The Pearl Manuscript (British Library MS Cotton Nero A X/2), also known as the Gawain manuscript, is an illuminated manuscript produced somewhere in northern England in the late 14th century or the beginning of the 15th century. It is one of the best-known Middle English manuscripts, the only one containing alliterative verse solely, and the oldest surviving English manuscript to have full-page illustrations. It contains the only surviving copies of four of the masterpieces of medieval English literature: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, Cleanness, and Patience. It has been described as "one of the greatest manuscript treasures for medieval literature", and "the most famous of all romance manuscripts".
Pearl Manuscript | |
---|---|
British Library | |
The Green Knight at Camelot, folio 94v, and the beginning of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, folio 95r | |
Also known as | The Gawain Manuscript, British Library MS Cotton Nero A X/2 |
Date | c. 1400 |
Place of origin | Northern England |
Language(s) | Middle English |
Author(s) | The Gawain Poet |
Material | Vellum |
Size | 12 centimetres (4.7 in) x 17 centimetres (6.7 in) |
Format | Single column |
Script | Gothic textura rotunda |
Contents | Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, Cleanness, Patience |
Previously kept | Cotton library |
Contents
The titles given here are those used by modern editors, all the poems being untitled in the manuscript. It has been foliated twice, first in ink and later in pencil; the second foliation is used here.
- Pearl, ff. 41r–59v
- Cleanness (also known as Purity), ff. 60r–86r
- Patience, ff. 86r–94r
- Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, ff. 94v–130r
- A Middle English couplet beginning "Mi minde is mukul on on þat wil me noȝt amende", f. 129v
There are also a number of illustrations scattered throughout.
Date and place of origin
The text of the Pearl Manuscript is commonly dated on palaeographical grounds to the last quarter of the 14th century, or at the latest to the beginning of the 15th century, the illustrations being added at either the same time as the text or a little later. It has also been argued that it was produced for the Stanley family by a scribe whose dialect locates him to south-east Cheshire or north-east Staffordshire. In recent years several scholars have reidentified the scribe's dialect as Yorkshire, and Joel Fredell has pointed out stylistic and thematic similarities with illuminated manuscripts produced in York which suggest that the illustrations in Cotton Nero A X/2 were drawn and painted there in the first two decades of the 15th century.
History of the manuscript
It is not known who owned the manuscript for the first two hundred years of its history. The name "Hugo de" appears on the margin of one leaf, and perhaps (though this is disputed) "J Macy" on another, either of which might be interpreted as a mark of either ownership or authorship. Edward Wilson has speculated that it was held by the Stanley family; Elizabeth Salter that it formed part of the library of one Yorkshire monastery or another, and passed from them to the 16th-century collector John Nettleton. The recorded history of the manuscript begins some time before 1614 with a description of it in the private library catalogue of the Yorkshire book-collector Henry Savile of Banke as "An owld booke in English verse beginninge Perle plesant to Princes pay in 4º. Limned". Before 1621 it was evidently acquired by Sir Robert Cotton, being then listed as "Gesta Arthuri regis et aliorum versu Anglico [Deeds of King Arthur and other matters in English verse]". His librarian bound it along with two quite unrelated Latin texts, from which it was not separated until a rebinding in 1964. A catalogue of Cotton's collection printed in 1696 mentioned this volume, and it was, along with all the Cotton family's other manuscripts, donated to the British Museum when that institution was founded in 1753. It is now held by the British Library.
Description
The manuscript consists of 90 vellum folios now measuring 12 centimetres (4.7 in) by 17 centimetres (6.7 in), though it seems to have been cropped from a larger size. The quiring comprises a single bifolium followed by seven gatherings of twelve leaves each and a single gathering of four leaves. Folio 39r, the first page of Pearl, is stained enough to suggest that the manuscript was once unbound and that this was its outer sheet. Most pages are ruled to allow for 36 lines of text. All four of the main poems in the manuscript were written by a single scribe using a Gothic textura rotunda script rather than the cursiva script that would be more usual in a late 14th-century vernacular poetry manuscript. The hand has been described as "distinctive, rather delicate [and] angular". The scribe's irregularity in following the ruled lines and his heavy use of abbreviations and ligatures has led to the suggestion that he was more used to notarial than literary work. Some letters which had faded or blurred have been redone by a later scribe, and this process of fading has continued; during the century that has passed since 1923 that year's EETS facsimile edition has become in many places more easily readable than the manuscript itself. There are 48 decorated initials in the manuscript, all written in blue with red penwork, which range in size from fifteen to two lines. It has often been argued that they were used to make clear the internal structure of each of the four poems.
