Dream Of The Rood Essay

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    In Anglo-Saxon literary works, the writing usually addressed to a Christian audience but yet all commonly affirm the values of the warrior cultures in power in different matters. In the two pieces “The Dream of the Rood” and Beowulf there are two powerful kings being represented that are set in overlapping values that benefit their true courageous deeds. Both are considered good, but do they mean the same thing in Christianity and paganism contexts? Specifically, the two pieces both fuse together

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    Paper to push the two-page limit, your dreams come true. Who would guess that this form, intended for essays written and read at a breakneck clip, would prove so amenable, so elastic, and so gloriously conducive to the fast-paced pondering of an essay twice its size when called upon to exegize the dreamscapes of Antony and Cleopatra and "The Dream of the Rood"? In asking a simple Freudian question of each text--what are the wish-fulfillments disguised in your dream depictions?--the Position Paper has

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    Christianity, it is said that the way of life is only to seek salvation. In the poem, ’The Dream of the Rood,’ it is assumed to have been written in the 8th century, but there is no exact time or authorship. By the 8th century, most of Anglo-Saxon England were Christian. This was a time where Roman Catholic Christianity was being shaken to the core by other entities, such as paganism and Islamic invaders. ‘The Dream of the Rood’ is intended to persuade people into Christianity, salvation and acknowledging the

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    Many times, when an individual discusses Christ’s sacrifice, they word it as defeating sin, as in winning a battle. In the poem “Dream of the Rood,” the author explains the sacrifice through the point of view of the cross while also including diction related closely to battle or war. One of these instances is, “I beheld Glory’s trunk / garnished with grandeur” (14-15). However, further on the author then discusses how “signs of ancient strife:/ beneath that gold” (18-19), had begun to show. During

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    viewpoint that needs questioning. Dream of the Rood is such a poem. Someone told a description account of a dream, made it a part of an historical experience, and used it to leverage an idea upon a group of individuals with intent to subjugate them. The focus will be on the exploration of this poem as it relates to, the dreamer’s state of mind, the cross as an object of rejection, and the natural relationship between Christ to man. “Listen! I will speak of the sweetest dream, what came to me in the middle

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    Annotated Bibliography Brock, Jeanette C." The Dream of the Rood and the Image of Christ in the Early Middle Ages.” Web. 18 July 2015. Jeanette Brock’s article, ‘The Dream of the Rood and the Image of Christ in the Early Middle Ages,” suggests that the author of “Dream of the Rood” had a missionary purpose to expose Christ as a warrior suiting for armor. This indication counter opposes the meek, human nature of Jesus as it is exemplified in the Bible. Furthermore, she compares this poem to other

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    Death in The Dream of the Rood The crucifixion of Christ is treated differently within the bodies of Old English and Middle English literature. The values of each era's society are superimposed on the descriptions of the sacrifice of Christ on the cross. Christ is depicted either as the model of the hero, prevalent in Old English literature, or as the embodiment of love and passion, as found in Showings by Julian of Norwich. Old English literature establishes the elements of the

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    rest of them. The poem The Dream of the Rood, which was written

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    “The Dream of the Rood” an Old English Poem, that of all the assignment we had to read this particular piece really resonated with me. I can remember seeing the movie “The Passion of the Christ” a movie that depicted the brutal crucifixion of Jesus Christ in 2004, I can remember thinking that this is an incredible way of telling the story of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Then I read the Dream of the Rood and it is an emotional and inspiring piece of work. In the story “The Dream of the

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    The Dream of the Rood vs. The Bible The Bible has been translated into 451 languages, sold over 6 billion times, and depicted in over 40 movies. The Bible and the crucifixion of the Messiah are prominent aspects in cultures all around the world today. The death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ has been translated, dramatized, televised, adapted, and cartooned. In “The Dream of the Rood,” translated by R.M. Liuzza, the Biblical cross comes to life to tell its own version of Christ’s death

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