Constantine II of Scotland

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    Heads turn as the screams are heard. The war was painful for both sides as they clashed. The Battle of Brunanburh was a historical battle that happened in the 8th century that united Britain and defined the British, Scottish, and Welsh borders. In 937 AD, Vikings from Scandinavia invaded Anglo-Saxon territory fearing that if they didn't, the Anglo-Saxons, ruled by Athelstan, would invade and conquer the Vikings. The Vikings lost but countless lives were lost. The Battle of Brunanburh is one of the bloodiest battles in Anglo-Saxon history and it is the topic of both the Anglo-Saxon epic translated by Burton Raffel, “The Battle of Brunanburh,” and the modern lyric by Jorge Luis Borges, “Brunanburh A.D., 937.” Both poems describe the bloody battle scene but despite being about the same event, the two poems have differences. Though both poems are describing the same historical event, they have differing points of view, scopes, and tones that affect the meaning that the reader understands. Both poems have different points of view and they give the reader a different understanding of the Battle of Brunanburh. In Raffel’s epic, the point of view is third person as demonstrated through the multiple uses of “they.” Borges’ lyric, on the other hand, is written in first person(shown by the use of “I”), giving the reader the opportunity to comprehend the battle differently. The reader can see in the epic that the battle was a victory for the Anglo-Saxons due to the Vikings and Scottish…

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