Word(s) inserted in the margin or between the lines of a text to clarify or comment on it. (internal glossary)
Who is Bede? And what is he famous for?
Bede is a monk and lived in a monastery. He read, wrote, and sang religious prayers.
His main theme was on the spread of Christianity and the growth of the English Church
He wrote down the eclesiastical history of the english people
Caedmon's Hymn:
Be able to give a summary of the story of Caedmon.
Caedmon was at a feast and left due to his inability to sing, he went to the stable and ended up falling asleep
A man comes to him in his sleep and asks him to sing
He says no he cannot sing
He began singing in his sleep about praising God and all creation, when He woke up he remembered what he had sung and began adding verses
He goes to the monastery and Monas Hild
They deemed this a gift from the heavenly Lord
Enters in the monastery, they began giving him scriptures which he interpreted and turned into lyrical verses
14 days before his death he knew he would die
He asked for Eucharist from his peers and those in charity with himself in God
He dies in his sleep after receiving Eucharist and was aware of his death/foreknowledge
Caesura
Gap or break in the middle of a line of poetry
Kenning
poetic naming, poetic term, a two word poetic renaming, (Ex: "whales' home" for "the sea")
Alliteration
repeated initial consonant sounds in stressed syllables.
Contemptus Mundi
the idea of nothing in this world has value therefore latch onto heavenly things. (Ex: the wise man's ideas (mentality) in the Wanderer Line 73)
Ubi Sunt
rhetorical question that has the answer in it (Ex: "where are those things that have gone?")
Anglo-Saxon (Code/Elements)
- Heroic (deeds of bravery, loyalty is valued, vengeance is valued, desire for treasure)
- Elegiac (exile, lament for loss of worldly things, yet desire to transcend the world for heavenly things)
- Eulogy - a song of praise
- Elegy - things that have gone away
- *Exeter poems - Elegies (lyrical poems)
Admonish
warn or reprimand someone firmly, warn to avoid something
Sentinel
a soldier/guard whose job is to stand or keep watch
Fervent
having or displaying a passionate intensity
Rancor
long standing bitterness or resentment
Compassionate
feeling or showing sympathy and concern for others
Rapture
a feeling of intense pleasure or joy
Why is understanding the historical context, relating to a warrior's relationship to his lord, important to appreciating the setting and the speaker's character in "The Wanderer"? (Lord & knight relationship)
It is important to understand the relationship between knight and lord because of the role the lord plays in the knight's life. When they leave for battle or are exiled they lose the protection from their king and the resources they provide. Although at battle they still have support it isn't the same. A lord pays their knights and gives them not only money but their protection and shelter, because of this when a lord dies or they're at battle and this is lost it is detrimental.
How does understanding the role of women in Anglo-Saxon society help you understand the speaker's plight in "The Wife's Lament"?
Knowing that women during this time were mostly in charge of little other than bearing children and getting married, it shows through the poem how serious adultery and marriage was taken at this time. And helps understand more why she was exiled and so lonely.
Be able to use and point out terms in the poems themselves... Ex: if asked to circle a kenning term - circle the word/words in the poem.
The woman gets married
Her husbands family hates the wife and wants to exile her/get rid of her
Accuses her of adultery
Her husband is the lord/king
The king is away at battle, his kinsmen wrote to him that his wife is cheating and he is thinking of murder
"Till death do us part"-> nothing could break them apart except death
She gets banished (by her husband) to live under an oath tree, sticker bushes all around it to trap her in the cave
Banishes her so he doesn't have to execute her as law says
Illiterate and completely separated from her city and her husband's city, she feels alone and can only reflect on her thoughts and past life
In the last stanza she is mad, wishes her Lord is "sad-binded"
- "sad-binded": hopes he doesn't find love, is childless, kingdom ruined, is sad everyday, never finds love
- Civil war erupts over the lack of a strong heir
The Wanderer Summary
Weary of exile: scared of his loneliness and helplessness
Everyone is dead -> fled from fate
Wakes up and no one is there, his dreams were a false reality
Unlock his heart-> express his feelings
Locking his lips-> thinking what he wants but doesn't speak it
If you want recognition and go on conquests/battle you can't complain you have to keep your fear inside
His land and lord were raided and killed, he is one of the last survivors and has no protection or land
Searching for a new lord
Misses comradery, no one understands what he's been through
When he dreams he dreams of how life was, his lord, and family -> sorrow goes away
Wisdom comes with age, the more winters you've been through the more you've seen & experienced
A wise man think about his word before he says them, calm, doesn't boil over, is patient, don't be weak strong & steadforth
Comes across old ruins, rime covered(moss), an old battleground and ponders about what happens, EVERYTHING IN THE WORLD WILL DECAY/WONT BE AROUND FOREVER
Gray wolf-> Fenrir (Norse God)
Ubi Sunt-> rhetorical questions
Everyones dead
The Seafarer
Written by a captain or someone on the open sea about how lonely life is on the sea knowing your family and friends are all home without you
In the second half of the poem he finds God and speaks on religion