Raiding the demotic: verse as evidence for speech prosody in Old and Middle English

This article reviews the isomorphism which may or may not have existed between the speech-prosodic principles pertaining in Old English (OE) and in later Englishes, and the metrical patterns evident in both OE and (early) Middle English lyric poetry. A key question is this: was there isomorphism in OE between rules of right-edge phrasal prominence in speech and purely metrical prominence? Recent theories of OE metrical prominence, particularly those of Russom (2017 and earlier works) show that many normative OE half-lines have a structure which can be adequately described without making reference to right-edge prominence. That very adequacy is a challenge to metrists since well-known eurhythmic phenomena of promotion (of erstwhile weaker syllables to relative stress position within the verse line) and demotion (of erstwhile stressed syllables to relatively less-stressed positions) depend crucially on phrasal right-headedness: if that right-headedness didn't exist in OE, where did it originate? And if it did exist in OE, why didn't poets then make use of the metrical opportunities the language afforded? What can revisiting and studying isomorphism (or the lack of it) between the forms of language and of verse teach scholars about English poetic history?

Here the metrical patterna generally alternating, octosyllabic line, with an optional extrametrical syllable at the line-endis filled where necessary by non-lexical words occupying stressed positions: in (1), a form of the verb be; in (2) the monosyllabic pronoun hi and the first syllable of the pronoun thine; (in 3) an infinitive particle; in (4) the personal pronoun me.
In Chaucer's pentametric work (later fourteenth century) the same modulation, where non-lexical items appear in stressed metrical positions, is readily apparent. Two examples only will suffice: (5) Bifil that in that seson on a day (General Prologue [GP], line 19) (6) The chambres and the stables weren wyde (GP, line 28) 3 Here, as in still later forms of metrical verse, prepositions (example (5)) and conjunctions (example (6)) are, where they occur in particular environments, freely allowed to occupy metrically stressed positions within the verse line.
The examples touched on so far are general instantiations from verse of a phenomenon widely attested in spoken forms of almost all those medieval and post-medieval varieties of English found in the British Isles: that is a Principle of Rhythmic Alternation, whereby stressed syllables separated by one (and only one) lesser-stressed syllable are evaluated as more eurhythmic than stressed syllables separated by more than one unstressed syllable (Hayes 1984, and see the wider discussion of eurhythmy and its implementation in Beat Addition and End Rules in Hayes 1995: 372ff.). To maximise eurhythmy, if the environment allows it then underlyingly unstressed syllables, such as those identified in (1)-(6), are 'promoted' to a relative stress (the phenomenon captured in Beat Addition within grid-based rhythmical representations) and may function as stressed within the verse line.
In Englishby which is here meant, and as far as is known, in those varieties of English spoken within the British Islestwo further, kindred, eurhythmically driven phenomena have been well-known for decades. One is known as a Rhythm Rule which shifts stress leftwards within phrases so that the resulting stressed syllables are optimally rhythmically spaced: (7) underlying: ninetéen físh > níneteen físh (output neatly alternating) The other 'demotes' underlyingly stressed monosyllables in certain environments so that they are perceived as bearing less relative stress than the syllables around them, again so that the perceived major stresses are optimally spaced: (8) underlying: three lárge tróut > thrée large tróut (output neatly alternating) These rhythmically driven phenomena have been known in the analytical literature for many years; the same principles were of foundational interest in the beginnings of non-linear phonology (Liberman & Prince 1977) and in a specifically verse-prosodic context, Attridge (1982) writes of the 'promotion' of unstressed syllables and the 'demotion' of underlying stressed ones in metrical contexts. 4 The rhythmic principles manifested in examples in (7)-(8) may be replicated many times over in later forms of English metrical verse, as in these examples spanning the late sixteenth century (9) to the early twentieth (10a, b): (9) Grim-visag'd war hath smoothed his wrinkled front (Shakespeare, Richard III, Act I, i, l.9: metrical demotion of grim [although other readings are possible, i.e. with relative stress shift so that grim is more stressed than vi(sag'd)]) (10) (a) But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you (Yeats, 'When you are old'; demotion of 'man') (b) Among whose warty snags the quaint perch lair (Edmund Blunden, cf. in the same poem The ogling hunchback perch with needled fin) 5 No metrist would claim of course that the lines in (9)-(10) should be read in a metrical jog-trot: the effect of