Capitolo 49
and to warn them some imminence of the imminent danger to that
they was now exposed.
A terrible scene of the dismay and terror it achieved. The affrighted
messengers said their history, without breath and wayworn, to the door of the
chapel, where the monks were busy to their devotions. The corridors
you/he/she was filled with exclamations of alarm and desperate lamentations.
The abbot whose name was Theodore, immediately started to take measures
been all right to the emergency. He resolved to only hold back to the convent
some elderly monks and some children which absolute defenselessness, him
thought, would disarm the ferocity and revenge of Danish. The
remains, only approximately thirty, however in number--almost all his/her brothers
having gone out under the Monk Joly to the great battle--has put
on axle a boat to be expeditious down the river. It seems sight for first a
the strange idea to send away the vigorous and strong one, and it holds the unsteady one
and defenseless to the scene of danger; but the monks knew well a lot that
every resistance was vain, and that, accordingly, their greatest safety
it would lie in the absence of every aspect of the possibility of
resistance.
The treasures were also away expeditious with all the men. Them with hurry
picked up together the whole valuables, the relics, the jewels and everybody
of the gold and silver dish that could easily be removed, and
puts them in a boat--surely compressing them as as their alacrity and
trepidation allowed. The boats slipped down the river up to them it came to
a solitary stain, where an anchorite or kind of hermit he/she lived in loneliness.
The men and the treasures had to be intrusted to its position. Him
concealed the men in the groves thick of trees and the other hiding-places in the
woods, and it buried the treasures.
Of bad duration, as soon as the boats and the party of monks that
accompanies them you/he/she had left the abbey, the abbot Theodore and the old one
monks that have remained with him exhorted on the job to conceal that part
of the treasures that had not been brought away. The whole dish that