evil, and useful tools, are shown throughout both stories. In both, the reader meets a central heroic figure who has the intelligence and athleticism that will aid him for the task of confronting different variables that are challenging his authority and the people in his charge, which would help the reader come up with the themes of heroism and the epic journey, as well as the theme of the constant battle between a good and an evil. Also, they both collected a magical weapon along their journey, Sir Gawain was given a “…green silk, with gold overwrought” by the host lady on his last day in the host’s castle, its powers were “if he bore it on his body… he could not be killed by any craft on earth” (Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 1833, 1852-1854). For Beowulf, he wasn’t really given his magical weapon, he took “a sword in [Grendel’s mother’s] armory, an ancient heirloom” that only he was able to hold and use because it was from “the days of the giants”, but it did the job and helped him complete the task of defeating Grendel’s mother (Beowulf 1558-1562). Beowulf and Sir Gawain are presented by their respective authors as ideal character types to describe a hero’s journey…