“THEY BEGAN TO SING HIM A SORHLEOД: POSSIBLE ECHOES OF THE ANGLO-SAXON FUNERARY RITES IN THE DREAM OF THE ROOD Cover Image

“THEY BEGAN TO SING HIM A SORHLEOД: POSSIBLE ECHOES OF THE ANGLO-SAXON FUNERARY RITES IN THE DREAM OF THE ROOD
“THEY BEGAN TO SING HIM A SORHLEOД: POSSIBLE ECHOES OF THE ANGLO-SAXON FUNERARY RITES IN THE DREAM OF THE ROOD

Author(s): Łukasz Neubauer
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, Cultural history, Poetry, 6th to 12th Centuries, Theory of Literature, British Literature
Published by: Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: Jesus Christ; Gospels; elegy; Old English poetry; The Dream of the Rood; Beowulf;

Summary/Abstract: The Dream of the Rood constitutes one of the most intriguing products of Old English literature, both in terms of its highly imaginative, heroicised depiction of Christ and the Cross and on account of its numerous Christian and pre-Christian intersections. One of the most arresting issues in it, however, particularly as regards the poem’s cultural background, is its mention of a sorhleoð (l. 67), the ‘sorrow-song’, or ‘dirge’ that the disciples begin to sing once they have placed the body of the Saviour in the sepulchre. Given that there is no mention of any songs being chanted at the time of Christ’s burial in the canonical Gospels, it seems rational to suggest that the anonymous poet must have supplied this ‘missing’ information on the basis of his own, perhaps somewhat antiquarian, knowledge of the burial customs in Anglo-Saxon England.

  • Issue Year: 2019
  • Issue No: 120
  • Page Range: 5-25
  • Page Count: 21
  • Language: English