РефератыИностранный языкBeBeowulf In Detail Essay Research Paper Beowulf

Beowulf In Detail Essay Research Paper Beowulf

Beowulf In Detail Essay, Research Paper


Beowulf begins with the story of the first king in the Danish dynasty, Scyld


Sceafing. The king was abandoned as a baby and later went on become a


successful, powerful leader of the Danish people. Following the death of Scyld


Sceafing, his son Beowulf (not the Beowulf of this story) becomes ruler of the


Spear-Danes and much like his father, Beowulf is respected and beloved by his


subjects. After a reign of many years, Beowulf dies and his son Healfdene


inherits the throne. Healfdene fathers four children including Heorogar,


Hrothgar, and Halfga. Hrothgar succeeds his father and after achieving much


glory and fame as ruler of the Danes, he decides to build a great mead hall as a


monument to his success and symbol of his greatness. He names it Heorot. After


the completion of Heorot, Hrothgar holds a banquet for his subjects where scops


sing of the creation of the Earth by God and the Danes celebrate the peaceful,


festive times in which they live. After the festivities continue for many years,


the singing and music awakens an evil, part-human monster named Grendel who is a


descendant of the biblical Cain. Angered by the noise and apparent happiness of


the Danes, Grendel travels to Heorot at night when the soldiers within are sound


asleep after their day celebrations. Grendel kills thirty warriors and escapes


into the night satisfied with his evil deed. Hrothgar is deeply saddened by the


deaths and fears the attack may be the beginning of a long war with the monster.


Grendel continues his murderous rampage the following night and a war with


Grendel ensues which lasts twelve years. Stories of the Danes’ suffering at the


hands of Grendel spread to foreign lands. The Danes exhaust all means of defense


against Grendel and attempts to pay the monster to cease his harassment are


useless. The Danes’ desperation becomes so great, they abandon their Christian


beliefs and begin worshipping ancient deities from their pagan past. When news


of the Danes’ troubles reaches Geatland, Beowulf, thane of Hygelac, gathers


fourteen of his strongest, bravest men to voyage across the seas to help


Hrothgar and his people. Upon arriving, Beowulf and his men are greeted by a


Danish coast guard sentinel. The sentinel is alarmed to see armed men


approaching the Danish coast and directly asks Beowulf to state his business.


The guard is clearly impressed by the Geat’s armor and weapons and conveys his


respect for the noble men. 4 Beowulf informs the soldier that he and his men are


followers of Hygelac from the clan of the Geats and explains that he is the son


of Ecgtheow, a respected and renowned leader known throughout the land. Beowulf


explains that he has come to help Hrothgar and the Danes. After learning that


the Geat’s intentions are noble, the guard agrees to escort the men to Hrothgar.


5 Wulfgar, a Danish soldier and advisor to Hrothgar, interrupts the men’s


journey to see Hrothgar and interrogates them about their identity and


intentions. Beowulf introduces himself and explains his purpose. Wulfgar,


impressed by Beowulf’s confidence and the appearance of his men, welcomes the


visitors and encourages Hrothgar to meet them. 6 While receiving Beowulf,


Hrothgar explains that he remembers Beowulf as a boy and recounts several


experiences shared with Beowulf??s father, Ecgtheow. Hrothgar views


Beowulf’s prescence as a blessing for the Danes because of his reputation as a


great warrior and his noble ancestry. He offers treasures to Beowulf and the


Geats if they can end Grendel’s terror and return Heorot to its previous glory.