Illustrations
The manuscript has twelve illustrations: four on ff. 41r–42v (immediately before Pearl), showing the dreamer sleeping, the dreamer approaching the stream, the dreamer seeing the maiden, and the dreamer trying to cross; two on ff. 60r–60v (immediately before Cleanness), showing Noah's Ark and Daniel at Belshazzar's feast; two on ff. 86r–86v (immediately before Patience), showing Jonah and the whale and Jonah preaching to the people of Nineveh; one on ff. 94v (immediately before Sir Gawain), showing the Green Knight at Camelot; and three on 129r–130r (immediately after Sir Gawain), showing Bertilak's wife tempting Sir Gawain, Gawain at the Green Chapel, and Gawain's return to Camelot. With one exception they all take up a complete side of a folio, a feature not found in any earlier English manuscript. They all depict scenes described in the four poems though not always with perfect accuracy, suggesting that the illustrator had not read them but was instead following suggestions from the manuscript's owner. They were created in two stages: first in black-and-white as ink drawings, then as paintings with the colour being applied with considerably less skill, perhaps by a different artist. Their overall quality was roundly abused by some 20th century critics, described as "crude and inartistic" by E. V. Gordon, and "the nadir of English illustrative art...infantile daubs" by R. S. and L. H. Loomis; more recently Kathleen L. Scott considered them the work of a professional, Sarah M. Horrall described them as "very competently executed", and Joel Fredell has judged them to be skilled work comparable to the miniatures of the , if inferior to London work and the products of the International Gothic style.
Transmission of the text
The Pearl manuscript's scribe was not the author of the poems it contains, and indeed the number and nature of its scribal errors and textual anomalies show it to stand at some distance from the original manuscript or manuscripts. At least one line, and possibly several more, have been lost from the original poems, while others seem to have been rearranged or added. It may have been an inept copy of a prestige illuminated manuscript commissioned by some wealthy patron. It has also been suggested that the Pearl manuscript or its exemplar may have collected each of its four texts from a different manuscript.
First publication
The first published quotations from Cotton Nero A X/2 appeared in a footnote in the third volume of Thomas Warton's History of English Poetry in 1781, comprising twelve lines from Pearl and four from Cleanness. A further short quotation from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight was included in a footnote to Richard Price's new edition of Warton's History in 1824, and the poem was published in its entirety, edited by Frederic Madden, in 1839. Pearl, Patience and Cleanness were not edited until 1864, by Richard Morris.
Editions
Editions of the full contents:
- Gollancz, Israel, ed. (1923). Pearl, Cleanness, Patience and Sir Gawain, Reproduced in Facsimile from the Unique MS. Cotton Nero A.x in the British Museum. Early English Text Society Original Series, 162. London: Oxford University Press.
- Cawley, A. C.; Anderson, J. J., eds. (1976). Pearl, Cleanness, Patience, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. London: Dent. ISBN 0460103466.
- Moorman, Charles, ed. (1977). The Works of the Gawain-Poet. Jackson, MS: University of Mississippi Press. ISBN 9780878050284.
- Vantuono, William, ed. (1984). The Pearl Poems: An Omnibus Edition. The Renaissance Imagination, 5 and 6. New York: Garland. ISBN 0824054504.. In two volumes.
- Andrew, Malcolm; Waldron, Ronald, eds. (2007). The Poems of the Pearl Manuscript: Pearl, Cleanness, Patience, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (5th ed.). Exeter: University of Exeter Press. ISBN 9780859897914. This is considered the reference edition.
