Friday, April 3, 2020
Beowulf And King Arthur Essays - Beowulf, Geats,
  Beowulf And King Arthur    Numerous stories about numerous heroes have been told and then retold. All of  these heroes do different things and all of them have a different set of  qualities which make them heroes. Due to the fact that there are only so many  heroic adventures and qualities, most are shared in part with at least one other  hero. Such is the case between the great hero, Beowulf, from the epic poem    Beowulf and King Arthur from the story of Morte d'Arthur. These great heroes  have strong similarities and a great deal of differences. Once their  similarities have been compared and then dismissed it is evident that Beowulf is  the greater hero of the two. True heroes do good things for good people. Such is  the case in Beowulf, Beowulf leaves his homeland to help the Danish people rid  themselves of the human eating monster, Grendel. This heroic quality is also  evident in Morte d'Arthur, as Arthur consciously rides into a battle in order to  rid his people of an evil knight who would not allow others to pass. Both heroes  are displaying their concern for others by risking themselves in battle for the  greater good. In the same aspect they are also striving for love and respect  from the people they protect. In order to obtain maximum respect per battle,  both Beowulf and Arthur enter into battle somewhat alone. Beowulf specifically  asks, "That [he], alone and with the help of [his] men, / May purge all evil  from [the] hall" (Beowulf, line 165-166). His request is granted by Hrothgar,    King of the Danes, so he and his man enter into the battle themselves and when    Grendel is defeated, the glory, love and respect belong solely to Beowulf and  his men. Arthur does the same, "he met with his man and his horse, and so  mounted up and dressed his shield and took his spear, and bade his chamberlain  tarry there till he came again" (Morte d'Arthur paragraph 20). Although    Arthur begins his journey alone he does meet up with Merlin, the court magician  and faithful companion, who accompanies him. Much like Beowulf, Arthur gains  great respect and praise from all men of worship by fighting alone, even though  it is not necessarily the smartest thing to do. The characteristic of being  fearless when faced with death is often a trait of heroes because it is  associated with courage and strength. King Arthur and Beowulf are not afraid to  die, thus showing their courage to their adversaries and peers. When Arthur is  faced with death he declares, "welcome be it when it cometh, but to yield me  unto thee as [cowardly] I had liefer die than to be so shamed." (Morte  d'Arthur, paragraph 34). Simply put he would rather die than admit to defeat  and being cowardly. Beowulf feels much the same way about death. He illustrates  this by showing no fear for his own life but instead expressing concern for the  honor of King Higlac by asking that, "if death does take [him], send the  hammered / Mail of [his] armor to Higlac" (Beowulf, line 186-187). In sending  his King his armor it recommits himself to his country and lets his King be  reminded of his bravery every time he looks upon it. That is the extent to which    Beowulf and King Arthur are similar. Beowulf has way more confidence in his  fighting ability then Arthur has in his. This is evident in the fact that    Beowulf fights Grendel unarmed, he says "my hands / Alone shall fight for me,  struggle for life" (Beowulf, line 172-173). His reasoning behind this is that    Grendel's, "scorn of men / Is so great that he needs no weapons and fears  none [so] / Nor will [he]" (Beowulf, line 167-169). By facing Grendel unarmed  to shows that he is brave and more importantly unafraid to be equal to Grendel.    Since Grendel is going to fight without the use of weapons, Beowulf creates  equality and therefore more respect upon himself by doing the same. Were as the  much less confident Arthur fights only with weapons and once his wounds were  amended his first thought was, "I have no sword" (Morte d'Arthur,  paragraph 41) followed by the task of finding him a sword. This demonstrates    Arthur's weakness in his dependence of weapons and thus Beowulf's greatness  in comparison. Beowulf is indeed the greater hero as the help he received from  his men was useless, not by fault of his men but by the simple fact that Grendel,    "had bewitched all    
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