Capitolo 60
course, understood completely, and the Anglo-Saxon swords and knives
discovered in wheelbarrows it is of good construction. Every head also had his
minstrel to that it sang the short ones and you mock Anglo-Saxon and jerky the
accompaniment of a harp. The corpses had burnt and their ashes put in
you bury in the north: the southern tribes buried their warriors in full
dressed military, and from their graves a lot of of the small knowledge that
we possess as to their habits you/he/she is deduced. For this motive you/he/she has been taken them
swords, a long enclosure, with ornamental hilt and double-penetrating edge, often
covered by runic registrations; their small knives of belt; them long
lances; and their circle, leather-faced, wood shields. Jewelry is
of gold, it enriched with coloured you enamel, pearl, or he/she cut pomegranate.
Buckles, rings, bracelets, hairpins, necklaces, scissors and toilet
requisites was also buried with the corpses. Drink-cups of glass that
happens among the graves, you/he/she had probably cared from the continent to
Kent or London; and some small work certainly existed with the Roman
world, as we learn from Baeda.
In faith the English were true to their old Teutonic myths. Them
you compare with the Christian Welsh it was not of some kind to do them
you embrace the religion that is due to seem to them that of slaves and
hostile. Baeda tells that the English adored idols, and it sacrificed
oxen to theirs of the. Many still trace of their mythology you/he/she has gone away in ours
half.
Before in the importance among their divinities it came to Woden the Odin of ours,
Scandinavian relatives which call us he/she anchors we preserve in Wednesday (it dies
Mercurii). To him every royal family of the English traced his/her descent.
The Mr. Kemble has pointed out many tall places in England that holds his
you call a present day. Wanborough, in Carriage to the
sky-water-dividend of the Hog was originally Back Wodnesbeorh, or
the hill of Woden. Wanborough, in Wiltshire that divides the valleys