Beowulf expresses his desire to challenge Grendel to a battle to the death and


says he will trust in God and will thus refuse weapons or shields. 7 Reassured


by Beowulf’s confidence, Hrothgar recalls further stories of Ecgtheow. He


explains how while new to his throne he helped Ecgtheow avoid a battle by


sending treasures to his enemies. Hrothgar then immediately begins discussing


his troubles with Grendel and explains his displeasure in seeing his mead hall


abandoned by his warriors. The Danes and the Geat warriors then go to Heorot


where they are entertained by scops and drink mead. 8, 9 During the banquet, a


courtier of Hrothgar named Unferth is overcome by jealousy of Beowulf’s


reputation and challenges the merit of his courageous feats. Unferth tells of a


swimming competition from Beowulf??s past in which Beowulf was defeated by a


warrior named Breca. Beowulf explains that both warriors were armed only with


swords to protect them from sea monsters and that after match had lasted five


nights, the two men became separated. Beowulf was then attacked by a monster and


was forced underwater where he slayed the monster with his sword and later


killed nine additional monsters before ending the competition. Beowulf asserts


that the hindrances with which he was forced to contend during the race


justified his late finish and that his acts of strength and courage validate his


reputation. Beowulf also accuses Unferth of murdering his brothers and explains


that he will assuredly suffer the fires of Hell for his crimes. After being


offered mead by the Hrothgar’s wife, Beowulf once again affirms his desire to


either defeat Grendel or lose his life in the battle. Hrothgar is encouraged by


Beowulf’s boastfullness and confidence and proclaims his willingness to put the


fate of Heorot in the hands of such a worthy and noble warrior. He also offers


treasures to Beowulf if he is victorious. 10 The Danes then leave Beowulf and


his men alone in Heorot to face the monster. To prepare for the confrontation,


Beowulf expresses his confidence in God, removes his armor, and relinquishes his


weapons. Beowulf’s men, who do not share his confidence, join him in retiring to


bed to await the monster’s arrival. 11-12 After breaking down the door, Grendel


enters the hall and immediately seizes one of the sleeping Geat warriors and


dismembers and consumes him. Beowulf rushes to attack. He firmly grasps


Grendel’s arm and the creature instantly realizes the strength of his attacker.


As Grendel tries to escape, his deafening shrieks frighten the Danes outside the


hall. The Geat warriors, now awakened by the battle, rush to Beowulf’s defense


but find their weapons useless due to a spell cast on their swords by Grendel.


In the struggle to escape, the monster loses his arm to Beowulf’s mighty grip.


Aware that his wound is fatal, Grendel retreats into the night to die. To


commemorate his victory, Beowulf places the arm on the wall of the mead hall and


the triumphant Beowulf celebrates his victory. 13, 14 Upon learning of Beowulf’s


victory, Danish warriors travel to the hall to view the monster’s severed arm


and follow the monster’s footprints from the hall to the boiling, steaming swamp


which has become his grave. Hrothgar enters the hall to see the arm and is


beside himself with gratitude. He exclaims that he will henceforth consider


Beowulf a son and will provide him with whatever earthly possessions he should


desire. Beowulf tells of his struggle with Grendel and asserts his belief that


the monster will suffer in Hell for his crimes against the Danes. 15 Damage to


Heorot done during the struggle is repaired and the hall is prepared for a great


banquet to celebrate the death of Grendel and the end of his reign of terror.


Hrothgar presents Beowulf with various gifts including armor, weapons, horses


and ornate saddles. 16, 17 Hrothgar also offers gifts to Beowulf’s men and


offers compensation for the loss of the Geat warrior to Grendel’s monster-sized


appetite. A poet in the hall entertains the warriors with the story of Finn, a


Frisian king. The story begins with the death of many Danes including a man


named Hnaef by followers of Finn. Finn’s wife, the sister of Hnaef and mother of


yet another victim, is angered by the battle and pressures Finn to end the


conflict . The poet vividly describes the cremation of the men and the sadness


of the grieving survivors. Hengest, a follower of Hnaef, does not return home


with the other Danish warriors after the battle. He stays and waits all winter


for reinforcements to return in the spring and avenges the killings by murdering


Finn. 18, 19 Wealhtheow, Hrothgar’s wife presents Beowulf with a valuable


necklace and praises Beowulf and graciously asks Beowulf to mentor her two sons.


After her oration about Beowulf’s courage and honor, the Danish warriors retire


to the mead hall as they had often done before Grendel’s attacks. Grendel’s


mother, enraged by the death of her son, enters the hall after the warriors are


asleep, steals her son’s arm from the hall’s rafters and kidnaps a Danish


warrior who is a close companion of Hrothgar. Beowulf, unaware of what has


transpired, is called to Heorot and politely and innocently asks the king if he


has had a quiet night. 20, 21 Hrothgar is visibly overcome with emotion over the


loss of his friend and relates to Beowulf that the troubles of the Danes have


begun again. Hrothgar tells Beowulf of the abduction of his frie

nd and of the


bottomless pool where legends say the two monsters lived for many years.


