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Examples Of Pagan Elements In Beowulf

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Beowulf is the longest epic poem written in Old English, the language spoken in Anglo-Saxon England before the 11th century. More than 3,000 lines long, the poem relates the heroic deeds of Beowulf, a Scandinavian prince from the Geats (North Germanic tribe in southern Sweden). Beowulf was composed in England between the middle of the 7th century and the end of the 10th century (bl.uk, collection-items).
Beowulf is set in the pagan world of sixth-century Scandinavia, but it also contains echoes of Christian tradition. The poem must have been passed down orally over many generations, and modified by each successive bard, until the existing copy was made at an unknown location in Anglo-Saxon England (bl.uk, collection-items).
Beowulf contains both pagan and Christian …show more content…

An example of the subtle contrasting of pagan and Christian values is the difference between the poet’s sympathetic (Christian) condemnation of Grendel and the jubilance of pagan warriors (beowulfpoet.com).
The morning after the battle, the poet gives as a somber, gruesome picture (beowulfpoet.com): “The lake water boiled with blood a mirky swirl of hot, dark ooze. There Grendel gave up his heathen soul. There Hell received him” (Heaney, Seamus. Beowulf. A New Translation).
Next, the poet contrasts this horror with the childish glee of warriors who once slept “elsewhere, anywhere at all but the great hall Heorot” and have now “gathered around the gift hall, from near and far” (Heaney, Seamus. Beowulf. A New Translation and beowulfpoet.com).
This links directly to Beowulf’s own behavior after Grendel’s death. Beowulf is not humbly grateful for his victory; rather, he is crowing about his victory and digging at his enemy, exulting in his opponent’s agony (beowulfpoet.com).
Another problem in the conflation of pagan and Christian elements is the use of Christological and Biblical imagery to speak of pagan warriors

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