| Charles Henry Pearson - 1861 - 500 pages
...funeral mass had been said, and the body was about to be lowered into the grave, Asselin FitzArthur stepped forth and forbade the burial to proceed. "...claimant with sixty shillings for the place of sepulture, 1 How much of this last speech was invented by Orderie, is difficult to decide. I have extracted the... | |
| Charles Henry Pearson - 1861 - 502 pages
...funeral mass had been said, and the body was about to be lowered into the grave, Asselin FitzArthur stepped forth and forbade the burial to proceed. "...claimant with sixty shillings for the place of sepulture, 1 How much of this last speech was invented by Orderic, is difficult to decide. I have extracted the... | |
| David Morris - 1879 - 586 pages
...was once .my father's house, which this man, when Duke of Normandy, took forcibly from my father. I forbid, in God's behalf, that the body of the spoiler...covered with my turf, or buried in my inheritance 1 ' The man's statements were proved to be true ; his claims were allowed ; and on the promise that... | |
| Henry Elliot Shepherd - 1881 - 368 pages
...funeral mass 4 had been said, and the body was about to be lowered into the grave, Asselin Fitz-Arthur stepped forth and forbade the burial to proceed :...the credit of discharging this debt with a hundred pounds. By a strange chance, Gunilda, Harold's sister, who had lived a life of ascetic devotion in... | |
| David Morris (B.A.) - 1883 - 176 pages
...was once my father's house, which this man, when Duke of Normandy, took forcibly from my father. I forbid, in God's behalf, that the body of the spoiler...with my turf, or buried in my inheritance ! ' The man's statements were proved to be true ; his claims were allowed ; and on the promise that the inheritance... | |
| Henry Elliot Shepherd - 1893 - 460 pages
...funeral mass 4 had been said, and the body was about to be lowered into the grave, Asselin Fitz-Arthur stepped forth and forbade the burial to proceed: "...the credit of discharging this debt with a hundred pounds. By a strange chance, Qunilda, Harold's sister, who had lived a life of ascetic devotion in... | |
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