eurhythmic pressure allows a metrical line to qualify in the first instance as metrical, while a reading may play underlying structure against a more or less emphatic form of delivery. Thus in (10a), man would be underlyingly more stressed than one, while eurhythmy may pressure the same syllable into less relative stress than the monosyllables which surround it; the same holds true in the Blunden example (10b), where perchlike man the head of its noun phrasewould be underlyingly more stressed than the monosyllable quaint. Cable (1991) speaks aptly of the 'tilting power' of metre, as that last is manifest in much medieval and post-medieval English verse: such a 'tilting power' adds to the interest of the line. In terms of the theme of the present workmetrical evidence for speech prosodythen it's of interest that while many later, syllable-counting forms of English verse abundantly attest the isochronic (i.e. stress-timed) basis of English speech (and particularly, the perception of that speech; see below), there is little unambiguous trace of linguistic or metrical principles of promotion or demotion in any form of Old English verse. (That's not to say that there's no trace at all of stress-timing in OE poetrysee section 2 below.) Specifically, in OE verse, and even in environments where one might have otherwise expected it, there seems to be no pressure to 'promote' underlyingly unstressed non-lexical syllables to relative stress: (11) hū ðā aeþelingas (Beo. 3ano metrical pressure to 'promote' hū; see also (25) below) (12) lange hwīle. Him þaes Līffrēa (Beo. 16no metrical pressure to 'promote' Him; see also (26) below) Further, the alliterative patterning of the line often helps to identify such a lack of pressure. Had any 'promotion' of unstressed syllables been operative in (12), for example, one might have expected hwīle to alliterate with Him (which last by 'promotion' would have become a candidate for alliteration). Clearly this doesn't happen, and doesn't happen across the entire corpus of Old English verse. This hasn't stopped critics assuming that Old English verse was structured and performed on an isochronic basis, with e.g. harp-strokes falling at regular intervals and, if necessary and in certain environments, occupying rhythmically salient pauses, as in Pope's (1966Pope's ( [1942) ingenious reading of OE metre. Poets, too, have sometimes provided pastiches of what they've understood to be OE (or more widely and even loosely, early 'Germanic') verse, and in providing the pastiche, have allowed unstressed syllables to fill metrically stressed positions within the line or hemistich in a way that would be entirely familiar from later forms of English but would have been illegitimate in OE (or other earlier Germanic languages). Thus, perhaps most notoriously, Longfellow's 1855 pastiche of early, notionally 'Germanic' verse as manifest in Hiawatha: Longfellow is alleged to have based the metre of Hiawatha on the metrical materials he found in the Finnish Kalevalapatterned selectively here as trochaic tetrameter. 6 Yet at the time of composition, Longfellow was twenty years beyond his brief study of Finnish and possibly modelled his work on a German translation of the Kalevala by Franz Anton Schiefner (1817-79). 7 Even though Finnish isn't an Indo-European language it seems likely that Longfellow, intent on presenting a nineteenth-century version of the 'noble savage' to an American readership, was attempting to deploy his intuitive sense of some mythical, somewhat 'Germanic' form and press that into the service of a new, native American context. The point is that OE metre lacks some of the hallmarks of isochrony familiar from later periods of English verse (see section 2 below). Tolkien's comment, made in an aside during his great essay on Beowulf, is pertinent: the structure of OE verse, he wrote, 'is more like masonry than music' (Tolkien 1936: 30). The 'masonry'to pursue the metaphor for a momentis formed of morphology, and specifically of structures which are, or are reminiscent of, lexical words. Russom makes this particularly clear in a series of book-length works (Russom 1987(Russom , 1998(Russom , 2017. (14) This well-known configuration (Russom 1987 and subsequent works) requires that halflines behave like (compound-)word-sized domains; there is a strong medial break within the line; and the configuration allows for an elegant constraint on alliteration, such that the rightmost weak constituent of a weak constituent (W in (14)) is too weak to alliterate.
While it would be legitimate, therefore, to look into the form of OE metre in order to understand it as providing evidence for morphology and for morphological stress, it would probably be rash to look to the same metrical constituents as providing evidence 7 Nor should it be forgotten that the inspiration for Elias Lönnrot's compilation of those materials which comprised the collection of folk-tales known today as the Kalevala was drawn from the wish of Finnish scholars such as Gottlund (1796-1875) to construct a Finnish national epic similar in scope to The Iliad, Beowulf and the Niebelungenlied.

