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Beowulf: Christianity And Heroism In The Pagan Epic

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Charlie Chappell
Dr. Boudreaux
ENGL 1112
24 April 2015
Christianity and Heroism in the Pagan Epic, Beowulf Beowulf is a timeless epic poem about warrior culture written more than twelve hundred years ago during the Anglo-Saxon period. Written as a heroic story, Beowulf himself encompasses the very being of what a hero should be: courageous, loyal, proud, adventurous, and serving of his people. Around the time Beowulf was written was around the time of the conversion to Christianity. The anonymous original poet was tasked with writing the tale of Beowulf, the great pagan warrior; however, he did not keep his own religion from influencing the story. Through character speech and narration, the poet inserts Christian views to show the flaws and sinful nature of the pagan beliefs. It is told from the viewpoint of a Christian narrator, who adds and even changes the would-be speech of the characters to talk of God.
During the time and setting of Beowulf, Christianity had not reached the people, and any Christian speech or influence wouldn’t have been included. As Beowulf and his men arrive and thank God for the safe journey, they meet a Danish guard, who then escorts them to their destination. When he goes to leave, he says to them, “May …show more content…

As the epic begins, the speaker talks of the lineage of the Shieldings, a son “sent by God,” and the tales of how the next distributed his “God-given goods.” A little later, Grendel, the terrible havoc-wreaking monster, is introduced as one of the “banished monsters [from] Cain’s clan.” Cain, condemned for killing his brother Abel, is known from the Bible, and his monsters, such as Grendel, are abominations of evil. As Grendel attacks the Danes over and over again, the poet explains that this happens because they prayed not to God, but to pagan shrines, as mention above, and that was their biggest

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