Beowulf Reading Guide

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Beowulf Reading Guide Name:______________________________ Period:______________________________ Beowulf Reading Guide Directions: Fill in the answers as we read and discuss the poem. Feel free to make additional notes on this handout as well. “Grendel” pg. 33-35 1. What imagery associated with Grendel hints at his evil nature? 2. What is the poet alluding to in lines 5-13? 3. What motivates Grendel to kill? 4. Why do none of Hrothgar’s men challenge Grendel? 5. How long has Grendel terrorized the land? 6. What evidence is there that Grendel symbolizes evil, and that the conflict is not only between men, but also between good and evil? 7. What is the implication of the fact that God prevents Grendel from touching Hrothgar’s throne? 8. Where do you see the influence of Christianity in Beowulf? If it was originally a pagan document, why do you think these influences are in there? (Remember your Anglo-Saxon History!) “Beowulf” pg. 36-39 9. What were Beowulf’s past deeds that set him apart from others? 10. What is Beowulf’s single request of Hrothgar? 11. Why does Beowulf say we will meet Grendel hand to hand without weapons? 12. What characteristics of the epic do you see in first Beowulf’s visit to Hrothgar? 13. What is the connection between Hrothgar and Beowulf? Why might Hrothgar find it necessary to remind Beowulf of the time he helped Beowulf’s father? 14. What is the purpose of Hrothgar’s promise to Beowulf? What does Hrothgar’s speech tell us about him? “The Battle with Grendel” pg. 40-44 15. How does the poet build suspense as Grendel approaches and enters Herot? 16. Why do you think Beowulf allows Grendel to slaughter one of the Geats before taking action himself? 17. What kennings are associated with Beowulf? With Grendel? Fill in the chart below with examples. Beowulf Grendel 18. Describe Grendel’s reaction to Beowulf’s attack. 19. Why do you think Beowulf hangs Grendel’s arm from the rafters of Herot? 20. How do the actions of Beowulf’s men uphold the Anglo-Saxon code of honor? 21. What additional evidence is there that the fight between Grendel and Beowulf is symbolic of the war between good and evil? “Grendel’s Mother” pg. 45-46 22. What is the poet saying in lines 400-405? Do you agree or disagree? Why or why not? 23. Why do you think Grendel’s mother takes his claw? 24. Describe Grendel’s mother’s underground lair. “The Battle with Grendel’s Mother” pg. 47-51 25. Predict in the chart what will happen in the final battle between Beowulf and Grendel’s mother. After we have read this section, come back and record the actual events. Predictions Actual Events 26. What characteristic of an epic hero does Beowulf display in lines 450-452? 27. What is the importance of Beowulf’s armor? 28. What does the “brilliant light” in lines 472-474 signify? 29. Retell how Beowulf manages to kill Grendel’s mother below. 30. When Beowulf fights with Grendel’s mother, what characteristics help him remain unbeaten? 31. What saves Beowulf from being killed by Grendel’s mother’s dagger? 32. Do you feel any sympathy for Grendel’s mother? Why or why not? “Beowulf’s Last Battle” pg. 52-55 33. What changes do you notice in Beowulf as he prepares to fight the dragon? 34. Why does Beowulf not rest on his laurels at this point, and instead fight, as an aged king, a battle whose odds are against him? What do you think Beowulf’s motivation is in going after the dragon’s treasure? 35. Agree or disagree: In his battle with the dragon, Beowulf accepts with valor and virtue his wyrd, the inescapable destiny all people in this world must accept. Explain your reasoning below. 36. Why do you think Beowulf’s men desert him now when earlier they came to his aid against Grendel? 37. Other than Beowulf’s men’s desertion of him, what might foretell the end of the Anglo-Saxons? “The Death of Beowulf” and “Mourning Beowulf” pg. 56-60 38. What view of fate does the image of the unwinding string convey? 39. What does the warrior Wiglaf say about Beowulf? 40. Who kills the dragon? 41. Do you think that the Beowulf poet successfully portrays Beowulf as a hero even in the fight with the dragon? Why or why not? 42. What do Beowulf’s gifts to Wiglaf suggest about Wiglaf’s future? 43. How will Beowulf continue to aid his people after his death? 44. What do the Geats do to honor Beowulf after his death? 45. The poet ends the poem by saying that Beowulf was a mild ruler? Do you agree that Beowulf was a considerate or merciful ruler? Why or why not? .
