Read the passage:
Now and then some trivial argument would break out, and one of them would kill another one, and all the
others would detach themselves from the killer as neatly as blood clotting,
and they'd consider the case
and
they'd either excuse him, for some reason, or else send him out
to the forest to live by stealing from their
outlying pens like a wounded fox. At times I would try to befriend the exile, at
other times I would try to
ignore
him, but they were treacherous. In the end, I had to eat them.
From Grendel's perspective, the people he observes are (choose two of following adjectives):
-Grendel,
John Gardner
friendly
honorable
violent
_ caring
amusing
untrustworthy