Hrothgar again calls upon Beowulf to save the Danes and promises riches for


avenging the attack. The warriors travel to the pool and find the head of the


kidnapped Dane and discover sea serpents swimming in the pool. After killing one


of the serpents, Unferth offers Beowulf his sword called Hrunting and apologizes


for questioning Beowulf’s courage 22, 23 After explaining to whom his treasure


should be sent if he perishes in the pool, Beowulf descends for several hours


displaying no apparent ill effects from lack of oxygen and upon reaching the


bottom is confronted by the monster. She grasps him and forces him into her lair


where Beowulf learns his sword has no effect on his attacker. Beowulf, near


death, then miraculously discovers a giant sword and beheads the monster. He


finds Grendel’s body and also severs its head. The toxic blood of the dead


monster dissolves the giant sword. Beowulf chooses Grendel’s head from his new


collection of severed heads and returns to the surface with the head and the


hilt of his dissolved sword. Beowulf discovers the Danes had given up hope that


he was still alive and had returned home. The hero then returns to Heorot and


presents his trophies to Hrothgar. 24, 25 Hrothgar examines the sword hilt and


learns that it was created by a race of giants from before the biblical flood.


He delivers a long sermon to Beowulf in which he praises him and warns the hero


not to let his success inflate his ego beyond its already unfathomable


proportions. He also tells the story of the king Heremod and warns Beowulf not


to end up like this evil king. The grateful Hrothgar holds another banquet and


Beowulf returns Hrunting to Unferth with his gratitude. 26, 27 The following day


Beowulf thanks the king for his generosity showing a new found modesty and


graciousness learned from Hrothgar’s sermon. He tells the king he will come to


the king’s aide if ever again his assistance is required. Hrothgar thanks the


hero for saving the Danes from the two monsters and expresses his profound


sorrow about Beowulf’s imminent departure. As the Geats travel to their ship


with their treasures, they again meet the coast guard sentinel who wishes the


men well and assures them that their homecoming will be greatly anticipated by


their friends in Geatland. Beowulf rewards the kind words with the gift of a


sword and the men board their ship. Upon returning home, Beowulf gives the


treasure to Hygelac, Beowulf’s lord. We then learn of Hygd, the queen of Hygelac,


a benevolent queen who divides the treasure among her subjects. Their daughter


Offa, however, is sadistic and cruel until marrying Thryth of the house of


Hemming. The marriage ends her evil ways and makes her a fair and respected


princess. 28 Hygelac and his queen welcome Beowulf home and express their


elation in his safe return. The king then asks Beowulf to describe his


adventures with the Danes. Beowulf recounts his feats of courage and describes


several of gifts given to he and his warriors and begins to explain of


Hrothgar’s efforts to end a conflict with the Hathobards, a rival clan. 29, 30


Hrothgar continues telling of Hrothgar’s plan to make peace with the Hathobards.


The King, Beowulf explains, has offered his daughter’s hand in marriage to


Ingeld of the Hathobard clan. Beowulf fears, however, that the two people’s


differences are too great and that Hrothgar’s strategy with fail. 31 Beowulf


then expresses his eternal loyalty to his Hygelac and explains that the king is


one of his few close companions. His fondness and respect for Hrothgar, he


explains, is overshadowed by his allegiance to Hygelac, his true king. The


treasures obtained for the king in Denmark are then brought before the king and


formally and presented to him. Beowulf’s devotion is rewarded by the gift of a


sword, a mead hall of his own, and other lavish gifts. After the death of the


king and his son, Heardred, Beowulf inherits the throne of Geatland. After a


successful reign of fifty years, a dragon begins to terrorize the Geats much


like Grendel’s aggression against the Danes. 32 The Dragon’s hatred for the


Geats begins when a thief, who is a transient serf, enters the dragon’s cave and


steals a jeweled cup from his hoard of treasures within. The theft awakens and


angers the dragon. The treasure, which had existed for hundreds of years, had


previously belonged to a noble race and had been discovered by the dragon. The


beast spreads his fury over the Geatish countryside and Beowulf is deeply


disturbed by the suffering of his people inflicted by the evil dragon. 33 The


dragon’s wrath soon reaches Beowulf’s home which is destroyed by its fiery


breath. Beowulf immediately vows vengeance and prepares for battle. We then


learn of the circumstances by which Beowulf became ruler of the Geats. During a


war with the Frisians, Hygelac is killed and his kingdom is offered to Beowulf.


