+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Date post: 25-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: quinta
View: 23 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness. Review Guide. Some terms to review…. Alliteration- Repetition of consonant sounds t the beginning of words. “My b oss wants to b uy my b aby!” ~ Rachel from Friends - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
22
BEOWULF GOODNESS ALWAYS CONQUERS WICKEDNESS Review Guide
Transcript
Page 1: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

BEOWULFGOODNESS ALWAYS CONQUERS

WICKEDNESSReview Guide

Page 2: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Some terms to review… Alliteration- Repetition of consonant

sounds t the beginning of words. “My boss wants to buy my baby!” ~Rachel from

Friends Epic Hero- Larger-than-life character who

represents the ideals of a nation or a race. An epic hero takes part in dangerous adventures and accomplishes great deeds. Many undertake long, difficult journeys and displays great courage and superhuman strength.

Foreshadowing-Hints or clues to indicate events that will occur later in a story.

Page 3: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Some terms to review…Continued

Kenning- a metaphorical compound word or phrase substituted for a noun or name (enhances meaning) “mankind’s enemy” is used for Grendel “fire-spitting terror” is used for the dragon “gray-bearded lord of the Geats” is used for Beowulf

Dramatic Irony- The reader or the viewer knows something that a character does not know.

Universal Theme- An underlying message that a writer wants the reader to understand that are found throughout the literature of all time periods.

Page 4: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Characters

A brief look into the major characters

Page 5: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Beowulf The protagonist of the epic A Geatish hero who fights the monster

Grendel, Grendel’s mother, and a fire-breathing dragon.

He is boastful and his encounters show him to be the strongest, ablest warrior around.

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.

Page 6: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

King Hrothgar The king of the Danes. Enjoys military success and prosperity

until Grendel terrorizes his realm. A wise and aged ruler, he represents a

different kind of leadership from that exhibited by the youthful warrior Beowulf.

He is a father figure to Beowulf and a model for the kind of king that Beowulf becomes.

Page 7: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Wiglaf A young kinsman and thanes of Beowulf Helps Beowulf fight against the dragon

while all of the other warriors run away. Wiglaf adheres to the heroic code better

than Beowulf’s other thanes, thereby proving himself a suitable successor to Beowulf.

Page 8: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Grendel A demon descended from Cain, Grendel

preys on Hrothgar’s warriors in the king’s mead-hall called Heorot.

Because his ruthless and miserable existence is part of the retribution exacted by God for Cain’s murder of Abel, Grendel fits solidly within the ethos of vengeance that governs the world of the poem. In other words, by portraying Grendel as Cain, the author emphasizes Grendel’s inherent evil.

Page 9: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Grendel’s Mother An unnamed swamp-hag She seems to possess fewer human

qualities than Grendel, although her terrorization of Heorot is explained by her desire for vengeance—a human motivation.

Page 10: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

The Dragon An ancient, powerful serpent He guards a horde of treasure in a hidden

mound. Beowulf’s fight with the dragon

constitutes the third and final part of the epic.

Page 11: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Story SynopsisGrendel

K ING HROTHGAR OF DENMARK, a descendant of the great king Shield Sheafson, enjoys a prosperous and successful reign. He builds a great mead-hall, called Herot, where his warriors can gather to drink, receive gifts from their lord, and listen to stories sung by the scops, or bards. But the jubilant noise from Herot angers Grendel, a horrible demon who lives in the swamplands of Hrothgar’s kingdom.

Page 12: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

Grendel Continued… Grendel terrorizes the Danes every night, killing

them and defeating their efforts to fight back. The Danes suffer many years of fear, danger, and death at the hands of Grendel.

The Danes leave Herot in order to protect themselves.

Even though Grendel (mankind’s enemy~associates Grendel to Satan) lived in Herot, “he never dared to touch king Hrothgar’s glorious throne, protected by God-God, whose love Grendel could not know” (This associates Hrothgar to God)

Page 13: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisBeowulf

A young Geatish warrior named Beowulf hears of Hrothgar’s plight. Inspired by the challenge, Beowulf sails to Denmark with a small company of men, determined to defeat Grendel.