Translations
Translations of the full contents:
Footnotes
- Cassidy, Seamus; McGarvey, Erin; Normesinu, Isaac. "Cotton Nero A.X". Mediakron. Boston College. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
Informally, Cotton Nero A.X is referred to as 'the Pearl Manuscript' or, less often, 'the Gawain Manuscript'.
- Booher, Dustin; Gunn, Kevin B. (2020). Literary Research and the Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Eras: Strategies and Sources. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 183. ISBN 9781538138434. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- Doyle, A. I. (1982). "The manuscripts". In Lawton, David (ed.). Middle English Alliterative Poetry and Its Literary Background: Seven Essays. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer. p. 93. ISBN 9780859910972. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- Fredell 2014, p. 1.
- Johnston, Arthur (1964). Enchanted Ground: The Study of Medieval Romance in the Eighteenth Century. London: University of London, Athlone Press. p. 114. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- Edwards 1997, pp. 197, 200.
- Brantley 2022, p. 218.
- Roberts 2018, p. 1.
- Edwards 1997, pp. 197–199.
- "Four anonymous poems in Middle English: Pearl, Cleanness, Patience and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Cotton MS Nero A X/2: 1375-1424". Explore Archives and Manuscripts. British Library. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- Fredell 2014, pp. 3–4, 13–33.
- Edwards 1997, pp. 197–198.
- Salter, Elizabeth (1983). Fourteenth-Century English Poetry: Contexts and Readings. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 83–84. ISBN 019811186X. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
- Gordon 1970, p. ix.
- Edwards 1997, p. 198.
- Putter 2014, p. 1.
- Edwards 1997, p. 197.
- Roberts 2018, p. 2.
- Silverstein 1984, p. 15.
- Fredell 2014, pp. 25, 27.
- Roberts 2018, pp. 4–5.
- Edwards 1997, p. 201.
- Reichardt 1997, p. 120.
- Edwards 1997, pp. 210, 213.
- McGillivray, Murray; Duffy, Christina (October 2017). "New light on the Sir Gawain and the Green Knight manuscript: multispectral imaging and the Cotton Nero A.x. illustrations". Speculum. 92 (1): 113–114, 122–123. doi:10.1086/693361. S2CID 165540619. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
- Gordon 1970, p. x.
- Edwards 1997, p. 218.
- Fredell 2014, p. 25.
- Edwards 1997, pp. 198–199.
- Putter 2014, p. 23.
- Edwards 1997, pp. 199–200.
- Burrow, J. A. (2001). The Gawain-Poet. Tavistock: Northcote House. pp. 2–3. ISBN 9780746308783. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
- Schmidt 2010, p. 369.
References
- Brantley, Jessica (2022). Medieval English Manuscripts and Literary Forms. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812253849. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
- Edwards, A. S. G. (1997). "The manuscript: British Library MS Cotton Nero A.x". In Brewer, Derek; Gibson, Jonathan (eds.). A Companion to the Gawain-Poet. Arthurian Studies, 38. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer. p. 195. ISBN 9780859915298. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
- Fredell, Joel (2014). "The Pearl-Poet manuscript in York". Studies in the Age of Chaucer. 36: 1–39. doi:10.1353/sac.2014.0004. S2CID 161651298. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
- Gordon, E. V. (1970). Pearl. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198113799. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
- Putter, Ad (2014). An Introduction to the Gawain-Poet. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780582225749. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
- Reichardt, Paul F. (1997). "'Several illuminations, coarsely executed': the illustrations of the Pearl manuscript". Studies in Iconography. 18: 119–142. JSTOR 23924071.
