Beowulf Seamus Heaney Analysis

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The Ever-returning Wheel
In the introduction to Beowulf, translator Seamus Heaney talks about the importance of the minstrel’s songs in paralleling and foreshadowing Beowulf’s journey, as well as creating “the historical and the imaginative world of the poem”. He explains that the second of the minstrel’s songs takes the reader into the world that Beowulf takes place in and by doing so gives the reader a sense of setting. It also provides the reader with an understanding of culture in this time period. Heaney explains the cycle of the world at this time period:
The little nations are grouped around their lord, the greater nations spoil for war and menace the little ones, a lord dies, defenselessness ensues, the enemy strikes, vengeance for

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