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- GRENDEL & FRANKENSTEIN
- AN ANALYSIS OF THE TWO "MONSTERS" AND THEIR SUPERIORITY TO MANKIND
-
-
- GRENDEL & FRANKENSTEIN
- AN ANALYSIS OF THE TWO "MONSTERS" AND THEIR SUPERIORITY TO MANKIND In
- the desert
- I saw a creature, naked, bestial,
- Who, squatting upon the ground,
- Held his heart in his hands,
- And ate of it.
-
- I said, "Is it good friend?"
- "It is bitter-bitter," he answered;
- "But I like it
- Because it is bitter
- And because it is my heart."
- -Stephen Crane
- This reflects how both Grendel and Frankenstein must have felt during
- their lonely lives. "Seeking friends, the fiends found enemies; seeking
- hope, they found hate"(Neilson back page). The monsters simply want to
- live as the rest of us live. But, in our prejudice of their kind, we
- banish them from our elite society. Who gave society the right to judge
- who is acceptable and who is not? A better question might be, who is
- going to stop them? The answer, no one. Therefore, society continues to
- alienate the undesirables of our community. Some of the greatest minds
- of all time have been socially unacceptable. Albert Einstein lived alone
- and rarely wore the same color socks. Van Gogh found comfort only in
- his art, and the woman who consistently denied his passion. Edgar Allen
- Poe was "different" to say the least. Just like these great men,
- Grendel and Frankenstein do not conform to the societal model. Also
- like these men, Grendel and Frankenstein are uniquely superior to the
- rest of
-
-
- mankind. Their superiority is seen through their guile to live in a
- society that ostracizes their kind, their true heroism in place of
- society's romantic view, and the ignorance on which society's opinion of
- them is formed.
- Grendel, though he needs to kill to do so, functions very well in his
- own sphere. Grendel survives in a hostile climate where he is hated and
- feared by all. He lives in a cave protected by firesnakes so as to
- physically, as well as spiritually, separate himself from the society
- that detests, yet admires, him. Grendel is "the brute existent by which
- [humankind] learns to define itself"(Gardner 73). Hrothgar's thanes
- continually try to extinguish Grendel's infernal rage, while he simply
- wishes to live in harmony with them.
- Like Grendel, Frankenstein also learns to live in a society that
- despises his kind. Frankenstein also must kill, but this is only in
- response to the people's abhorrence of him. Ironically, the very doctor
- who bore him now searches the globe seeking Frankenstein's destruction.
- Even the ever-loving paternal figure now turns away from this outcast
- from society. Frankenstein journeys to the far reaches of the world to
- escape from the societal ills that cause society to hate him. He
- ventures to the harshest, most desolate, most uninhabitable place known
- to man, the north pole. He lives in isolation, in the cold acceptance
- of the icy glaciers. Still, Dr. Frankenstein follows, pushing his
- creation to the edge of the world, hoping he would fall off, never to be
- seen or heard from again. Frankenstein flees from his father until the
- Doctor's death, where
-
-
- Frankenstein joins his father in the perpetual, silent acceptance of
- death.
- Frankenstein never makes an attempt to become one with society, yet he
- is finally accepted by the captain to whom he justifies his existence.
- Frankenstein tracks Dr. Frankenstein as to better explain to himself the
- nature of own being by understanding the life of his creator.
- "Unstoppable, [Frankenstein] travels to the ends of the earth to destroy
- [his] creator, by destroying everyone [Dr.] Frankenstein loved" (Shelley
- afterword). As the captain listens to Frankenstein's story, he begins
- to understand his plight. He accepts Frankenstein as a reluctant, yet
- devoted, servant to his master. Granted that Frankenstein does not
- "belong," he is accepted with admiration by the captain. The respect
- that Frankenstein has longed for is finally given to him as he announces
- his suicide in the name of his father, the late Dr. Frankenstein.
- On the other hand, Grendel makes numerous attempts to assimilate into
- society, but he is repeatedly turned back. Early in his life, Grendel
- dreams of associating with Hrothgar's great warriors. Nightly, Grendel
- goes down to the meadhall to listen to Hrothgar's stories and the
- thanes' heroism, but most of all, he comes to hear the Shaper. The
- Shaper's stories are Grendel's only education as they enlighten him to
- the history of the society that he yearns to join. "[The Shaper]
- changed the world, had torn up its past by its thick gnarled roots and
- had transmuted it, and they, who knew the truth, remembered it his way-
- and so did [Grendel]"(Gardner 43). Upon
-
-
- Grendel's first meeting with Hrothgar, the great hero tries to kill him
- by chopping him out of a tree. "The king (Hrothgar) snatches an ax from
- the man beside him and, without any warning, he hurls it at
- [Grendel]"(Gardner 27). After being attacked by those he so admires, he
- turns against them to wreak havoc on their civilization.
