Halleck's New English Literature by Reuben Post Halleck
page 72 of 775 (09%)
page 72 of 775 (09%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
Where did the exploits celebrated in the poem take place? Where was
Heorot? What was the probably time of the completion of _Beowulf_? Describe the hero's three exploits. What analogy is there between the conflict of natural forces in the Norseland and Beowulf's fight with Grendel? What different attitude toward nature is manifest in modern poetry? What is the moral lesson of the poem? Show that its chief characteristics are typical of the Anglo-Saxon race. Caedmonian Cycle.--Some of the strongest passages may be found in P. & S., 30-45; C. & T., 104-120; Morley, II. 81-101; Brooke, 290-340. Read at the same time from Milton's _Paradise Lost_, Book I., lines 44-74, 169-184, 248-263, and _passim_. What evidence do we find in this cycle of the introduction of Christianity? Who takes the place of Grendel? What account of Caedmon does Bede give? What is the subject matter of this cycle? Cynewulf Cycle.--_The Poems of Cynewulf_, translated by C.W. Kennedy. Translations of parts of this cycle may be found in Whitman's _The Christ of Cynewulf_, and _The Exeter Book_, translated by Gollancz. Good selections are translated in P. & S., 46-55; C. & T., 79-103; and 132-142: Morley, II., 206-241; Brooke, 371-443. For selections from the _Phoenix_, see P & S, 54-65; C.& T., 143-163. What new qualities does this cycle show? What is the subject matter of its most important poems? What is especially noticeable about the_ Andreas and the Phoenix_? _General Characteristics of the Verse._--What is its usual form? What most striking passages (a) in Beowulf; (b) elsewhere, show the Saxon |
|