Page:The mythology of ancient Britain and Ireland (IA mythologyofancie00squiiala).pdf/80

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Chapter VIII
The Arthurian Legend

But the Gaelic myths, vital as they are, have yet caused no echo of themselves in the literatures. of the outside world. This distinction has been left for the legendary tales of the Britons. The Norman minstrels found the stories which they heard from their Welsh confrères so much to their liking that they readily adopted them, and spread thein from camp to camp and from court to court, wherever their dominant race held sway. Perhaps the finer qualities of Celtic romance made especial appeal to that new fashion of 'chivalry' which was growing up under the fosterage of poetry and romance by noble ladies. At any rate the Matière de Bretagne, as the stories of the British gods and heroes, and especially of Arthur, were called, came to be the leading source of poetic inspiration on the Continent. The whole vast Arthurian literature has its origin in British Celtic mythology.

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