English Literature - The Original Classic Edition. J H Long. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: J H Long
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Учебная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781486410057
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Again Beowulf goes forth to champion his people. As he approaches the dragon's cave, he has a presentiment that death lurks within:

       Sat on the headland there the warrior king; Farewell he said to hearth-companions true,

       The gold-friend of the Geats; his mind was sad, Death-ready, restless. And Wyrd was drawing nigh, Who now must meet and touch the aged man,

       To seek the treasure that his soul had saved

       And separate his body from his life. [10]

       There is a flash of illumination, like that which comes to a dying man, in which his mind runs back over his long life and sees something of profound meaning in the elemental sorrow moving side by side with magnificent courage. Then follows the fight with the firedrake, in which Beowulf, wrapped in fire and smoke, is helped by the heroism of Wiglaf, one of his companions. The dragon is slain, but the fire has entered Beowulf 's lungs and he knows that Wyrd is at hand. This is his thought, while Wiglaf removes his battered armor:

       "One deep regret I have: that to a son

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       I may not give the armor I have worn, To bear it after me. For fifty years

       I ruled these people well, and not a king

       Of those who dwell around me, dared oppress

       Or meet me with his hosts. At home I waited

       For the time that Wyrd controls. Mine own I kept, Nor quarrels sought, nor ever falsely swore.

       Now, wounded sore, I wait for joy to come." [11]

       He sends Wiglaf into the firedrake's cave, who finds it filled with rare treasures and, most wonderful of all, a golden banner from which light proceeds and illumines all the darkness. But Wiglaf cares little for the treasures; his mind is full of his dying chief. He fills his hands with costly ornaments and hurries to throw them at his hero's feet. The old man looks with sorrow at the gold, thanks the "Lord of all" that by death he has gained more riches for his people, and tells his faithful thane how his body shall be burned on the Whale ness, or headland:

       "My life is well paid for this hoard; and now

       Care for the people's needs. I may no more

       Be with them. Bid the warriors raise a barrow

       After the burning, on the ness by the sea,

       On Hronesness, which shall rise high and be For a remembrance to my people. Seafarers Who from afar over the mists of waters

       Drive foamy keels may call it Beowulf 's Mount

       Hereafter." Then the hero from his neck

       Put off a golden collar; to his thane,

       To the young warrior, gave it with his helm, Armlet and corslet; bade him use them well. "Thou art the last Waegmunding of our race, For fate has swept my kinsmen all away.

       Earls in their strength are to their Maker gone, And I must follow them."[12]

       Beowulf was still living when Wiglaf sent a messenger hurriedly to his people; when they came they found him dead, and the huge

       dragon dead on the sand beside him.

       Then the Goth's people reared a mighty pile With shields and armour hung, as he had asked, And in the midst the warriors laid their lord, Lamenting. Then the warriors on the mount Kindled a mighty bale fire; the smoke rose

       Black from the Swedish pine, the sound of flame Mingled with sound of weeping; ... while smoke Spread over heaven. Then upon the hill

       The people of the Weders wrought a mound, High, broad, and to be seen far out at sea.

       In ten days they had built and walled it in

       As the wise thought most worthy; placed in it Rings, jewels, other treasures from the hoard. They left the riches, golden joy of earls,

       In dust, for earth to hold; where yet it lies, Useless as ever. Then about the mound

       The warriors rode, and raised a mournful song For their dead king; exalted his brave deeds, Holding it fit men honour their liege lord, Praise him and love him when his soul is fled. Thus the [Geat's] people, sharers of his hearth,

       Mourned their chief 's fall, praised him, of kings, of men

       The mildest and the kindest, and to all

       His people gentlest, yearning for their praise. [13]

       One is tempted to linger over the details of the magnificent ending: the unselfish heroism of Beowulf, the great prototype of King

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       Alfred; the generous grief of his people, ignoring gold and jewels in the thought of the greater treasure they had lost; the memorial mound on the low cliff, which would cause every returning mariner to steer a straight course to harbor in the remembrance of his dead hero; and the pure poetry which marks every noble line. But the epic is great enough and simple enough to speak for itself. Search the literatures of the world, and you will find no other such picture of a brave man's death.

       History and Meaning of BeowulfConcerning the history of Beowulf a whole library has been written, and scholars still differ too radically for us to express a positive judgment. This much, however, is clear,--that there existed, at the time the poem was composed, various northern legends of Beowa, a half-divine hero, and the monster Grendel. The latter has been interpreted in various ways,-

       -sometimes as a bear, and again as the malaria of the marsh lands. For those interested in symbols the simplest interpretation of these myths is to regard Beowulf 's successive fights with the three dragons as the overcoming, first, of the overwhelming danger of the sea, which was beaten back by the dykes; second, the conquering of the sea itself, when men learned to sail upon it; and third, the conflict with the hostile forces of nature, which are overcome at last by man's indomitable will and perseverance.

       All this is purely mythical; but there are historical incidents to reckon with. About the year 520 a certain northern chief, called by the chronicler Chochilaicus (who is generally identified with the Hygelac of the epic), led a huge plundering expedition up the Rhine. Af-ter a succession of battles he was overcome by the Franks, but--and now we enter a legendary region once more--not until a gigantic nephew of Hygelac had performed heroic feats of valor, and had saved the remnants of the host by a marvelous feat of swimming. The majority of scholars now hold that these historical events and personages were celebrated in the epic; but some still assert that the events which gave a foundation for Beowulf occurred wholly on English soil, where the poem itself was undoubtedly written.

       Poetical FormThe rhythm of Beowulf and indeed of all our earliest poetry depended upon accent and alliteration; that is, the beginning of two or more words in the same line with the same sound or letter. The lines were made up of two short halves, separated by a pause. No rime was used; but a musical effect was produced by giving each half line two strongly accented syllables. Each full line, therefore, had four accents, three of which (i.e. two in the first half, and one in the second) usually began with the same sound or let-ter. The musical effect was heightened by the harp with which the gleeman accompanied his singing.. The poetical form will be seen clearly in the following selection from the wonderfully realistic description of the fens haunted by Grendel. It will need only one or two readings aloud to show that many of these strange-looking words are practically the same as those we still use, though many of the vowel sounds were pronounced differently by our ancestors.

       ... Hie dygel lond

       Warigeath, wulf-hleothu, windige naessas, Frecne fen-gelad, thaer fyrgen-stream

       Under naessa genipu nither gewiteth,

       Flod under foldan. Nis thaet feor heonon, Mil-gemearces, thaet se mere standeth, Ofer thaem hongiath hrinde bearwas

       ... They (a) darksome land Ward (inhabit), wolf cliffs, windy nesses, Frightful fen paths where mountain stream

       Under nesses' mists nether (downward) wanders, A flood under earth. It is not far hence,

       By mile measure, that the mere stands,

       Over which hang rimy groves.

       A PAGE FROM THE MANUSCRIPT OF BEOWULF