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Raskolnikov

“How Christian is the poem?” asks Howell Chickering in his analysis of Beowulf. While the author of the poem was most certainly a pagan, as were most Anglo-Saxons at the time the poem was written, the recorder of the poem, a monk who had most likely heard the poem while converting the pagans to Christianity, included many of his own religious beliefs. There are many pagan rituals and beliefs represented in Beowulf, but the overall tone of the poem is very Christian. Christian nature is shown in the battle between Beowulf and Grendel, the constant failure of the pagan people, and the poem’s fixation on fate.
The battle between Beowulf and Grendel is overtly Christian. Grendel “bore the curse of the seed of Cain” (65), the first murderer according to the Bible. Cain’s sin of murder is all the more grievous in the setting of Beowulf, as the murder he committed was that of his brother. The Anglo-Saxons held lineage in the highest regard, and to kill one’s own family wou...

Posted by: Asare Mabel

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