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Beowulf - Scholarly Submissions

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<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Introducing the Epic<br />

Literary Focus: The Epic Hero<br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong>: Caesuras,<br />

Alliteration, and Kennings


<strong>Beowulf</strong>


<strong>Beowulf</strong> is<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Introducing the Epic<br />

• the first great work of<br />

English national literature.<br />

• the epic story of the hero<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong>, who fights the<br />

demonic monster<br />

Grendel.


Places<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong> takes place in<br />

Scandinavia.<br />

Scholars think Herot<br />

might have been built<br />

on the coast of<br />

Zealand, in Denmark.<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Introducing the Epic<br />

Britain<br />

Scandinavia


Places<br />

Herot: the golden<br />

guest hall built by<br />

King Hrothgar where<br />

warriors gathered to<br />

celebrate.<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Introducing the Epic<br />

[End of Section]


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Literary Focus: The Epic Hero<br />

The epic hero is the<br />

central figure in a long<br />

narrative that reflects the<br />

values and heroic ideals of<br />

a particular society.<br />

An epic is a quest story on<br />

a grand scale.


Quickwrite


Make the Connection<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Quickwrite<br />

Write about a contemporary hero, real or fictional,<br />

and the challenges he or she faces. Describe your hero,<br />

and then briefly analyze him or her using these<br />

questions:<br />

•What sort of evil or oppression does your hero<br />

confront?<br />

•Why does he or she confront evil? What’s the<br />

motivation?<br />

•For whom does your hero confront evil?<br />

•What virtues does your hero represent?<br />

[End of Section]


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Literary Focus: The Epic Hero<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong> is one of ancient England’s heroes.<br />

Other times and other<br />

cultures have had other<br />

heroes.<br />

King Arthur<br />

Joan of Arc


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Literary Focus: The Epic Hero<br />

In modern America, the hero may be a real person<br />

or a fictional character.<br />

[End of Section]


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong> was composed in Old English, which<br />

uses a caesura, or rhythmic pause, to create<br />

unity.<br />

Locate the caesura in these lines:<br />

ða com of more under misthleoþum<br />

Grendel gongan, godes yrre bær;<br />

mynte se manscaða manna cynnes<br />

sumne besyrwan in sele þam hean.<br />

Line divided into two parts by a caesura.


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Here are the same lines in modern English from<br />

Burton Raffel’s translation:<br />

Out from the marsh, from the foot of misty<br />

Hills and bogs, bearing God’s hatred,<br />

Grendel came, hoping to kill<br />

Anyone he could trap on this trip to high Herot.<br />

Punctuation reproduces pause effect of the caesura.


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Anglo-Saxon oral poet also used the poetic<br />

device of alliteration.<br />

Grendel gongan, godes yrre bær;<br />

mynte se manscaða manna cynnes


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Alliteration: the repetition of consonant sounds<br />

in words close together.<br />

And with old woes new wail my dear<br />

time’s waste.<br />

The emphasis on the w sound in this line from<br />

Shakespeare’s Sonnet 30 creates a melancholy<br />

tone.


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Find examples of alliteration in Burton Raffel’s<br />

translation of lines 1-5:<br />

Out from the marsh, from the foot of misty<br />

Hills and bogs, bearing God’s hatred,<br />

Grendel came, hoping to kill<br />

Anyone he could trap on this trip to high Herot.


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Find examples of alliteration in Burton Raffel’s<br />

translation of lines 1-5:<br />

Out from the marsh, from the foot of misty<br />

Hills and bogs, bearing God’s hatred,<br />

Grendel came, hoping to kill<br />

Anyone he could trap on this trip to high Herot.


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The kenning is another poetic device that was<br />

used by the oral poet.<br />

Examples of kennings from <strong>Beowulf</strong>:<br />

gold-shining hall= Herot<br />

guardian of crime = Grendel<br />

strong-hearted wakeful sleeper = <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

cave-guard and sky-borne foe = dragon


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Kenning: a metaphorical phrase or compound<br />

word used to name a person, place, thing, or<br />

event indirectly.<br />

A kenning enhances the literal meaning of the<br />

words. A kenning gives the listener an idea of how<br />

the words connect to an idea or concept that is<br />

richer and more emotionally complex.


Create modern-day kennings for things you see<br />

around you.<br />

giver of words<br />

word-wand<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

The Poetry of <strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

?<br />

? ?<br />

?<br />

[End of Section]


<strong>Beowulf</strong> is an oral<br />

epic passed from<br />

bard to bard.<br />

Harpist-bards told<br />

the familiar story<br />

for audiences in<br />

the communal halls<br />

at night.<br />

Written down<br />

between 700 and<br />

750.<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Background<br />

Reconstructed Anglo-Saxon village in<br />

West Stow, England, with communal hall<br />

on the left.


Who wrote it down?<br />

Theory:<br />

The poet who wrote <strong>Beowulf</strong> down<br />

may have been a Northumbrian<br />

monk.<br />

Evidence:<br />

• scenery described resembles<br />

Northumbria (northeastern<br />

England)<br />

• Christian elements in epic<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Background<br />

[End of Section]


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Introducing the Epic<br />

People<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong>: nephew of Higlac,<br />

king of the Geats.<br />

Hrothgar: king of the<br />

Danes.<br />

Wiglaf: a Geat warrior,<br />

one of <strong>Beowulf</strong>’s select<br />

band and the only one to<br />

help him in his final fight<br />

with the dragon.


Monsters<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Introducing the Epic<br />

Grendel: man-eating<br />

monster who lives at the<br />

bottom of a foul mere, or<br />

mountain lake.<br />

Grendel’s mother: waterwitch<br />

who seeks revenge.<br />

Dragon: giant fire-breathing<br />

serpent whom <strong>Beowulf</strong> fights<br />

in Part Two of the epic.


Vocabulary


Previewing the Vocabulary<br />

resolute adj.: determined.<br />

vehemently adv.: violently<br />

infallible adj.: unable to fail or be wrong<br />

furled v.: rolled up.<br />

lavish adj.: extravagant<br />

assail v.: attack<br />

extolled v.: praised<br />

<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Vocabulary


<strong>Beowulf</strong><br />

Vocabulary<br />

Previewing the Vocabulary: Activity<br />

resolute furled extolled assail<br />

vehemently lavish infallible<br />

Which Word……<br />

1. is often used in reference to a flag?________<br />

furled<br />

2. describes someone who is stubborn?________ resolute<br />

3. describes how someone might argue about a subject he<br />

or she feels strongly about?___________<br />

vehemently<br />

4. is a synonym for praised? __________<br />

extolled<br />

5. describes someone who cannot fail?_________<br />

infallible<br />

6. describes someone who gives generous gifts?________ lavish<br />

7. is another way of saying attack? ________ assail<br />

[End of Section]

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