[25] Stubbs, “Memorials of Saint Dunstan,” p. xxx.

[26] “The Englishman and the Scandinavian,” by Frederick Metcalfe, M.A., 1880, p. 11.

[27] In 1880 these Homilies were edited by Dr. Morris, for the Early English Text Society, under the name of “The Blickling Homilies.”

[28] Hübner, 197.

[29] Hübner, 179, 180, 181.

[30] Kemble, “Archæologia,” Anno 1843; Stephens, “Runic Monuments,” p. 405.

[31] Westwood, “Palæographia Sacra Pictoria,” and “Facsimiles of Miniatures from Irish and Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts.”

[32] Beda, “Church History,” i., 33.

[33] “The Architectural History of Canterbury Cathedral,” 1845, p. 27.

[34] “The church at Brixworth has plainly had its walls raised, and a clerestory with windows added, even in the Saxon period; assuming that midwall baluster-shafts are to be received as characteristics of this period, for a triple window with such shafts was inserted in the western wall when the walls were so raised.” Ibid., p. 30. See also Haddan and Stubbs, i., 38.