Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Anglo-Saxon society and its literature
- 2 The Old English language
- 3 The nature of Old English verse
- 4 The nature of Old English prose
- 5 Germanic legend in Old English literature
- 6 Heroic values and Christian ethics
- 7 Pagan survivals and popular belief
- 8 Beowulf
- 9 Fatalism and the millennium
- 10 Perceptions of transience
- 11 Perceptions of eternity
- 12 Biblical literature
- 13 Biblical literature
- 14 The saintly life in Anglo-Saxon England
- 15 The world of Anglo-Saxon learning
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
8 - Beowulf
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Anglo-Saxon society and its literature
- 2 The Old English language
- 3 The nature of Old English verse
- 4 The nature of Old English prose
- 5 Germanic legend in Old English literature
- 6 Heroic values and Christian ethics
- 7 Pagan survivals and popular belief
- 8 Beowulf
- 9 Fatalism and the millennium
- 10 Perceptions of transience
- 11 Perceptions of eternity
- 12 Biblical literature
- 13 Biblical literature
- 14 The saintly life in Anglo-Saxon England
- 15 The world of Anglo-Saxon learning
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
Beowulfis generally held to be the first great narrative poem in the English language. This heroic tale, 3,182 lines in length, is about a man and his people in north European lands during the period when Germanic precursors of the English were still migrating to Britain. The poem is strongly linked to the Germanic roots of the English nation and displays the qualities of English before the language and literary tradition became quite intermingled with French, classical and other non-Germanic cultures. The style and metre of Beowulf is essentially that of other early Germanic poems like the Old High German Hildebrandslied and the Old Saxon Heliand, and many of the characters and incidents in the poem are referred to independently by early Germanic writers on the Continent. Indeed, although it is usually seen as the first great masterpiece of English literature, from another perspective it may be said that by virtue of its large scale, refined style and lofty theme Beowulf is also the chief glory of early Germanic poetry at large.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Old English Literature , pp. 142 - 159Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991
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