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A Study of the Metrical Structure of the Middle English Poem The Pearl

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2020

Extract

The difference in the treatment of final unstressed -e among the various ME. dialects has long since been noticed. In Nth., according to Morsbach (Mittelenglische Grammatik §§ 6–9), it became silent (“ist stumm”) about 1350; in Ml. it was in part sounded throughout the fourteenth century, though as Morsbach remarks, “in vielen fällen ist es schon verstummt;” in WSth. and MSth. it was in general retained throughout the century; while Kt. on the whole retains it intact quite up to the middle of the century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1897

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Footnotes

1

For the suggestion which led me to write this paper, and for valuable assistance in its preparation, I am indebted to Professor O. F. Emerson, of Western Reserve University.

References

page 327 note 1 The general structure of the poem has already been described: see Trautmann, Angl. i 119; Kaluza, ESt. xvi 178; Gollancz, Pearl p. xxiii f.

page 327 note 2 In the use of signs I have in general followed Kittredge: -e (in italicized words -e) indicates a final e written but elided before a vowel or h. -ë (or ) indicates a final e pronounced before a vowel or h. Used over a vowel in the interior of a word the diæresis indicates that the vowel is pronounced. -[ë] indicates that the metre requires an e to be pronounced at the end of a word which is written without -e in the MS. -ė indicates a final -e written but not sounded before a consonant (not h). -ė- indicates syncopated e (and so of other vowels).

page 327 note 3 I have followed Morris in using the character for (a) z (sonant spirant), (b) h (guttural and palatal spirant), and (c) y (consonant).

page 329 note 1 None of the words cited occur at the end of the line; cp. Summary 14.

page 329 note 2 We might also read: myn herte a brunt, 174.

page 335 note 1 If we adopt Gollancz's reading, At date of the day, the -e will be removed; but cp. daye, 517, 541.