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Manipulations
of the Mind-as-Container Motif in Beowulf, Homiletic Fragment II,
and Alfred's Metrical Epilogue to the Pastoral Care
by BRITT
MIZE, Texas A&M University
Old English poetry regularly represents the mind as a metaphysical enclosure.
Figures of speech reflecting a similar model of mentality are frequent
in many languages, including Modern English (keep it in mind, he's
closed-minded, it never entered my mind), but Anglo-Saxon poets working
in the vernacular used the idea more consciously than we normally do now,
often formulating it in more concrete or developed metaphors and sometimes
exploiting its possibilities for considerable rhetorical effect. Any enclosure
has, in principle, two functional properties, the ability to keep things
in and the ability to keep things out, and both characterize the human
mind as it is imagined within the surviving canon of Old English
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