That couldn’t be more true for the character Grendel in the poem Beowulf, With all the sinful deeds he did to the danish people i’m sure even he couldn’t predict the outcome of the fateful meeting with Beowulf. As proven in the text Grendel was living out his fate. To begin,the poet introduces Grendel as this demonic evil monstrous creature. He also informs to the readers that Grendel is not only descended from a biblical evil-doer, but he also had an insatiable lush for malice. In the poem, Beowulf, it states “ Grendel came again, so set on murder that no other crime could ever be enough. No savage assault quench his lust for evil.” (Beowulf 411) He knew no love of God. So it became apparent for me upon this discovery that his days of tormenting the danish people could only end with the worst possible outcome. Furthermore, Grendel is projected to be this gruesome horrific beast. As stated in the text, “ the monster’s thoughts were as quick as his greed or his claws: he slipped through the door and there in silence snatched up thirty men, smashed them unknowing in their beds and ran out with their bodies, the blood dripping …show more content…
As a child most are taught right from wrong. In Grendel’s case he was taught the opposite. Many people can say he was acting out of free will for reasons such as his enjoyment of killing and looking at murder as a game. As a child your mind is like a sponge, sucking up everything around you and holding it in. Grendel learned evil as at young age, so the older he got he thought that bad was good and good was bad. As the poet states in the text “ As now warriors sang with pleasure, so now Hrothgar’s men lived happy in this hall, till that monster stirred,that demon, that fiend, Grendel.”(Beowulf 410). Grendel despised