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634.

BOOK and all human aggrandisement, are unavailing decorations. In the festival of Easter a silver dish was laid before him, full of dainties. While the blessing was about to be pronounced, the servant appointed to relieve the poor, informed the king that the street was crowded with the needy, soliciting alms. Struck by the contrast, that while he was feasting with luxury, many of his subjects, beings of feelings, desires, and necessities like his own, were struggling with poverty; remembering the benevolent precepts of Christianity, and obeying the impulse of a kind temper, he ordered the food, untouched, to be given to the supplicants, and the silver dish to be divided among them." The beggar for one instant participated in the enjoyments of a king, and rank was, in that fierce and proud day, admonished to look with compassion on the misery which surrounds it.

642.

Slain by
Penda.

OSWALD had the satisfaction of perceiving the blessings of Christianity diffused into Wessex. A spirit so lowly and so charitable as his own, must have powerfully felt the beauties of its benign morality. He stood sponsor for Cynegils, who re-. ceived baptism. The nation followed the example of the king."

WHILE Oswald was benefiting his age by a display of those gentle virtues which above all others are fitted to meliorate the human character, the Mercian king was preparing to attack him. His invasion of Northumbria was fatal to the less warlike Oswald, who fell at Oswestry in Shropshire, in

6 Bede, lib. iii. c. 6. Oswald was Nepos Edwini regis ex sorore Acha. ibid. As he united Deira and Bernicia, the Saxon states formed, during his reign, an hexarchy.

7 Bede, lib. iii. c. 7.

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the thirty-eighth year of his age, and the ninth of CHA P. his reign. Oswald breathed his last sigh in prayer for his friends.s

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tacks Beb

As ferocious as he was daring and restless, Penda caused the head and limbs of Oswald to be severed from his body, and exposed on stakes. He proceeded through Northumbria with devastations, and finding himself unable to carry the royal city of Bebbanburh by storm, he resolved to destroy it by Penda atfire. He demolished all the villages in its vicinity, banburh. and encompassing the place with a great quantity of the wood and thatch of the ruins, he surrounded the city with flames. But the wind, which was raising the fiery shower above the city walls, suddenly shifted. The element of destruction, most fatal to man, was driven back from its expected prey on those who had let it loose, and the sanguinary besiegers, in panic or in prudence, abandoned the place. 10 The Northumbrians afterwards made Oswy, the brother of Oswald their king.

PENDA'S next warfare was against Wessex. Cenwalh, the son of Cynegils, had offended him by repudiating his sister. He invaded and expelled him; and Cenwalh was an exile in Wessex for three years, before he could regain his crown.

11

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of East

In the year after Oswald's death, the victorious Destroys the kings Penda turned his arms against East Anglia, then in a state of unambitious and inoffensive tranquil- Anglia. lity. But this disposition only tempted the ambi

Bede, lib. iii. c. 9.

9 Bede, lib. ii. c. 12. Oswy, his successor, removed and interred them, ibid. But the Saxon Chronicler mentions that his hands were at Bebbanburh in his time, p. 31. They were kept as relics.

10 Bede, lib. iii. c. 16.

"Bede, lib. iii. c. 7. Flor. Wig. 237. Sax. Chron. 32.

BOOK tion of the Mercian. In this country, Sigebert had

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succeeded the son of Redwald, whom at one time fearing, he had fled into France for safety, and there became a Christian, and attached himself to study. Attaining the crown of East Anglia, he established that school in his dominions, which has not only the distinction of being the first, after that at Canterbury, which the Anglo-Saxons established to teach reading and the literature to which it leads, but also of being supposed to have formed the original germ of the university of Cambridge. 12 Sigebert built also a monastery; and preferring devotion, letters, and tranquillity, to state, he resigned his crown to his kinsman Ecgric, who was reigning in a part of East Anglia, assumed the tonsure, and retired into the monastery, which he had founded. On Penda's invasion, the East Anglians, fearful lest their reigning monarch should be unequal to repel his superior numbers, drew Sigebert by force from his monastery, and compelled him to head their from a belief that it would prosper under the

