Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 2014 | Page 32

28 With this note, Oldham claims this Beowulf narrative as her own. Not only does she refer to it as “my narrative,” but she also justifies her decision to re-shape the narrative of the poem in order to emphasize what she considers to be the true central storyline of her Text of Beowulf. Like Gardner’s Grendel, The Raven Waits tells its story from the point of view of a character marginalized in the Old English poem. In this case, the novel’s perspective comes from King Hrothgar’s teenaged son Hretheric, a figure with whom the probable target audience of the book (adolescent boys) might be presumed to identify. Though this choice implies that Hrethric will be the hero of the story, the young prince is in fact no more than a close observer of actions performed by others. The real agency in the novel comes from the exiled Anglian scop who befriends Hrethric and becomes his constant companion. The scop’s name Angenga means “lone-goer,”'* and he meets Hrethric on the day of Beowulf s arrival at Heorot, shortly after the story begins. He calls himself a “scop, bard poet, versifier, word-weaver, spell-spinner, mythmaker, string-strummer—there are plenty of names” (Oldham 24) and arrives in the land of the Scyldings armed with stories, including tales of King Arthur, and Beowulf s watery race with Brecca and battle with the sea monsters. Called simply “the scop” by Raven's other characters, Angenga quickly grasps the significance of Beowulf s arrival. He also predicts the coming of Grendel’s mother, averts conflict between Hrothulf and Beowulf, and convinces Hrothgar to banish his Thule Unferth, all through the subtle execution of his storytelling technique. This posits the writer/storyteller in a particularly powerful position within this story. The scop not only uses his role as storyteller to interpret the novel’s action for the other characters, he is also a meta-narrator who mediates between the world of the novel and a modem British Young Adult audience. Though this might seem to align him with the Beowulf poet who tells a pagan story from a Christian perspective, we must keep in mind that the Beowulf poet does not play a direct role in the tale being told. Moreover, the Beowulf poet “controls his two perspectives simply by distinguishing between the natural wisdom possible to pagans and the revealed [Christian] knowledge he shares with” the Anglo-Saxon audience (Osbom TGF:SHSB 978). Unlike the Beowulf poet, Oldham’s scop judges that the pagan Scyldings are too primitive to accurately interpret their tragic situation. They need the scop’s intervention and advice, which comes from a Christian as well as a British perspective. Judging other civilizations from one’s own cultural perspective is not unexpected, but is problematic for an author trying to accurately depict the values of the Anglo-Saxon society.