It
is hard for Wiglaf to watch his king die. The poet says that few
warriors could have held out and killed the dragon as Beowulf had done.
The warriors who had fled now return, ashamed. Wiglaf tries to revive
Beowulf with water, but he can do nothing because God has decreed that
Beowulf should die.
Wiglaf
rebukes the other warriors. He says that when Beowulf gave them gifts
and the best armor he had, he was just throwing weapons away, because
these men were of no use when a battle broke out. Wiglaf says that when
he went to help Beowulf, he felt new strength welling up in him. He then
predicts a grim future for the Geats. They will lose everything as soon
as princes from other lands learn what cowards they are.
A
messenger takes the news of Beowulf's death to the crowd of retainers
that are waiting at the top of the cliff. He also tells them that soon
there will be war with the Franks and the Frisians, who have been
enemies of the Geats since the Geat king Hygelac raided their lands.
Nor, says the messenger, with there be any peace with the Swedes, with
whom the Geats have a history of enmity. The Swede Ongentheow once
cornered a Geat force and threatened to annihilate it, until Hygelac
arrived with a relief force. In the ensuing battle, Ongentheow was
struck by Wulf, and then killed by Wulf's brother, Eofor. The Geats
were victorious. When they returned home, Hygelac gave Wulf and Eofor
gifts worth a fortune, as well as land.
The
messenger is convinced that the feud with the Swedes will continue when
the Swedes hear of Beowulf's death. He then says they must go to
prepare the royal funeral pyre, burning the body of Beowulf with much
treasure.
Going
to the scene of the battle, they find the dragon lying on the ground
facing Beowulf. The dragon is fifty feet long. The riches he guarded are
piled up beside him.
Wiglaf
ponders Beowulf's fate. Nothing had been able to stop Beowulf meeting
his destiny. The treasure has been retrieved, but the price paid is
high. Wiglaf then reports on Beowulf's last wishes, that a barrow be
built in a commanding position, as a memorial to him.
Wiglaf
says they are to look once more on the hoard of treasure and then make a
bier for Beowulf. He gives orders for the funeral pyre, and selects
seven warriors to go with him to collect the remainder of the treasure.
They throw the dragon over the cliff-top.
The
Geats build a funeral pyre for Beowulf and place his body in the middle
of it. The pyre is lit. A Geat woman sings out in grief for Beowulf. She
fears the disasters that may happen to the Geats now that Beowulf is
gone.
The
Geats construct a mound on a headland. In ten days the work is done.
They bury in the barrow much of the treasure they found. Twelve warriors
ride around the tomb, chanting dirges. They praise Beowulf's heroic
nature and his exploits. The Geats mourn for Beowulf, the most gracious
and kind of all the kings on earth, and the most eager to win fame.
Analysis
Beowulf
ends on an ominous note. There is a sense that an era has passed for the
Geats, and that the future is grim and uncertain: "So it is goodbye
now to all you know and love" (line 2884), says Wiglaf to the other
warriors.
The
end of the epic mirrors the beginning, in that it deals with the death
of a revered king and describes burial rites. There are some marked
differences, however. The body of Shield Sheafson was put out to sea in
a boat, while Beowulf was cremated and his ashes buried under a barrow.
Perhaps the Geats had different funeral rites than the Danes, or perhaps
customs had changed in the four generations that separated the two
heroes. But in death, the two kings did at least have one thing in
common: they were both dispatched with their treasure.
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