The hero graciously refuses the throne, believing the rightful heir to be the


king’s son, Heardred. In a war with the Swedish king Ongentheow, however, the


new king is killed and Beowulf agrees to take his place on the throne. 34 Ready


for battle, Beowulf instructs the thief who had stolen the dragon’ s cup to lead


he and twelve warriors to the dragon’s lair. As the warriors reach the cave,


Beowulf becomes fearful that his strength may have deteriorated in his old age


and begins to fear that the battle with the dragon could bring about his death.


His sorrow is compounded by his telling of the story of the death of Herebald.


He explains that Herebald, the eldest son of Beowulf’s adoptive father, was


accidentally killed by an arrow fired by one of Herebald??s other sons.


Beowulf regrets the inability of his beloved father to ever avenge the death of


his son. 35 As if sensing that his death is at hand, Beowulf continues to tell


stories of his past and relives battles with his companions in which he achieved


glorious success. He then bids farewell to his fellow warriors and enters the


dragon’s cave to meet his fate. The dragon attacks and Beowulf finds his


specially made iron shield is little protection against the dragon’s breath of


fire. Beowulf strikes the dragon with his sword but finds the dragon’s scale


armor too strong to fatally wound the beast. 36, 37 Wiglaf, one of the warriors


outside the cave, realizes the peril which faces Beowulf and berates his fellow


warriors for failing to assist their king. He prepares for battle and rushes to


the hero’s aid. The dragon responds with a burst of flames which destroys


Wiglaf’s wooden shield. After Beowulf’s sword breaks in the battle, the dragon


advances upon the wounded hero and strikes him in the neck with his poisonous


fangs. Wiglaf skillfully strikes the dragon below the head where the dragon is


defenseless and pierces the beast’s skin. Realizing the dragon has been injured,


Beowulf quickly slices the belly of the beast with his dagger, delivering a


mortal wound to his mighty foe. Wiglaf treats the wounds of the hero, but


Beowulf knows he will soon die. He reflects on the worthiness of his


accomplishments and asks to see the treasure he has gained in his struggle with


the dragon. 38, 39 Wiglaf brings the treasure to Beowulf and the hero admires


the immense fortune he has gained for his people. Beowulf orders the


construction of a monument to honor his greatness and achievements. He then


praises Wiglaf for his courage, gives him the helmet necklace, and armor he is


wearing, and dies. As the Geat warriors return from the woods where they had run


in cowardice, Wiglaf scolds them for abandoning their king who had armed them


with superior weapons for the fight. He exclaims that they will be forever known


as traitors and cowards. 40, 41 Wiglaf sends word of the outcome of the battle


to the Geat soldiers awaiting the news. As the messenger informs the warriors of


the death of Beowulf, he conveys his belief that their enemies will assuredly


take advantage of the news and attack. The messenger tells of the many conflicts


which have existed in the violent history of the Geats and predicts the conflict


may begin again with unfortunate death of their king. The warriors travel to the


cave to see the corpses of Beowulf and the dragon. 42 We learn that the nobles


who had placed the treasure in the cave had placed a curse on it which would


last until the last day of the earth. Wiglaf orders the construction of a


funeral pyre for Beowulf and selects seven strong men to throw the dragon’s body


off a cliff and load the treasure onto a wagon. 43 After placing shields,


helmets, and armor around Beowulf’s funeral pyre, the great king is cremated to


the crying of his mourning people. They place the ashes of Beowulf and all of


the dragon’s treasures inside a giant mound of sand where they would be safe


from the enemies sure to attack after hearing of the tragedy. The Danes are left


feeling uncertain about the future of their kingdom after the loss of their


great king.

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