Early BritainT. Fisher Unwin, 1889 - 382 pages |
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Page 14
... gave the signal to weigh anchor , and having wind and tide in his favour , moved seven miles north- ward , probably to the neighbourhood of Deal , where the shore was level . As soon as the Roman ships began to move , the Britons ...
... gave the signal to weigh anchor , and having wind and tide in his favour , moved seven miles north- ward , probably to the neighbourhood of Deal , where the shore was level . As soon as the Roman ships began to move , the Britons ...
Page 32
... gave back , as a matter of policy or friendship , the spoils which they had taken at the defeat of Crassus . This arrangement the Roman poets describe by such phrases as " tearing down the Roman standards from the Parthian shrines ...
... gave back , as a matter of policy or friendship , the spoils which they had taken at the defeat of Crassus . This arrangement the Roman poets describe by such phrases as " tearing down the Roman standards from the Parthian shrines ...
Page 33
... gave the order that the soldiers were to fill their helmets and pockets with shells . These , " he said , " are the spoils of the ocean , and are due to the Capitol and the Palatine , " whither he accordingly sent them , with directions ...
... gave the order that the soldiers were to fill their helmets and pockets with shells . These , " he said , " are the spoils of the ocean , and are due to the Capitol and the Palatine , " whither he accordingly sent them , with directions ...
Page 36
... gave in their submission , and Claudius within a few days returned to Rome ( from which he was absent scarcely six months ) , and celebrated his 1 Camalodunum may be identified with the modern Colchester , i.e. , Coloniacastra . But it ...
... gave in their submission , and Claudius within a few days returned to Rome ( from which he was absent scarcely six months ) , and celebrated his 1 Camalodunum may be identified with the modern Colchester , i.e. , Coloniacastra . But it ...
Page 41
... gave the signal for advance . He had , how- ever , surveyed the ground , and knew where the attack 1 Dean Merivale gives a doubtful preference to Coxall Knoll , near Lentwardine , on the Teme , among many places for which the ...
... gave the signal for advance . He had , how- ever , surveyed the ground , and knew where the attack 1 Dean Merivale gives a doubtful preference to Coxall Knoll , near Lentwardine , on the Teme , among many places for which the ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards Alfred Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Archbishop army Athelstan attack Author battle Bede Bishop Bretwalda Britain British Britons brother Cæsar called camp Canute Carausius Caswallon cavalry chief Christian Church cloth coast command conquest Crown 8vo Danes Danish daughter death defeated Demy 8vo died dominions Dunstan Earl East Anglia edition Edmund Edric Edward Egbert Emperor enemy England English king Ethelbald Ethelbert Ethelred Ethelwulf fight fled fleet force fought Gaul Godwin hand Harold Harold Hardrada hear held Hengist invaders island Kent King's kingdom land legions London married Mercia monastery native nobles Norman Normandy Northmen Northumbria Pagans peace Penda plunder prince probably ravaged reign Roman Rome sailed says the Chronicler seems sent ships slain soldiers story Suetonius Sussex Sweyn Tacitus Thames throne told took Tostig town tribes troops victory Vortigern Wales wall Welsh Wessex West Saxons William William of Malmesbury
Popular passages
Page 217 - But those things which I met with, either of the days of Ine my kinsman, or of Offa, king of the Mercians, or of Ethelbert, who first among the English race received baptism, those which seemed to me the rightest, those I have here gathered together, and rejected the others.
Page 158 - Go on quickly, I know not how long I shall hold out, and whether my Maker will not soon take me away.
Page 112 - Beda's list comprises Ella of Sussex, Ceawlin of Wessex, Ethelbert of Kent, Redwald of East Anglia, and Edwin, Oswald, and Oswy, of Northumbria. THE SAXON ERA.
Page 160 - Receive my head into your hands, for it is a great satisfaction to me to sit facing my holy place, where I was wont to pray, that I may also, sitting, call upon my Father ! And thus, on the pavement of his little cell, singing : ' Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost ; ' when he had named the Holy Ghost, he breathed his last, and so departed to the heavenly kingdom.
Page 157 - ... nights and days, From Heaven to Hell, where the Lord changed them all To Devils, because they his Deed and Word Refused to worship. Therefore in worse light Under the earth beneath, Almighty God Had placed them triumphless in the swart HelL There evening, immeasurably long, Brings to each fiend renewal of the fire; Then comes, at dawn, the east wind keen with frost Its dart, or fire continual, torment sharp, The punishment wrought for them they must bear.