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An Anglo-Saxon Primer: With Grammar, Notes, and Glossary:

Current price: $26.62
An Anglo-Saxon Primer: With Grammar, Notes, and Glossary:
An Anglo-Saxon Primer: With Grammar, Notes, and Glossary:

Barnes and Noble

An Anglo-Saxon Primer: With Grammar, Notes, and Glossary:

Current price: $26.62

Size: Hardcover

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126 Pages. Complete and Unabridged.
From the Preface to the First Edition.
The want of an introduction to the study of Old-English has long been felt. Vernon's "Anglo-Saxon Guide" was an admirable book for its time, but has long been completely antiquated. I was therefore obliged to make my "Anglo-Saxon Reader" a somewhat unsatisfactory compromise between an elementary primer and a manual for advanced students, but I always looked forward to producing a strictly elementary book like the present one, which would enable me to give the larger one a more scientific character, and would at the same time serve as an introduction to it. Meanwhile, however, Professor Earle has brought out his "Book for the Beginner in Anglo-Saxon." But this work is quite unsuited to serve as an introduction to my Reader, and will be found to differ so totally in plan and execution from the present one as to preclude all idea of rivalry on my part. We work on lines which instead of clashing can only diverge more and more.
My main principle has been to make the book the easiest possible introduction to the study of Old-English.
Poetry has been excluded, and a selection made from the easiest prose pieces I could find. Old-English original prose is unfortunately limited in extent, and the most suitable pieces (such as the voyages of Ohthere and Wulfstan) are already given in the Reader; these I could not give over again. But I hope the short extracts from the Chronicle and the Martyrdom of King Edmund will be found not wanting in interest. For the rest of the selections I have had to fall back on scriptural extracts, which have the great advantages of simplicity and familiarity of subject. The Gospel extracts have been transferred here from the Reader, where they will be omitted in the next edition. The sentences which head the selections have been gathered mainly from the Gospels, Ælfric's Homilies, and the Chronicle. They are all of the simplest possible character, only those having been taken which would bear isolation from their context. They are intended to serve both as an introduction and as a supplement to the longer pieces. They are grouped roughly into paragraphs, according to the grammatical forms they illustrate. Thus the first paragraph consists mainly of examples of the nominative singular of nouns and adjectives, the second of accusative singulars, and so on....

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