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Grendel begins raiding Hrthgar's court and killing his men. Beowulf is summoned and wrenches off the monster's arm. Beowulf fights Grendel's mother, whom he slays with a magical sword he finds as they struggle in a mysterious hall beneath the ocean. Beowulf is killed years later by a dragon. |
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Dream of the Rood, Cynewulf |
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A poem about the Crucifixion as told by the Cross itself. Because of its tenderness, it is considered the finest of the Old English religious poems. |
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The Wycliffe Bible, John Wycliffe |
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The first translation of the Bible into English so that persons could interpret the Scriptures individually. |
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A dream allegory lamenting the death of the poet's two-year old and envisioning Paradise. |
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Purity (Cleanness), the Pearl Poet |
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Promotes purity by paraphrasing Biblical stories of the Flood, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and the fall of Belshazzer. |
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Illustrates the evils of impatience by retelling the story of Jonah in a humorous way. |
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Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, the Pearl Poet (possibly) |
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Divided into four fitts (parts), this allegory intends to teach the virtues of chivalry and knighthood. Gawain's behavior is above reproach. |
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Piers Plowman, Willam Langland |
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A dream-vision. It provides vivid scenes of medieval life that depict famine, gluttony, and the greed of unscrupulous landlords. |
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Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer |
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Thirty travelers telling two stories each way on their pilgrimage to Canterbury and return to London. It is unfinished. |
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Morte Darthur, Sir Thomas Malory |
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A gathering of the main body of legends about King Arthur into one narrative. |
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