- The more that society alienates Grendel and Frankenstein, the more they
- come to realize the invalidity of "social heroism." As Grendel's
- oppressors see it, heroism consists of the protection of one's name, the
- greater glory of their line, and most of all, their armor collection.
- "Beowulf, so movingly compounded with self-vindication, looks to care
- for his own name and honour"(Morgan xxxi-xxxii). According to
- Frankenstein's time, a hero is someone who protects their lady's name,
- earns greater glory for themselves and their country, and has a large
- collection of prestigious degrees to hang on their walls. Social
- heroism is not a single event, it is properly defined as a
- "revolution." It is an on-going, ever-changing series of "heroic"
- events. This "revolution is not the substitution of immoral for moral,
- or of illegitimate violence for legitimate violence; it is simply the
- pitting of power against power, [hero against hero,] where the issue is
- freedom for the winners and enslavement of the rest"(Gardner 119). This
- revolution is built on intimidation by the powerful of society to
- oppress the undesirables. "Murder and mayhem are the life and soul of
- [the] revolution"(Gardner 118).
- This revolution is most evident in John Gardner's Grendel. In
- Hrothgar's meadhall, his thanes are discussing the heroic revolution
-
-
- with the Shaper. According to the Shaper, the kingdom, those in power,
- pretends to be protecting the values of all people. Supposedly, the
- revolution causes the kingdom to
- save the values of the community-regulate compromise- improve the
- quality of the commonwealth. In other words, protect the power of the
- people in power and repress the restà [It] rewards people who fit the
- System best. The King's immediate thanes, the thanes' top servants, and
- so on till you come to the people that don't fit in at all. No
- problem. Drive them to the darkest corners of the kingdom, starve
- them, arrest and execute a few, or put them out to war. That's how it
- works. (Gardner 118)
- In Grendel's time, violence is the common denominator in all
- righteousness. "The incitement to violence depends upon total
- transvaluation of the ordinary values. By a single stroke, the most
- criminal acts may be converted to heroic and meritorious deeds"(Gardner
- 117). Certainly the only difference between appalling acts of violence
- and heroic deeds is the matter of who commits them. What might be
- appropriate for a king would be unheard of by a peasant. This is
- obviously a social commentary that fits today as well, if not better,
- than it did then. The rich and powerful still succeed in oppressing the
- poor and helpless in every culture around the world. "If the Revolution
- [ever] comes to grief, it will be because [the powerful] have become
- alarmed at [their] own brutality"(Gardner 117). Then, as the rich
- descend, the poor will rise
-
-
- to power in order to complete the revolution. "The total ruin of
- institutions and [heroism] is [in itself] an act of creation"(Gardner
- 118). To break the circle would cause "evolution," forward progress,
- that would enhance the natural progress of mankind. But, according to
- Gardner, this will never happen because the powerful enjoy their present
- state of grace; and when they helpless rise up, they are immediately
- repressed in a "cry [of] common good"(Gardner 119).
- Though not as overt as Grendel, the concept of "revolution" is also
- displayed in Frankenstein. Frankenstein's society ostracizes its
- undesirables by chasing them to the darkest corners of the world in much
- the same way that Grendel's society does. Frankenstein is driven from
- his birthplace by his creator only to find that he must hide in shadowed
- allies to avoid social persecution. In the theme of revolution, the
- rich control what is acceptable, and to them, Frankenstein definitely
- does not fit the mold. Next, Frankenstein seeks asylum in the barn of a
- small farmer. The place where he finds refuge is a cold, dark corner
- symbolic of how society forces the non-elite from their spheres to
- places where they cannot be seen, nor heard, and therefore do not
- exist. After Frankenstein saves the starving family by harvesting their
- crops, they repay him by running him off their land. This incident
- repeats itself throughout Frankenstein's journeys. Finally,
- Frankenstein is forced into the cold wasteland of the Arctic circle. In
- this uninhabitable place there is no one to persecute him. Yet the
- doctor maliciously continues to follow Frankenstein, hoping to
- completely destroy his creation. When Dr.
-
-
- Frankenstein dies, his monster is the first to come to lay his body to
- rest and follow him into the afterlife.
- Frankenstein fits the idea of a true hero, rather than the romantic
- view of heroism shared by society. He is chivalrous, loyal, and true to
- himself. Frankenstein shows his chivalry by helping a family in need
- and still accepting their hatred of him. He acts to help others
- although he receives nothing in return. Frankenstein holds absolute
- loyalty to his creator. Dr. Frankenstein shuns his creation,
- Frankenstein, and devotes his life to killing the monster, yet
- Frankenstein is the first to show respect to his fallen master after his
- death. Frankenstein builds a funeral pyre to honor his master and
- creator who despised him during his life. Frankenstein's loyalty
- extends as far as the ritual suicide he commits while cremating the body
- of his creator. Most importantly, Frankenstein is true to himself.
