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Codex Exoniensis - The Exeter Book. A Collection of Anglo-Saxon Poetry

The Exeter Book (Codex Exoniensis). This book was presented to his Cathedral by Leofric, the first Bishop of Exeter, about the middle of the 11th century. It is preserved in the Cathedral Library at Exeter; the first leaves are missing, and the last leaves are injured; the handwriting of the MS belongs probably to the first half of the 11th century.

In the catalogue of Leofric’s donations to his cathedral, this volume is entered as 'one great English book on various subjects, composed in verse'.

The Exeter Book is the largest extant manuscript of Old English literature and containing approximately one sixth of the Old English poetry that survives.

The most striking characteristics of Anglo-Saxon Poetry are: inversion of phrase; redundance of metaphor; “parallelism,” or repetition in synonymous terms of the same act or idea. Both rhyme and alliteration are found in Anglo-Saxon Poetry, but rhyme is less generally introduced. The structure of the verse is trochaic; the line is divided into two halves by the Caesura, each half line having two stressed syllables, the, unstressed syllables varying in number; the half lines are associated by alliteration, one stressed syllable at least in each half line beginning with a similar consonant, or vowel. Usually the alliteration falls on the two stressed syllables in the first half line and the first stressed syllable in the second. (Summary by Marian Edwardes and Preface)

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To Jesus Christ (InTheDesert)
To the Virgin Mary (Stefan Von Blon)
On the Nativity (Devorah Allen)
On the same (Devorah Allen)
To the Trinity (Larry Wilson)
On the Nativity (Larry Wilson)
On the Nativity and Ascension (Agnes Robert Behr)
On the Ascension and the Harrowing of Hell (Devorah Allen)
Hymn of Praise and Thanksgiving (czandra)
Hymn in continuation of the foregoing (czandra)
Poems on the Day of Judgment, I-III. (Emma Charlotte)
On the Crucifixion (TR Love)
On the Day of Judgment, I-II. (czandra)
On the Crucifixion etc. (Larry Wilson)
Of Souls after Death etc., I-II. (Vinny Lerin)
Poem, Moral and Religious (Christine Bowden)
The Legend of St. Guthlac Part 1 (czandra)
The Legend of St. Guthlac Part 2 (czandra)
The Legend of St. Guthlac Part 3 (czandra)
The Story of Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah paraphrased (Belinda McReynolds)
The Phoenix Part 1 (Vinny Lerin)
The Phoenix Part 2 (Vinny Lerin)
The Legend of St. Juliana Part 1 (Adrian Stephens)
The Legend of St. Juliana Part 2 (Adrian Stephens)
The Wanderer (Ehsan Ahmed Mehedi)
On the Endowments and Pursuits of Men (czandra)
A Father’s Instruction to his Son (czandra)
The Seafarer (Ehsan Ahmed Mehedi)
Monitory Poem (czandra)
The Scop or Scald’s Tale (czandra)
On the Various Fortunes of Men (czandra)
Gnomic Verses, I-III. (earl)
On the Wonders of the Creation (czandra)
Riming Poem (Devorah Allen)
The Panther (czandra)
The Whale (czandra)
A Fragment (Christine Bowden)
A Departed Soul's Address to the Body, I. (Christine Bowden)
A Departed Soul's Address to the Body, II. (Christine Bowden)
Deor the Scald's Complaint (czandra)
Riddles Part 1 (Adrian Stephens)
Riddles Part 2 (Adrian Stephens)
Riddles Part 3 (Adrian Stephens)
The Exile's Complaint (Agnes Robert Behr)
On the Day of Judgment (InTheDesert)
A Supplication (czandra)
On the Resurrection and the Harrowing of Hell (Vinny Lerin)
Religious Poem (Agnes Robert Behr)
A Fragment (Rebecca Eden Walker)
The Lord’s Prayer paraphrased (Rebecca Eden Walker)
Maxims (czandra)
Riddles (czandra)
A Fragment (Agnes Robert Behr)
The Ruin (czandra)
Riddles (Hansen1021)
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