(or Junius) manuscript, an angel is shown guarding the gates of paradise.
Form and style The most distinguishing feature of Old English poetry is its
alliterative verse style. The Anglo-Latin verse tradition in early medieval England was accompanied by discourses on Latin
prosody, which were 'rules' or guidance for writers. The rules of Old English verse are understood only through modern analysis of the extant texts. The first widely accepted theory was constructed by
Eduard Sievers (1893), who distinguished five distinct
alliterative patterns. His system of
alliterative verse is based on
accent, alliteration, the quantity of vowels, and patterns of
syllabic accentuation. It consists of five permutations on a base verse scheme; any one of the five types can be used in any verse. The system was inherited from and exists in one form or another in all of the older
Germanic languages. Alternative theories have been proposed, such as the theory of
John C. Pope (1942), which uses musical notation to track the verse patterns.
J. R. R. Tolkien describes and illustrates many of the features of Old English poetry in his 1940 essay "
On Translating Beowulf.
Alliteration and assonance Old English poetry alliterates, meaning that a sound is repeated throughout a line, generally taken from the first syllable of the first stressed word in a line. Alliteration is based on sound rather than letter. For instance, in the first line of
The Wanderer, "Oft him anhaga are gebideð", "Often the loner finds grace for himself", the 'o' of 'oft', and 'a' in 'anhaga' and 'are' all alliterate. Prefixes such as 'ge-' are always unstressed and therefore not part of alliterative patterns, while consonant clusters, for example 'st' or 'sp', may only alliterate with themselves, not any word beginning with 's'.
Caesura Old English poetry, like other Old Germanic alliterative verse, is also commonly marked by the
caesura or pause. In addition to setting pace for the line, the caesura also grouped each line into two
hemistichs.
Metaphor Kennings are a key feature of Old English poetry. A kenning is an often formulaic metaphorical phrase that describes one thing in terms of another: for instance, in
Beowulf, the sea is called
hronrad, or "whale road" (Seamus Heaney's translation). Old English poetry is marked by the comparative rarity of
similes.
Beowulf contains at best five similes, and these are of the short variety. The hypotheses of
Milman Parry and
Albert Lord on the
Homeric Question came to be applied (by Parry and Lord, but also by
Francis Magoun) to verse written in
Old English. That is, the theory proposes that certain features of at least some of the poetry may be explained by positing
oral-formulaic composition. While Old English
epic poetry may bear some resemblance to
Ancient Greek epics such as the
Iliad and
Odyssey, the question of if and how Anglo-Saxon poetry was passed down through an
oral tradition remains a subject of debate, and the question for any particular poem unlikely to be answered with perfect certainty. Parry and Lord had already demonstrated the density of metrical formulas in
Ancient Greek, and observed the same feature in the Old English alliterative line:
Hroþgar maþelode helm Scildinga ("Hrothgar spoke, protector of the Scildings")
Beoƿulf maþelode bearn Ecgþeoƿes ("Beowulf spoke, son of Ecgtheow") In addition to verbal formulas, many themes have been shown to appear among the various works of Anglo-Saxon literature. The theory suggests a reason for this: the poetry was composed of formulae and themes from a stock common to the poetic profession, as well as literary passages composed by individual artists in a more modern sense.
Larry Benson introduced the concept of "written-formulaic" to describe the status of some Anglo-Saxon poetry which, while demonstrably written, contains evidence of oral influences, including heavy reliance on formulas and themes. Frequent oral-formulaic themes in Old English poetry include "Beasts of Battle" and the "Cliff of Death". The former, for example, is characterised by the mention of ravens, eagles, and wolves preceding particularly violent depictions of battle. Among the most thoroughly documented themes is "The Hero on the Beach".
D. K. Crowne first proposed this theme, defined by four characteristics: • A Hero on the Beach. • Accompanying "Retainers". • A Flashing Light. • The Completion or Initiation of a Journey. One example Crowne cites in his article is that which concludes Beowulf's fight with the monsters during his swimming match with Breca: Crowne drew on examples of the theme's appearance in twelve Old English texts, including one occurrence in
Beowulf. It was also observed in other works of Germanic origin, Middle English poetry, and even an Icelandic prose saga. John Richardson held that the schema was so general as to apply to virtually any character at some point in the narrative, and thought it an instance of the "threshold" feature of
Joseph Campbell's
Hero's Journey monomyth. J.A. Dane, in an article (characterised by Foley as "polemics without rigour") claimed that the appearance of the theme in
Ancient Greek poetry, a tradition without known connection to the Germanic, invalidated the notion of "an autonomous theme in the baggage of an oral poet." Foley's response was that Dane misunderstood the nature of oral tradition, and that in fact the appearance of the theme in other cultures showed that it was a traditional form.
Poets Most Old English poems are recorded without authors, and very few names are known with any certainty; the primary three are
Cædmon,
Aldhelm, and
Cynewulf.