Recommended publications
  • The Battle with Grendel
    That Herot would be his to command. And then He declared: 385 ' "No one strange to this land Has ever been granted what I've given you, No one in all the years of my rule. Make this best of all mead-halls yours, and then Keep it free of evil, fight 390 With glory in your heart! Purge Herot And your ship will sail home with its treasure-holds full." . The feast ends. Beowulf and his men take the place of Hrothgar's followers and lie down to sleep in Herot. Beowulf, however, is wakeful, eager to meet his enemy. The Battle with Grendel 8 Out from the marsh, from the foot of misty Hills and bogs, bearing God's hatred, Grendel came, hoping to kill 395 Anyone he could trap on this trip to high Herot. He moved quickly through the cloudy night, Up from his swampland, sliding silently Toward that gold-shining hall. He had visited Hrothgar's Home before, knew the way— 4oo But never, before nor after that night, Found Herot defended so firmly, his reception So harsh. He journeyed, forever joyless, Bronze coin showing a Straight to the door, then snapped it open, warrior killing a monster. Tore its iron fasteners with a touch, 405 And rushed angrily over the threshold. He strode quickly across the inlaid Floor, snarling and fierce: His eyes Gleamed in the darkness, burned with a gruesomeX Light. Then he stopped, seeing the hall 4io Crowded with sleeping warriors, stuffed With rows of young soldiers resting together. And his heart laughed, he relished the sight, Intended to tear the life from those bodies By morning; the monster's mind was hot 415 With the thought of food and the feasting his belly Would soon know.
    [Show full text]
  • Uncovering the Origins of Grendel's Mother by Jennifer Smith 1
    Smith 1 Ides, Aglæcwif: That’s No Monster, That’s My Wife! Uncovering the Origins of Grendel’s Mother by Jennifer Smith 14 May 1999 Grendel’s mother has often been relegated to a secondary role in Beowulf, overshadowed by the monstrosity of her murderous son. She is not even given a name of her own. As Keith Taylor points out, “none has received less critical attention than Grendel’s mother, whom scholars of Beowulf tend to regard as an inherently evil creature who like her son is condemned to a life of exile because she bears the mark of Cain” (13). Even J. R. R. Tolkien limits his ground-breaking critical treatment of the poem and its monsters to a discussion of Grendel and the dragon. While Tolkien does touch upon Grendel’s mother, he does so only in connection with her infamous son. Why is this? It seems likely from textual evidence and recent critical findings that this reading stems neither from authorial intention nor from scribal error, but rather from modern interpretations of the text mistakenly filtered through twentieth-century eyes. While outstanding debates over the religious leanings of the Beowulf poet and the dating of the poem are outside the scope of this essay, I do agree with John D. Niles that “if this poem can be attributed to a Christian author composing not earlier than the first half of the tenth century […] then there is little reason to read it as a survival from the heathen age that came to be marred by monkish interpolations” (137).
    [Show full text]
  • An Examination of Scandinavian War Cults in Medieval Narratives of Northwestern Europe from the Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages
    PETTIT, MATTHEW JOSEPH, M.A. Removing the Christian Mask: An Examination of Scandinavian War Cults in Medieval Narratives of Northwestern Europe From the Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages. (2008) Directed by Dr. Amy Vines. 85 pp. The aim of this thesis is to de-center Christianity from medieval scholarship in a study of canonized northwestern European war narratives from the late antiquity to the late Middle Ages by unraveling three complex theological frameworks interweaved with Scandinavian polytheistic beliefs. These frameworks are presented in three chapters concerning warrior cults, war rituals, and battle iconography. Beowulf, The History of the Kings of Britain, and additional passages from The Wanderer and The Dream of the Rood are recognized as the primary texts in the study with supporting evidence from An Ecclesiastical History of the English People, eighth-century eddaic poetry, thirteenth- century Icelandic and Nordic sagas, and Le Morte d’Arthur. The study consistently found that it is necessary to alter current pedagogical habits in order to better develop the study of theology in medieval literature by avoiding the conciliatory practice of reading for Christian hegemony. REMOVING THE CHRISTIAN MASK: AN EXAMINATION OF SCANDINAVIAN WAR CULTS IN MEDIEVAL NARRATIVES OF NORTHWESTERN EUROPE FROM THE LATE ANTIQUITY TO THE MIDDLE AGES by Matthew Joseph Pettit A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of The Graduate School at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts Greensboro 2008 Approved by ______________________________ Committee Chair APPROVAL PAGE This thesis has been approved by the following committee of the Faculty of The Graduate School at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
    [Show full text]
