crystal Cave for years upon years.
ewein2412: (Default)

[personal profile] ewein2412 2007-09-02 01:58 pm (UTC)(link)
when I announced, at 14 and after reading "Over Sea Under Stone," that I was a king arthur fanatic, my grandfather went to the library and checked out The Crystal Cave. He left it lying on my desk. It is one of those outstanding visual memories of my childhood, this battered library first edition of The Crystal Cave waiting for me on my desk with no fanfare or explanation. It is the first "Arthurian literature" that I ever read.

you can kind of see where it led me.

And I can STILL recite the epigraph poem from memory!
ewein2412: (Default)

[personal profile] ewein2412 2007-09-03 09:54 am (UTC)(link)
You had an awesome grandfather.

I did, I did.

[identity profile] clarionj.livejournal.com 2007-09-02 05:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks, now I'll start thinking of all the magical possibilities this September.

(I haven't read this book in over 20 years. One day, I'm going to get back to all my reading.)

Hope you're well. I haven't been able to get on LJ much lately due to my work schedule. Just peeking in now and then!

[identity profile] seishonagon.livejournal.com 2007-09-02 07:41 pm (UTC)(link)
This is easily one of the books that has been most influential on me, my taste in fiction, my taste in stories, and the way I think about myth and history.

It was the first volume in what would grow to a 300+ volume collection of Arthurian books.

[identity profile] seishonagon.livejournal.com 2007-09-03 12:39 am (UTC)(link)
Edith Hamilton's Mythology. Neil Gaiman's Sandman. Michael Ende's The Neverending Story. Various works by Tolkien. T.H. White's The Once And Future King, though that was mostly because I really didn't care for most of the book; the same goes for Bradley's Mists of Avalon. The Killer Angels, by Michael Shaara. Moon Shot, by Alan Shepard and Deke Slayton (which also remains the book that has caused me to cry the most at one time). Hugo's Les Miserables. St.-Exupery's Le Petit Prince. Vergil's Aeneid, both the Latin and Dryden's translation of it, which I still read bits of sometimes when I need something numinous in my life. Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. And Harlan Ellison's short story "The Deathbird." Inherit The Wind and Farenheit 451, which I read one after the other in sixth grade. And in the not-a-book category, Ken Burns' Civil War documentary film, which remains one of the best examples I have seen of a telling of history with a real eye for the people who lived through it - it was this, really, which made me first understand what I love about the study of history: the fact that it happened to real people.
To name a few. Most of them were books I loved, the major exceptions being Once and Future King and Mists of Avalon, which I fortunately encountered after already becoming totally obsessed with Arthurian literature.

[identity profile] sharonafyre.livejournal.com 2007-09-03 05:14 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved these books too, as a teen. Your excerpt makes me want to reread, but I've found the magic of many favorite books from that time less available to me when I reread as an adult, which is just sad.

[identity profile] sharonafyre.livejournal.com 2007-09-08 04:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh! I'm reading E Wein's Coalition of Lions! Thanks for the GREAT RECOMMENDATION!!!!!