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" How he came to know this he neither explained at the time, nor did any of his hearers ask : nevertheless, out of respect to his piety, not a doubt of the truth of his words remained on the minds of any present. "
The annals of England, an epitome of English history [by W.E. Flaherty]. - Page 214
by William Edward Flaherty - 1855
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History of England, from the Earliest Times to the Year Eighteen Hundred and ...

James White - 1861 - 876 pages
...abbot observed, " Last night that king was brought before God, and by a deliberate judgment received the sorrowful sentence of damnation." How he came...of the truth of his words remained on the minds of ;iny present. Hugo led such a life and had such a character, that all regarded his discourse and venerated...
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The Annals of England: An Epitome of English History, from Contemporary ...

William Edward Flaherty - 1876 - 670 pages
...William of Malmesbury, need no remark ; but there is a singular statement on the subject in Eadmer. "Anselm, the exiled archbishop of Canterbury, being...regarded his discourse, and venerated his advice, as though an oracle from heaven had spoken." From this, some comparatively modern writers have concluded...
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The annals of England: an epitome of English history [by W.E. Flaherty ...

William Edward Flaherty - 1876 - 694 pages
...observed,—' Last night that king was brought before God : and by a deliberate judgment incurred (he sorrowful sentence of damnation.' How he came to know...regarded his discourse, and venerated his advice, as though an oracle from heaven had spoken." From this, some comparatively modern writers have concluded...
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William of Malmesbury's Chronicle of the Kings of England: From the Earliest ...

William (of Malmesbury) - 1895 - 604 pages
...to Hugo, abbat of Clugny. There, when the conversation turned upon king William, the abbat aforesaid observed, " Last night that king was brought before...of his words remained on the minds of any present. Hugh led such a life, and had such a character, that all regarded his discourse and venerated his advice,...
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The London Quarterly Review, Volume 1

William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1853 - 606 pages
...to Hugo, Abbot of Clugny. There, when the conversation turned upon King William, the Abbot aforesaid observed : ' Last night, that King was brought before...on the minds of any present. Hugo led such a life, and had such a character, that all regarded his discourse, and venerated his advice, as though an oracle...
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