  • Medievalism and the Shocks of Modernity: Rewriting Northern Legend from Darwin to World War II
    Medievalism and the Shocks of Modernity: Rewriting Northern Legend from Darwin to World War II by Dustin Geeraert A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies of The University of Manitoba In partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of English, Film, and Theatre University of Manitoba Winnipeg Copyright © 2016 by Dustin Geeraert 1 Abstract Literary medievalism has always been critically controversial; at various times it has been dismissed as reactionary or escapist. This survey of major medievalist writers from America, England, Ireland and Iceland aims to demonstrate instead that medievalism is one of the characteristic literatures of modernity. Whereas realist fiction focuses on typical, plausible or common experiences of modernity, medievalist literature is anything but reactionary, for it focuses on the intellectual circumstances of modernity. Events such as the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution, many political revolutions, the world wars, and the scientific discoveries of Isaac Newton (1643-1727) and above all those of Charles Darwin (1809-1882), each sent out cultural shockwaves that changed western beliefs about the nature of humanity and the world. Although evolutionary ideas remain controversial in the humanities, their importance has not been lost on medievalist writers. Thus, intellectual anachronisms pervade medievalist literature, from its Romantic roots to its postwar explosion in popularity, as some of the greatest writers of modern times offer new perspectives on old legends. The first chapter of this study focuses on the impact of Darwin’s ideas on Victorian epic poems, particularly accounts of natural evolution and supernatural creation. The second chapter describes how late Victorian medievalists, abandoning primitivism and claims to historicity, pushed beyond the form of the retelling by simulating medieval literary genres.
    [Show full text]
  • Tolkien's Creative Technique: <I>Beowulf</I> and <I>The Hobbit</I>
    Volume 15 Number 3 Article 1 Spring 3-15-1989 Tolkien's Creative Technique: Beowulf and The Hobbit Bonniejean Christensen Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.swosu.edu/mythlore Part of the Children's and Young Adult Literature Commons Recommended Citation Christensen, Bonniejean (1989) "Tolkien's Creative Technique: Beowulf and The Hobbit," Mythlore: A Journal of J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature: Vol. 15 : No. 3 , Article 1. Available at: https://dc.swosu.edu/mythlore/vol15/iss3/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Mythopoeic Society at SWOSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Mythlore: A Journal of J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature by an authorized editor of SWOSU Digital Commons. An ADA compliant document is available upon request. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To join the Mythopoeic Society go to: http://www.mythsoc.org/join.htm Mythcon 51: A VIRTUAL “HALFLING” MYTHCON July 31 - August 1, 2021 (Saturday and Sunday) http://www.mythsoc.org/mythcon/mythcon-51.htm Mythcon 52: The Mythic, the Fantastic, and the Alien Albuquerque, New Mexico; July 29 - August 1, 2022 http://www.mythsoc.org/mythcon/mythcon-52.htm Abstract Asserts that “The Hobbit, differing greatly in tone, is nonetheless a retelling of the incidents that comprise the plot and the digressions in both parts of Beowulf.” However, his retelling is from a Christian point of view. Additional Keywords Beowulf—Influence on The Hobbit; olkien,T J.R.R.
    [Show full text]
  • Beowulf Timeline
    Beowulf Timeline Retell the key events in Beowulf in chronological order. Background The epic poem, Beowulf, is over 3000 lines long! The main events include the building of Heorot, Beowulf’s battle with the monster, Grendel, and his time as King of Geatland. Instructions 1. Cut out the events. 2. Put them in the correct order to retell the story. 3. Draw a picture to illustrate each event on your story timeline. Beowulf returned Hrothgar built Beowulf fought Grendel attacked home to Heorot. Grendel’s mother. Heorot. Geatland. Beowulf was Beowulf’s Beowulf fought Beowulf travelled crowned King of funeral. Grendel. to Denmark the Geats. Beowulf fought Heorot lay silent. the dragon. 1. Stick Text Here 3. Stick Text Here 5. Stick Text Here 7. Stick Text Here 9. Stick Text Here 2. Stick Text Here 4. Stick Text Here 6. Stick Text Here 8. Stick Text Here 10. Stick Text Here Beowulf Timeline Retell the key events in Beowulf in chronological order. Background The epic poem, Beowulf, is over 3000 lines long! The main events include the building of Heorot, Beowulf’s battle with the monster, Grendel, and his time as King of Geatland. Instructions 1. Cut out the events. 2. Put them in the correct order to retell the story. 3. Write an extra sentence or two about each event. 4. Draw a picture to illustrate each event on your story timeline. Beowulf returned Hrothgar built Beowulf fought Grendel attacked home to Geatland. Heorot. Grendel’s mother. Heorot. Beowulf was Beowulf’s funeral. Beowulf fought Beowulf travelled crowned King of Grendel.
