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See also: hero of See also: romance
.
He was the son of a duke and duchess of See also: Normandy, and by the See also: time he was twenty was a See also: prodigy of strength, which he used, however, only for outrage and See also: crime
.
At last he learnt from his See also: mother, in explanation of his wicked impulses, that he was See also: born in answer to prayers addressed to the devil
.
He was directed by the See also: pope to a See also: hermit, who imposed on him by way of penance that he should maintain absolute silence, feign madness, take his See also: food from the mouth of a See also: dog, and provoke See also: ill-treatment from the See also: common See also: people without retaliating
.
He became See also: court fool to the emperor at See also: Rome, and delivered the city from Saracen invasions in three successive years in the See also: guise of an unknown knight, having each time been bidden to fight by a See also: celestial messenger
.
The emperor's dumb daughter recovered speech to declare the identity of the court fool with the deliverer of the city, but Robert refused the See also: hand of the princess and the imperial See also: inheritance, and ended his days in the hermitage of his old See also: confessor
.
The French romance of Robert le Diable is one of the See also: oldest versions of the See also: legend, and differs in detail from the popular tales printed in the 15th and 16th centuries
.
It was apparently founded on folk-See also: lore, not on the wickedness of Robert Guiscard or any See also: historical personage; but probably the name of Robert and the localization of the legend may be put down to the terror inspired by the See also: Normans
.
In the See also: English version the hero is called See also: Sir Gowther, and the scene is laid in See also: Germany
.
This metrical romance See also: dates from the beginning of the 15th century, and is based, according to its author, on a See also: Breton See also: lay
.
The legend had undergone much change before it was used by E
.
Scribe and C
.
Delavigne in the libretto of See also: Meyerbeer's See also: opera of Robert le Diable
.
See Robert le Diable, ed
.
E
.
Loseth (See also: Paris, 1903, for the See also: Soc. See also: des anc. textes fr.) ; Sir Gowther, ed
.
K
.
Breul (See also: Oppeln, 1886) ; M
.
Tardel, Die See also: Sage v
.
Robert d
.
Teufel in neueren deutschen Dichtungen (Berlin, 1900)
.
Breul's edition of the English poem contains an examination of the legend, and a bibliography of the literature dealing with the subject
.
The English See also: prose romance of Robert the Devyll was printed (c
.
151o) by Wynkyn de Worde
.
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