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Exeter Book
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== Elegies == The Exeter Book contains the Old English poems known as the "elegies": "[[The Wanderer (Old English poem)|The Wanderer]]" (fol. 76b - fol. 78a); "[[The Seafarer (poem)|The Seafarer]]" (fol. 81b - fol. 83a); "[[The Riming Poem]]" fol. 94a - fol. 95b); "[[Deor]]" (fol. 100a - fol. 100b), "[[Wulf and Eadwacer]]" (fol. 100b - fol. 101a); "[[The Wife's Lament]]" (fol. 115a - fol. 115b); "[[The Husband's Message]]" (fol. 123a - 123b); and "[[The Ruin]]" (fol. 123b - fol. 124b). The term "elegy" can be confusing due to its application to a diverse range of poems and poetic genres from different cultures and time periods. For example, the ''Oxford English Dictionary'' defines elegy (in the poetic sense) as a poem either composed in the [[Elegiac couplet|elegiac metre]] of Greek and Roman lyric poets, expressing "personal sentiments on a range of subjects, including epigrams, laments, [and] love", or "a poem in another language based on or influenced by this"<ref>{{Citation |title=elegy, n. |url=https://www.oed.com/view/Entry/60350 |work=OED Online |publisher=Oxford University Press |language=en-GB |access-date=2022-03-20}}</ref> β hence, from this latter definition, the application of the term "elegy" to the Old English poems, which are not elegiac in their metre. More broadly, the term "elegy" has also been widened by some to include "any serious meditative poem",<ref>{{cite book |title=The Broadview Anthology of British Literature |date=2011 |publisher=Broadview Press |isbn=9781554810482 |edition=Second |pages=51}}</ref> a definition which would include the Exeter Book elegies. Providing a synthesis of the strictly metrical definition and the broader definition based on subject matter, [[Anne Klinck]] argues in ''The Old English Elegies'' that "genre should be conceived [...] as a grouping of literary works based, theoretically, upon both outer form (specific meter or structure) and also upon inner form (attitude, tone, purpose β more crudely, subject and audience)".<ref>{{cite book |last=Klinck |first=Anne L. |author-link=Anne Klinck |title=The Old English Elegies |publisher=McGill-Queen's Press |year=1992 |page=224}}</ref>
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