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8 - Into the Woods: Robin Hood and Sherwood Forest in the Romantic Imagination

Stefanie Fricke
Affiliation:
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
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Summary

Before its presence we pause to do homage and admire; … It was when England was young, her sons wore robes of paint, and Druids lived in her hidden caves, but the heart of a mighty forest, which according to tradition, stretched far north and covered counties; … Who shall say what its shades have witnessed …? Storms and tempests have careered in fury by since its far off birth – lightnings have cleaved its giant sons, and left it the old and weather-beaten but majestic emblem of the past we now behold.

Thus writes Edwin Eddison in his description of Sherwood Forest, published in 1854. By this time, thanks to its associations with Robin Hood, Sherwood had become a tourist attraction, marketing its past to Victorian tourists eager to experience the days of the famous outlaw. Individual trees were assigned names and histories associated with Robin Hood (like ‘Robin Hood's Larder’ and the ‘Major Oak’) and the visitors could buy tourist guides such as James Carter's A Visit to Sherwood Forest including the Abbeys of Newstead, Rufford, and Welbeck … With a Critical Essay on the life and Times of Robin Hood (1850). For Victorian tourists the ancient trees of Sherwood seemed to be living witnesses to the feats of Robin and thus provided a tangible link to the past.

For hundreds of years, the stories of Robin Hood have constantly been retold in new forms, contexts and media to an ever more global audience.

Type
Chapter
Information
Romantic Localities
Europe Writes Place
, pp. 117 - 130
Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
First published in: 2014

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