Beowulf And Grendel Comparison

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Andy Stanley, author of Louder Than Words: The Power of Uncompromised Living, wrote, “Your character is not stagnant, it is either developing or deteriorating.” While his book was primarily focused on middle-aged humans, Stanley’s quote can easily be used to depict Grendel’s extensive inner journey in Grendel by John Gardner. Grendel was a one who raised himself through years of relentless observation of his surroundings. He was immature, unsure of what life was beyond his mother, and uncertain of what he was and how he fit into the world. He lived with no intention. Thus, it was not until Grendel was introduced to the Shaper, the dragon, and Beowulf that he began to evolve and then drastically devolve. Grendel, while vilified in the epic Beowulf, was the victim in his own story. His character was so …show more content…

Pondering whether or not he would continue interacting with the humans led him to the dragon. Conversely, while Grendel’s evolved mind saw the world as meaningful and beautiful, the dragon had a strictly nihilistic view, meaning he saw everything as pointless in the ever-ending whirlpool of time. The dragon convinced Grendel that brought mankind to new heights of art and religion, and encouraged him to “scare them to glory” (Gardner72-73). The dragon was, in his own eyes as well as Grendel’s, a higher creature. Grendel, still vulnerable, was powerless to do anything but feebly disagree to the shaking of his newly rooted foundations, and to no avail. After their meeting, Grendel reflected, “Whatever I may had understood or misunderstood in the dragon’s talk, something much deeper stayed with me, became my aura. Futility, doom became a smell in the air…my scent and the world’s” (Gardner 75).The little influence the Shaper’s had had on Grendel was wiped away by the dragon. Grendel was now forced to look at the world through a bleak, nihilistic lens, and this devolved him past where he had originally

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