- Roberts, Jane (31 January 2018). "The Hand and Script" (PDF). The Cotton Nero A.x. Project. University of Calgary. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - Schmidt, A. V. C. (2010). "The poet of Pearl, Cleanness and Patience". In Saunders, Corinne (ed.). A Companion to Medieval Poetry. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 369–384. ISBN 9781405159630. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
- Silverstein, Theodore, ed. (1984). Sir Gawain & the Green Knight: A New Critical Edition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226757674. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
External links
- Digital Facsimile of the Manuscript
- The Cotton Nero A.x. Project at the University of Calgary
The Pearl Manuscript British Library MS Cotton Nero A X 2 also known as the Gawain manuscript is an illuminated manuscript produced somewhere in northern England in the late 14th century or the beginning of the 15th century It is one of the best known Middle English manuscripts the only one containing alliterative verse solely and the oldest surviving English manuscript to have full page illustrations It contains the only surviving copies of four of the masterpieces of medieval English literature Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Pearl Cleanness and Patience It has been described as one of the greatest manuscript treasures for medieval literature and the most famous of all romance manuscripts Pearl ManuscriptBritish LibraryThe Green Knight at Camelot folio 94v and the beginning of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight folio 95rAlso known asThe Gawain Manuscript British Library MS Cotton Nero A X 2Datec 1400Place of originNorthern EnglandLanguage s Middle EnglishAuthor s The Gawain PoetMaterialVellumSize12 centimetres 4 7 in x 17 centimetres 6 7 in FormatSingle columnScriptGothic textura rotundaContentsSir Gawain and the Green Knight Pearl Cleanness PatiencePreviously keptCotton libraryContentsThe titles given here are those used by modern editors all the poems being untitled in the manuscript It has been foliated twice first in ink and later in pencil the second foliation is used here Pearl ff 41r 59v Cleanness also known as Purity ff 60r 86r Patience ff 86r 94r Sir Gawain and the Green Knight ff 94v 130r A Middle English couplet beginning Mi minde is mukul on on that wil me noȝt amende f 129v There are also a number of illustrations scattered throughout Date and place of originThe tempting of Sir Gawain by Bertilak s wife folio 129r The text of the Pearl Manuscript is commonly dated on palaeographical grounds to the last quarter of the 14th century or at the latest to the beginning of the 15th century the illustrations being added at either the same time as the text or a little later It has also been argued that it was produced for the Stanley family by a scribe whose dialect locates him to south east Cheshire or north east Staffordshire In recent years several scholars have reidentified the scribe s dialect as Yorkshire and Joel Fredell has pointed out stylistic and thematic similarities with illuminated manuscripts produced in York which suggest that the illustrations in Cotton Nero A X 2 were drawn and painted there in the first two decades of the 15th century History of the manuscriptIt is not known who owned the manuscript for the first two hundred years of its history The name Hugo de appears on the margin of one leaf and perhaps though this is disputed J Macy on another either of which might be interpreted as a mark of either ownership or authorship Edward Wilson has speculated that it was held by the Stanley family Elizabeth Salter that it formed part of the library of one Yorkshire monastery or another and passed from them to the 16th century collector John Nettleton The recorded history of the manuscript begins some time before 1614 with a description of it in the private library catalogue of the Yorkshire book collector Henry Savile of Banke as An owld booke in English verse beginninge Perle plesant to Princes pay in 4º Limned Before 1621 it was evidently acquired by Sir Robert Cotton being then listed as Gesta Arthuri regis et aliorum versu Anglico Deeds of King Arthur and other matters in English verse His librarian bound it along with two quite unrelated Latin texts from which it was not separated until a rebinding in 1964 A catalogue of Cotton s collection printed in 1696 mentioned this volume and it was along with all the Cotton family s other manuscripts donated to the British Museum when that institution was founded in 1753 It is now held by the British Library DescriptionPearl