Happy Holidays!

Posted by Nikki Roulo on December 19, 2023

 

As the holidays draw closer and the weather in the Midwest turns cold and snowy, I am reminded of the description of a cold morning and the new year crawling ever closer in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight:

NOW ne葷ez 镁e Nw 葴ere, and 镁e ny葷t passez,
脼e day dryuez to 镁e derk, as Dry葷tyn biddez;
Bot wylde wederez of 镁e worlde wakned 镁eroute,
Clowdes kesten kenly 镁e colde to 镁e er镁e,
Wyth ny葷e innoghe of 镁e nor镁e, 镁e naked to tene;
脼e snawe snitered ful snart, 镁at snayped 镁e wylde;
脼e werbelande wynde wapped fro 镁e hy葷e,
And drof vche dale ful of dryftes ful grete.
脼e leude lystened ful wel 镁at le葷 in his bedde,
脼a葷 he lowkez his liddez, ful lyttel he slepes鈥.1

Now New Year draws near and the night passes, day comes driving the dark, as ordained by God; but wild weathers of the world awake in the land, clouds cast keenly the cold upon earth with bitter breath from the North biting the naked. Snow comes shivering sharp to shrivel the wild things, the whistling wind whirls from the heights and drives every dale full of drifts very deep. Long the knight listens as he lies in his bed; though he lays down his eyelids, very little he sleeps....2

These mornings become all too familiar at the end of fall semester, and sometimes, the best way to spend a cold, sleepy morning is simply to read a fresh book. If you are looking to escape the holiday reveling and winter cold with new monographs or an edited collection to read, check out our new releases, including , edited Rebecca Hardie, and , by Rasmus Vangshardt. It has been a busy year, and we have so much more planned for 2024.

And as we near the new year and the close of 2023, Medieval Institute Publications would like to take a moment to thank all of our authors, readers, reviewers, editors, and supporters!  And we hope everyone spends the holidays celebrating and taking time to sleep more than a little. We look forward to working with you in the new year!

1 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967), Early English Books Online, Ann Arbor Michigan, , accessed on Dec. 19, 2023.

2 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, translated by J. R. R. Tolkien (New York: Harper Collins, 1967): 1998-2007.