This page will contain information on the texts being read in class.
If at all possible, I will try to give you a link to the full text online as well.
Beowulf

Beowulf is the first surviving epic written in the English language.
The single existing copy of the manuscript dates from the late tenth century, although some scholars believe it dates from
the first part of the eleventh century. It is found in a large volume that features stories involving mythical creatures and
people. Two different scribes copied the poem, most likely using an existing copy. Between 1066 and the Reformation, the whole
volume remained in a monastic library until Sir Robert Cotton gained possession of it for his own extensive library. A fire
consumed much of his library, and the volume containing Beowulf became badly charred. Today the manuscript still exists, though
it is falling apart rapidly due to the charring in the fire.
We do not have any definite knowledge about the poet--indeed,
we do not even know the date of the poem's composition. Through the study of Old English verse, most scholars believe that
the poem was composed much earlier than the Cotton manuscript, between 650 and 800. Some words in Beowulf do not adhere to
the scansion of Old English verse; however, using the older forms of the words, dating from the period given, causes the lines
to scan correctly. Yet accurately dating the poem is a difficult enterprise since the poem has such a derivative quality.
It is evident that the Beowulf poet wished to place his work within an even more ancient tradition. Beowulf directly uses
many ancient stories that have been preserved in later texts, such as the legend of Sigemund and the account of the war at
Finnesburh. In addition, the poem is written with the traditional epic diction, with whole phrases taken from the other bards
who sang the legends incorporated.
Despite his borrowing from other sources, perhaps in large quantities, the Beowulf
poet nonetheless manages to add his own specialized view of his characters' world. First and foremost, Beowulf's author is
a Christian, and he makes the Christian world extremely visible. He alludes to Cain and the Flood; he shows the Christian
God's influence upon the pagan world of the Danes. Yet he is obviously aware of his culture's pagan past and attempts to describe
it in great detail through rituals, such as the elaborate Germanic sea-burials and the grand feasts in the mead-halls, and
the ever-present belief in fate. Thus Beowulf's poet tries to recreate the past of his people for his people, almost with
a nostalgic feeling for the bygone pagan days.
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