    [Show full text]
  • The Tale of Beowulf
    The Tale of Beowulf William Morris The Tale of Beowulf Table of Contents The Tale of Beowulf............................................................................................................................................1 William Morris........................................................................................................................................2 ARGUMENT...........................................................................................................................................4 THE STORY OF BEOWULF.................................................................................................................6 I. AND FIRST OF THE KINDRED OF HROTHGAR.........................................................................7 II. CONCERNING HROTHGAR, AND HOW HE BUILT THE HOUSE CALLED HART. ALSO GRENDEL IS TOLD OF........................................................................................................................9 III. HOW GRENDEL FELL UPON HART AND WASTED IT..........................................................11 IV. NOW COMES BEOWULF ECGTHEOW'S SON TO THE LAND OF THE DANES, AND THE WALL−WARDEN SPEAKETH WITH HIM.............................................................................13 V. HERE BEOWULF MAKES ANSWER TO THE LAND−WARDEN, WHO SHOWETH HIM THE WAY TO THE KING'S ABODE................................................................................................15 VI. BEOWULF AND THE GEATS COME INTO HART...................................................................17
    [Show full text]
  • From Beowulf “Hail, Hrothgar! Higlac Is My Cousin and My King; the Days
    From Beowulf “Hail, Hrothgar! Higlac is my cousin and my king; the days Of my youth have been filled with glory. Now Grendel’s Name has echoed in our land: Sailors Have brought us stories of Herot, the best Of all mead-halls, deserted and useless when the moon Hangs in skies the sun had lit, Light and life fleeing together. My people have said, the wisest, most knowing And best of them, that my duty was to go to the Danes’ Great King. They have seen my strength for themselves, Have watched me rise from the darkness of war, Dripping with my enemies’ blood. I drove Five great giants into chains, chased All of that race from the earth. I swam In the blackness of night, hunting monsters Out of the ocean, and killing them one By one; death was my errand and the fate They had earned. Now Grendel and I are called Together, and I’ve come. Grant me, then, Lord and protector of this noble place, A single request! I have come so far, Oh shelterer of warriors and your people’s loved friend, That this one favor you should not refuse me- That I, alone and with the help of my men, May purge all evil from this hall. I have heard, Too, that the monster’s scorn of men Is so great that he needs no weapons and fears none. Now will I. My lord Higlac Might think less of me if I let my sword Go where my feet were afraid to, if I hid Behind some broa linden shields: My hands Alone shall fight for me, struggle for life Against the monster.
    [Show full text]
  • 13 Reflections on Tolkien's Use of Beowulf
    13 Reflections on Tolkien’s Use of Beowulf Arne Zettersten University of Copenhagen Beowulf, the famous Anglo-Saxon heroic poem, and The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien, “The Author of the Century”, 1 have been thor- oughly analysed and compared by a variety of scholars.2 It seems most appropriate to discuss similar aspects of The Lord of the Rings in a Festschrift presented to Nils-Lennart Johannesson with a view to his own commentaries on the language of Tolkien’s fiction. The immediate pur- pose of this article is not to present a problem-solving essay but instead to explain how close I was to Tolkien’s own research and his activities in Oxford during the last thirteen years of his life. As the article unfolds, we realise more and more that Beowulf meant a great deal to Tolkien, cul- minating in Christopher Tolkien’s unexpected edition of the translation of Beowulf, completed by J.R.R. Tolkien as early as 1926. Beowulf has always been respected in its position as the oldest Germanic heroic poem.3 I myself accept the conclusion that the poem came into existence around 720–730 A.D. in spite of the fact that there is still considerable debate over the dating. The only preserved copy (British Library MS. Cotton Vitellius A.15) was most probably com- pleted at the beginning of the eleventh century. 1 See Shippey, J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century, 2000. 2 See Shippey, T.A., The Road to Middle-earth, 1982, Pearce, Joseph, Tolkien.
