The Old English
Rune Poemconsists of ninety-four lines, grouped in twenty-nine stanzas of two to five lines each. Each stanza is prefixed by a runic sign in alphabetical order, followed by a description of the object or concept that each of the twenty-nine runic letters signify. While runic symbols occasionally occur in other Old English texts, the closest parallel to the Old English
Rune Poemis found in two significantly younger poems from Scandinavia: the Old Norwegian and Icelandic
Rune Poems. Their existence points to a shared cultural tradition, whose original purpose might have been the preservation of wisdom and learning by means of a human cultural instrument, the runic alphabet.
The eleventh century manuscript of the Old English Rune Poem, MS Cotton Otho B. x, was almost
482 words
Citation: Kries, Susanne. "The Old English Rune Poem". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 25 October 2002 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=11654, accessed 24 November 2024.]