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A rare voice from seventh-century England, rendered in measured verse. It sings in Old English. Caedmon’s Metrical Paraphrase of Parts of the Holy Scriptures in Anglo-Saxon gathers sacred narrative into spare, rhythmic lines - scripture retold in verse with plain power and archaic charm. Readable and austere, this edition introduces the metre and mood of the earliest vernacular Christian poetry while remaining approachable for modern readers. Every line carries the alliterative pulse of early English verse, and the work’s oral-memory qualities make it as useful for listening imaginatively as it is for close reading.Both a biblical paraphrase collection and an early witness to old english religious verse, the work occupies a pivotal place in the study of early medieval christianity. Familiar to readers of anglo-saxon poetry anthology material and often taught alongside beowulf era texts, it is essential for anglo-saxon literature study and for medieval literature curriculum design. Surviving in early english manuscripts, these poems offer scholars of old english direct evidence of how scripture was reshaped for vernacular devotion - scripture retold in verse that balances doctrinal clarity with poetic economy. For students and teachers the text sharpens appreciation of Old English diction, metre and formula; for scholars it supplies lexical and syntactic clues to transmission, translation practice and early homiletic strategies.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Casual readers curious about linguistic history and spiritual imagination will find the language immediate; classic-literature collectors and libraries will prize it as a companion to caedmon poetic works and to collections of early english manuscripts. It endures as a living witness to the birth of English sacred verse and a quietly brilliant addition to any shelf of early literature.