The Abbot

Author: Walter Scott

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Ivanhoe

Walter Scott

Ivanhoe is a historical novel that deals with one of the first and most acclaimed works of the genre. Written in 1820 and set in medieval England, more specifically in the twelfth century, the protagonist of the action is Wilfred of Ivanhoe, a young and brave knight.

Ivanhoe is the story of one of the noble Saxon families at a time when the nobility in England was overwhelmingly Norman. The novel follows the Saxon protagonist, Sir Wilfred of Ivanhoe, who has fallen out of favor with his father for his loyalty to the Norman king Richard the Lionheart.

The story is set in 1194, after the failed Third Crusade, when many of the Crusaders were still returning to their homes in Europe. King Richard, who had been captured by Leopold of Austria on his return journey to England, is believed to be still in captivity.

Redgauntlet

Walter Scott

Redgauntlet is a historical novel first published in 1824 and set mainly in Dumfriesshire (Scotland) in the year 1765. The fictional plot describes a conspiracy to start a third Jacobite rebellion.

Young Darsie Latimer is kidnapped by Hugh Redgauntlet and taken to Dumfriesshire. After several events Darsie discovers that Redgauntlet is his uncle and goes with him to Cumberland, meeting there several prominent Jacobites in addition to Prince Charles Edward Stuart. The crux of the matter is that Redgauntlet has summoned them all to start a new Jacobite rebellion, and wants Darsie to join them.

However, Redgauntlet's companions are not as committed as he is, and they also suspect that the Prince's mistress is a spy, which leads to arguments. In addition, General Campbell arrives to announce that the government knows they are hatching a conspiracy.

Robin Hood

Walter Scott

Robin Hood is an archetypal hero and outlaw of medieval English folklore. Inspired by Ghino di Tacco (Italian historical thief whose fame led him to be mentioned in the Divine Comedy and the Decameron), his character is a man named Robin Longstride or Robin of Locksley (or Loxley), who would have a big heart and live outside the law, hiding in the woods of Sherwood and Barnsdale, near the city of Nottingham.

Best archer, defender of the poor and oppressed, according to legend he fought against the Sheriff of Nottingham and Prince John Lackland, who used public force to illegitimately hoard the wealth of the nobles who opposed them. In medieval England, any individual who opposed the royal edicts was considered an outlaw.

Lady of the Lake

Walter Scott

It is a narrative poem composed of six cantos. It has three main plots: the feud between three men for the love of Ellen Douglas; the feud and reconciliation of King James V of Scotland and James Douglas; and the war between the Lowland Scots and the Highland clans.

In Canto I, James Fitz-James meets Ellen Douglas, who rescues him and takes him to a cottage that he suspects is the hideout of a Highland chieftain. In Canto II Roderick Dhu asks James Douglas (who turns out to be Fitz-James' exiled enemy) for Ellen's hand in marriage, to conclude an alliance between Douglas and the Clan Alpine.

In Canto III Roderick decides to start the rebellion against King James so the clan members respond to the summons of their chief.... If you want to know how this poem culminates, don't think twice and immerse yourself in the story of the Lady of the Lake.

The Bride of Lammermoor

Walter Scott

The plot of The Bride of Lammermoor relates the misadventures of an ill-fated love between Lucy Ashton and the enemy of his family, the Master of Ravenswood. Master of Ravenswood and Lucy Ashton fall in love but she is the daughter of the Lord Keeper, Ravenswood's enemy and indirect murderer of his father whose death he swears to avenge.

The Lord Keeper knows the murderous intentions of the Master, and trying to get rid of his rancor propitiates a relationship between him and his daughter, who are promised in marriage despite the opposition of Lady Ashton, Lucy’s mother. But when Lady Ashton returns, she does so with a purpose: to expel the Master from his castle and marry her daughter to an enemy of the Baron, Bucklaw.