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Compare And Contrast Beowulf And The Wife's Lament

Decent Essays

Heros always have a common trait within them, that they are concerned about establishing their own identities. This can either mean explaining who they are and where they came from to establish a bond between those theyhave yet to gain trust. Other times it may be about bragging about their achievements and challenges in order to build a positive reputation about themselves. In the Anglo-Saxon era, Warriors had to talk themselves up,boasting and making claims about their past victories. In Grendel, Beowulf and The Wife’s Lament, we see the struggle of identity passed through,questioning,building and breaking of these characters in an orderly fashion to bring forth their created identities.
As Grendel is often viewed as a nuisance to society,nothing more than a heartless monster who just wishes to destroy everything around him. Grendel gives the reader a seat to an identity struggle several centuries in the making. The manifestation of his hatred for the world can be due to his encounters with the world around him. Figuring out who he is and what he means to do …show more content…

In Beowulf's case, it's a bit egotistical – it's the thought of his reputation. We can only hope that our other heroes are a little less selfish. Beowulf spoke, made a formal boast for the last time: "I risked my life often when I was young. Now I am old, but as king of the people I shall pursue this fight for the glory of winning, if the evil one will only abandon his earth-fort and face me in the open." (2510-2515)” Even when Beowulf is facing his end of his life, He continues to add more to his reputation and fame by talking about his brave deeds. He sustains himself by continuing to think about the name that he has made for himself. This only reinforces the idea that, identity is important as it is all that is left of you the moment that their body turns to

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