An Analysis of the Arguably Unified Poem, Beowulf

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An Analysis of the Arguably Unified Poem, Beowulf

Beowulf as a less than unified work, more important for its historical and philological content than its literary merit, and critics after him regard Beowulf as a unified work of art. For example, of the critics who discuss the poem as a whole in An Anthology of Beowulf Criticism, most agree pace Tolkien that Beowulf is a unified poem, even if they argue so on different grounds.

Burton Raffel's introduction to his own translation offers a particularly exuberant example of post-Tolkien Beowulf criticism:

[W]e are remarkably lucky to have [Beowulf]: not only is it unique, the sole survivor of what might have been a thriving epic tradition, but it is great poetry. Approached as an archaeological relic, it is fascinating. Taken as a linguistic document, it is a marvel ... But Beowulf's position as a great poem must remain primary; the other purposes it serves are important but peripheral to this central fact of sheer literary merit. (x)

This view of Beowulf has become so common that its unity is taken by many critics as a self-evident fact. As one might expect, however, the certainty of this view is not apodictic. The issue of unity is one naturally raised by the critics, because Beowulf presents certain difficulties for critical analysis. The manuscript support for the poem is limited to one damaged copy written in two hands and provides little help in determining its origin and authorship. The poem itself has two parts that differ in content. The first part contains many allusions to the Old Testament, implying the presence of a Christian author. The monsters of part one are evil, being linked by ancestry with Cain. Part two, however, makes no clear reference to the ...

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...sh Literature. Ed. J. B. Trapp. New York: Oxford University Press, 1973. 29-98.

Goldsmith, Margaret E. "The Christian Perspective in Beowulf." Nicholson: 373-86.

Kaske, R. E. "Sapientia et Fortitudo as the Controlling Theme of Beowulf." Nicholson: 269-310.

Ker, W. P. The Dark Ages. New York: Thomas Nelson, 1955.

Lumiansky, R. M. "The Dramatic Audience in Beowulf." The Beowulf Poet. Ed. Donald Frye. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1968. 76-82.

Malone, Kemp. "Beowulf." Nicholson: 137-54.

Nicholson, Lewis E., ed. Preface. An Anthology of Beowulf Criticism. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1963.

Raffel, Burton, trans. Introduction. Beowulf. New York: New American Library, 1963.

Rogers, H. L. "Beowulf's Three Great Fights." Nicholson: 233-56.

Tolkien, J. R. R. "Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics." Nicholson: 51-103.

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