Legends of the Saxon Saints
    BY

     Aubrey de Vere

    Hic sunt in fossa Bedæ Venerabilis ossa

    (

     Old Inscription

    )

    LONDON

    C. KEGAN PAUL & CO., 1 PATERNOSTER SQUARE

    1879

    (

     The rights of translation and of reproduction are reserved

    )

    TO THE

    VENERABLE BEDE

   Many years ago a friend remarked to me on the strangeness of the circumstance that the greatest event in the history of a nation, its conversion to Christianity, largely as it is often recorded in national legends, has never been selected as a theme for poetry. That event may indeed not supply the materials necessary for an Epic or a Drama, yet it can hardly fail to abound in details significant and pathetic, which especially invite poetic illustration. With the primary interest of that great crisis, many others, philosophical, social, and political, generally connect themselves. Antecedent to a nation's conversion, the events of centuries have commonly either conduced to it, or thrown obstacles in its way; while the history as well as the character of that nation in the

   subsequent ages is certain to have been in a principal measure modified by that event. Looking back consequently on that period in which the moral influences of ages, early and late, are imaged, a people recognises its own features as in a mirror, but sees them such as 
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