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  2. A Gest of Robyn Hode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Gest_of_Robyn_Hode

    A Gest of Robyn Hode (also known as A Lyttell Geste of Robyn Hode) is one of the earliest surviving texts of the Robin Hood tales. Written in late Middle English poetic verse, it is an early example of an English language ballad, in which the verses are grouped in quatrains with an ABCB rhyme scheme, also known as ballad stanzas.

  3. Robin Hood and the Monk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood_and_the_Monk

    In Robin Hood and the Monk, Robin goes to Nottingham for mass, but has a dispute with Little John on the way. In Nottingham, he is spotted by a monk and captured. Little John, Much the Miller's Son, and other Merry Men intercept the monk, kill him, and launch a successful plot to free Robin from prison. Robin and Little John are reconciled.

  4. Robin Hood and Allan-a-Dale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood_and_Allan-a-Dale

    Robin puts the bishop's cloak on Little John, who mockingly asks the question seven times – and then marries the young couple, Robin giving away the bride in loco parentis. All then - except, presumably, for the old knight and the bishop - repair to the greenwood. [1]

  5. Robin Hood and the Potter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood_and_the_Potter

    Robin, in disguise as a potter, eating a meal with the Sheriff of Nottingham and the Sheriff's wife. Robin Hood and the Potter is a 15th century ballad of Robin Hood.While usually classed with other Robin Hood ballads, it does not appear to have originally been intended to be sung, but rather recited by a minstrel, and thus is closer to a poem.

  6. Robin Hood Rescuing Three Squires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood_Rescuing_Three...

    Robin meets an old woman lamenting that her sons will hang for poaching the king's deer. He persuades an old man to trade his ragged clothing for Robin's fine clothes, and in this disguise, offers to be the sheriff's hangman. He blows on his horn, and his men arrive.

  7. The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bold_Pedlar_and_Robin_Hood

    The pedlar winning, Robin laughs and says he has a man who could defeat him. They fight, and the pedlar wins again, and refuses to hold his hand, or tell his name, until they had told them theirs. They do, and he says his name is Gamble Gold, and he is fleeing because he killed a man in his father's lands.

  8. Robyn and Gandeleyn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robyn_and_Gandeleyn

    The work may have been recited rather than sung, and thus is closer to a poem than a song. [4] Transcription errors, such as a presumably accidental repetition of two lines, leads to suspicion that the Sloane manuscript 2593 was copied hastily and potentially inaccurately, but any differences with an older, lost version can only be speculated on.

  9. The Miller's Tale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Miller's_Tale

    "The Miller's Tale" (Middle English: The Milleres Tale) is the second of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (1380s–1390s), told by the drunken miller Robin to "quite" (a Middle English term meaning requite or pay back, in both good and negative ways) "The Knight's Tale". The Miller's Prologue is the first "quite" that occurs in the tales.