Record no. 154. How do I cite this entry?

Beowulf

  • Genre/Type Descriptor(s)
    Translation from Old English
    Anthology
     
    Language(s)
    English
  • Translator
    Crossley-Holland, Kevin
    Compiling Editor
    Crossley-Holland, Kevin
  • Contained in
    The Anglo-Saxon World, ed. Kevin Crossley Holland
    Location Details
    71-142
    City
    Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK
    Publisher
    Boydell Press
    Date
    2002
  • Relationships
    (Upstream) Reproduces in new context -> Beowulf, Crossley-Holland, Kevin (1982)
  • Identifying Numbers
    ISBN: 0851158854
     
    Descriptive Notes

    Book is xix [unpaginated] + 276 pp. + 8 pp. of color plates [with new pagination sequence]. A "new edition" of Crossley-Holland, The Anglo-Saxon World (1982), with greatly expanded introduction ([ix]-[xix]) and addition of color plates. The text of Beowulf, Crossley-Holland's full verse translation originally published in 1968, begins:

    Listen!
              The fame of Danish kings
    in days gone by, the daring feats
    worked by those heroes are well known to us.

    Scyld Scefing often deprived his enemies,
    many tribes of men, of their mead-benches.
    He terrified his foes; yet he, as a boy,
    had been found a waif; fate made amends for that.
    He prospered under heaven, won praise and honour
    until the men of every neighbouring tribe,
    across the whale's way, were obliged to obey him
    and pay him tribute. He was a noble king! (71)

    And ends:

    Then twelve brave warriors, sons of heroes,
    rode round the barrow, sorrowing;
    they mourned their king, chanted
    an elegy, spoke about that great man:
    they exalted his heroic life, lauded
    his daring deeds; it is fitting for a man,
    when his lord and friend must leave this life,
    to mouth words in his praise
    and to cherish his memory.
    Thus the Geats, his hearth-companions,
    grieved over the death of their lord;
    they said that of all kings on earth
    he was the kindest, the most gentle,
    the most just to his people, the most eager for fame. (142)

     
    Notes on Prior Documentation

    Not in MO2.

     
    Authentication

    BAM.

  • Last Updated
    03/22/2022