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Excessive Pride In Beowulf

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In Tolkien’s book The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, Isildur committed the sin of ofermod, or excessive pride. Instead of casting the ring into Orodruin’s fire (which is place the ring originated from) to destroy the ring, he kept the ring for himself as compensation (“man-price”) because he lost his family in the battle. He disregarded any council he received about destroying ring and the power it contained. Since Isildur did not heed any of the warnings, his pride eventually caused his demise, but that is not the only consequence it caused. By keeping the ring, Isildur put the whole Middle Kingdom in grave danger. Now, it is up to the group of travelers (Frodo, Sam, Merry, Pippin, Gandalf, Legolas, Gimli, Boromir, and Aragorn) to destroy the ring and clean up the mess Isildur created because he kept the ring as a “treasure”. …show more content…
Beowulf is known for defeating and killing the undefeatable monster known as Grendel who repeatedly attacked Hrothgar’s Herot. Not only did he kill an undefeatable monster, Beowulf completed the task singlehandedly. In his older age, Beowulf decides to participate in one last battle when a dragon terrorizes his kingdom. Instead of accepting help from his fellow thanes (or soldiers), he decides he will defeat the dragon on his own (like the time he defeated Grendel). Since Beowulf did not accept any help to kill the dragon, his desire for personal glory causes his

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