How do the danes feel about beowulf




















It is significant that Grendel attacks at night because it shows that he is evil and likes to lurk under darkness. Images are words that help us see something, and often hear it,smell it, taste it, and touch it as well.

Identify images describing Grendel that associate him with death or darkness. How are these images supposed to make you feel about Grendel? Many terms are used to describe Grendel and make you understand how evil he is. What symbolism do you see in the uselessness of human-made weapons against Grendel? What might Grendel and his mother represent for the Anglo-Saxons? They may be a representation of social disorder. Did Gardner make you sympathize with Grendel?

How does life in the compare with life today? In , they did not have cell phones or computers for information on aanything. Therefore, we currently live in a better time. Beowulf is the archetype of the dragon slayer, the hero who faces death in order to save a threatened community. Does Beowulf remind you of any heroes in real life, in fiction, or in the movies today? What characteristics do the heroes share?

Both Superman and Beowulf have superhuman characteristics and use there abilities to fight off evil. How does she respond to Beowulf? She welcomes him warmly.

What does Hrothgar promise Beowulf if he defeats Grendel? Anything he wants. Prediction: Will Beowulf be successful in his quest to defeat Grendel? Yes, he might die trying though. What do the other Great warriors think will happen to them? What do you think will happen to Beowulf and the others? Beowulf will die Identify three of the kennings that refer to Grendel in lines Captain of evil, dread of the land, terror-monger What happens when Grendel first enters Heorot Hall?

Why are his warriors unable to help him? God chose Beowulf so only he could defeat him. His strength What trophy does Beowulf display after his battle with Grendel? Identify the place to which Grendel retreats. How do the men trace his trail? Lake with surging bloodshot water filled with gore from wounds; by his bloody trail.

What tale does the minstrel interweave into his song about Beowulf? Why do you think he does so? The story of Sigemund the dragon-slayer. Hrothgar credits G-d with sending Beowulf. All warriors work to repair the damage from the fight. What will happen to Grendel? Explain which one you think he puts the most faith in or if he believes in them equally.

List and explain two kennings that describe this evil. Two kennings are hell-dam and Why has evil returned to Heorot? Grendel was killed by Beowulf so his mother is looking for revenge. Describe the creatures who have been seen prowling the moors. Where do they dwell? What affect do they have? People say it is a huge creature, ghastly, luminous, and spectral. It was a scary creature, a hell-hound.

How does Beowulf respond? It reveals he is a good man, caring. He dons himself in armor and girds himself with weapons. He brings a sword called Hrunting. Unferth gives it to beowulf because he is too scared to fight himself. It reveals that in the end they have a mutual understanding and care for each other despite the jealous from Unferth. Why do you think he makes these requests? He wants the treasures he won to be sent to the great King Hygelac, Hrothgar promised to take care of the Great Warriors, and Unferth gets Hrunting back.

In his youth, he personifies all of the best values of the heroic culture. In his old age, he proves a wise and effective ruler. This situation continues for twelve years. Grendel turns Heorot, the heart of Danish society, into a slaughterhouse.

Grendel the outcast has, symbolically, made the Danes outcasts. The defeat shames the Danes. The narrator notes that unlike men, Grendel has no desire to end the feud, or to pay compensation for those he kills and thus make peace with their families.

Hrothgar can neither make peace with Grendel, nor destroy him. Because Grendel is a being outside of society, there is no way for Danes to deal with him. In despair, Hrothgar and the Danes prayed to their heathen gods. The narrator pities them, since they did not know of the true "Lord God" and were therefore praying to demons to save them from a monster.

Here the narrator says that the Danes of the time were not Christians. However, the characters speeches later in the text seem to contradict this statement. Christianity and Paganism. Cite This Page. Home About Story Contact Help.

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