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for aspects of speech prosody (such as stress-timing, though see remarks on poetic resolution below). Rather, OE metre seems, like other, later forms of metre, to be a specialised game, one whose 'rules' depend on counting and on closure. 8 That is, there are four positions in the typical half-line and there are strict constraints on the material which can be allowed to occupy position 4. This can be crudely summarised as follows: This view is, metrically speaking, uncontroversial: almost all metres known to me have domain-end markers of some kind (see also McCully 2017) and the position with respect to OE is succinctly summarised in Strang: '[T]here is between half-lines a break, or line-end marker …The end of a half-line is always determinate … [I]f it is occupied by a lift [stressed syllable: McC] that goes without saying, but if it is occupied by a drop there is the special restriction that the drop must there be monosyllabic' (Strang 1970: 326;my emphasis).
It seems plausible that this, or something very like it, was the metrical game played by Caedmon: fitting raw materialbiblical stories, in the first, devotionally most important instance, and fragments of orally transmitted poems (such as praise formulas)into the framework of the OE metrical game was clearly something that required not so much the rapture of apparently spontaneous, oral composition but careful considerationsilent rumination, as Bede testified in his well-known account of Caedmon's compositional procedure: (16) Bede on Caedmon Ond he eal þa he in gehaernesse geleornian meahte mid hine gemyndgade, ond swa swa claene neten eodorcende in þaet sweteste leoð gehwerfde. Ond his song ond his leoð waeron swa wynsumu to gehaeranne þaette þa seolfan his lareowas aet his muðe wreoton ond leornodon.
'And he was able to learn all that he heard, and, keeping it all in mind, just as a clean animal chewing cud, turned (it) into the sweetest song …' 9 '… swa swa claene neten eodorcende in þaet sweteste leoð gehwerfde': this can only mean that Caedmon's gift required effort, thought and concentration. It was not a gift of spontaneous 'song' (despite Caedmon's output being described metaphorically as leoð and nor, we might notice in Bede's account above, is there any mention of harps). It's plausible to imagine (and see here Opland 1980) that the miracle of Caedmon was embodied not so much in the fact that a previously illiterate neat-herd was able to compose poetry but in the fact that (i) he deployed poetic epithets from secular praise-poetry and placed them into a new devotional context and (ii) he was able to do so using all the apparatusthat is, all the rules of this highly specialised language gameassociated with the explicit (and apparently prized) knowledge of that subset of literate peers called poets. 10 These rules included resolution. From a purely metrical point of view, resolution is a fix which allows an underlying half-line spanning five or more syllables to qualify as metrical because two of those syllables, in a particular and adjacent phonematic configuration, 'fit' one metrical position. This fix was employed by Caedmon as well as by his fellow, and later, English poets: heofonrīces Weard 11 ('Guardian of heaven-kingdom', Hymn 1b) 1 2 3 4 weorc Wuldorfaeder ('work(s) of the Glory-Father', Hymn, 3a) 1 2 3 4 The same set of rules also, and for our purposes somewhat more interestingly, made provision for the suspension of resolution, of which the most concise and recent statement is that of Terasawa (2011: 55-6): 12 9 From the Old English translation of Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum, book IV, ch. xxiv, https://heorot.dk/bede-caedmon.html, accessed 27 February 2020. 10 Thornbury (2014) provides a wonderfully nuanced view of what the word 'poet' might have meant in Anglo-Saxon England. As Thornbury elucidates (2014: 19ff.), there were several terms for such a verbal maker, among which were the following: scop (the most common term), poeta, leoðwyrhta (applied to the makers of prose as well as poems), gleeman (a term that seemed to mean 'entertainer' and might thus include the harpist, who may or may not have been the same as the scop). Thornbury also usefully points out (2014: 17) that in the famous Beowulf passage relating to hearpan sweg (the sound of the harp, Beo. 89b-92) as many as three different performers might have been enumerated (a poet, a harpist and someone reciting the Creation in normal speech). 11 An anonymous reviewer helpfully pointed out that verse 3a of the Hymn had an alternative scansion where Wuldorscanned as monosyllabic (with a non-syllabic resonant 'r') and suspension of resolution on -faeder (see also (18a) above); verse 6a heofon tō hrōfe ('heaven as a roof'), which I had originally inserted as an example in (17), also scans perfectly whether or not heofon is analysed as resolved. In heofonrīces Weard, however, there can be no such ambiguity: heofon-must show resolution so that the linguistic material spans four metrical positions. 