A Comparison of Runes and Magic in Beowulf and in Anglo-Saxon England

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Runes and Magic in Beowulf and in Anglo-Saxon England

In the Old English poem Beowulf we see the mention of runes, which were used with connotations of magic or charms. Examining evidence from historic times, we find that early Englishmen were fully conversant with the Germanic runic alphabet and that runes did have special connotations.

In Beowulf the hero is in deadly combat with Grendel’s mother in the mere. He is at the point of being killed by the monster when suddenly God shows to him the presence of a special sword nearby on the wall. Beowulf seizes the giant weapon and kills the monster. Then:

that sword

had begun to melt in battle-bloody icicles;

that it melted away was as much a marvel

as ice itself when the Father unwinds

the bonds of frost, loosens the freezing

chains of water, Who keeps the power

of times and seasons; He is the true God. . . .

Already the sword had melted away,

its blade had burned up; too hot the blood

of the poisonous spirit who had died within. . . .

the wave-sword burned up, quenched in that blood. . . .

then the strange gold hilt was placed in the hand

of the gray-bearded king, wise war-leader

old work of giants; after the fall of devils

it came into the hands of the lord of the Dane-men,

from magic smithies; once the fierce spirit,

long God’s opponent, guilty creature,

and his murderous mother had quitted this world,

it came to the power of the best overlord

between the two seas, of all world-rulers

in Scandanavia who gave good treasures.

Hrothgar spoke, examined the hilt,

great treasure of old. There was engraved

the origin of past strife, when the flood drowned,

the pouring ocean killed the race of giants. . . .

On its bright gold facings there were also runes

set down in order, engraved, inlaid,

which told for whom the sword was first worked,

its hair-keen edges, twisted gold

scrolled in the hilt, the woven snake-blade(1605ff).

Chickering in his “Commentary” would have us believe that the melting sword is a reference to patristic theology, to St.

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