Capitolo 22
positive job. Teacher Rolleston that has opened a lot of these
first graves of pagan of our Teutonic ancestors, it finds everywhere in them
the abundant evidence of the "them great attitude to destroying, and them great
the slowness in to elaborate, civilisation of the material." Up to that the Anglo-Saxon
received by the Continent the Christian religion and the Roman
culture, he was a middle and mere Aryan barbarian, with a strong taste for
war and it plunders, but with the small love for some of the arts of the peace.
Everywhere other, in Gaul, Spain or Italy, the Teutonic barbarianses entered,
you contact with the Roman civilisation, they received the religion of
Christ and the arts of the conquered people, during or first them
conquest of the country. But in Britain the Teutonic invaders remained
pagans crave after their setup in the island; and them suddenly
destroyed, in the south-oriental line, almost every relic of the Roman
rule and of the Christian faith. From now us we have here the curious fact
what, during the fifth and sixth centuries, a belt of intrusive and
aggressive heathendom intervenes among the Cristiano of the Continent
and the Welsh Christian and Irish of western Britain. The Church of the
Celtic Welsh was cut the road for more than one hundred years from she Asked her
of the Roman world from a hostile and impracticable barrier of pagan
English, Jutes and Saxons. Their separation produced very serious
effects on the after history both of their Welsh and of them
Conquerors English.
I CAPITULATE IV.
THE COLONISATION DI THE COAST.
Although the myths that surround the arrival of the English in Britain
has little historical value, they is still interesting for the light
what they incidentally throws on the habits and ways of thought of
the farmers. They has in common a character with all the other legends,
what they grows fuller and more circumstantial the further one they proceeds
from the original duration. Baeda around that he/she wrote AD 700, give them in a
very lean form: the Chronicle English, compiled to the court of