army,

12 Bede's account is, that desiring to imitate what he had seen well arranged in Gaul, he instituted, with the help of Felix from Kent, a school in which youth should be instructed in letters. Felix gave him teachers and masters from Kent, lib. iii. c. 18. Dr. Smith has given a copious essay on the question, whether this was the foundation of the university at Cambridge, and preceded that of Oxford in antiquity. He considers himself to have shown "feliciter," that the school of Sigebert was planted at Cambridge; but admits that the posterior account, which Peter Blessensis has left of Joffrid's teaching near Cambridge, after the Norman conquest, is an

objectio validissima," which can hardly be answered. On the whole, he thinks, that if he has not identified the Cambridge university with the school of Sigebert, he has at least shown, that the fables about Alfred's founding Oxford are to be entirely rejected. App. No. 14. p. 721-740.

guidance of so good a man.
shock, but disclaiming all weapons of destruction,
he used only a wand of command. His skill was
excelled by the veteran ability of Penda. Both
the East-Anglian princes fell, and their army was
dispersed. 13

He led them to the CHA P.

THE ambition and the success of Penda were not yet terminated. In 654, he marched into East Anglia, against Anna, the successor of Sigebert and Ecgric, and destroyed him.1 His crime was unpardonable in the eyes of Penda. of Penda. He had hospitably received Cenwalch. 15

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654.

In that warlike age, when every man was a sol- Oswy. dier, no conquest was permanent, no victor secure. Penda lived to exhibit an instance of this truth. When Oswy assumed the government of Bernicia on the death of Oswald, he placed Oswin, son of Osric, the kinsman of the applauded Edwin, over Deira. Oswin, of a tall and graceful stature, distinguished himself for his humanity and generosity, but could not allay the jealousy of Oswy, who soon became eager to destroy the image he had set up. Oswin shrunk from a martial conflict, and concealed himself, with one faithful soldier, Tondhere, his foster-brother, in the house of Earl Hunwald, his assured friend. This man betrayed him to Oswy, and suffered him to be murdered. 16 Oswin killed.

13 Bede, lib. iii. c. 18.

14 Flor. Wig. 240. Sax. Chron. 23. Anna was the son of Eni, of royal descent. His brother Adelhere acceded on Anna's fall; but in his second year was slain by the army of Oswy. The third brother, Edewold, a pious prince, succeeded. On his death, Adulph, the son of Anna, was crowned. Hist. Elien. MSS. Cott. Lib. Nero. A. 15.; and 1 Dugdale, 88. 15 Bede, lib. iii. cap. 18. and c. 7.

16 Bede, lib. iii. c. 14. .

Oswin

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BO O K had given to his betrayer the possessions he enjoyed. The soldiers of Oswy, whom he guided, entered the house in the night. Tondhere offered himself to their fury, to save his lord and friend; but had only the consolation to perish with him."

654.

655.

Penda's fate.

Oswy was, however, destined to free the AngloSaxon octarchy from Penda. When this aged tyrant was preparing to invade his dominions, he sued long and earnestly for peace in vain. At the age of eighty, the pagan chief, encouraged by his preceding successes, still courted the chances and the tumult of battle. Rejecting the negotiations repeatedly offered, he hastened with the veterans whom he had long trained, to add Oswy to the five monarchs whose funeral honours recorded him as their destroyer. With trembling anxiety Oswy met him, with his son Alfred, and a much inferior force; but the battle is not always given to the strong, nor the race to the swift. Penda had filled up the measure of his iniquities, and Providence released the country from a ruler, whose appetite for destruction age could not diminish. He rushed into the battle with Oswy confident of victory, but the issue was unexpectedly disastrous to him. Penda, with thirty commanders perished before the enemy, whose greatest strength they had subdued, and whose present feebleness they despised. The plains of Yorkshire witnessed the emancipation of England.18 Oidilwald, the son of Oswald, was with the forces of Penda, but not desirous to assist

17 Dugd. Mon. i. 333.

18 Sax. Chron. 33. Bede, lib. iii. c. 24. Winwidfield, near Leeds, was the theatre of the conflict. Camden, Gib. 711.Bede does not explicitly assert that Penda had three times the number of forces, but that it was so reported.

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