English2.4(g12 c1 beowulf)

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Beowulf Introducing the Epic Literary Focus: The Epic Hero The Poetry of Beowulf: Caesuras, Alliteration, and Kennings Feature Menu

Transcript of English2.4(g12 c1 beowulf)

Beowulf

Introducing the Epic

Literary Focus: The Epic Hero

The Poetry of Beowulf: Caesuras, Alliteration, and Kennings

Feature Menu

Beowulf

• the first great work of English national literature.

• the epic story of the hero Beowulf, who fights the demonic monster Grendel.

Beowulf is

BeowulfIntroducing the Epic

BeowulfIntroducing the Epic

Beowulf: nephew of Higlac, king of the Geats.

Hrothgar: king of the Danes.

Wiglaf: a Geat warrior, one of Beowulf’s select band and the only one to help him in his final fight with the dragon.

People

BeowulfIntroducing the Epic

Grendel: man-eating monster who lives at the bottom of a foul mere, or mountain lake.

Monsters

Grendel’s mother: water-witch who seeks revenge.

Dragon: giant fire-breathing serpent whom Beowulf fights in Part Two of the epic.

Beowulf takes place in Scandinavia.

Places

Scholars think Herot

might have been built

on the coast of

Zealand, in Denmark.

Scandinavia

Britain

BeowulfIntroducing the Epic

Places

Herot: the golden

guest hall built by

King Hrothgar where

warriors gathered to

celebrate.

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BeowulfIntroducing the Epic

The epic hero is the

central figure in a long

narrative that reflects the

values and heroic ideals of

a particular society.

An epic is a quest story on

a grand scale.

BeowulfLiterary Focus: The Epic Hero

BeowulfLiterary Focus: The Epic Hero

Beowulf is one of ancient England’s heroes.

King Arthur

Joan of Arc

Other times and other cultures have had other heroes.

In modern America, the hero may be a real person or a fictional character.

BeowulfLiterary Focus: The Epic Hero

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Beowulf was composed in Old English, which uses a caesura, or rhythmic pause, to create unity.

ða com of more under misthleoþum Grendel gongan, godes yrre bær; mynte se manscaða manna cynnes sumne besyrwan in sele þam hean.

Line divided into two parts by a caesura.

Locate the caesura in these lines:

BeowulfThe Poetry of Beowulf

Here are the same lines in modern English fromBurton Raffel’s translation:

Out from the marsh, from the foot of mistyHills and bogs, bearing God’s hatred,Grendel came, hoping to killAnyone he could trap on this trip to high Herot.

Punctuation reproduces pause effect of the caesura.

BeowulfThe Poetry of Beowulf

The Anglo-Saxon oral poet also used the poetic device of alliteration.

Grendel gongan, godes yrre bær; mynte se manscaða manna cynnes

BeowulfThe Poetry of Beowulf

Find examples of alliteration in Burton Raffel’s translation of lines 1-5:

Out from the marsh, from the foot of mistyHills and bogs, bearing God’s hatred,Grendel came, hoping to killAnyone he could trap on this trip to high Herot.

BeowulfThe Poetry of Beowulf

The kenning is another poetic device that was used by the oral poet.

Examples of kennings from Beowulf:

gold-shining hall= Herotguardian of crime = Grendelstrong-hearted wakeful sleeper = Beowulfcave-guard and sky-borne foe = dragon

BeowulfThe Poetry of Beowulf

Create modern-day kennings for things you see around you.

giver of wordsword-wand

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? ?

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BeowulfThe Poetry of Beowulf