12 Terasawa scrupulously notes (2011: 56) that the applicability of resolutiona phenomenon known as Kaluza's Lawdepends inter alia on the nature of syllabic endings (thus resolution applies in Beo. 430a, frēowine folca 'noble friend of the people', even though wi-is preceded by a long (heavy) syllable, because -ne is itself short; cf. the -can of bānlocan, where the final syllable ends with a consonant. Kaluza's Law applies to certain verse 519 RAIDING THE DEMOTIC (18) Suspension of resolution Resolution may be suspended where: (a) the potentially resolvable sequence is preceded by a stressed and long syllable in the same metrical constituent (b) the potentially resolvable sequence has a minimally bimoraic second syllable Example: bāt bānlocan ('bit the bone-locks', Beo. 742a) It's not easy to imagine rules for the suspension of resolution applying in spontaneous composition. Speakers are not usually (or even at all) consciously aware of syllable weight in the production of spontaneous speech: they just … speak (however the production of that speech may be conditioned by principles of which those same speakers are unaware). In Caedmon's context, too, as in the wider and subsequent Old English context, matters are further complicated by the inherently archaising nature of OE verse. To get this verse to work at all, i.e. to fit language materials into a counted and closed metrical frame, it's sometimes necessary for poets to draw on structures which fit into the metrical frame in diachronically legitimate but synchronically illegitimate ways: The view that OE metrics is the product of a specialised game would be fairly uncontroversial. It's a pity that there is no contemporary description of the rules of the game from any Anglo-Saxon poet. What accounts there are of verse-making in England do not, unfortunately, relate to the making of English verse but to verse composed in Latin: Bede's De Arte Metrica, probably composed in or around 710 CE, 13 was an introduction of the principles of Latin prosody to a non-specialised readership; Aldhelm's Enigmata (or 'Riddles') were written in Latin hexameters in order to demonstrate the form and amplify on comments made in the metrical treatise which was part of a letter he wrote to Aldfrith of Northumbria at the end of the seventh century. 14 Nor, equally unfortunately, is there much to help the metrical historian of types in Beowulf but 'is … generally abandoned by other Old English poets' (Terasawa 2011: 56). That observation doesn't affect the nature or the development of the argument presented here, however, which centres on the assumption of how scriptist (or not) the composition and delivery of OE verse might have been. The fact that resolution (and in a limited context, suspension of resolution) occurred at all suggests a carefully wrought, well-considered compositional process. That said, it's probably unwise to rule out entirely the existence in Anglo-Saxon England of spontaneous songs, chants, children's verses/counting-out games or even political slogans. These exist in contemporary English too, of courseand how many of those are ever written down? 13 See Heikkinen (2012), who suggests that the dating cannot be before 709 and may possibly be as late as 725 CE.
https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/14922993.pdf, retrieved 1 February 2021. 14 One of the manuscripts (c. late tenth/early eleventh century) of this important work, which survives wholly or partially in 32 manuscript versions, exists in the collections of the British Library: www.bl.uk/collection-items/ aldhelms-riddles#, retrieved 1 February 2021.

CHRISTOPHER B. McCULLY
English if we enquire into the metrics of Old Norse as that's described in the (chronologically much later) work of Snorri Sturluson. It's well known that Old Norse fornyrðislag shows close similarities to OE metre, and in the Prose Edda Snorri provided a resource both for prose writers and, in one section of the work (Háttatal), for aspiring skalds via rules for the composition of both syllable-counting and/or stanzaic, and traditional metres. Yet what Snorri best reveals is actually the relative paucity of the OE metrical repertoire: for all its sophisticated archaism, the OE metrical game was essentially one of a kind, so far as is known. One looks in vain for syllable-counted forms of verse, or stanzaic ones, or even for regularly deployed variants of standard alliterative patterning or new combinations of repeated phonemes such as one finds in ON ljóðaháttr or dróttkvaett. The Norse poetic world seems remarkably sophisticated when compared with, for example, the earnest pasticheeven the repetitive monotonyof The Battle of Maldon.

