The Poetic Art of Aldhelm

Aldhelm of Malmesbury has been described as the first English man of letters. He was the first Germanic author to compose extensively in Latin metrical verse, and his Latin works were amongst the most influential in Anglo-Saxon England. Aldhelm can also be considered the best-read of Anglo-Saxon poets, in both senses of the phrase: he read most and was most read. In this first book-length study of Aldhelm’s poetic art Andy Orchard traces the sources and models for Aldhelm’s idiosyncratic style, as well as the nature and extent of his influence on later Anglo-Latin verse. Aldhelm’s innovations in Latin verse technique are emphasized, in particular his special debt to the specific techniques of Old English vernacular verse.

• A full-length study of early Anglo-Latin poetics • A detailed study of the poetry of Aldhelm • Chapters backed up by detailed appendices

Contents

List of tables; Preface; List of short titles and abbreviations; Sigla of scholars cited; 1. Aldhelm’s life and verse; 2. Aldhelm and the Anglo-Latin octosyllable; 3. Aldhelm’s hexameter verse style and its origins; 4. Aldhelm’s remembered reading in verse; Appendix 4.1: Parallel diction in Aldhelm\'s sources; 5. After Aldhelm: the Anglo-Latin legacy; Appendix 5.1: Parallel diction in Aldhelm\'s Anglo-Latin heirs; Appendix 5.2: a statistical survey of Anglo-Latin verse; Bibliography; Index.