Examples Of A Hero's Quest In Beowulf

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In the epic poem, Beowulf, one way that Beowulf proves to be a classic example of the perfect Anglo-Saxon hero is his embarking upon a heroic quest, archetypal to the epic heroes of the period. In truth, Beowulf embarks on several heroic quests: three battles with three different monsters and the life-long quest for glory and fame. Beowulf receives news about the monster Grendel through “sailors [who] brought stories of the plight [Heorot] suffers” and plans to “sail the swan’s road and search out the king” in order to “proffer his [his] wholehearted help and counsel” (411, 200, 278). He is ever confident in his abilities and sets out to defeat the evil of Grendel as is the Anglo-Saxon style, for the benefit of other people and for the glory …show more content…

Beowulf, as true to the Anglo-Saxon arc of a hero’s quest, possesses superhuman qualities to defeat the evil that he encounters on his heroic quests. Beowulf, when Grendel attacks, “[puts him] in a handgrip harder than anything [Grendel] had ever encountered in any man,” which demonstrates the great strength that Beowulf is privy to as an epic hero of Anglo-Saxon literature (749-751). After Beowulf’s victory, the Danes are attacked by Grendel’s mother, a grief-stricken monster looking for revenge, and Hrothgar, the king, tells Beowulf that “help depends again on [him] and [him] alone,” a call to adventure for the hero to embark upon another quest (1375-1376). After guaranteeing the king that he will be victorious, Beowulf travels to the monster’s …show more content…

The water of the swamp is “infested with all kinds of reptiles. There [are] writing sea-dragons and monsters,” but Beowulf, determined to avenge the evil done to the Danes, “[dives] into the heaving depths of the lake” (1426-1427, 1494-95).This shows Beowulf’s determination to complete his quest. True to the Anglo-Saxon pattern of a hero’s quest, Beowulf experiences a crisis when fighting the monster. In the midst of the battle, “the shining blade refuse[s] to bite” and thus “fail[s] [Beowulf] in his need” (1523-1525). However, Beowulf eventually prevails and slays the second monster and takes the treasure of glory but “carried no spoils from those quarters” (1612) because he did not embark on such a quest for anything other than to avenge the Danes and for the glory of the defeat. Beowulf completes his second quest by departing from Denmark and returning back to his home in Geatland. After fifty years of ruling over Geatland, Beowulf embarks upon his final quest to defeat a dragon that is wreaking havoc upon his kingdom. Despite his old age, Beowulf is brave enough to pursue the fight against the dragon for the “glory of winning,” thus aiding his lifelong quest for glory and fame

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