In contrast to the above, alliteration between vowels appears to have
no
constraints, so that any vowel alliterates with any other vowel:
æ´tterne
órd
Se
éorl wæs
t
e blí
t
ra
poisoned point
The earl was the happier
This situation has caused much controversy. The dominant view is that
things were simply as they appear on the surface,
but another view is that
there was something preceding the apparently alliterating vowel. The
only plausible something is a glottal stop, as is found medially in non-
standard pronunciations of, say,
bitter, which, of course,
the Old English
scribes would have no way of representing. Of course this also means we
have no direct data to allow us to prove that this the correct view. No
doubt the controversy will persist. One argument in favour of positing
an initial glottal stop is that such a sound is indeed found in Dutch and
German. I have to
say that I remain unconvinced, but you should make
up your own mind!
The final point to consider takes us back to another question about
what sounds count as identical. Here are two different examples from
Beowulf:
Dostları ilə paylaş: