There is no absolute truth. There are so many versions of ‘truth’,
that we can never really know which is completely correct. Same goes with
Grendel. He faces so many different versions of the truth.
There is his mother’s truth: Nothing matters but them. Why
should he bother with the outside world when they have everything they need
right there? I believe she wishes he would just spend time with her and stop
rushing to understand the humans, “…she would smash me to her fat, limp breast
as if to make me a part of her flesh again” (p. 17).
There is the shaper’s truth: The Danes are heroes, Hrothgar
is the greatest king, Grendel is the spawn of evil. “He would sing the glory of
Hrothgar’s line and gild his wisdom and stir up his men to more daring deeds,
for a price” (p.42). Yet at the same
time, Grendel knew that the shaper was telling lies. The Danes weren’t always
heroes and Grendel himself wasn’t as evil as he was being depicted by the
Shaper’s song.
There is the dragon’s truth: The world is so timeless, everyone
is barely a blink of an eye. Humans don’t know the truth either. All they have
is random facts that they try to piece together. God does not exist. The future
is predetermined (pg.64-68).
In the end, Grendel has to decide what he believes in. He needs
to piece everyone’s truths and create his own. Good luck on that one, Grendel!
I really like the way you present the "truths". The shaper, the dragon, and Grendels mother each have a view of things, but in the end it's up to Grendel to determine what is true and what is false.
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