Stress-timing and English historical metrics
The general instantiations of post-lexical 'rhythm rules' of different kinds are familiar from much of the relevant phonological literature of the past thirty years. Yet the relative absence of evidence for these rules from OE verse is a puzzle. Given that many of such rules seem to depend critically on right-headednessi.e. adjustments are made so that linguistic material to the left of a rightmost head is arranged so as to be maximally eurhythmic and preferably, alternatingand given that rhythmic alternation is an optimal instantiation of stress-timing, could it be the case that OE was not organised rhythmically in the same way as later Englishes? Were the relevant rules added to the language at some point between the tenth century and the thirteenth? And in that same period, does the nature of English verse itself reconfigure so that maximally alternating forms are privileged within the line and the old, position-based structures disfavoured? Put more simply: given the absence of evidence for it in OE verse, has stress-timing been an unchanging feature of the English language? Bertinetto (1989) provides a useful overview of the literature and key concepts belonging to the study of isochronya term he uses to cover 'the temporal regulation of speech' in a general sense. He points out that while interstress intervals in so-called stress-timed languages are preferentially regulated, stress-timing is in some ways a perceptual illusion: it is not the case that stable diagnostics (such as the absolute duration of stressed syllables or the absolute regularity of interstress intervals) apply invariably to such languages. Nevertheless, it remains true (in Bertinetto's view) that stress-timed languages exhibit some or all of the following features: (20) Some features of stress-timing ( < Bertinetto 1989) In comparison with syllable=timing, in stress-timing there is • compensatory shortening of unstressed syllables within the rhythmic foot (consider e.g. schwa in the manager's here vs the manor's here)

RAIDING THE DEMOTIC
• preference for regularity in interstress intervals (even though this is in Bertinetto's view a 'perceptual illusion'; see also Roach 1982) • more vowel reduction in unstressed syllables • more tolerance for extreme shortening of unstressed syllables Yet these tendencies are arguably just thattendenciesand there remain languages, such as Russian, whose status as stress-timed or syllable-timed is contestable despite having initial stress and despite displaying some of the features listed in (20)see for example Mehler et al. (1988: 177, particularly fn.1.). It may also not be insignificant that while Mehler et al., in researching prosodic cuing, found that infants responded to some prosodic features from their native languagefor so-called stress-timed languages, the placing of word-stress preferentially onto heavy syllables might, for instance, be considered as a likely source of cue recognitionstress-timing itself appears to be ruled out as a basis for infants discriminating one language from another. That in turn, and taken together with the findings of Bertinetto (1989), suggests that stress-timing and syllable-timing aren't either/or options but are scalar in nature.
Suppose for a moment that varieties of OE weren't stress-timed in the sense familiar from those present-day Englishes spoken within the British Isles. For the language historian interested in the evolution of verse forms that might be an enticing position: the coming of rhyme as a structural feature of some verse could then be aligned with the ingress of some 'Romance' features of prosody such as right-to-left prosodic scansion of words for stress placement together with final stress in some nouns borrowed from French. Further, if phrasal right-headedness ('right-hand phrase-stress') were to gain a firmer foothold in English speech prosody in the early Middle English period then that might align with the corresponding availability of rhythmically promoted function words to poets. In the past I have flirted with both positions (see e.g. McCully 1996McCully , 2003 in other words, have entertained the possibility that right-hand phrasal stress emerges or develops at or near the beginning of the ME period and that verse-structures are critically sensitive to, and thereby provide evidence for, structures present (or tendencies at work) in those varieties of English in which the relevant texts are written. That is, in the past I have entertained the idea that speech prosody and versification are more isomorphic rather than less.
Intellectual flirtations are best left to the young. In (21) are found some features of OE that suggest it was rhythmically patterned like present-day English: (21) Stress-timing present in OE, as evidenced by verse • interstress intervals regulated so that monosyllabic dips are more frequent (this is of course part of the design of Sievers' 1885 Typentheorie: for example, Type A half-lines with monosyllabic dips occur more frequently than the same Type with two or more unstressed syllables in the second position of the verse) • vowel reduction well underway by the time much OE verse was composed/compiled • Minkova & Stockwell (1997) summarise arguments both for and against the emergence of a right-hand, phrasal stress rule in earlier Middle Englisha moderate assumption is that such a rule ('Nuclear Stress Rule') has been present in all periods of English • Behaviour of finite verbs in OE verse is ambiguous ( just as in later Englishes, cf. ran in John ran home, Janet ran away etc.) and in the right contexts, right-headedness within verb phrases was a 'viable choice' for Anglo-Saxon poets (Minkova & Stockwell 1997: 307; see also fn.19 below).
