Hrothgar's People example essay topic
A man prospers by good deeds in any nation. Shield died at his fated hour, went to God still strong. His people carried him to the sea, which was his last request. In the harbor stood a well-built ship, icy but ready for the sea. They laid Shield there, propped him against the mast surrounded by gold and treasure from distant lands. I've never heard of a more beautiful ship, filled with shields, swords, and coats of mail, gifts to him for his long trip.
No doubt he had a little more than he did as a child when he was sent out, a naked orphan in an empty boat. Now he had a golden banner high over his head, was, sadly by a rich people, given to the sea. The wisest alive can't tell where a death ship goes. Grain ruled the Danes long time after his father's death, and to him was born the great Healfdene, fierce in battle, who ruled until he was old.
Healfdene had four children -- Heorogar, Hrothgar, H alga the Good, and a daughter who marriedOnela, King of the Swedes. Hrothgar Becomes King of the Danes After Hrothgar became king he won many battles: his friends and family willingly obeyed him; his childhood friends became famous soldiers. So Hrothgar decided he would build a mead-hall, the greatest the world had ever seen, or even imagined. There he would share out to young and old alike all that God gave him (except for public lands and men's lives). I have heard that orders went out far and wide; tribes throughout the world set to work on that building. And it was built, the world's greatest mead-hall.
And that great man called the building 'He rot,' the hart. After it was built, Hrothgar did what he said he would: handed out gold and treasure at huge feasts. That hall was high-towered, tall and wide-gabled (though destruction awaited, fire and swords of family trouble; and outside in the night waited a tortured spirit of hell). The words of the poet, the sounds of the harp, the joy of people echoed. The poet told how the world came to be, how God made the earth and the water surrounding, how He set the sun and the moon as lights for people and adorned the earth with limbs and leaves for everyone. Hrothgar's people lived in joy, happy until that wanderer of the wasteland, Grendel the demon, possessor of the moors, began his crimes.
He was of a race of monsters exiled from mankind by God -- He was of the race of Cain, that man punished for murdering his brother. From that family comes all evil beings -- monsters, elves, zombies. Also the giants who fought with God and got repaid with the flood.