Page:William of Malmesbury's Chronicle.djvu/81

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a.d. 737, 738.]
King Eadbert.
61

man either emulous of his pursuits, or a follower of his graces, who could continue the thread of his discourse, now broken short. Some few indeed, "whom the mild Jesus loved," though well skilled in literature, have yet observed an ungracious silence throughout their lives; others, scarcely tasting of the stream, have fostered a criminal indolence. Thus to the slothful succeeded others more slothful still, and the warmth of science for a long time decreased throughout the island. The verses of his epitaph will afford sufficient specimen of this indolence; they are indeed contemptible, and unworthy the tomb of so great a man:

Presbyter hic Beda, requiescit carne sepultus;
Dona, Christe, animam in cœlis gaudere per sevum:
Daque illi sophiæ debriari fonte, cui jam
Suspiravit ovans, intento semper amore."[1]

Can this disgrace be extenuated by any excuse, that there was not to be found even in that monastery, where during his lifetime the school of all learning had flourished, a single person who could write his epitaph, except in this mean and paltry style? But enough of this: I will return to my subject.

Ceolwulf thinking it beneath the dignity of a Christian to be immersed in earthly things, abdicated the throne after a reign of eight years, and assumed the monastic habit at Lindisfarne, in which place how meritoriously he lived, is amply testified by his being honourably interred near St. Cuthbert, and by many miracles vouchsafed from on high.

He had made provision against the state's being endangered, by placing his cousin, Eadbert,[2] on the throne, which he filled for twenty years with singular moderation and virtue. Eadbert had a brother of the same name, archbishop of York, who, by his own prudence and the power of the king, restored that see to its original state. For, as is well known to any one conversant in the history of the Angles,[3]

  1. These lines are thus rendered into English:
    Beneath this stone Bede's mortal body lies;
    God grant his soul may rest amid the skies.
    May he drink deeply, in the realms above.
    Of wisdom's fount, which he on earth did love !"

  2. Called Egbert by some writers.
  3. Paulinus had departed from Northumbria, in consequence of the confusion which prevailed on the death of Edwin. Bede, b. ii. c. 20. He died Oct. 10, 644.