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Contents How to Use This Study Guide With the Text...4 Notes & Instructions to Teacher...5 Basic Features & Background...7 Taking With Us What Matters...9 Four Stages to the Central One Idea...11 How to Mark a Book...13 From The Anglo-Saxon Invasion to The Norman Conquest 449-1066 Introduction...15 The Literature of the Warrior The Seafarer...19 The Wanderer...29 Riddles...39 The Battle of Brunanburh...47 from Andreas: A Legend of St. Andrew...55 The Literature of the Priest Bede: from Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation...63 Cuthbert s Letter on the Death of Bede...73 Caedmon s Hymn...79 The Dream of the Rood...85 from the norman conquest to the accession of the tudors 1066-1485 Introduction...95 The Literature of the Medieval Church from A Bestiary...99 Gaudeamus Igitur...107 Everyman...113 The Literature of the Common People Sir Patrick Spens...135 Robin Hood Ballads...141 from Le Morte d Arthur...151 Tests & KEy 161 Contents 3

Central Quote: Pre-Grammar Preparation Prepare the student for understanding the Central One Idea by drawing upon his or her prior knowledge or experience. 1. Imagine living life on a ship at sea, away from your family, friends, and community. Now imagine you are in this place of exile permanently. How would you feel? What things and people would you yearn for? What kinds of dreams and hopes would sustain you? 2. How would the vast ocean make you think or feel about life, eternity, and God? How would it shape your perspective about these realities? 20 The Seafarer Pre-Grammar Preparation

Grammar Presentation The student is presented with and discovers essential facts, elements, and features of the poem. Reading Notes 1. Anglo-Saxon lyrics Anglo-Saxon lyrics were composed primarily for simple memorization and recitation. 2. lyric poem a poem that expresses the thoughts and feelings of a single speaker 3. elegy a sustained, formal poem that mourns the loss of someone or something; a lament or sadly meditative poem on a solemn theme 4. Anglo-Saxon lyrics contain these elements: regular rhythms in the lines, often with strong beats kennings A kenning is a two-word metaphoric word or phrase that takes the place of a noun. Example: "whale-road" for sea; "swan-boat" for ship. alliteration the repetition of consonant sounds in successive words assonance the repetition of vowel sounds in successive words caesuras The poetic device in Anglo-Saxon poetry that divides each line in the center into two half lines (more noticeable in the original Anglo-Saxon than in many modern English translations). Example: "Night after night over the misty moor" (Beowulf) 5. diction the particular words used in a work; word choice 6. personification a figure of speech that gives human qualities to animals, inanimate objects, or ideas 7. anaphora the repetition of a word or words at the beginning of two or more lines, phrases, or clauses 8. oft (l. 2) often 9. benumbed (l. 5) made numb, especially by the cold 10. prow (l. 6) the bow; the front of a ship 11. gannet (l. 15) a large seabird with mostly white plumage 12. kittiwake (l. 15) a small gull that nests in colonies on sea cliffs. Its loud call sounds like "kittiwake" 13. sea-mew (l. 16) a common seagull 14. tern (l. 17) a seabird related to the gulls, somewhat smaller and more slender 15. pinions (l. 19) the wings of a bird 16. aught (l. 37) anything at all 17. yore (l. 64) in the past; long ago 18. sear (l. 68) dried up; withered The Literature of the Warrior Grammar Presentation 21

Words to Be Defined Definitions Bank assigned; committed has a strong inner feeling or notion complaining; grumbling; fretful that something bad will happen; foretells or predicts dwelling places; residences to praise enthusiastically; to exalt great waves or surges of water to pull, twist, or turn forcibly someone or something that indicates what is to come; a forerunner trivial; unimportant stormy; turbulent 1. 'Mid the terrible rolling of waves, habitations of sorrow. (l. 4) dwelling places; residences 2. Yet hotly were wailing the querulous sighs round my heart (l. 8) complaining; grumbling; fretful 3. Some hardship, some trifling adversity, proud and wine-flushed. (l. 22) trivial; unimportant 4. To test the the high streams, the salt waves in tumultuous play. (l. 27) stormy; turbulent 5. Nor in aught save the roll of the billows; but always a longing (l. 37) great waves or surges of water 6. Summer s harbinger sings, and forebodes to the heart bitter sorrow. (l. 44 ) someone or something that indicates what is to come; a forerunner 7. Summer s harbinger sings, and forebodes to the heart bitter sorrow. (l. 44) has a strong inner feeling or notion that something bad will happen; foretells or predicts 8. Wrench the soul away, doomed to depart. This is praise from the living (l. 56) to pull, twist, or turn forcibly 9. 'Gainst the malice of fiends, and the devil; so men shall extol him (l. 59) to praise enthusiastically; to exalt 10. He has seen his old friends, sons of princes, consigned to the earth. (l. 71) assigned; committed 22 The Seafarer Grammar Presentation

