harishankar
Member
I posted this question on my own forum, but also figured I could do with some help from BAR.
There's a certain passage in the classic novel, "Three men in a boat" which has always intrigued me.
It's the part where Jerome describes the glorious night and then tells a story about a band of good knights who travelled into a dark wood and lost their companion.
It's in pages 96-97 in my Penguin Popular Classics paperback edition.
I hope somebody can help with with it. What is this story allude to? And what is this line?
Can some knowledgeable reader help me decipher this? What does this passage allude to?
There's a certain passage in the classic novel, "Three men in a boat" which has always intrigued me.
It's the part where Jerome describes the glorious night and then tells a story about a band of good knights who travelled into a dark wood and lost their companion.
It's in pages 96-97 in my Penguin Popular Classics paperback edition.
I hope somebody can help with with it. What is this story allude to? And what is this line?
And the name of the dark forest was Sorrow; but of the vision the good knight saw therein we may neither speak nor tell.
Can some knowledgeable reader help me decipher this? What does this passage allude to?