Heroic lay

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The heroic lay (German Heldenlied) is a genre of Germanic epic poetry characteristic of the Migration Period and the Early Middle Ages. A lay is a short narrative poem of between 80 and 200 lines concerning a single heroic episode in the life of a warrior from Germanic legend. [1][2] It is distinct from the heroic epic (Beowulf, Nibelungenlied) which combines a sequence of episodes into a longer narrative.[3]

Examples

Notes

  1. ^ Hatto 1980, p. 165. "A terse, self-contained, objective, memorized poem of epic-dramatic style imbued with an heroic ethos conveyed with art in a single-stranded plot"
  2. ^ Gloning & Young 2004, p. 42. "a short poem extolling the valour and nobility of character of a great hero of the past."
  3. ^ Heusler 1905.

References

  • Gloning, Thomas; Young, Christopher (2004). A History of the German Language Through Texts. Abingdon, New York: Routledge. .
  • . Retrieved 8 January 2018.
  • Heusler, Andreas (1905). Lied und Epos in germanischer Sagendichtung. Dortmund: Ruhfus. Retrieved 9 January 2018.

Further reading