[59] William of Malmesbury, p. 249.
[60] Malmesbury, p. 252.
[61] Vol. i. p. 322.
[62] “Having first washed the corpse, it was clothed in a straight linen garment, or put into a bag or sack of linen, and then wrapped closely round from head to foot with a strong cloth wrapper.”—Strutt, vol. i., p. 66.
[63] The custom of carrying the dead in some slight envelope to the sarcophagus which was to be its last resting place, accounts for the mischance which occurred at the burial of William the Conqueror, force being required to thrust the body into its too narrow cell. Bede tells us (Ecc. Hist. b. iv. c. xi.) how the stone coffin for Sebba, King of the East Saxons, was too small, and when the attendants were for bending the knees of the corpse a miracle ensued, and the coffin elongated of itself.
[64] Wace, p. 89.
[65] Annals of Roger de Hoveden, vol. i. p. 130.
[66] The paludamentum, or official dress of a Roman general, to which the episcopal pallium is probably to be traced, was either of a brilliant white, scarlet, or purple colour.
[67] See [note D], at the end of the volume.
[68] Hinde on Comets, p. 52.