gnomic poetry, aphoristic verse containing short, memorable statements of traditional wisdom and morality. The Greek word gnomē means “moral aphorism” or “proverb.” Its form may be either imperative, as in the famous command “know thyself,” or indicative, as in the English adage “Too many cooks spoil the broth.” Gnomes are found in the literature of many cultures; among the best known examples are those contained in the biblical book of Proverbs. They are found in early Greek literature, both poetry and prose, from the time of Homer and Hesiod onward. Gnomic poetry is most commonly associated with the 6th-century-bc poets Solon and Simonides and with the elegiac couplets of Theognis and Phocylides. Their aphorisms were collected into anthologies, called gnomologia, and used in instructing the young. One of the best known gnomologia was compiled by Stobaeus in the 5th century ad, and such collections remained popular in the Middle Ages.
(Read Howard Nemerov’s Britannica essay on poetry.)
Gnomes appear frequently in Old English epic and lyric poetry. In Beowulf they are often interjected into the narrative, drawing a moral from the hero’s actions with such phrases as “Thus a man ought to act.” The main collections of Old English gnomes are to be found in the Exeter Book (q.v.) and the 11th-century Cotton Psalter.
Alexander Pope’s Essay on Man (1733–34) offers a more modern example of the use of couplets of distilled wisdom interspersed through a long poem.