Friday, November 29, 2019
Christian Elements In Beowulf Essays - Beowulf, Geats,
  Christian Elements In Beowulf    Christian Elements in Beowulf  The praised epic poem, Beowulf, is the first great heroic poem in English  literature. The epic follows a courageous warrior named Beowulf throughout his young,  adult life and into his old age. As a young man, Beowulf becomes a legendary hero when  he saves the land of the Danes from the hellish creatures, Grendel and his mother. Later,  after fifty years pass, Beowulf is an old man and a great king of the Geats. A monstrous  dragon soon invades his peaceful kingdom and he defends his people courageously, dying  in the process. His body is burned and his ashes are placed in a cave by the sea. By  placing his ashes in the seaside cave, people passing by will always remember the  legendary hero and king, Beowulf. In this recognized epic, Beowulf, is abound in  supernatural elements of pagan associations; however, the poem is the opposite of pagan  barbarism. The presentation of the story telling moves fluidly within Christian  surroundings as well as pagan ideals.  Beowulf was a recited pagan folklore where the people of that time period  believed in gods, goddesses, and monsters. It's significance lies in an oral history where  people memorized long, dense lines of tedious verse. Later, when a written tradition was  introduced they began to write the story down on tablets.  The old tale was not first told or invented by the commonly known, Beowulf poet.   This is clear from investigations of the folk lore analogues. The manuscript was written  by two scribes around AD 1000 in late West Saxon, the literary dialect of that period. It  is believed that the scribes who put the old materials together into their present form  were Christians and that his poem reflects a Christian tradition. The first scribe copied  three prose pieces and the first 1,939 lines of Beowulf while the second scribe copied the  rest of Beowulf and Judith. In 1731, a fire swept through the Cottonian Library,  damaging many books and scorching the Beowulf codex. In 1786-87, after the  manuscript had been deposited in the British Museum the Icelander, Grinur Jonsson  Thorkelin, made two transcriptions of the poem for what was to be the first edition, in  1815 (Clark, 112-15).  Beowulf is a mixture of pagan and Christian attitudes. Heathen practices are  mentioned in several places, such as vowing of sacrifices at idol fanes, the observing of  omens, the burning of the dead, which was frowned upon by the church. The frequent  allusions to the power of fate, the motive of blood revenge, and the praise of worldly  glory bear testimony to the ancient background of pagan conceptions and ideals.   However, the general tone of the epic and its ethical viewpoint are predominantly  Christian . There is no longer a genuine pagan atmosphere. The sentiment has been  softened and purified. The virtues of moderation, unselfishness, consideration for others  are practiced and appreciated. Beowulf is a Christian reworking of a pagan poem with ?a  string of pagan lays edited by monks; it is the work of a learned but inaccurate Christian  antiquarian? (Clark, 112).  The author has fairly exhaulted the fights with Grendel, his mother, and the  dragon into a conflict between powers of good and evil. The figure of Grendel, while  originally an ordinary Scandinavian troll is conceived as an impersonation of evil and  darkness, even an incarnation of the Christian devil. Grendel is a member of the race of  Cain, from whom all ?misshapen and unnatural things were spawned? (Kermode, 42)  such as ogres and elves. He is a creature dwelling in the outer darkness, a giant and  cannibal. When he crawls off to die, he is said to join the route of devils in hell. The  story of a race of demonic monsters and giants descended from Cain. It came form a  tradition established by the apocryphal Book of Enoch and early Jewish and Christian  interpretations of Genesis 6:4, ?There were giants in the earth in those days, and also  afterward, when the sons of God had relations with the daughters of men, who bore  children to them? (Holland Crossley, 15).  Many of Grendel's appellations are unquestionable epithets of Satan such as  ?enemy of mankind,? ?God's adversary,? ?the devil in hell,? and ?the hell slave.? His  actions are represented in a manner suggesting the conduct of the evil one, and he dwells  with his mother in a mere which conjures visions of hell.   The depiction of the mere is the most remarkable because it is a conceptual  landscape made fearsomely realistic    
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