Explanation of the Vowel Accenting
In general, Harrison and Sharp use circumflex accents over vowels to mark long vowels. For ash, however, the actual character 'æ' represents the long vowel. Short ash is rendered with a-umlaut (ä). The long diphthongs (ēo, ēa, etc.) are indicated with an acute accent over the second vowel (eó, eá, etc.).
Vowel Equivalents in Different Versions:
| Orig. | Revised | Orig. | Revised |
| ä | æ | û | ū |
| Ä | Æ | Û | Ū |
| æ | ǣ | ý | ȳ |
| Æ | Ǣ | Ý | Ȳ |
| â | ā | eá | ēa |
| Â | Ā | Eá | Ēa |
| ê | ē | eó | ēo |
| Ê | Ē | Eó | Ēo |
| î | ī | iá | īa |
| Î | Ī | Iá | Īa |
| ô | ō | ió | īo |
| Ô | Ō | Ió | Īo |
I. BEÓWULF:
AN ANGLO-SAXON POEM.