Beowulf And Other Olde English Poems
@arthurchappell (44941)
Preston, England
June 7, 2019 1:05pm CST
Translated/edited by Constance B. Hieatt. Bantham Classics 1967, revised 1983 edition.
I have several editions of Beowulf around, and this is probably the worst of them. It is a tired lethargic translation that strips the greatest early poetry in the English Language to the most basic and simplistic of prose. What shines through is the unshakeable quality of the story itself.
Beowulf’s battle with the dreadful monster Grendel, and later with its vengeful mother is captivating. The hero tries to relive his former glory when he is just too old to accomplish the task, and dies a noble death as his son helps to end the truly terrifying monsters once and for all. At least he dies knowing that the monsters have finally been vanquished.
Later the son manages to avoid making the same mistake when further danger threatens his people. The fragment ends with a spectacular battle and an approaching dragon, but how it would go for the heroes will never be known.
Beowulf's son knows that he is not as young and fit for engaging the enemy alone as once before, and so he is generally triumphant.
The story is gloriously violent, and the tone of the story is morbid and doom laden throughout. The claustrophobic atmosphere of the battle in the deep dark swamp water is thrilling despite the poor translation work. Of course, no one could hold his or her breath so long as Beowulf manages, but that is part of the myth itself.
This edition of one of the earliest and finest examples of English literature remains interesting for the author’s addition of an eclectic mix of bits from other stories and fragments of records from battles, legends and prayers, - that the translation is bad is highlighted even by the translator who includes side by side with some of his work, alternative, earlier and vastly superior translations by Ezra Pound and Alfred Lord Tennyson.
This edition is worth having around to flick through and also to remind you how it shouldn't be done. Hopefully this won't be most people's first introduction to Beowulf or the other wonderful works cited.
The CGI heavy film version of the myth starring Ray Winstone makes further travesty of the story, with Grendel's mother being replaced by a glamorous sorceress, played in voice and seduction skill by Angelique Jolie, and no regard for the literary ending to the story.
Arthur Chappell
5 people like this
5 responses
@arthurchappell (44941)
• Preston, England
9 Jun 19
@LadyDuck school often kills appreciation of literature sadly
1 person likes this
@arthurchappell (44941)
• Preston, England
10 Jun 19
@LadyDuck they go from teaching us how to read from telling us what to conlude about what we have read - the thought that you might have other interpretations is bad to them so they ruin the book trying to press for you to see it their way
1 person likes this
@LadyDuck (502573)
• Italy
10 Jun 19
@arthurchappell You are so right, many professors have a way to make everything look boring.
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@Torunn (8606)
• Norway
7 Jun 19
I know the story but haven't read the whole thing. It's on my list of things I plan to read once I get around to reading again.
I did see the CGI version with Angelina Jolie. It annoyed me, I don't remember why, but I found it very annoying. Wasn't there another film version too?
1 person likes this
@arthurchappell (44941)
• Preston, England
7 Jun 19
@Torunn there is a short animated version that is very good
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@Torunn (8606)
• Norway
7 Jun 19
@arthurchappell How many translations are there? And is there one that's better than the rest?
1 person likes this
@arthurchappell (44941)
• Preston, England
7 Jun 19
@Torunn Several including one by Tolkien - also look out for John Garner's novel Grendel which tells the story from the monster's point of view - it is great.
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@arthurchappell (44941)
• Preston, England
9 Jun 19
@Ronrybs I like the pot-boiler sci-fi too
1 person likes this
@Ronrybs (21497)
• London, England
10 Jun 19
@arthurchappell I am fully up to date on the Lost Fleet series. Not the greatest Sci Fi, but enjoyable
1 person likes this
@LindaOHio (222534)
• United States
8 Jun 19
I know the name but have never read anything about Beowulf.
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@DocAndersen (54399)
• United States
7 Jun 19
Our Twins Godfather recited Beowulf to them in the NICU at Good Samaritan Hospital in Cincinnati Ohio. I will never forget that!
1 person likes this
@arthurchappell (44941)
• Preston, England
9 Jun 19
@DocAndersen that would be an interesting reading







