<p dir="ltr">This paper examines the dragon imagery in the Old English epic poem “Beowulf” and George R.R. Martin’s “Fire and Blood,” a fictional history from his “A Song of Ice and Fire” series. Through comparative analysis, this study explores how these works from profoundly different historical periods conceptualize dragons as literary symbols, narrative devices, and cultural reflections. The Beowulf dragon embodies the themes of fate, death, and societal collapse within a medieval Germanic worldview, serving as a symbolic adversary in a moral universe. In contrast, Martin’s dragons function as biologically-grounded creatures integrated into a complex political ecosystem, reflecting contemporary fantasy’s tendency toward world-building and psychological realism. Despite their differences, both representations utilize the dragon motif to explore themes of power, legacy, and the inevitable decline of empires. This comparison reveals the evolution of dragon lore in Western literature and the enduring power of these creatures to illuminate human struggles against time and mortality.</p>