to be considered here concerns three methods by which clauses may be
linked together, namely
coordination,
parataxis and
hypotaxis. Each of
these is important in Old English.
The easiest of these, because it is the most familiar, is undoubtedly
coordination, in which two main, or independent, clauses are linked
together by a coordinating conjunction. The most obvious examples use
the conjunction
and ‘and’, but Old English deployed a wide range of
conjunctions. The following example is both typical and interesting:
(40) Ond se Cynewulf oft mic
.
lum g
.
efeohtum feaht uui
t
[= wi
t
]
Bretwa¯lum
And this Cynewulf often great fights fought against the Welsh
The example is interesting because there is verb-final word order (the
final phrase being where it is because of considerations of weight). It is
a feature of such clauses that verb-final order is common. You may also
have noticed that in this example there is actually no coordination, but
instead merely a simple clause.
Parataxis is a kind of halfway house between coordination and hypo-
taxis, where the latter involves overt subordination. In parataxis there
is a relationship between a main clause and a subordinate clause, but
crucially there is no overt signal of subordination, except that there is
no overt subject. Thus the second clause in the following example lacks
an overt subject, which would be identical with the subject of the first
clause:
(41)
T
a¯ co¯mon
t
e¯ofas eahta, woldon stelan
t
a¯ ma¯
e
mas
Then came eight thieves, wanted to steal the treasures
Very often the verbs in such structures correspond to present participles
in present-day English:
(42) He¯ sæt on
e
æ¯m muntum, we¯op ond hearpode
He sat on the mountain tops, weeping and playing the harp
Hypotaxis, or subordination, is used extensively in Old English,
often together with
correlation, where two (or more) clauses are linked
together by means of correlative elements. Thus we find examples such
as the following, where the subordinate clause is first introduced by
†
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