More Background Information
BEOWULF
BEOWULF comes from the OLD ENGLISH or ANGLO-SAXON Literary and Historical period of what was then ancient Britannia. This period of Old English extends from about 450 to 1066, the year of the Norman-French conquest of England led by William of Normandy (later to be known as William the Conqueror). The Germanic tribes from Europe who overran England in the second half of the fifth century AD, right after the Romans retreated from Britannia, brought with them the Old English, or, rather, the Angle, Saxon, and Jute interrelated tongues which combined and merged into ANGLO-SAXON, which in turn is also the basis of Modern English (see The English Language). They brought also a unique and specific poetic form and tradition, the formal character of which remained surprisingly constant until the end of their rule by the Norman-French invaders six centuries later (on September 28, 10666, to be exact).
Much of Old English poetry was probably intended to be chanted, with harp accompaniment, by the Anglo-Saxon scop, or bard of the times. Often bold and strong, but also mournful and elegiac in spirit, this poetry emphasizes the sorrow and ultimate futility of life and the helplessness of humans before the power of fate and the natural forces. Almost all this poetry is composed without rhyme, in a characteristic line, or verse, of four stressed syllables alternating with an indeterminate number of unstressed ones. This line strikes strangely on ears habituated to the usual modern rythmical pattern, in which the rythmical unit, or foot, theoretically consists of a constant number (either one or two) of unaccented syllables that always precede or follow any stressed syllable. Another unfamiliar but equally striking and most prominent feature in the formal character of Old English poetry is structural alliteration, or the use of syllables beginning with similar sounds in two or three of the stresses in each line.
All these qualities of form and spirit are exemplified in the epic poem Beowulf, written somewhere within the 8th century -- beginning and ending with the funeral of the great Danish king Hroðgar. Composed against a background of impending disaster, it describes the exploits of a Scandinavian culture hero, Beowulf, in destroying the monster Grendel, Grendel's mother in his youth, and later in his elderly existence, a fire-breathing dragon. In these sequences Beowulf is shown not only as a glorious hero, but as a savior of the people. The Old Germanic virtue of mutual loyalty between leader and followers is evoked effectively and touchingly in the aged Beowulf's sacrifice of his life and in the reproaches heaped on the retainers who desert him in this tragic but climactic second battle. The extraordinary artistry with which fragments of other heroic tales are incorporated to highten the main action, and "with which the whole plot is reduced to symmetry," has only recently been fully recognized.
Another feature of Beowulf is the weakening of the sense of the ultimate power of arbitrary fate. The injection of the Christian idea of dependence on a just God is evident in the epic. [That feature is typical of other Old English literature, for almost all of what survives was preserved by monastic copyists. Most of it was actually composed by religious writers after the early conversion of the people from their faith in the older Germanic divinities.]
Sacred legend and story were reduced to verse in poems resembling Beowulf in form. At first such verse was rendered in the somewhat simple, stark style of the poems of Caedmon, a humble man of the late 7th century who was described by the historian and theologian Saint Bede the Venerable as having received the gift of song from God. Later the same type of subject matter was treated in the more ornate language of the Anglo-Saxon poet Cynewulf and his school. The best of their productions is probably the passionate "Dream of the Rood."
In addition to these religious compositions, Old English poets produced a number of more or less lyrical poems of shorter length, which do not contain specific Christian doctrine and which evoke the Anglo-Saxon sense of the harshness of circumstance and the sadness of the human lot. "The Wanderer" and "The Seafarer" are among the most beautiful of this group of Old English poems.
With regards to prose, prose in Old English is represented by a large number of religious works. The imposing scholarship of monasteries in northern England in the late 7th century reached its peak in the Latin work Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum (Ecclesiastical History of the English People, 731) by Bede. The great educational effort of Alfred, king of the West Saxons, in the 9th century produced an Old English translation of this important historical work and of many others, including De Consolatione Philosophiae (The Consolation of Philosophy),by Boethius. This was a significant work of largely Platonic (innocent in intentions) philosophy easily adaptable to Christian thought, and it has had great influence on English literature.
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