EXETER BOOK


Meaning of EXETER BOOK in English

the largest extant collection of Old English poetry. Copied c. 975, the manuscript was given to Exeter Cathedral by Bishop Leofric (died 1072). It begins with some long religious poems: the Christ, in three parts; two poems on St. Guthlac; the fragmentary Azarius; and the allegorical Phoenix. Following these are a number of shorter religious verses intermingled with poems of types that have survived only in this codex. All the extant Anglo-Saxon lyrics, or elegies, as they are usually calledThe Wanderer, The Seafarer, The Wife's Lament, The Husband's Message, and The Ruinare found here. These are secular poems evoking a poignant sense of desolation and loneliness in their descriptions of the separation of lovers, the sorrows of exile, or the terrors and attractions of the sea, although some of theme.g., The Wanderer and The Seafareralso carry the weight of religious allegory. In addition, the Exeter Book preserves 95 riddles, a genre that would otherwise have been represented by a solitary example. The remaining part of the Exeter Book includes The Rhyming Poem, which is the only example of its kind; the gnomic verses; Widsith, the heroic narrative of a fictitious bard; and the two refrain poems, Deor and Wulf and Eadwacer. The arrangement of the poems appears to be haphazard, and the book is believed to be copied from an earlier collection.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.