Comparing Beowulf's Grendel: The Battle Between Good And Evil

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The poem describes Grendel as a very strong creature shaped like a man. According to what Hrothgar heard, the physical appearance of Grendel was, “warped / in the shape of a man” and “bigger than any man, an unnatural birth” (1351-1353). Grendel is a descendant of Cain clan who is supposed to be a murderer of his own brother Abel, as portrayed in the poem, “Cain’s clan, whom the creator had outlawed / and condemned as outcasts” (105-106). Grendel kills the people in the Mead hall every night for 12 straight years. It all began when the beautiful Mead hall was stood up by the king Hrothgar to comfort his warriors and people where they can enjoy their kinship. Grendel who resided near the swap from the mead hall was agitated by the cheerful sound …show more content…

He slaughtered those people without any remorse. The poem clearly tells the reader about the morbid nature of Grendel who has never shown contrite for his killings, “Grendel / stuck again with more gruesome murders. / Malignant by nature, he never showed remorse” (135-137). If Grendel were to know about having supposedly been “born evil”, his resentment and despair towards humans would increase by folds as he already hates humans so much. Lines 87 – 93 conveys Grendel’s distress when he sees the light and hears the merriment at Heorot, “It harrowed him, / to hear the din of the loud banquet, / every day in the hall, the harp being struck, / and the clear song of a skilled poet telling with mastery of man’s beginnings, / how the Almighty had made the earth, / a gleaming plain girdled with waters;” As an outlet for his intense distress, Grendel could have pulled pranks and create troubles for the people which could have turned into a playful thing for him. The problem is Grendel is naturally malevolent, therefore he might not have found any better approach to deal with the humans in mead celebration other than slaughtering

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