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Ælfric's
(Un)Changing Style: Continuity of Patterns from the Catholic Homilies
to the Lives of Saints
by Gabriella
Corona, University of York
Stylistically, most of Ælfric's Lives of Saints epitomize
a sort of golden-mean, with their neatly balanced end-stopped lines of
variable syllable-number. In his introduction to the Supplementary
Homilies, John C. Pope points out that "[s]everal of Ælfric's
half-lines fit exactly the requirements of Sievers types A, B, and C,
and the line fleah to his foton. friðes biddende is a perfect
combination of types A and D, alliteration and all." Pope further comments
that later developments of the patterns found in this line show experimentation
with vocabulary and syntax but that in so doing Ælfric disturbs
the metrical balance. Indeed, experiments on alliterative patterns involving
the verb biddan and f-alliteration appear in the First
Series of Catholic Homilies and regularly throughout Ælfric's
work. Thus in the Life of Thomas the Apostle lexical and syntactical changes
leave the alliterative patterns intact, but create some space for variation
(LS 36, l. 337): "[h]eo feol þa to his fotum fulluhtes biddende"
(she fell at his feet begging for baptism). This line is characterized
by double alliteration on f and a rhythm which is reminiscent of, but
not identical to, that of the poetry. |
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