- Society wishes that he would cease to exist, so their opinion is
- irrelevant to him. His creator shuns him, but Frankenstein learns to
- cope with his own emotions in order to support himself. Frankenstein
- relies solely on what he believes in, not in what society believes to be
- important. His actions are based upon his own assessment of situations,
- rather than what is socially acceptable.
- Grendel is also isolated from society, and his actions also classify
- him as a true hero. Like Frankenstein, Grendel has little outside
- influence and has to rely on his own emotions to make decisions.
- Grendel possesses bravery, yet he does not have the foolish pride of
- Beowulf. "The first virtue [of heroism] is bravery,
-
-
- but even more, it is blind courage"(Nicholson 47). Grendel is the
- epitome of "blind courage." For example, when the bull attacks Grendel,
- he simply calculates the bull's movements and fearlessly moves out of
- the way. Even when the bull rips through his leg, Grendel is not
- afraid. Grendel repeatedly charges into the meadhall and destroys its
- best warriors without a second thought. Grendel even has the courage to
- taunt Hrothgar's bravest thanes by throwing apples at them. Grendel
- "breaks up their wooden gods like kindling and topples their gods of
- stone"(Gardner 128). It is this type of "blind courage" that Grendel
- believes saves his life in battle. "Fate will often spare a man if his
- courage holds"(Gardner 162). Beowulf, on the other hand, is foolish in
- his approach to battle. He goes to fight an immortal opponent, the
- dragon, and is killed because of his pride. "His very valor, wisdom, and
- magnanimity, expended unstindtly, lead only to a hero's grave in a land
- soon to be conquered"(Brodeur 105). Grendel's "blind courage" is far
- superior to the "blind stupidity" of Beowulf.
- Just as society's heroes fight foolishly, their opinions are made by
- prejudice and reflect the ignorance of humankind. Both monsters are
- seen as the minions of evil, and even of Satan himself. "Grendel is
- placed in a Biblical lineage of evil reaching back to the first
- murder"(Hamilton 105). Even the author of the poem alludes to "the
- descent of the race of Grendel from Cain"(Donaldson 1688). Frankenstein
- is proposed to be of "accursed origin"(Milton 130). However, neither of
- the two can be properly defined as Satanic,
-
-
- especially on the information known to the rest of society. Continuing,
- this belief causes extended prejudice of the monsters even in our
- society today.
- Through the predetermined opinions of society, Grendel is seen as an
- evil come to destroy all of mankind. Grendel is a victim of society,
- he was not born inherently evil. "Woe to him who is compelled, through
- cruel persecution, to thrust his soul into the embrace of fire, to hope
- for no solace"(Kennedy 9). Society unduly restrains Grendel to heinous
- stereotypes that he does not fit. For example, another character more
- closely fits the description of Cain than Grendel. "The only one of the
- personages of the poem who is clearly said to be destined to suffer in
- hell is Unferth, who, in his responsibility for the death of his
- brothers, has committed the sin of Cain"(Brodeur 218). Clearly, it is
- not Grendel that should be condemned. He only tries to assimilate into
- society, but after being continually rejected he turns to violence in
- response to society's hatred of him.
- Similar to Grendel, Frankenstein is also pictured as satanic. Brooks
- concurs in saying that society "views [Frankenstein] to be a unique
- creation, like Adam 'united by no link to any other being in
- existence'(Milton 129), yet by his condition more resembling
- Satan"(210). "There are times when he scarcely seems to be of this
- earth"(Venables 59). Also like Grendel, Frankenstein was not born evil,
- he was forced into his way of life by the society that rejected him.
- After this rejection, Frankenstein "like the arch-fiend, bore a
-
-
- hell within him"(Shelley 136). To each man his own god, and to each man
- his own devil as well. Frankenstein, "like Coleridge's wedding guest,
- leaves 'a sadder and wiser man'"(Scott 201). He now better understands
- his existence and how society wrongfully rejects it. Frankenstein
- simply wants society to have the "knowledge that might enable [him] to
- make them overlook the deformity of [his] figure"(Shelley 114). "ManÃ
- how ignorant art thou in thy pride of wisdom!"(Shelley 201).
- Grendel's and Frankenstein's superiority to humankind is made obvious
- by their ability to live in a society that has ostracized them, the
- monsters' true heroism in place of humankind's romantic view, and the
- ignorance on which society's opinion of the monsters is based. "The
- monsters not only embody our fears of the way certain entities can
- artificially pervert nature in ourselves and our society, they also
- speak to us knowledgeably of nature and in a human voice, to tell us we
- need not be afraid [of them]"(Scott
- 201).