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Abstract
The Dream of the Rood is celebrated as one of the most beautiful poems in the Old English corpus, mostly due to its blending of Christian and Germanic heroic traditions. In this dream vision, the cross is portrayed as Christ’s retainer. The result of this portrayal is one of duality: Christ as Germanic hero and Christian Savior, the cross as retainer and lord. These dualities function together to deliver a message of salvation to the Anglo-Saxon community. However, the way in which this spiritual message is brought to the Anglo-Saxon audience holds importance for the temporal, historical, and human-governed institution of the church.
Though many scholars acknowledge Christ’s portrayal in The Dream as that of a Germanic warrior, few have addressed the relevance of his silence and how Christ should be the one to deliver His message of conquest over sin and death, offering saving Grace. Instead of the cross which becomes the mode of salvation. It is the purpose of this thesis to evaluate the importance of Christ's silence and offer an alternative reading to The Dream of the Rood, which does not focus on the balance of the Germanic and Christian traditions but explores the possibility of the Christian church utilizing traditional framework to assert their importance as an intercessor on man’s behalf, especially in its role as vocal educator and interpreter of God’s message.