    [Show full text]
  • Grendel's Mother: Victim, Not Villain
    IOSR Journal of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS) Volume 25, Issue 10, Series 5 (October. 2020) 35-38 e-ISSN: 2279-0837, p-ISSN: 2279-0845. www.iosrjournals.org Grendel’s Mother: Victim, Not Villain Tazreen Jahan Bari1 1(Department of English, Bangladesh University of Professionals, Bangladesh) Abstract:This paper entitled Grendel’s Mother: Victim, Not Villain aims to analyze the character of Grendel‟s mother in the Old English epic “Beowulf” in order to refute the traditional interpretation of her as an evil monster and establish her as a victim. To this purpose, this paper analyzes the portrayal of Grendel‟s mother as a villain. This study further examines the flaws in such one-dimensional portrayal and offers a more comprehensive analysis of the victim in Grendel‟s mother. This study has been done by using qualitative method from the perspective of content analysis where text served as the primary source and other books and articles as the secondary source of information. In the poem “Beowulf”, Grendel‟s mother serves as one of the three antagonists that the hero Beowulf hasto defeat. Her association with her monstrous son Grendel, her „sinful origin‟ and her battle with Beowulf that essentially serves as a microcosm for the battle between good and evil, makes her appear as a malicious villain. By offering a more nuanced understanding of Grendel‟s mother this study establishes her as a victim of unfortunate origin, prejudice, institutionalized hostility and constitutional discrimination rather than a villain. In other words, this paper shows how whether a character is a victim or villain depends to some extent on who is telling the story.
    [Show full text]
  • BEOWULF SUMMARY Chapter 1: We Meet King Hrothgar (The Victim)
    BEOWULF SUMMARY Chapter 1: We meet King Hrothgar (the victim) and Grendel (the monster). We learn Grendel is pure evil and was created from death. Chapter 2: Grendel attacks the Danes when they’re sleeping. He murders thirty men at once and then keeps coming back at night for 12 years. Chapter 3: Beowulf brings 13 men across the sea to defeat Grendel. Chapter 4: Beowulf arrives in Hrothgar’s kingdom and makes his way to the castle. Chapter 5: Beowulf arrives at the castle and is announced to the king. He is described as a wise, powerful, and brave fighter. Chapter 6: Beowulf meets Hrothgar and he says that Beowulf is as strong as 30 men and is very confident in his ability to defeat the monster. Beowulf talks about how his own people told him to come help Hrothgar, he rid the world of giants, and will fight Grendel with his bare hands. Chapter 7: Beowulf came to help Hrothgar, not just because he wants to fight Grendel, but because he is repaying the debt that his father owes. Hrothgar helped Edgetho end a feud he started when he murdered someone. Chapter 8: Unferth, a disgruntled soldier, calls Beowulf out as a foolish man who constantly puts himself in danger by seeking out monsters to defeat. Beowulf responds by saying that even though he seeks out monsters,it doesn’t matter since he always wins the fight. Chapter 9: Beowulf continues to discuss all the adventures he’s gone on and all the monsters he’s faced. Once done the queen passes around drinks and everyone starts celebrating.
    [Show full text]
  • Reading Beowulf Now and Then
    READING BEOWULF NOW AND THEN Beowulf is undoubtedly one of the most famous English poems, if not, perhaps, one of the most read. Perhaps it was ever thus: a recent commentator observes that more people read Beowulf now than can ever in the Anglo-Saxon period have had access to the fire-damaged ruin that the sole manuscript-witness remains (Anlezark 2003: 320). Moreover, Beowulf’s begrudged place at the head of the canon of English literature looks increasingly precarious, constantly threatened as a result of its difficulty and strangeness, and the fact that throughout its 3,182 lines not a single Englishman is mentioned, not a single place in England is described, and for many English Majors in universities throughout the world who are forced to read the stuff (often against their will), the language of the poem seems barely English at all.1 Modern readers have the “benefit” of a bewildering myriad of translations and interpretations, including that of Seamus Heaney (2000),2 as well as comic-books, cartoons, and several versions for the big screen,3 but the purpose of this paper is rather to survey a limited range of readers and readings from the past thousand years or so, to see how far such earlier efforts help or hinder us in our interpretations of Beowulf today. In focusing in turn on the problems faced by the scribes who wrote the single surviving manuscript, on the inaccuracies of the earliest modern edition, as well as on the poorly regarded translation of the text made by 1 Typical is the tongue-in-cheek diatribe by Brigid Brophy that Beowulf is “Boring and unattractive as a story, pointlessly bloodthirsty” (1967: 1); see further Orchard 2003: 238–64, who argues that the multiplicity of perspectives offered by modern interpreters is implicit in the original text.
    [Show full text]