Hrothgar, who had once done a great favor for Beowulf’s father Edgetho, accepts Beowulf’s offer to fight Grendel and holds a feast in the hero’s honor.

Page 14: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisThe Battle With Grendel

After the feast, Hrothgar and his followers leave Herot, and Beowulf and his warriors spent the night at Herot in the mead hall.

Grendel comes from his marsh to Herot and finds the hall crowded with sleeping warriors and soldiers and watches them as he choose who to eat first.

As the warriors keep an eye on Grendel, he suddenly snatches the first Geat, rips him apart, drinks his blood, and shoves the body parts down his throat.

Page 15: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisThe Battle…Continued…

Grendel chooses his next victim, and he has chosen Beowulf.

Beowulf leaps up, and, being the epic hero that he is, produces incredible courage and superhuman strength. He faces Grendel without a weapon, grabs Grendel’s claws, and prevents the monster from escaping.

Beowulf’s men jump to join in the fight to defeat the shepherd of evil; however, their swords could not harm Grendel.

Page 16: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisThe Battle…Continued…

Grendel had “bewitched all men’s weapons, laid spells that blunted every mortal man’s blade.”

Meanwhile, Beowulf is still trying to rip the monster’s claws off, and in the struggle, Beowulf manages to rip off Grendel’s shoulder.

Grendel escapes and goes back to his cave in the marsh to die.

Everyone comes back to Herot and celebrates Beowulf’s success in killing the monster.

Page 17: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisGrendel’s Mother

Grendel’s mother finds out about the death of her son and heads out, seeking revenge.

When she arrives at Herot, she takes a single victim - Hrothgar’s closest and dearest friend – back to her marshy lair and kills him.

Deveastated by the loss of his friend, Hrothgar sends for Beowulf and recounts what Grendel’s mother has done. Then Hrothgar describes the dark lake where Grendel’s mother has lived with her son.

Page 18: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisThe Battle With Grendel’s Mother

Beowulf accepts Hrothgar’s challenge, and the king and his men accompany the hero to the dreadful lair of Grendel’s mother. Fearlessly, Beowulf prepares to battle the terrible creature.

During the battle, Beowulf finds that Grendel’s mother, like her son, has skin that cannot be pierced by his sword.

Beowulf discovers a sword hanging from her wall that was “hammered by giants, strong and blessed with their magic.”

Beowulf kills Grendel’s mother with the sword by stabbing her in the neck.

As a final revenge against Grendel, he finds the dead monster and chops off his head and took it to Herot.

Page 19: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisBeowulf’s Last Battle

With Grendel’s mother destroyed,, peace is restored to the land of the Danes, and Beowulf, laden with Hrothgar’s gifts, returns to the land of his own people, the Geats.

After his uncle and cousin die, Beowulf becomes king of the Geats and rules in peace and prosperity for 50 years.

One day, a fire-breathing dragon that has been guarding a treasure for hundreds of years is disturbed by a thief, who enters the treasure tower and steal a cup.

The dragon begins terrorizing the Geats, and Beowulf, now an old man, takes on the challenge of fighting it.

Page 20: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisBeowulf’s Last Battle-Continued Beowulf begins to fight the dragon, and starts

to lose. “Quickly, the dragon came at him, encouraged

as Beowulf fell back; its breath flared, and he suffered, wrapped around in swirling flames-a king, before, but now a beaten warrior. None of his comrades came to him, helped him, hi brave and noble followers; they ran for their lives, fled deep in a wood.”

However, Wiglaf, a good soldier, saw how his king was being defeated and decides to help Beowulf.

Page 21: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisThe Death of Beowulf

Wiglaf joins Beowulf, who again attacks the dragon single-handed; but his sword shatters, and the dragon wounds him in the neck.

Wiglaf then strikes the dragon, and he and Beowulf together finally succeed in killing the beast.

Their triumph is short-lived, however, because Beowulf’s wound proves to be fatal.

Page 22: Beowulf goodness always conquers wickedness

SynopsisMourning Beowulf

The Geats build a tower as Beowulf’s monument with his ashes in the walls so sailors could find it from far away.

The riches he and Wiglaf had won from the dragon went into the tower as well.

The Geats told stories about Beowulf, proclaiming that no future king will be as brave and heroic.


Recommended