The History of the Kings of Britain Quotes
The History of the Kings of Britain
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The History of the Kings of Britain Quotes
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“Take heed, you bear in mind the piety you owe unto your country and unto your fellow countrymen, whose slaughter by the treachery of the Payneham shall be unto your disgrace everlasting. Unless you press hardily forward to defend them. Fight therefore for your country, and if it be that death overtake you, suffer it willingly for your country’s sake. For death itself is victory, and a healing unto the soul.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“Britain, the best of islands, is situated in the Western Ocean, between France and Ireland.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“For whosoever seeks to snatch away from another those things that be his own, deserves to lose his own through him who he seeks to wrong.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“You men that be known from these others by your Christian profession. Take heed, you bear in mind the piety you owe unto your country and unto your fellow countrymen, whose slaughter by the treachery of the Payneham shall be unto your disgrace everlasting. Unless you press hardily forward to defend them. Fight therefore for your country, and if it be that death overtake you, suffer it willingly for your country’s sake. For death itself is victory, and a healing unto the soul. In as much as he that shall have died for his brethren offers himself as a living sacrifice unto God, nor is it doubtful that herein he follows in the footsteps of Christ, who distained not to lay down his own soul for his breatharian. Who therefore amongst you shall be slain in this battle, unto him shall that death be as full penance and absolution of all his sins, if so be he receive it willingly on this way.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“Woe unto the red dragon, for his extermination draws near; and his caverns shall be occupied of the white dragon that betokens the Saxons whom you have invited here. The red signifies the race of Briton, that shall be oppressed of the white. Therefore, shall the mountains and the valleys thereof be made level plane and the streams of the valley’s shall flow with blood. The rights of religion shall be done away, and the ruin of the churches be made manifest. At last, she that is oppressed shall prevail, and resist the cruelty of them that came from without. For the bore of Cornwall shall bring sucker and shall trample their necks beneath his feet. The islands of the ocean shall be subdued onto his power, and the forest of goal shall he possess. The house of Romulus shall dread the fierceness of his prowess, and doubtful shall be his end.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“When fatigue finally forced him to pause, he ordered the men who were left to have their hearts torn out and their carcasses burned”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“Roots and branches shall change their places and the oddness of this will pass for a miracle.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“When these things were represented to the king, he was mightily pleased, as being very unwilling to part with Hengist; and at last ordered his subjects and the Saxons to meet upon the kalends of May, which were now very near, at the monastery of Ambrius,[63] for the settling of the matters above mentioned.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
“But Hengist, hearing that Vortimer was dead, raised an army of not less than three hundred thousand men, and fitting out a fleet returned with them to Britain.”
― The History of the Kings of Britain
― The History of the Kings of Britain
