The old English who had come to Britain were heathen, and
believed in many false gods: the Sun, to whom they made Sunday
sacred, as Monday was to the moon, Wednesday to a great terrible
god, named Woden, and Thursday to a god named Thor, or Thunder.
They thought a clap of thunder was the sound of the great hammer he
carried in his hand. They thought their gods cared for people being
brave, and that the souls of those who died fighting gallantly in
battle were the happiest of all; but they did not care for kindness
or gentleness.
Thus they often did very cruel things, and one of the worst that
they did was the stealing of men, women, and children from their
homes, and selling them to strangers, who made slaves of them. All
England had not one king. There were generally about seven kings,
each with a different part of the island and as they were often at
war with one another, they used to steal one another's subjects,
and sell them to merchants who came from Italy and Greece for
them.
Some English children were made slaves, and carried to Rome,
where they were set in the market-place to be sold. A good priest,
named Gregory, was walking by. He saw their fair faces, blue eyes,
and long light hair, and, stopping, he asked who they were.
"Angles," he was told, "from the isle of Britain." "Angles?" he
said, "they have angel faces, and they ought to be heirs with the
angels in heaven." From that time this good man tried to find means
to send teachers to teach the English the Christian faith. He had
to wait for many years, and, in that time, he was made Pope,
namely, Father-Bishop of Rome. At last he heard that one of the
chief English kings, Ethelbert of Kent, had married Bertha, the
daughter of the King of Paris, who was a Christian, and that she
was to be allowed to bring a priest with her, and have a church to
worship in.
Gregory thought this would make a beginning: so he sent a
priest, whose name was Augustine, with a letter to King Ethelbert
and Queen Bertha, and asked the King to listen to him. Ethelbert
met Augustine in the open air, under a tree at Canterbury, and
heard him tell about the true God, and JESUS CHRIST, whom He sent;
and, after some time, and a great deal of teaching, Ethelbert gave
up worshiping Woden and Thor, and believed in the true God, and was
baptized, and many of his people with him. Then Augustine was made
Archbishop of Canterbury; and, one after another, in the course of
the next hundred years, all the English kingdoms learnt to know
God, and broke down their idols, and became Christian.
Bishops were appointed, and churches were built, and parishes
were marked off—a great many of them the very same that we
have now. Here and there, when men and women wanted to be very good
indeed, and to give their whole lives to doing nothing but serving
God, without any of the fighting and feasting, the buying and
selling of the outer world, they built houses, where they might
live apart, and churches, where there might be services seven times
a day. These houses were named abbeys. Those for men were,
sometimes, also called monasteries, and the men in them were termed
monks, while the women were called nuns, and their homes convents
of nunneries. They had plain dark dresses, and hoods, and the women
always had veils. The monks used to promise that they would work as
well as pray, so they used to build their abbeys by some forest or
marsh, and bring it all into order, turning the wild place into
fields, full of wheat. Others used to copy out the Holy Scriptures
and other good books upon parchment— because there was no
paper in those days, nor any printing—drawing beautiful
painted pictures at the beginning of the chapters, which were
called illuminations. The nun did needlework and embroidery, as
hangings for the altar, and garments for the priests, all bright
with beautiful colors, and stiff with gold. The English nuns' work
was the most beautiful to be seen anywhere.
There were schools in the abbeys, where boys were taught
reading, writing, singing, and Latin, to prepare them for being
clergymen; but not many others thought it needful to have anything
to do with books. Even the great men thought they could farm and
feast, advise the king, and consent to the laws, hunt or fight,
quite as well without reading, and they did not care for much
besides; for, though they were Christians, they were still rude,
rough, ignorant men, who liked nothing so well as a hunt or a
feast, and slept away all the evening, especially when they could
get a harper to sing to them.
The English men used to wear a long dress like a carter's frock,
and their legs were wound round with strips of cloth by way of
stockings. Their houses were only one story, and had no
chimneys—only a hole at the top for the smoke to go out at;
and no glass in the windows. The only glass there was at all had
been brought from Italy to put into York Cathedral, and it was
thought a great wonder. So the windows had shutters to keep out the
rain and wind, and the fire was in the middle of the room. At
dinner-time, about twelve o'clock, the lord and lady of the house
sat upon cross-legged stools, and their children and servants sat
on benches; and square bits of wood called trenchers, were put
before them for plates, while the servants carried round the meat
on spits, and everybody cut off a piece with his own knife and at
it without a fork. They drank out of cows' horns, if they had not
silver cups. But though they were so rough they were often good,
brave people.
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