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Old
English Meter and Oral Tradition:
Three Issues Bearing on Poetic Chronology
by R.D. Fulk,
Indiana University
The study of metrical means of gauging the relative antiquity of Old English
poems is founded on the assumption that language change should be reflected
in scansional differences among poems of various ages. The relation between
meter and chronology, however, is not an unmediated one: metrical conservatism
does not unambiguously indicate archaic composition, because in respect
to nearly every chronological variable that has been proposed, the influence
of oral tradition must be taken into account. It is this remarkably conservative
tradition that insulates the language of verse from the immediate effects
of change, allowing archaic language forms to persist in poetry long after
they have been lost from everyday speech, disappearing slowly as the tradition
evolves. The implications of this mediating role of poetic tradition must
continually be kept in mind in connection with chronological studies.
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