The Marsh King 🔍
written and illustrated by C. Walter Hodges Puffin / Penguin Books, Puffin books, Harmondsworth, United Kingdom, 1970
English [en] · PDF · 10.7MB · 1970 · 📗 Book (unknown) · 🚀/ia · Save
description
Following the career of King Alfred further and revealing more of his claim to "the Great," Mr. Hodges switches narrators from the secretary, Alfred Dane-Leg ( The Namesake , 1964) to a secondary source, the son of Hildis who as a little girl is caught up in the struggle between Christian Saxon and pagan Northman. In the period of a year or so, Alfred releases Guthorm the Dane and his followers, provoking Guthorm's scorn by his magnanimity and words of advice, then rallies his forces to defeat Guthorm's vengeful attack upon Wessex, finally converting him to Christianity and establishing him as king of a buffer state. The import is obvious, vindicating Alfred's assertion that "if we and not Guthorm are to win the end, surely it must not be because our brutalities are stronger than his, but because our purposes are greater." The historical events emerge from a rich tapestry of life in palace and peasant hut (Hildis and her brothers cornered by a wild boar, King Alfred inadvertently burning an old woman's bread) in which each incident has later implications. Characterization is equally rich: Guthorm, his head covered to hide his baldness, "suffering much from toothache." Mr. Hodges' typically robust illustrations close in on conspiratorial moments, stand back to survey a swirling scene. Try this on your Treece readers: it demands a little more, perhaps, repays in full measure of historical insight and individual understanding.
Alternative author
Hodges, C. Walter (Cyril Walter), 1909-2004
Alternative publisher
Harmondsworth: Puffin Books
Alternative publisher
Penguin; Puffin Books
Alternative publisher
Ladybird Books Ltd
Alternative publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
Alternative edition
United Kingdom and Ireland, United Kingdom
Alternative edition
Puffin books, Harmondsworth, 1976
Alternative edition
First Puffin edition, PS, 1970
Alternative edition
New Impression, 1970t
metadata comments
Originally published (B67-12194), London, Bell, 1967.
Alternative description
A story of ninth-century Britain, when King Alfred of Wessex fought to establish and preserve peace, learning, and civilization from the invading onslaught of Danish blood, death, and Valhalla.
Alternative description
234p. : 18cm
Originally published: London : Bell, 1967
date open sourced
2023-06-28
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