s dreamer sleeps folio 41r The manuscript consists of 90 vellum folios now measuring 12 centimetres 4 7 in by 17 centimetres 6 7 in though it seems to have been cropped from a larger size The quiring comprises a single bifolium followed by seven gatherings of twelve leaves each and a single gathering of four leaves Folio 39r the first page of Pearl is stained enough to suggest that the manuscript was once unbound and that this was its outer sheet Most pages are ruled to allow for 36 lines of text All four of the main poems in the manuscript were written by a single scribe using a Gothic textura rotunda script rather than the cursiva script that would be more usual in a late 14th century vernacular poetry manuscript The hand has been described as distinctive rather delicate and angular The scribe s irregularity in following the ruled lines and his heavy use of abbreviations and ligatures has led to the suggestion that he was more used to notarial than literary work Some letters which had faded or blurred have been redone by a later scribe and this process of fading has continued during the century that has passed since 1923 that year s EETS facsimile edition has become in many places more easily readable than the manuscript itself There are 48 decorated initials in the manuscript all written in blue with red penwork which range in size from fifteen to two lines It has often been argued that they were used to make clear the internal structure of each of the four poems IllustrationsThe manuscript has twelve illustrations four on ff 41r 42v immediately before Pearl showing the dreamer sleeping the dreamer approaching the stream the dreamer seeing the maiden and the dreamer trying to cross two on ff 60r 60v immediately before Cleanness showing Noah s Ark and Daniel at Belshazzar s feast two on ff 86r 86v immediately before Patience showing Jonah and the whale and Jonah preaching to the people of Nineveh one on ff 94v immediately before Sir Gawain showing the Green Knight at Camelot and three on 129r 130r immediately after Sir Gawain showing Bertilak s wife tempting Sir Gawain Gawain at the Green Chapel and Gawain s return to Camelot With one exception they all take up a complete side of a folio a feature not found in any earlier English manuscript They all depict scenes described in the four poems though not always with perfect accuracy suggesting that the illustrator had not read them but was instead following suggestions from the manuscript s owner They were created in two stages first in black and white as ink drawings then as paintings with the colour being applied with considerably less skill perhaps by a different artist Their overall quality was roundly abused by some 20th century critics described as crude and inartistic by E V Gordon and the nadir of English illustrative art infantile daubs by R S and L H Loomis more recently Kathleen L Scott considered them the work of a professional Sarah M Horrall described them as very competently executed and Joel Fredell has judged them to be skilled work comparable to the miniatures of the if inferior to London work and the products of the International Gothic style Transmission of the textThe dreamer sees the maiden folio 42r The Pearl manuscript s scribe was not the author of the poems it contains and indeed the number and nature of its scribal errors and textual anomalies show it to stand at some distance from the original manuscript or manuscripts At least one line and possibly several more have been lost from the original poems while others seem to have been rearranged or added It may have been an inept copy of a prestige illuminated manuscript commissioned by some wealthy patron It has also been suggested that the Pearl manuscript or its exemplar may have collected each of its four texts from a different manuscript First publicationThe first published quotations from Cotton Nero A X 2 appeared in a footnote in the third volume of Thomas Warton s History of English Poetry in 1781 comprising twelve lines from Pearl and four from Cleanness A further short quotation from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight was included in a footnote to Richard Price s new edition of Warton s History in 1824 and the poem was published in its entirety edited by Frederic Madden in 1839 Pearl Patience and Cleanness were not edited until 1864 by Richard Morris EditionsEditions of the full contents Gollancz Israel ed 1923 Pearl Cleanness Patience and Sir Gawain Reproduced in Facsimile from the Unique MS Cotton Nero A x in the British Museum Early English Text Society Original Series 162 London Oxford University Press Cawley A