The
Parable of Caedmon's Hymn: Liturgical Invention and Literary Tradition
by Bruce
Holsinger , University of Virginia
To say that the story of Caedmon's Hymn represents the beginnings of English
poetry is to surround this story with the same penumbra of miracle with
which Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People shrouds
Caedmon himself. If Caedmon's Hymn does indeed represent "probably the
earliest extant Old English poem," as a recent edition of the Norton
Anthology of English Literature puts it, this designation nevertheless
invents this fragment of vernacular writing as the dawn of a tradition
of specifically literary making. The story of Caedmon's Hymn
can be understood as the "miracle that made literary history," in other
words, only if we understand Caedmon's Hymn primarily as literature:
as a putative point of origin for what we have come to know as English
literary writing.
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