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Saturday, March 23, 2019

Epic of Beowulf :: Epic of Beowulf Essays

I confine just completed the reading of Beowulf, which was translated by Burton Raffel.1)     Beowulf is an extremely enkindle and fascinating story about a character who lived in mediaeval Europe. The scandalous thing for me about this work was to find out that it is the earlier poem in a modern European language. Beowulf is to the English what bell ringer and the Odyssey were to the Greeks. Although this is the earliest poem, it is still fun and exciting to read. I didnt believe that a poem which has been around for more than twelve centuries, could keep my interest. I was wrong. The word of honor is filled with more blood and guts then the average summertime horror flick. After the battle with Grendel, the monster which has been ravaging the Danish countryside and putting to death countless hands, Beowulf makes sure that all people know that he had wound the great monster. It is translated that, "...no Dane doubted the victory, for the proof, hangin g high from the rafters where Beowulf had hung it, was the monsters arm, claw and shoulder and all" (Raffel, 49). It was the shocking use of detail and exciting battles that was left with me when I finished the have got. I guess all hands, regardless of their age can still be fun and entertaining to read.2)     Good literature has a very little definition for me. I judge a piece of literature on three different criteria, 1) does it have memorable characters, 2) does the work take me to a place and let me experience things that I have never go through before, and 3) will the work stay with me long after I have completed reading it. This is the criteria on which I judge a book and according to this, I believe that Beowulf should be considered "good" literature.I always ask myself, when I am done reading a book, did the book have memorable characters. In Beowulf, the characters were memorable. A minor character in the book, the king of the Danes, na med Hrothgar, is a character who sticks out greatly in my mind. Hrothgar was a king of the Danes and built for them a huge mead hall in which men were able to eat drink and be merry. It was then that the great monster, Grendel, came and undo the utopia which was Herot by eating and feasting on the Danish warriors. Hrothgar sticks out in my mind because I could envision him, in the time before Beowulf came to the Danes, in anger and despair over this monster that wouldnt stop killing his soldiers and friends.

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