C Anderson J J eds 1976 Pearl Cleanness Patience Sir Gawain and the Green Knight London Dent ISBN 0460103466 Moorman Charles ed 1977 The Works of the Gawain Poet Jackson MS University of Mississippi Press ISBN 9780878050284 Vantuono William ed 1984 The Pearl Poems An Omnibus Edition The Renaissance Imagination 5 and 6 New York Garland ISBN 0824054504 In two volumes Andrew Malcolm Waldron Ronald eds 2007 The Poems of the Pearl Manuscript Pearl Cleanness Patience Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 5th ed Exeter University of Exeter Press ISBN 9780859897914 This is considered the reference edition TranslationsTranslations of the full contents Gardner John 1965 The Complete Works of the Gawain Poet Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226283302 Andrew Malcolm Waldron Ronald eds 1993 The Complete Works of the Pearl Poet Translated by Finch Casey Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520078710 FootnotesCassidy Seamus McGarvey Erin Normesinu Isaac Cotton Nero A X Mediakron Boston College Retrieved 8 March 2023 Informally Cotton Nero A X is referred to as the Pearl Manuscript or less often the Gawain Manuscript Booher Dustin Gunn Kevin B 2020 Literary Research and the Anglo Saxon and Medieval Eras Strategies and Sources Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 183 ISBN 9781538138434 Retrieved 26 March 2023 Doyle A I 1982 The manuscripts In Lawton David ed Middle English Alliterative Poetry and Its Literary Background Seven Essays Cambridge D S Brewer p 93 ISBN 9780859910972 Retrieved 26 March 2023 Fredell 2014 p 1 Johnston Arthur 1964 Enchanted Ground The Study of Medieval Romance in the Eighteenth Century London University of London Athlone Press p 114 Retrieved 26 March 2023 Edwards 1997 pp 197 200 Brantley 2022 p 218 Roberts 2018 p 1 Edwards 1997 pp 197 199 Four anonymous poems in Middle English Pearl Cleanness Patience and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Cotton MS Nero A X 2 1375 1424 Explore Archives and Manuscripts British Library Retrieved 15 March 2023 Fredell 2014 pp 3 4 13 33 Edwards 1997 pp 197 198 Salter Elizabeth 1983 Fourteenth Century English Poetry Contexts and Readings Oxford Clarendon Press pp 83 84 ISBN 019811186X Retrieved 15 March 2023 Gordon 1970 p ix Edwards 1997 p 198 Putter 2014 p 1 Edwards 1997 p 197 Roberts 2018 p 2 Silverstein 1984 p 15 Fredell 2014 pp 25 27 Roberts 2018 pp 4 5 Edwards 1997 p 201 Reichardt 1997 p 120 Edwards 1997 pp 210 213 McGillivray Murray Duffy Christina October 2017 New light on the Sir Gawain and the Green Knight manuscript multispectral imaging and the Cotton Nero A x illustrations Speculum 92 1 113 114 122 123 doi 10 1086 693361 S2CID 165540619 Retrieved 31 March 2023 Gordon 1970 p x Edwards 1997 p 218 Fredell 2014 p 25 Edwards 1997 pp 198 199 Putter 2014 p 23 Edwards 1997 pp 199 200 Burrow J A 2001 TheGawain Poet Tavistock Northcote House pp 2 3 ISBN 9780746308783 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Schmidt 2010 p 369 ReferencesBrantley Jessica 2022 Medieval English Manuscripts and Literary Forms Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812253849 Retrieved 28 March 2023 Edwards A S G 1997 The manuscript British Library MS Cotton Nero A x In Brewer Derek Gibson Jonathan eds A Companion to theGawain Poet Arthurian Studies 38 Cambridge D S Brewer p 195 ISBN 9780859915298 Retrieved 8 March 2023 Fredell Joel 2014 The Pearl Poet manuscript in York Studies in the Age of Chaucer 36 1 39 doi 10 1353 sac 2014 0004 S2CID 161651298 Retrieved 28 March 2023 Gordon E V 1970 Pearl Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198113799 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Putter Ad 2014 An Introduction to theGawain Poet London Routledge ISBN 9780582225749 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Reichardt Paul F 1997 Several illuminations coarsely executed the illustrations of the Pearl manuscript Studies in Iconography 18 119 142 JSTOR 23924071 Roberts Jane 31 January 2018 The Hand and Script PDF The Cotton Nero A x Project University of Calgary Retrieved 15 March 2023 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint date and year link Schmidt A V C 2010 The poet of Pearl Cleanness and Patience In Saunders Corinne ed A Companion to Medieval Poetry Chichester Wiley Blackwell pp 369 384 ISBN 9781405159630 Retrieved 22 March 2023 Silverstein Theodore ed 1984 Sir Gawain amp the Green Knight A New Critical Edition Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226757674 Retrieved 25 March 2023 External linksDigital Facsimile of the Manuscript The Cotton Nero A x Project at the University of Calgary