Read "The Seafarer," marking the text in key places according to the method taught in "How to Mark a Book." Comprehension Questions 1. When was "The Seafarer" probably composed? in the early 8th century 2. "The Seafarer" reminds us that the Anglo-Saxons were originally Vikings, and their daily lives were vitally connected with the sea. 3. This poem, along with passages from "The Wanderer" and voyages in Beowulf, is the beginning in England of a literature of the sea. 4. Who is the speaker in the poem? the seafarer 5. In the opening five lines, how does the speaker describe his voyages? List five descriptive words or phrases that he uses to describe his voyages. Answers will vary. He tells how harrowing his voyages are. "laborious days"; "wearisome hours"; "I have suffered"; "have borne tribulations"; "the terrible rolling of waves"; "habitations of sorrow"; "benumbed by the cold"; "comfortless night-watch" 6. Quote the line that contains an instance of personification in lines 8-11. "And hunger within me, sea-wearied, made havoc of courage." (l. 9) 7. Consider the diction in line 11. What particular word signals a broader theme for the poem?_ exile 8. What important contrast does the speaker present in lines 10-11? He makes a contrast between a comfortable land-dweller and himself on the ice-cold sea. 9. In lines 11-13, what evidence do you find that the seafarer s pain is more than physical? He mentions that in his "wretchedness" he is "robbed of my kinsman." Both of these terms, especially "robbed of my kinsman," reveal the emotional and mental pain that he feels from being separated from his family and community. The Literature of the Warrior Grammar Presentation 23

10. What elements of setting does the seafarer mention to help convey his desolate, exiled state? Quote at least three words or phrases. He says "the shadows of night became darker"; "it snowed from the North"; "The world was enchained by frost"; "hail fell upon the earth" 11. What transition word signals the first important shift in the speaker s perspective about the sea? Quote the line or two that contains the shift, and underline the transition word. "Yet the thoughts of my heart now are throbbing / To test the high streams " (ll. 26-27) 12. What change does this shift bring in the speaker s perspective? Quote a line that you think best expresses his change in perspective. His heart now throbs to get out on the sea. He says, "Desire in my heart ever urges my spirit to wander / To seek out the home of the stranger in lands far off" (ll. 28-29). 13. What kinds of things does the seafarer choose to live without in favor of the "roll of the billows"? He chooses to live without music (harp), treasure, a wife, and other worldly pleasures. 14. Identify two kennings from anywhere between line 22 and the end Part I. The kennings in this translation may have more than two words. Answers will vary. "sea-way" (l. 23); "high streams" (l. 27); "home of the whale" (l. 48); "whale-path" (l. 51) 15. Part II presents another major shift in the poem. What do you think has caused the seafarer s changed perspective? The seafarer realizes his life of exile is painful, desolate, and fleeting. It causes him to hope for something better. He says, "The delights of the Lord are far dearer to me than this dead, / Fleeting life upon earth, for I can not believe that earth s riches / For ever endure" (ll. 52-54). 16. What three things make life so uncertain and "wrench the soul away"? violence, age, and disease 17. In the first ten lines of Part II, the seafarer is primarily concerned with: a. the angels d. violence, age, and disease b. the earth and its pleasures e. enduring hardships c. the afterlife 24 The Seafarer Grammar Presentation