All the same, if we approach the position that Old English was stress-timed (and had right-hand phrasal stress) in much the same way as later Englishes then that leaves several further things for which a language historian and metrist must account: (22) Linguistic questions to answer • If there was right-hand phrasal ('Nuclear') stress in OE then why is the default underlying metrical organisation of the half-line left-strong ('compound stress'see (14)  The lines and half-lines of OE mimic the default stress patterns of English words, with strongest prominence at their leftmost edges. That pattern survives to the present-day, of course, and it's of interest that many bisyllabic acronyms -ACAS (Arbitration and Conciliation Advisory Service) is a typical exampledisplay not primary+weak stress but primary+secondary, with the final syllable of such words apparently resistant to reduction to schwa (see McCully & Holmes 1988 for an initial account of the stress patterns of English acronymy). There may be a case for regarding the stressing of such words as embodying old and indeed 'native' principles of word-stress (and conversely, for regarding end-stressed monomorphemic nouns as exhibiting non-native patternsthe pronunciations of the French loanword garage in different varieties of English rather prove the point). All the same, there are many half-lines in the OE corpus which are unambiguously phrases and might be expected to have strong(est) prominence at their rightmost edges: it remains true that alliteration suggests (but no more than suggests) that mihtig and manna are stronger than any syllable in their following adjacent lexical words (the <g> of God is stressed but doesn't alliterate) but if rightmost phrasal stress operates in OE then surely God would bear more prominence than anything in the preceding adjective?  (Russom 2017: 51). Such a pattern, with corresponding left-edge phrasal stress, is archaistically preserved ('by formulaic tradition' in Russom's view -2017: 52) into and within the surviving OE poetic corpus. Possibly, too, there is something more at work: in contemporary Englishes it's well-known that there's considerable variability in the stressing of compounds and phrases, as in the examples in (24) Why is it possible, even preferable, to allow variability in the perception of compound and phrasal stress in contemporary Englishes but deny it to OE? Further, linguists and critics quite generally accept that there are tensions between an underlying metrical pattern and its instantiation -'trochaic substitution' is a well-known example, one so familiar as to require no further comment here. Such mismatches are sometimes regarded as exemplifying a productive and satisfying metrical complexity (see e.g. Kiparksy 1977 for an account of such complexity in the Shakespearean pentameter). Why deny OE its own metrical mismatching and (therefore) its own form of satisfying complexity? To revisit the example in (23) for a moment: (25) Metrical complexity in OE verse It seems plausible to allow Anglo-Saxon poets the same ingenuity, the same structural aversion to metrical monotony, as one would grant to their poetic aftercomers in succeeding centuries. In later, foot-based forms of English verse, mismatches occur in 15 Giegerich (2017) ascribes anomalies in some well-known phrasal and compound stress patterns to principles operating on an interesting interface between phonology and pragmatics, and specifically in [N1+N2] compounds to structures where N1 is an attribute (cotton in end-stressed cotton dress) and not an 'object' of N2 (a watch-makercompound stressmakes watches (2017: 62)).

CHRISTOPHER B. McCULLY
sequences of feet (by which is here meant constituents of a fixed stock drawn supposedly from Classical metresiamb, trochee, spondee and so on) ranged against an underlying metre; in Old English verse, stress mismatches seem to occur across word-based stress contours ranged against an underlying, word-sized metrical domain. That is, while it comprises elements of isochrony and is constrained by principles of position and closure, the metre is essentially morphological. That view of the underlying, morphologically based nature of OE ('more like masonry than music') is captured in the assumption that both the line and the half-line are left-strong, as suggested in (14) abovea figure derived from Russom (1987) and later works. Both metrical domains mimic the stress-pattern of native words, not necessarily phrases.
Suppose for a moment that the underlying metre allowed for the replication of right-hand, phrasal prominence. We might conceivably (though ultimately erroneously) want to suggest that instead of (14) a configuration such as (26) might be considered descriptively viable: (26) Right-strong phrasal prominence would thereby be built into the underlying template for the metreand would, as an aside, provide a natural explanation for the position of the obligatory site and origin of alliteration within the line, the strongest position of the strong, second half-line (the Hauptstab). Yet as Suzuki (1985) shows, no such assumption need be made: association between segments (in the present context, alliteration) is governed by a Universal Association Convention (UAC) which stipulates that 'association lines drawn from the same autosegmental tier, i.e., the tier 525 RAIDING THE DEMOTIC belonging to the same morpheme, may not cross' (Suzuki 1985: 111; Suzuki notes that the UAC was developed in McCarthy (1981)). 16 In effect, that means that alliteration associates segments working right-to-left. Further, for OE alliterative verse we might make a basic stipulation such that 'alliteration proceeds from and preferentially associates metrically strong (sub)constituents'. The fourth lift of any metrical line might be a candidate for a site of originbut is ruled out because it's not a metrical strong subconstituent. Neither of the lifts in the a-verse can be candidates for a site of origin (because to allow alliteration to spread rightwards from either lift would violate the UAC). That leaves only the first lift of the b-verse as a viable candidate for the site of origin of alliteration across the line and there is no need to assume that phrasal stress is replicated or mimicked within the underlying metrical origination of the line, as shown in (27): (27) Alliteration and left-edge prominence in the OE verse line If this view is correct then although right-hand phrasal stress may well have been present in Old English, poets made a choice not to use itor any of the metrical possibilities associated with rhythmical right-headedness. That's not to claim or even to implydespite what I've described above as the paucity of its metrical repertoirethat OE verse was somehow aesthetically impoverished: an astonishing range of verse and rhythmical prose remains. Yet the absence of isomorphism between phrasal stress and the underlying form of the OE alliterative verse line is suggestive: a morphological basis for the production of aesthetic effect had been found, and found of oldhence, perhaps, the archaising nature of this highly wrought, intricate verse. It was for later English-language poets (often attempting to replicate, or pastiching or translating the work of their Continental contemporaries; see here e.g. Duffell 2018) to exploit the further rhythmical possibilities existing within the English languageto promote and demote syllables to relatively strong positions within the verse-line, to count syllables and to allow and even encourage right-strong patterns of metrical closure. The final section of this article begins to review that form of cultural rapacity and linguistic exploitation.

