A spiritual moral journey in the holy grail exploration "Pursuit of the Holy Grail" is an exciting story about the adventure of King Arthur's Knight in the quest for the legendary Holy Grail in the country. During their journey, the knights do a fight with the various enemies and many exciting guerrillas and swords. The author of the "Holy Grail exploration" intends to make the story more than just entertainment. The pursuit of the Holy Grail by Cavaliers is similar to the pursuit of morality and spiritual chivalrous and shows success through asceticism, confession, purity and faith. .
Journey: The journey is a metaphor for the pursuit of the spirituality of the Middle Ages. In the romantic story of King Arthur, all the knights of King Arthur are looking for a metaphor for the Holy Grail, spiritual realization. In the medieval romance of Tristan and Isolde, Tristan and Isolde are stories about young star lovers who are trying to get out of the situation trying to achieve their romantic fate to separate them. . Love: Medieval knights usually pledge a beautiful girl for eternal love. (Don Quixote swears his eternal love for Dulcinea del Toboso.) With this love, the Cavaliers continue to live while they are roaming. The girl may occasionally submit a knight to "test" so that he can judge whether he loves her.
The main source of Malory's "Sangreal's Noble Story" is the La Queste Del Saint Graal of the Vulgate Cycle of France. The version of Mallory records the adventure of countless knights in the process of achieving the Holy Grail. The Holy Grail first appeared in the hall of King Arthur, "Why do you have samyte?" And it miraculously makes meat and drink for the knight. Gao Wen is the first person to argue that he will "appear in Sankgreall's problem." Before being "provocative rather than beaten" to see the Holy Grail he began this work to get more "ex Shen and Cognac". Likewise, Lancelot, Percival, Bors, and Galahad also accepted this task. Their achievements are intermingled with encounters of girls and hermits who provide advice and explain their dreams.
ChrétiendeTroyes introduced another more spiritual adventure, which later became an important theme in King Arthur's legend - the pursuit of the Holy Grail, where the activity of Arthur Knight was given mysterious and Christian dimension. In the text of Cretien, the Holy Grail is not explained; in later writers it became the instrument that Jesus used to make wine in the last supper. The greatness is to make the magical adventure that the knight experience as it pursues it. In 1469, a British knight, Thomas Mallory was in prison. Over time, he began writing French text, King Arthur and his first English account of his knight. He finished his work in 1470. Everything about Mallory came from the last sentence of his book, where he gave his name and prayed for salvation from prison. In 1485, Caxton printed a manuscript called Morte Darthur.