18. Quote the line that contains the use of anaphora. "There now are no kings, no emperors now, no gold-givers" (l. 63) 19. The seafarer presents another shift in the last section of the poem. Where does his attention or focus now turn? Include a line or a phrase from these lines in your answer. The seafarer now focuses primarily on God, and on believing in Him and fearing Him. "Great is the fear of the Lord; the earth trembles before it" (ll. 80-81); "God doth establish the soul that believes in His might" (l. 85). Logic Dialectic The student reasons with the facts, elements, and features of the poem, and begins to uncover and determine the Central One Idea. Socratic discussion questions 1. What sounds of society does the seafarer imagine hearing, and what sounds does he actually hear? How does this contrast contribute to the overall mood? He imagines hearing the "laughter of men" (l. 16). He actually hears the "gannet s cry," "the kittiwakes chatter," and "the call of the sea-mews" (ll. 15-16). The contrast contributes to the agony and pain he feels in exile; he wishes he could hear the former, but he only hears the latter. 2. Quote the 2-3 lines where the seafarer reiterates and amplifies the contrast between a citydweller and himself. What important words or expressions does he use to convey how he feels about those people? "of this little he knows / Who possesses the pleasures of life, who has felt in the city / Some hardship, some trifling adversity, proud and wine-flushed" (ll. 20-22). He says that they have "trifling adversities" and that they are "proud and wine-flushed." The Literature of the Warrior Logic Dialectic 25

3. But that he has always a longing, a sea-faring passion For what the Lord God shall bestow, be it honor or death. (ll. 33-34) These lines bring together the desire for the sea and the will of God. Summarize and explain these lines. What important idea is conveyed? He seems to say that the passion and desire for the sea exists, and along with that comes a belief in whatever (fate or destiny) God chooses to bestow upon the seafarer be it honor or death. 4. How does the seafarer describe nature in lines 39ff.? Include a line or phrase from his description in your answer. What effect does this nature have on the seafarer? He speaks of nature in descriptive terms it is full of life and vitality: "The woodlands are captured by blossoms, the hamlets grow fair, / Broad meadows are beautiful, earth again bursts into life" (ll. 39-40). It stirs his heart to journey out on the "pathway of tides." 5. This garment of flesh has no power, when the spirit escapes, To drink in the sweet nor to taste of the bitter; it then Has no power to stretch forth the hands or to think with the mind. (ll. 72-74) Summarize these lines. In your answer, identify and explain the metaphor. What is the main topic the seafarer is speaking of? The main topic the seafarer is speaking about is death. The metaphor "garment of flesh" refers to the body, which has no power upon death "when the spirit escapes." The "garment of flesh" can no longer drink or taste or move the hands or think with the mind. 6. In the last section of the poem, the seafarer is concerned with not only the object of our belief, but in how we should live. 26 The Seafarer Logic Dialectic

Rhetoric Expression The student explains in his or her own words the Central One Idea with supporting details. I Central One Idea 1. In a few sentences, summarize "The Seafarer." In Part I, the seafarer reveals the agony, hardship, and pain of living a life of exile on the sea. And yet he also conveys that when he is not at sea, he longs to be there. In Part II, the seafarer conveys knowing God is far more precious than this fleeting life, especially his miserable life of exile at sea. He concludes the poem by stating how important it is to fear the Lord and to live in a right manner before Him. 2. Write the Central One Idea of the poem in a complete sentence. 3. List two or three points that support your determination of the Central One Idea. The poem s theme expands and develops from the hardships of a life in exile at sea to the longing and yearning for that life, to a realization that nothing in this fleeting life matters compared to God, to the culmination of the theme in the Central One Idea: fear the Lord, live rightly, and press forward unto heavenly joy. 4. Choose 1-3 lines from the poem that you think best embody the Central One Idea and with good penmanship, write it in the Central Quote section at the beginning of this lesson. I Central One Idea (as expressed by the teacher) Fear the Lord, live a right manner of life, and press forward unto heavenly joy everlasting. The Literature of the Warrior Rhetoric Expression 27

Essay Option Can people find a manner of life or a place in life where they are fully happy? Or, like the seafarer, will they always have a yearning for another place? Are we all, figuratively speaking, "seafarers"? Develop a clear thesis that presents your point of view and support it with a well-reasoned argument. Though most of the essay will be your own ideas and supporting evidence, make some effort to reference "The Seafarer" in your essay. For example, you may find that the seafarer and/or his story work well as an analogy or metaphor in your argument, or in a certain part of your argument. You may find it useful to quote a line from the poem in your essay one time or even a few times. 28 The Seafarer Rhetoric Expression