preview

Similarities Between Beowulf And Grendel

Decent Essays

After reading the novels Beowulf and Grendel, I was interested in how the stories told from different perspectives were influenced by the religion. Beowulf is the hero and savior from all the monsters and Grendel is one of the monsters slain by Beowulf. From a religious standpoint Beowulf is written very focused on religion; like Beowulf acknowledges that God is the reason he is able to slay all of the beasts. On the other hand we have Grendel; he believes that the world is how he defines it. Beowulf was written as an anti-paganism poem, and Grendel was written to tell people the world is what you make of it and of yourself, but be careful to not cross the limits. Grendel isn’t as full of religion, but the emphasis of free-will versus …show more content…

His first fight is against Grendel, the wrecker of Hrothgar's mead hall. He defeats the terrible beast with his bare hands. His next fight is against Grendel's mother, who avenged her son’s death by killing one of Hrothgar’s men. For the next 50 years Beowulf is king of the Geats, until the dragon is awaken. Beowulf meets his demise when he is bitten in the neck while battling the dragon, but he still manages to slay the dragon in the process. It is told that this was the end for the Geat people, soon they would be taken over by a more powerful clan. But did these events actually happen, or are they just symbols for people to look up to and remember? There is no actual evidence that Beowulf did any of these things. All we know is that Beowulf was probably an actual king whose stories were embellished for generations so that its hard to tell fact from fiction. The monks could’ve been the ones to embellish it to make it do what they wanted. During this time period the monks were trying to convert the pagans into Christians. By getting the pagans to read and relate to a historic old warrior and hero it would have been easier to get them to convert. This is why throughout the novel of Beowulf we consistently see the reference to the almighty God, as seen on line 2858, “What God judged right would rule what happened to every man, as it does to this day” (Heaney). Throughout the story the monks cast Grendel and the other monsters as paganism, and

Get Access