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  2. " Wulf and Eadwacer " ([ˈæ͜ɑːd.wɑtʃ.er], approximately ADD-watcher) is an Old English poem in alliterative verse of famously difficult interpretation. It has been variously characterised, (modernly) as an elegy, (historically) as a riddle, and (in speculation on the poem's pre-history) as a song or ballad with refrain.

  3. Feb 27, 2023 · Wulf and Eadwacer is an intense exploration of divided loyalties, unsatisfied longing and transgressive hatred at a turning point in the history of the Goths and Europe.

  4. Wulf and Eadwacer. By Unknown. Translated By Roy M. Liuzza. Wulf and Eadwacer (4 versions) It's as if someone should give a gift to my people—. they will kill him if he comes to the troop. It is otherwise for us. Wulf is on an island, I on another. Fast is that island, surrounded by fen.

  5. our song together. TRANSLATOR'S NOTES: In my interpretation of "Wulf and Eadwacer" the speaker is a defiant early feminist, the first #metoo poet of the English language. She is disgusted with her bloodthirsty tribe, who have driven her lover Wulf away.

  6. Along with The Wife's Lament (Text 40), Wulf and Eadwacer is a rarity in the OE poetic corpus: a secular lyric in a female voice. It is also one of the most enigmatic of poems and has generated intense but largely unresolved argument about its interpretation, for at the simple narrative level it is full of undeveloped allusions and unexplained ...

  7. Wulf, O my Wulf! Your hopes in me have gone sick, your infrequent pleasures, mournful mindings, not your failing appetite. Hear that, Eadwacer you dog? Our whelp was wailing, the wolf ferrying it to the forest. How easily it all comes apart, what was hardly together — the song we made as one.

  8. Wulf and Eadwacer is one of the most enigmatic Old English poems, since the story it alludes to is not known to us. It has given rise to many theories, of which perhaps the most widely credited is that the speaker (a woman, as rēotugu in l. 10 tells us) is being held prisoner on an island by Eadwacer, while Wulf (her lover or husband) is in ...

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