Although the
Awntyrs off Arthure is in some respects typical of the romances featuring Gawain, it has peculiarities of structure and theme that set it apart. It begins, conventionally enough, with Arthur's court riding out to a hunt. , Cumberland, the
Terne Wathelyne of the poem. The lake, once famous for its
carp, was largely drained in the 1850s, and had disappeared by the 1940s At the lake
Tarn Wadling,
Gawain and
Guinevere ("Gaynour") encounter a hideous and vividly-described ghost, who reveals that she is Guinevere's mother, condemned to suffer for the sins of adultery and pride that she committed while alive. In response to Gawain and Guinevere's questions, she advises them to live morally and to "have pité on the poer [...] Sithen charité is chef" ("have pity on the poor [...] Because charity is paramount"), and prophesizes that the
Round Table will ultimately be destroyed by
Mordred. She ends by requesting that
masses are said for her soul. The second half of the poem covers a different story: a knight, Sir Galeron of Galloway, claims that
King Arthur and Gawain have false possession of his lands, and demands to settle the issue through honourable combat ("I wol fight on a felde - thereto I make feith") Gawain, who takes up the challenge, has the upper hand, and seems about to kill Galeron; but Galeron's lady and Guinevere intervene, and Arthur calls a halt to the fight. An amicable settlement is made of the land ownership; Galeron marries his lady, and becomes a knight of the
Round Table. In the final stanza, Guinevere arranges masses for her mother's soul, and bells are rung throughout Britain (signifying public celebration, and the passage of a soul from Purgatory), bringing the narrative full circle in a "happy ending". ==Textual criticism==