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Encyclopedia > Deor

Deor (or The Lament of Deor) is an Old English poem from the 10th century, preserved in the Exeter Book. It consists of 42 alliterated lines. Old English poetry is based upon one system of verse construction which was used for all poems. ... As a means of recording the passage of time, the 10th century was that century which lasted from 901 to 1000. ... The Exeter Book, also known as the Codex Exoniensis, is a book (or, as some prefer, a codex) of Anglo-Saxon poetry from the 10th century. ... Alliteration is a stylistic device, or literary technique, in which successive words (more strictly, stressed syllables) begin with the same consonant sound or letter. ...


The poem is untitled as written, but the name Deor is cited within the poem as its author, and so this has been commonly taken as the title.


All attempts at placing this poem within a genre are difficult. When commentators try to locate the poem in general, they may call it an ubi sunt ("where are they?") poem for its meditations on transience. It is also a traditional lament and poem of consolation. In religious traditions, the consolation poem attempts to place the personal miseries in the context of history or the entire world (e.g. Boethius's The Consolation of Philosophy). However, these attempts are overlays from a non-Anglo-Saxon tradition. Medievalist scholars who have placed the poem within Old English poetry have seen it as a "begging poem": A poem written by a travelling and begging poet who is without a place at a noble court. The difficulty of seeing it that way is that few other "begging poems" survive, and supposing a genre is somewhat speculative. Others have put Deor with other melancholy poems also in the Exeter Book such as The Seafarer and The Wanderer. Ubi Sunt (literally where are. ... A lament or dirge is a song or poem expressing grief or regret. ... There are several persons called Bo thius: Philosophers: Anicius Manlius Severinus thius - to many scholars this is the Bo thius, a late-Roman writer best known for his works in philosophy and theology. ... The Seafarer is an Old English poem. ... This article is about the Old English Wanderer poem, for the German Wanderer poems set to music by (amongst others) Franz Schubert, see: List_of_compositions_by_Schubert#Lieder_. ...


As poetry, the verse is extraordinary. The language is exceptionally beautiful and highly nuanced, and it is difficult for any translation into Modern English to recreate the tensions present in the highly dense and parsimonious wording. The poem runs through a list of legendary figures, asks what happened to them, and then returns to a refrain of "Þæs ofereode, þisses swa mæg!" ("that was overcome (with respect to it) this may also be (with respect to it)"). Among the miseries and poor fates that Deor runs through, we have Theodoric the Great, Ermanaric of the Goths, and the mythological smith Weyland. Each had an undeserved end, and, in each case, "that passed away with respect to it, and so may this be." It is only in the last stanza that we learn what the "this" is. Theodoric the Great (454 - August 30, 526), known to the Romans as Flavius Theodoricus, was king of the East Goths, the Ostrogoths (488-526), ruler of Italy (493-526), and regent of the Visigoths (511-526). ... Ermanaric (d. ... Invasion of the Goths: a late 19th century painting by O. Fritsche portrays the Goths as cavalrymen. ... Weyland (also spelled Wayland, Weland and Watlende) is the mythical smith-god of the Saxon immigrants into Britain. ...


At the poem's conclusion, Deor says that he was once a great poet among the Heodenings (presumably some Germanic people), until he was displaced and sent wandering by Heorrenda, a more skillful poet.


See also

The first page of Beowulf This article describes Beowulf, the epic poem. ... The Seafarer is an Old English poem. ... This article is about the Old English Wanderer poem, for the German Wanderer poems set to music by (amongst others) Franz Schubert, see: List_of_compositions_by_Schubert#Lieder_. ... Widsith is an Old English poem of 144 lines. ...

External links

  • Deor
  • Deor, modern English translation
  • The Exeter Anthology of Old English Poetry Including audio readings of Deor

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Deor is the name given by modern scholars to a short Old English poem which is preserved in a single manuscript, the large miscellany of Old English verse known as the Exeter Book (Exeter Dean and Chapter MS 3501).
Deor does not give the narrative in full, but assumes that its reader will know this story, which appears to have been well known in several Germanic cultures, although it also bears a strong resemblance to the story of Daedalus's escape from Minos.
This is, according to Deor, a greater cause of sorrow for her than the death of her two brothers at Wayland's hands.
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