The Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records: A Collective Edition. Vol. 2. The Vercelli Book

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In accordance with the plan of this collective edition of Anglo-Saxon poetry, as announced in the Preface to the first volume, containing the texts of the Junius Manuscript, the poetical parts of the Vercelli Book are here grouped together in a second volume. Although the original compilers of the Vercelli Book, as of the other extant Anglo-Saxon miscellanies, apparently had no very strict principles of similarity in mind in determining what should be included in their collection, nevertheless the Vercelli Book, like the Junius Manuscript, exhibits a certain degree of uniformity. For the poems of the Junius Manuscript are examples of versified Biblical narrative, whereas the poems of the Vercelli Book are legendary and homiletic in character. The two longest poems of the Vercelli Book are "Andreas" and "Elene", saints’ lives of less authenticity than the Scripture itself, and like the prose homilies and the other poetical pieces in the Vercelli Book, probably designed for occasional use to supplement and lighten the formal offices of the service. The grouping of these poems in a volume of their own, therefore, reflects something more than a mere accident of preservation within the limits of a single manuscript.

Author(s): George Philip Krapp (ed.)
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Year: 1932

Language: English
Pages: 246
City: New York

PREFACE
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
I. THE MANUSCRIPT
II. ORIGIN OF THE MANUSCRIPT
III. THE CONTENTS OF THE MANUSCRIPT
IV. LARGE CAPITALS IN THE MANUSCRIPT
V. SMALL CAPITALS IN THE MANUSCRIPT
VI. ABBREVIATIONS IN THE MANUSCRIPT
VII. PUNCTUATION AND ACCENT MARKS
Accents in the Poems
Punctuation and Accent-Marks in the Prose Texts
VIII. THE POEMS IN THE MANUSCRIPT
IX. Table I. CONTENTS OF THE FOLIOS OF THE MANUSCRIPT
X.Table II. SECTIONAL DIVISIONS IN THE POEMS
XI. Table III. SMALL CAPITALS
XII. Table IV
A. ACCENTS IN THE VERCELLI BOOK
B. ACCENTS IN THE JUNIUS MANUSCRIPT
BIBLIOGRAPHY
I. Manuscript and Reproductions
II. Complete Texts
III. Editions oe Separate Texts
IV. Partial Texts
V. Translations
VI. Critical Discussions
TEXTS
ANDREAS
FATES OF THE APOSTLES
SOUL AND BODY I
HOMILETIC FRAGMENT I
DREAM OF THE ROOD
NOTES
ABBREVIATIONS IN THE NOTES
NOTES ON ANDREAS
NOTES ON FATES OF THE APOSTLES
NOTES ON SOUL AND BODY I
NOTES ON HOMILETIC FRAGMENT I
NOTES ON DREAM OF THE ROOD
NOTES ON ELENE