Bede Bede is often thought to be the poet of a five-line poem entitled ''Bede's Death Song'', on account of its appearance in a letter on his death by
Cuthbert. This poem exists in a Northumbrian and later version.
Cædmon Cædmon is considered the first Old English poet whose work still survives. He is a legendary figure, as described in
Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People. According to Bede, Cædmon was first an illiterate herdsman. Following a vision of a messenger from God, Cædmon received the gift of poetry, and then lived as a monk under
Abbess Hild at the abbey of
Whitby in
Northumbria in the 7th century. Bede's
History claims to reproduce Cædmon's first poem, comprising nine lines. Referred to as ''
Cædmon's Hymn'', the poem is extant in Northumbrian, West-Saxon and Latin versions that appear in 19 surviving manuscripts:
Cynewulf Cynewulf has proven to be a difficult figure to identify, but recent research suggests he was an Anglian poet from the early part of the 9th century. Four poems are attributed to him, signed with a runic acrostic at the end of each poem; these are
The Fates of the Apostles and
Elene (both found in the Vercelli Book), and
Christ II and
Juliana (both found in the Exeter Book). Although
William of Malmesbury claims that
Aldhelm, bishop of
Sherborne (d. 709), performed
secular songs while accompanied by a harp, none of these Old English poems survives. Paul G. Remely has recently proposed that the Old English
Exodus may have been the work of Aldhelm, or someone closely associated with him.
Alfred Alfred is said to be the author of some of the metrical prefaces to the Old English translations of Gregory's
Pastoral Care and Boethius's
Consolation of Philosophy. Alfred is also thought to be the author of 50 metrical psalms, but whether the poems were written by him, under his direction or patronage, or as a general part in his reform efforts is unknown.
Poetic genres and themes Heroic poetry '',
British Library Cotton Vitellius A.XV The Old English poetry which has received the most attention deals with what has been termed the Germanic heroic past. Scholars suggest that Old English heroic poetry was handed down orally from generation to generation. As Christianity began to appear, re-tellers often recast the tales of Christianity into the older heroic stories. The longest at 3,182 lines, and the most important, is
Beowulf, which appears in the damaged
Nowell Codex. Beowulf relates the exploits of the hero Beowulf, King of the
Weder-Geats or
Angles, around the middle of the 5th century. The author is unknown, and no mention of Britain occurs. Scholars are divided over the date of the present text, with hypotheses ranging from the 8th to the 11th centuries. It has achieved much acclaim as well as sustained academic and artistic interest. Other heroic poems besides
Beowulf exist. Two have survived in fragments:
The Fight at Finnsburh, controversially interpreted by many to be a retelling of one of the battle scenes in
Beowulf, and
Waldere, a version of the events of the life of
Walter of Aquitaine. Two other poems mention heroic figures:
Widsith is believed to be very old in parts, dating back to events in the 4th century concerning
Eormanric and the
Goths, and contains a catalogue of names and places associated with valiant deeds.
Deor is a lyric, in the style of
Consolation of Philosophy, applying examples of famous heroes, including
Weland and Eormanric, to the narrator's own case. The
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle contains various heroic poems inserted throughout. The earliest from 937 is called
The Battle of Brunanburh, which celebrates the victory of King
Athelstan over the Scots and Norse. There are five shorter poems: capture of the
Five Boroughs (942); coronation of
King Edgar (973); death of King Edgar (975); death of Alfred the son of King Æthelred (1036); and death of King
Edward the Confessor (1065). The 325 line poem
The Battle of Maldon celebrates
Earl Byrhtnoth and his men who fell in battle against the
Vikings in 991. It is considered one of the finest, but both the beginning and end are missing and the only manuscript was destroyed in a fire in 1731. A well-known speech is near the end of the poem:
Elegiac poetry Related to the heroic tales are a number of short poems from the
Exeter Book which have come to be described as "elegies" or "wisdom poetry". They are lyrical and
Boethian in their description of the up and down fortunes of life. Gloomy in mood is
The Ruin, which tells of the decay of a once glorious city of
Roman Britain (cities in Britain fell into decline after the Romans departed in the early 5th century, as the early Celtic Britons continued to live their rural life), and
The Wanderer, in which an older man talks about an attack that happened in his youth, when his close friends and kin were all killed; memories of the slaughter have remained with him all his life. He questions the wisdom of the impetuous decision to engage a possibly superior fighting force: the wise man engages in warfare to
preserve civil society, and must not rush into battle but should seek out allies when the odds may be against him. This poet finds little glory in bravery for bravery's sake.
The Seafarer is the story of a sombre exile from home on the sea, from which the only hope of redemption is the joy of heaven. Other wisdom poems include
Wulf and Eadwacer, ''
The Wife's Lament, and The Husband's Message. Alfred the Great wrote a wisdom poem over the course of his reign based loosely on the neoplatonic philosophy of Boethius called the Lays of Boethius''.
