Beowulf Personal Code Analysis

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Everyone seeks freedom, but what is freedom? Freedom is not tangible, so what does it mean to be “free”? According to Dictionary.com, Freedom [noun]: the state of being free or at liberty rather than in confinement or under physical restraint. Restraint is something that holds you back. What if it’s us who hold ourselves back? I believe we each have a personal code or a set of ethics that we subconsciously follow. If you were guaranteed freedom in exchange to willingly violate your personal code, would you do it? In “Beowulf”, “Lanval”, “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” and “The Wife of Bath”, the main characters undergo an internal struggle regarding the violation of their “personal code”.

Beowulf a strong, fearless warrior who is unlike any other. After he encounters and slays a beast and afterward slays his more powerful mother, Beowulf is admired by many tribes! As told by Katherine Marie Ismeurt: “After his defeat of Grendel’s mother, Beowulf is honored far and wide by the danes and …show more content…

Lanval’s loyalty is put to the test when he refuses to return his love (or lust) for his kingdom’s Queen. “The queen had charged the knight with treason./ Lanval went with them very sadly./ Should he be killed, he’d bear it gladly./” (Line 354-356) The King immediately believes his “loyal” wife and tries Lanval in court. During the trial, Lanval is at a fork: should he prove his innocence (and loyalty to the King) by breaking his oath of his love for the Fairy Queen or should he take his sentencing? Unfortunately, he breaks his oath with the Fairy Queen and proves his innocence. “But of his speech- to give her due-/ He confessed it was true./ The mistress he had boasted of/ He mourned for he had lost her love”. (Line 373-376) As he proves his innocence, he finds his freedom by proving his loyalty to his king and also his love for the Fairy

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