Poetic change as linguistic and cultural rapacity
To recap: it would not necessarily be the case that those neatly alternating outputs seen in (1)-(10) above didn't occur in vernacular OE and were (therefore) unavailable to poets. As section 2 begins to suggest, absence of evidence does not provide evidence of absence. The most straightforward assumption to make is that then, as now, right-hand phrasal stressrightmost headednesswas present in the language and alternation might well have been found in, for example, strings of monosyllabic function words. Yet because the metre was essentially morphological such alternating outputs weren't identified as possible poetic patterns. Further, if such underlying unstressed syllables were so identified then the rhythmic promotion involved would violate alliterative principles or threaten to overload any potential half-line with stresses and therefore, with potential metrical lifts: (28)  In practice, what seems to happen in the period between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries is that an essentially morphological metreby 'essentially morphological' is here meant that the metre is developed from the form and placement of morphological wordsgave way to a new metre based largely on the form and placement of syllables. In order to effect this change, poets had to exploit features of the English language which had, perhaps, always been present but which weren't operable as parts of the former, once-prestige, metrical pattern. That is, function wordsarticles, prepositions, pronounsas well as certain high-frequency verbs (such as forms of have and be) became usable in the new metres in ways in which they had formerly been non-usable. The fact that in the same period prepositions took on functions formerly supplied by nominal inflections meant that there was an abundant supply of such syllables in the new dispensation. As nominal and verbal inflections were eroded, reordered or redeployed then pronouns, too, were increasingly needed in the new, syllabically based metres to disambiguate who was doing what to whom. Russom puts this well. The syntactic ambiguities arising from inflectional loss were in his view resolved by more frequent employment of function words. An ambiguous dative inflection, for example, would increasingly be clarified by a preposition like to or for. Ambiguous definite inflections would be clarified by a determiner equivalent to modern English the or that. A verb inflection no longer provided adequate identification of the subject. The Beowulf poet could omit subject pronouns to improve the meter but this option was becoming unworkable in the tenth century… (2017: 93) Early signs of the coming metrical changes are observable in Maldon (composed in or very shortly after 991). As Russom and many others have noted, in Maldon the poet uses more expanded dips than would have been tolerated by the Beowulf poet or indeed by Cynewulf (Russom compares Elene 134, flugon on faesten ond feore burgon 19 One of the reviewers here noted that interesting additional cases were provided by those verses which Sievers (1885) classified as A3, essentially those of the form ..x x / x. At particular issue would be the classification of verses beginning with finite verbs, such as the following, from Beowulf: Būgon þā tō bence (Beo. 1013a -'then they bent to the bench'). The alliteration seems to indicate clearly that būgon occupies the first lift of the (on one reading, a fairly standard A Type) verse but Bliss (1958), following Kuhn (1933), read such high-frequency verbs as less-stressed when they occurred early in the syntactic clause or half-line (cf. later English ran in [John [ran away]], where ran is relatively less stressed than the preceding noun or following adverb) and accordingly, the finite verb in e.g. Beo. 1013a would bear only accidental alliterationdecoration rather than structure. If Bliss is correct then A3 verses in Beowulf provide evidence for one-stress half-lines: the key constraint seems to be that there should be four positions within the half-line obligatorily filled with linguistic material and a minimal one stress (metrical lift) in position 3. There are, then, grounds for thinking that ..x x / x is the template for the minimal metrical half-line in OE. Beyond noting that the ambiguity of the poetic evidence (and the possible existence, in OE as in later Englishes, of the kind of metrical fudging which on the grounds of aesthetic variety and interest has always been useful to poets) provides provocative material for historically minded metrists, for reasons of space I will not develop that much wider theme here.