Translations of classical and Latin poetry Several Old English poems are adaptations of
late classical philosophical texts. The longest is a 10th-century translation of Boethius'
Consolation of Philosophy contained in the
Cotton manuscript Otho A.vi. Another is
The Phoenix in the Exeter Book, an
allegorisation of the
De ave phoenice by
Lactantius. Other short poems derive from the Latin
bestiary tradition. These include
The Panther,
The Whale and
The Partridge.
Riddles The most famous Old English
riddles are found in the
Exeter Book. They are part of a wider Anglo-Saxon literary tradition of riddling, which includes riddles written in Latin. Riddles are both comical and obscene. The riddles of the Exeter Book are unnumbered and without titles in the manuscript. For this reason, scholars propose different interpretations of how many riddles there are, with some agreeing 94 riddles, and others proposing closer to 100 riddles in the book. Most scholars believe that the Exeter Book was compiled by a single scribe; however, the works were almost certainly originally composed by poets. A riddle in Old English, written using
runic script, features on the
Franks Casket. One possible solution for the riddle is 'whale', evoking the whale-bone from which the casket made.
Saints' lives in verse The Vercelli Book and Exeter Book contain four long narrative poems of saints' lives, or
hagiographies. In Vercelli are
Andreas and
Elene and in Exeter are
Guthlac and
Juliana.
Andreas is 1,722 lines long and is the closest of the surviving Old English poems to
Beowulf in style and tone. It is the story of
Saint Andrew and his journey to rescue
Saint Matthew from the
Mermedonians.
Elene is the story of
Saint Helena (mother of
Constantine) and her discovery of the
True Cross. The cult of the True Cross was popular in Anglo-Saxon England and this poem was instrumental in promoting it.
Guthlac consists of two poems about the English 7th century
Saint Guthlac.
Juliana describes the life of Saint Juliana, including a discussion with the devil during her imprisonment.
Poetic Biblical paraphrases There are a number of partial
Old English Bible translations and paraphrases surviving. The
Junius manuscript contains three paraphrases of Old Testament texts. These were re-wordings of Biblical passages in Old English, not exact translations, but paraphrasing, sometimes into beautiful poetry in its own right. The first and longest is of
Genesis (originally presented as one work in the Junius manuscript but now thought to consist of two separate poems,
A and
B), the second is of
Exodus and the third is
Daniel. Contained in Daniel are two lyrics,
Song of the Three Children and
Song of Azarias, the latter also appearing in the Exeter Book after
Guthlac. The fourth and last poem,
Christ and Satan, which is contained in the second part of the Junius manuscript, does not paraphrase any particular biblical book, but retells a number of episodes from both the Old and New Testament. The Nowell Codex contains a Biblical poetic paraphrase, which appears right after
Beowulf, called
Judith, a retelling of the story of
Judith. This is not to be confused with
Ælfric's homily
Judith, which retells the same Biblical story in alliterative prose. Old English translations of
Psalms 51–150 have been preserved, following a prose version of the first 50 Psalms. There are verse translations of the
Gloria in Excelsis, the
Lord's Prayer, and the
Apostles' Creed, as well as some
hymns and
proverbs.
Original Christian poems In addition to Biblical paraphrases are a number of original religious poems, mostly lyrical (non-narrative). The Exeter Book contains a series of poems entitled
Christ, sectioned into
Christ I,
Christ II and
Christ III. Considered one of the most beautiful of all Old English poems is
Dream of the Rood, contained in the Vercelli Book. The presence of a portion of the poem (in Northumbrian dialect) carved in runes on an
8th century stone cross found in
Ruthwell,
Dumfriesshire, verifies the age of at least this portion of the poem. The Dream of the Rood is a
dream vision in which the
personified cross tells the story of the crucifixion. Christ appears as a young hero-king, confident of victory, while the cross itself feels all the physical pain of the crucifixion, as well as the pain of being forced to kill the young lord. The dreamer resolves to trust in the cross, and the dream ends with a vision of heaven. There are a number of religious debate poems. The longest is
Christ and Satan in the Junius manuscript, which deals with the conflict between Christ and Satan during the forty days in the desert. Another debate poem is
Solomon and Saturn, surviving in a number of textual fragments,
Saturn is portrayed as a magician debating with the wise king
Solomon.
Other poems Other poetic forms exist in Old English including short verses,
gnomes, and
mnemonic poems for remembering long lists of names. There are short verses found in the margins of manuscripts which offer practical advice, such as remedies against the loss of cattle or how to deal with a delayed birth, often grouped as
charms. The longest is called
Nine Herbs Charm and is probably of
pagan origin. Other similar short verses, or charms, include
For a Swarm of Bees,
Against a Dwarf,
Against a Stabbing Pain, and
Against a Wen. There are a group of mnemonic poems designed to help memorise lists and sequences of names and to keep objects in order. These poems are named
Menologium,
The Fates of the Apostles,
The Rune Poem,
The Seasons for Fasting, and the
Instructions for Christians. == Prose ==