it symoblized sorrow and darkness because he killed so many people in .the hall
Grendel hated Herot because it was a place of joy, celebration, and community, which contrasted with his feelings of isolation and rejection. The sounds of laughter and music coming from Herot angered him, as he felt excluded and tormented by the happiness inside the hall.
He's a demon who hates laughter and happyness
He hung Grendel's arm, claw, and shoulder.
Grendel first goes to Herot at night, under the cover of darkness, to terrorize and attack the warriors in their mead hall. This happens in the epic poem "Beowulf" when Grendel starts his reign of terror at Herot.
Grendel hates Herot because it is a symbol of human joy, celebration, and community - everything he is excluded from. The noise and revelry of the mead hall highlights his own loneliness and isolation as a monstrous outcast. Grendel's jealousy and anger towards the humans grows as he sees them enjoying the very things he can never have.
Grendel attacks Herot because he is envious of the happiness and joy he sees in the warriors' hall. As a being cursed to live a life of isolation and misery, Grendel is filled with resentment towards the humans who celebrate and enjoy their lives in Herot. His attacks are driven by this deep sense of anger and alienation.
Grendel attacks the mead hall at Herot due to feelings of isolation, jealousy, and a sense of being excluded from human society. He is a descendant of Cain, cursed by God and lives a lonely existence away from human contact, leading to his violent outbursts.
They're hated?
He is attacked by Beowulf and Beowulf tears his arm off and injures him very badly. Grendel then escapes, but is so badly wounded that he dies, and Beowulf is seen as a hero. Later, Grendels mother goes to avenge Grendel's death.
He wasn't hated so much as he was misunderstood. They didn't hate him, they just found him depressing and morbid.
Grendel attacked Heorot for 12 winters before Beowulf arrived to confront him.
This question is not relevant in the least because Hrothgar and Grendel are both characters in the epic poemBeowulf:Hrothgar is the king of the Danes (Scandinavia, or Denmark). The story mainly takes place in the Scandinavian mead hall named "Herot."Grendel is the devilish monster that represents all that is evil. Grendel is the monster who encountered the sleeping warriors/drunkards of Herot in the middle of the night and ripped them to pieces only to then immediately consume them one by one and drink their blood. Beowulf killed Grendel with his bare hands because Grendel enchanted all the swordsmen's weapons, so they appeared blunt and could not penetrate his skin (after Beowulf's victory, he ripped off Grendel's arm and hanged it). And after Beowulf kills Grendel's vengeful mother in the moor, he beheads Grendel's dead body and brings it to the men of Herot.So, to conclude this answer, you obviously have no grasp of the concept or any of this historical story's premise. In no place does it say anything about an amount of sons Hrothgar has.It would be easier if you read it.
because he hated them so much
its because of war
Beowulf cut off Grendel's head to kill him and end the monster's threat to the Danes' kingdom. Grendel had been terrorizing the kingdom for years, killing and causing chaos, and Beowulf wanted to finally defeat him in battle. Cutting off Grendel's head was a way to ensure he wouldn't come back to harm anyone again.