CHRISTOPHER B. McCULLY
['(they) fled into (the) safe place and saved (their own) lives'] with Maldon 194, flugon on þaet faesten and hyra feore burgon -Russom 2017: 90). Russom (2017) also, following Fulk (1992), cautions against conflating poetic change with decline. The Maldon poet was not necessarily less able than his writerly ancestors; he was simply working with raw materials whose nature and disposition made it more difficult to write using all the metrical constraints (including constraints on expanded dips) of former times. It's also the case that alliterative verse-making seems not to have entirely disappeared between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries: some knowledge of the former system seems to have survived in different parts of the country and traces of alliteratively structured, two-stress phrases appear in some prose of the same period, but when alliterative verse-making again appears as a significant part of English literary production in the fourteenth century it employs a longer, more discursive line than would ever have been thought metrical in either Beowulf or Maldon and/or is yoked together with frankly syllabic and stanzaic forms, as most famously in Gawain.
In considering English verse as it existed between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries it therefore seems wiser to think of poetic change rather than poetic decline. I would add a further caution: principles of historical reconstruction such as Uniformitarianism mean that ascribing uniqueness to poetic events and changes may be as rash as ascribing uniqueness to language change itself. English poets have, after all, always been rapacious: they have ransacked not only their own language for raw materials but have also ransacked other literary models from those languages with which English has been in contact. To use a picturesque metaphor: poets are in some ways sculptors, cutting shapes from raw material in a process of composition which (as far as metrical compositions are concerned) critically involves selecting and discarding aligned with counting and closure. As Hanson & Kiparsky (1996) show, constituentsphonemes, syllables, words themselvesare likely to be selected and metricised in such a way as to make use of the largest number of them available at any given time to any given poet. Thus OE metre in principle makes use of the largest number of morphological words; later metres, which count not positions but syllables and rhythmic beats, exploit the stress patterning of the language in a different way but nevertheless optimise what portions of the English word-stock can be used by poets. This point can be summarised in (32): (32) The metrical rapacity of poets 'Maximise the ways in which the word-stock of English can be aligned with metres constrained by counting and closure.' 1. OE: essentially morphological, based on position (optimises syllable onsets in structural alliteration, disposition of stress within morphological words) 2. Later metres: largely phonological, based on syllables and rhythmic beats (optimises syllable rhymes in structural rhyming, disposition of stress within morphological words and within or across strings of function words) The poetic changes involved here are of course affected by those languages and literary models with which English comes into contact. The fascination of Bede or Aldhelm with 529 RAIDING THE DEMOTIC Latin prosodic organisation did not translate into the inception of new forms of English verse, however, and that failure is instructive: the principles of quantity around which classical Latin verse is constructed bore little or no relationship to those native metrical principles then familiar to literate monks or clerics. Further, there were no native Latin speakers or poets available to support the inception of a new from of poetic making. Elsewhere, it may have been the case that by the tenth and eleventh centuries English poets had contact with Norse speakers (i.e. with speakers of Danish or Norwegian dialects of Norse) who were in turn familiar with syllable-counting and/or stanzaic forms of verse, but the widespread adoption of such forms for English audiences would have been unlikely: in that period, large parts of England were an occupied country, so experiments with verse-forms favoured by the political occupier would have been stigmatised even if they had been attempted. Noragain across the same perioddoes literacy seem widespread enough to support durable experiments with verse-forms drawn from other languages and cultures, even though monastic orders were in the eleventh and twelfth centuries beginning once again to have contact with languages and cultures in France and Italy (see again Duffell 2008again Duffell and, in particular, 2018. This article has perhaps begun to stray into the sociolinguistics of metrics (a research field where much still remains to be done) and away from the brief which asked for analyses of the evidential value of older English verse to linguistic historians. In one respect and contextthat of the presence or absence of right-hand phrasal stress in Old Englishthat evidence is possibly less than I once imagined. That is, it seems more straightforward to think of such right-hand phrasal stress as always having been present in the language together with the associated possibilities of rhythmically promoting or demoting monosyllables. Yet if that is the case then the subsequent coming of syllable-counting, rhythmically alternating forms of (rhymed) verse can be seen not as something unprecedented or unique but as a movement exploiting phonological and other constituents already found within the language, but exploiting them in new ways. To paraphrase T. S. Eliot, 20 as English poetry develops and changes, its ventures are not only raids on the inarticulate; they are raidsvibrant, necessary, vitalon the structures of the demotic.