Before I continue, it might serve as a useful guide if I now present a
schematic representation of the above types, which were first presented
at the end of the nineteenth century by Eduard Sievers (see the recom-
mended reading). Essentially these types consist
of a pattern of fully
stressed (/), partly stressed (i.e. with secondary stress) (\) and fully
unstressed (x) syllables. The number of unstressed syllables is relatively
unimportant; indeed, in Old Saxon poetry they can occur very exten-
sively indeed. To the little sketch below, therefore, you can add extra
unstressed syllables after the unstressed syllables given there. Here are
the five types of half-line:
A
/ x / x
B
x / x /
C
x / / x
D
/ / \ x
E
/ \ x /
You may have noticed that in the extract above
there is still one half-
line unaccounted for, namely 2a:
ne míhte he g
.
ehéaldan, and equally it
appears to be unaccounted for in the five schematic types. If I say that
this half-line is a type A (falling-falling type), the obvious problem is that
there is an initial unstressed syllable to explain. Such an initial syllable
is quite often found and indeed is a part
of general metrical theory, not
Dostları ilə paylaş: