Harold : the Last of the Saxon Kings — Volume 04 - Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton - Book

Harold : the Last of the Saxon Kings — Volume 04

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and David Widger
But, as has been before implied, Godwin's civil capacities were more prominent than his warlike. And this it is which invests him with that peculiar interest which attracts us to those who knit our modern intelligence with the past. In that dim world before the Norman deluge, we are startled to recognise the gifts that ordinarily distinguish a man of peace in a civilised age.
I promised, said the Dane king, to set thy head higher than other men's, and I keep my word. The trunkless head was set on the gates of London.
Wolnoth had quarrelled with his uncle Brightric, Edric's brother, and before the arrival of Canute, had betaken himself to the piracy of a sea chief, seduced twenty of the king's ships, plundered the southern coasts, burnt the royal navy, and then his history disappears from the chronicles; but immediately afterwards the great Danish army, called Thurkell's Host, invaded the coast, and kept their chief station on the Thames. Their victorious arms soon placed the country almost at their command. The traitor Edric joined them with a power of more than 10,000 men; and it is probable enough that the ships of Wolnoth had before this time melted amicably into the armament of the Danes. If this, which seems the most likely conjecture, be received, Godwin, then a mere youth, would naturally have commenced his career in the cause of Canute; and as the son of a formidable chief of thegn's rank, and even as kinsman to Edric, who, whatever his crimes, must have retained a party it was wise to conciliate, Godwin's favour with Canute, whose policy would lead him to show marked distinction to any able Saxon follower, ceases to be surprising.
The son of Wolnoth accompanied Canute in his military expedition to the Scandinavian continent, and here a signal victory, planned by Godwin and executed solely by himself and the Saxon band under his command, without aid from Canute's Danes, made the most memorable military exploit of his life, and confirmed his rising fortunes.

Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2005-03-01

Темы

Biographical fiction; Harold, King of England, 1022?-1066 -- Fiction; William I, King of England, 1027 or 8-1087 -- Fiction; Anglo-Saxons -- Kings and rulers -- Fiction; Great Britain -- History -- Edward, the Confessor, 1042-1066 -- Fiction; Great Britain -- Kings and rulers -- Fiction

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