An Introduction to Old English Edinburgh University Press
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particular to Old English. It is usually referred to as anacrusis. It occurs far more often in type A half-lines than anywhere else, for reasons you should be able to work out yourself. There are several other variations which can occur, and of these perhaps the one that must be noted here can be found in the following half-line: héofona hláford There is a metrical requirement that every stressed syllable must be heavy (see the discussion in Chapter 3 for how this operates). This poses no problem in the case of hla¯ford, where the stressed syllable is indeed heavy. However, it is clear that the stressed syllable of heofona is light, for its diphthong is short and there is only a single following consonant. The metrical rule which saves such forms is called resolution. Resolution states that a light syllable occupies a stressed position if the immediately following syllable is also light. This is phonologically parallel to the morphological position where, as shown in Chapter 3, heavy-stemmed word ‘words’ is the equivalent of light-stemmed sc . ipu ‘ships’. If we now turn to the system of alliteration, there are several interest- ing features which in part reflect interestingly on the present-day VARIETY 121 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 121 language. Essentially, as the example above from The Battle of Maldon shows, alliteration links two or three stressed syllables in the long line in terms of identical initial consonants. This itself demonstrates that alliteration has a stylistic and functional meaning not dissimilar to rhyme in later poetry. There are still questions to be asked, however, notably, which syllables alliterate, how many syllables alliterate, and which sounds count as identical? Usually alliteration is based on the first stressed syllable of the second half-line and the initial consonant of that syllable must alliterate with the stronger of the two stressed syllables in the first half-line. I cannot here go into the vexed question of how we determine which syllable that might be, but roughly speaking nouns, adjectives, infinitives and par- ticiples are stronger than verbs and adverbs. The other stressed syllable of the first half-line may, however, participate in the alliteration also. The same, however, is not true of the second stressed syllable of the second half-line, which can only participate in alliteration in very special circumstances which are outside the scope of this work. There are exceptions to the above, but they are mostly a matter of literary style, and do not affect the fundamental linguistic points. I still have to address the question of which sounds count as identical. The essential position is that only one single consonant is involved in the alliteration. But that leaves three cases to consider. Firstly, it is normally the case that if there is an initial consonant cluster, then alliteration still remains associated with only the initial consonant, as can be seen in another line from the same poem as before: Download 1.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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