Robin Hood Sir Richatd of the Lee Repaid Debt to Robin Hood Again

Robin Hood and the Debt of Honour

Chamber Airs, Op. two: Sonata No. 3 in G Major:
IV. Vivace

Richard Jones (1680-1744)

Performed by Kreeta-Maria Kentala, Lauri Pulakka and Mitzi Meyerson.

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Robin Hood and the Debt of Accolade (ane) : The outlaw showed that strange every bit it may be, he did have a lawmaking of honour.

Robin Hood and the Debt of Honour

Part one

Stairs in the Keep of Conisbrough Castle almost Doncaster, Yorkshire. © Richard Croft, Geograph. Licence: CC-BY-SA 2.0.

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Robin Hood and the Debt of Honour

Introduction

This tale opens a mediaeval ballad called 'The Gest of Robin Hood', and introduces us to the dashing outlaw's peculiar code of ideals.

Written for ELH

It was Robin Hood'due south custom to waylay a knight on the road, and invite him to dinner. As they finished their wine, Robin would ask his guest how much money he was carrying, and if he perjured himself, a scandalised Robin confiscated it.

One such guest said he had just ten shillings which, after a thorough search by Little John, turned out to be truthful. The knight, whose name was Sir Richard of the Lee, explained that his son had killed someone, and that, to pay compensation to the family, he had borrowed four hundred pounds from the Abbot of St Mary's Abbey. Now he was broke, the deadline was midnight, and in a few hours his castle and lands would be forfeit.

Robin at once sent Little John to his coffers, and handed the astonished knight 4 hundred pounds. Our Lady, Robin bodacious him, would run into the loan repaid. And and so, with minutes to spare, the knight redeemed his lands and castle from a bitterly disappointed Abbot.

Robin Hood institute that the knight whom he expected to pay for his dinner could not afford to, because his castle and lands were being held by St Mary's Abbey, every bit security for a debt incurred on his son's behalf. Robin immediately offered to loan him the money to redeem his property, and the grateful knight accepted.

Run into all our story summaries

British Myths and Legends

Word Play

Exercises based on Pre-Sixties Textbooks,
using the vocabulary in this passage

Précis

A fundamental skill in writing is the ability to shorten a text while preserving all essential information. Summarise this passage using no more than than sixty words.

Robin Hood found that the knight whom he expected to pay for his dinner could not afford to, because his castle and lands were being held by St Mary's Abbey, as security for a debt incurred on his son'south behalf. Robin immediately offered to loan him the money to redeem his property, and the grateful knight accepted.

See if y'all tin can reduce this to no more than forty words.

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Paraphrase

JOIN each grouping of ideas below together, to brand a unmarried judgement. Try to change as much of the grammar and vocabulary every bit possible. See if you tin compose at least two different answers.

1. Robin Hood invited strangers to dinner. Then he stole their money. This is how he made his living.

2. Sir Richard had only a few shillings. He told Robin why. His gallantry impressed Robin.

3. Sir Richard wanted to recover his holding. He needed £400. Robin lent the money to him.

Expansion

IT is frequently necessary to add together extra colour or detail to a sentence. Answer these three questions in exactly seven words, so again in exactly fourteen words, and then one more time in exactly twenty-one words.

ane. Why did Robin invite strangers to dine with him?

ii. Why did the knight need four hundred pounds?

three. Why was the Abbot disappointed when the loan was repaid?

Spinner

AN exercise in imagination. Combine each group of three words beneath into a single judgement. You tin can change due east.thou. cat → cats or go → went. For variety, effort composing questions and directly speech.

1. Bitterly. Guest. Thorough.

2. Confiscate. Waylay. Would.

3. Assure. Lands. Perjury.

four. How. Money. Pay.

5. Now. Such. Whose.

Spinner
Grammar and Vocabulary

Confusables

SOME words may hands exist mistaken for others, though they are not precisely the same. Invent your own sentences to draw out differences in meaning, grammar or use between these words.

one. Guest. Visitor.

2. Summon. Invite. Invitation.

3. Will. Would.

4. Through. Thorough.

5. A lot. Much.

Confusables
Grammar Games

Our discontent is from comparison,
Were better states unseen, each man would like his ain.

John Norris of Bemerton (1657-1712)

reeseprifid.blogspot.com

Source: https://englishlanguageandhistory.com/?id=robin-hood-debt-honour-1

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