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Literary analysis: Beowulf

human society (Norton Anthology Vol. I, 30). The author successfully develops a larger than life enemy for his hero to confront. He arguably aligns the hero Beowulf with a larger trajectory of magnanimous Christians, among them, the first and most notable, Jesus Christ.
Still, epic conventions aside, the author employs rather sophisticated writing techniques. There is evidence he was a "wordsmith," as the poem is prolific with "hapax legomena that is, words recorded only once in a language" (Norton Anthology Vol. I, 29). This suggests the writer was comfortable enough with linguistics to invent words, which more aptly captured his literary intent. In addition to his linguistic abilities, there is evidence the author of Beowulf knew how to manipulate poetic conventions. For example, his poem uses conventions common to oral poetry, like chiastic cyanghanedd in line 154 of the poem "nothing but war; how he would never," which creates the consonant repetition of n/w/w/n (Norton Anthology Vol. I, 35). Another example of the same technique is alternative cyanghanedd where he creates consonant repetition with line 126 of the poem, "then as dawn, brightened and the day broke," d/b/d/b (Norton Anthology Vol. I, 35). Clearly the author is sophisticated enough a writer to emulate, in writing style, the ancient Germanic or Old English oral tradition of using certain patterns of consonants to remember lines.


Finally, as further evidence of its sophistication Beowulf is written in such a manner that it allows readers to extrapolate meaning beyond the text. That is to say, figures like Beowulf's three enemies could symbolize, in terms of Christian convention, Satan and/or his imps. In essence, these figures are non-corporeal and evidential of the author's successful creation of figures, which transcend his age to have meaning for future Christian audiences. In addition, the author recreates in vivid detail, a world preceding his own and simultaneously left for future generations, a glimpse into the ancient Germanic world.
Consequently, Beowulf is by no means crude when one considers the author of the work and its socio-historical background. Clearly, a sophisticated person, well read and educated on ancient German history and tradition and possessed of aesthetic ability wrote this poem. He deliberately sought to and succeeded in writing a timeless work, one that recreates a time centuries before his own while transcending, in terms of cultural relevance, any post-Christian age. In writing Beowulf, the author employs a number of techniques, which suggest a cosmopolitan viewpoint informed the work. Beowulf, complex and written by a refined author, is the antithesis of crude.

Works Cited
Anoymous. "Beowulf." The Norton Anthology English Literature. Volume I. 7th edition. Ed. M.H. Abrams and Stephen Greenblatt. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2000. 29-99.

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