Chapter
I
The story is set in England in the twelfth century, towards
the end of the reign of Richard I. Richard is absent from the
country. He has been imprisoned in Austria on his return from
the Crusades in the Holy Land. In his absence, the nobles have
established a tyranny, and the lower classes suffer under it.
This situation arose as a result of the Norman Conquest of England
in 1066. Although four generations have passed since then, there
is still hostility between the Normans, who were originally
from France, and the conquered population of Anglo-Saxons.
It is an early evening
in summer in a forest in the area of northern England known
as the West Riding of Yorkshire. Gurth, the swine-herd, is talking
to Wamba, the jester. Both are in the employ of Cedric of Rotherwood,
a Saxon noble. Gurth appeals to Wamba to help him round up the
herd, but Wamba is reluctant. Wamba then makes a series of pointed
jokes at the expense of the Normans, whom they both dislike.
Gurth then complains that the Normans take the best of everything,
although Cedric has been valiant in the preservation of Saxon
rights. But he fears the imminent visit of a Norman noble, Reginald
Front-de-Boeuf.
Chapter II
A group of ten horsemen overtake Wamba and Gurth on the road.
The two most important men in this group are an easy-going,
generous-minded monk, Prior Aymer of Jorvaulx, and a stern knight
of the order of the Knights Templar, Brian de Bois-Guilbert,
who has been fighting in the Holy Land. The other men are their
attendants. The prior and the knight ask Gurth and Wamba the
way to Cedric the Saxon’s home, where they desire to stay
the night. Gurth is reluctant to give these Normans directions
to his master’s dwelling, and he quarrels with the knight.
The prior intervenes to keep the peace. Then Wamba gives the
men the wrong directions. But when the men reach the place called
Sunken Cross, where Wamba told them to turn left, they cannot
remember what the directions were. They stop a stranger, who
says he is also going to Cedric’s. The stranger, who says
he is a palmer (pilgrim) just returned from the Holy Land, then
leads them in the right direction until they arrive at Cedric’s
mansion.
Chapter III
In Cedric’s mansion, the hall is prepared for the evening
meal. Cedric sits at his table on a raised dais, waiting for
the dinner, which has been delayed, to be served. Several servants
stand behind him, and his dogs are at his feet. Cedric is anxious
because Gurth has not returned with the herd, and he fears that
some misfortune has befallen them, although he is more worried
about the herd (which is valuable) than about Gurth. He is also
impatient for his favorite clown, Wamba. When Oswald, his cup-bearer,
says that Gurth is not that late, since the curfew bell only
tolled an hour ago, Cedric is put in an even worse temper. This
is because the curfew is a Norman imposition. Cedric rants about
all the injustices that accompany Norman rule, and he also mentions
his son that he banished. Then the sound of the Knight Templar’s
horn outside interrupts him. Cedric is none too pleased to hear
who the visitors are, because both are Normans, but he wishes
to show hospitality nonetheless. The guests are shown in.
Chapter IV
Cedric greets his hosts with dignity, although there is some
tension between the Saxon Cedric and his Norman guests. Wamba
and Gurth return, to Cedric’s complaints about how tardy
they are. The feast is a fine one, and the diners are joined
by Cedric’s beautiful young ward, the Lady Rowena. Brian
de Bois-Guilbert, the Knight Templar, is captivated by her and
stares at her, which displeases both Rowena and Cedric. In the
discussion over dinner, it transpires that the Knight and Prior
are on their way to a tournament at Ashby-de-la-Zouche. Another
stranger arrives at the gate, and Cedric authorizes his page
to allow him to stay the night.
Analysis
The
opening chapters introduce a number of the themes of the novel
and show the situations of many of the main characters. Chapter
I makes is clear how divided the country is between Normans
and Saxons, and how the Norman nobles have established a tyranny.
In this theme the author, Sir Walter Scott, is not being true
to history. Scholars of the period agree that any hostility
between Norman and Saxon did not last for four generations after
the Norman Conquest. In those days, people were more conscious
of divisions of rank than of national origin. Scott’s
picture of Saxons and Normans in fact represents more the typical
nineteenth century view of the good-hearted, rough-and-ready
English and the foppish, pretentious French. Hostility between
England and France was a habit acquired over several centuries
of frequent wars between the two countries. (The war in which
the English defeated Napoleon was fresh in the minds of the
first readers of Ivanhoe, which was published only a few years
after Napoleon’s final defeat.)
The lines
of conflict that are to dominate the novel are clearly drawn
in the opening chapters. Cedric’s disinheritance of his
son is mentioned, and this father-son drama will become an important
element in the plot. Lady Rowena is introduced, and as a beautiful
young unmarried woman she is clearly going to be the subject
of a romantic plot, although De Bois-Guilbert’s early
interest in her does prove to be something of a red herring.
The Norman
villain of the novel is also introduced in these early chapters.
De Bois-Guilbert is presented as an arrogant, quarrelsome knight,
as his treatment of Gurth in Chapter II shows. His susceptibility
to women, later to become one of the main plot elements, is
also shown. It runs counter to the vow of chastity he took as
a member of the Knight Templar Order.
Just
as the representatives of medieval chivalry do not emerge as
admirable characters, neither do the representatives of the
medieval church. One such representative is introduced in these
chapters. The initial description of the Prior tells its own
tale. His clothes are much finer than the rules of his Cistercian
order permit—a sign of his hypocrisy. The fact that he
is overweight, not to mention the twinkle in his eye, indicates
that he enjoys the pleasures of eating and drinking.
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