Wednesday, May 29, 2019
A Comparison of Perfection in Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knig
Perfection in Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the parking area KnightThe cuneuses of both Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight are controverters. However, the traits they have in common are far less numerous than those that set them apart. As each of the deuce is dubbed perfect by his contemporaries, it should be possible to draw the picture of both the model warrior and the paragon knight by comparing Beowulf and Gawain. The first question to arise is that of attr routineership. In Beowulf, the hero is referred to as prince*, the helmet-of-Weders**, or master-friend***. This is not without reason in the times of the epic, might did literally make right. T here(predicate)fore, he who was to be an accomplished warrior had to display a leader s qualities as well as combat prowess. As for the knights, they had their appointed ruler, king Arthur, and none thought of challenging him. Neither did any of the knights distinguish himself as a general all their exploits were done sin gle-handedly. Now, let us focus on combat. Beowulf fights a great many battles during his life, and while some of these are but briefly mentioned (the famous sea-monsters, for instance), the really titanic ones are described fully and with abundance of detail. The clash between the Geats and Grendel may serve as an example here   Now many an earl of Beowulf brandished blade ancestral, ( ) The outlaw dire Took mortal hurt * And so it continues for fifty-one verses. And this is but one of the heroe s armed encounters Clearly, one has to fight much to be a great warrior The matter is quite different when it make dos to knights. While Gawains skill with sword and lance is highly praised throughout the poem, his battles are alone hinted at as... ...e himself notices, nothing is said of Beowulfs wife in the poem, but Bugge surmises that Beowulf finally accepted Hygds offer of kingdom and hoard, and, as was usual, took her into the bargain*** - which reflects the lack of concern a true warrior should show when dealing with women. There is, however, a trait common to the warrior and the knight the two have a set of rules they should obey. And though the regulations that force Beowulf to come to Hrothgars help are not nearly as neatly organised as Gawains chivalric code embodied in the pentangle****, the idea of being compelled to act in a way dictated by generally accepted rules appears in both poems. We have thereby drawn the pictures of the ideal men of two different ages, and proved in the process how much the notion of perfection has changed from Beowulf to Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.  
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