10-11-2025, 06:42 PM
(10-11-2025, 02:55 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.We don't have anything comparable to the VM.
But we can get hints what it could be if we look at the special feature, that it is not a continues text.
A simple (not very good) question about text that start lines with similar words to Chatgpt revealed that:
1. Alliterative Revival poetry (England, c. 1360–1400)
These poems use the line as a fixed metrical block.
Words with the main alliteration nearly always appear at the start of the line or the half-line, because the poetic grammar demands it.
Examples:
- “Piers Plowman” (William Langland, late 14th century)
- “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” (c. 1375–1400)
- “Pearl,” “Patience,” “Cleanness” (Pearl-poet)
Key stressed words often appear at the beginning of the metrical unit, and scribes preserve line integrity very strictly.
2. Acrostic and abecedarian poems (prevalent 13th–15th c.)
These are poems where line-initial letters form words, names, or sequences (A-B-C, or a prayer acrostic).
The line start is functionally constrained because the writer needs the initial letters to obey the pattern.
Examples around 1400:
- Many Middle English devotional poems include acrostics (e.g., names of Mary).
- French love poems sometimes embed the beloved’s name via acrostic.
- German Minnesang late manuscripts sometimes include acrostic dedications.
- Liturgical Latin hymns in manuscripts from this period continue the abecedarian tradition (e.g., “Abecedaria in laudem Mariae”).
3. Italian and Occitan lyric traditions (late medieval copies)
In many lyric forms (ballate, laude, canzoni), line-initial positions carry repeated refrain words or repeated syntactic anchors.
Examples (not strictly 1400 but circulating in manuscripts of that era):
- Dante’s “Vita Nuova” poems in Trecento manuscripts
- Petrarch’s “Canzoniere” (completed 1374, widely copied through 1400)
- Occitan troubadour poems in late medieval codices (where repeated first-word patterns define stanza structure)
4. Middle High German verse tradition (still copied around 1400)
German manuscripts often preserve strophic forms with rigid line openings.
Examples:
- “Der Stricker” (13th c., but heavily recopied ca. 1400)
- Mystical verse (e.g., poems of Heinrich Seuse)
- Meisterlieder precursors with fixed line openings for rhyme and meter
5. Hebrew liturgical poetry (piyyutim)
Common around 900–1500, many piyyutim use acrostic forms, including author signatures or alphabetic patterns.
These strongly constrain line-initial letters.
Manuscripts around 1400 (Ashkenazi and Sephardi) frequently include such poems.
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