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CHAP. XI.

JOHN.

Accession of the king-His marriage-War with France-
Murder of Arthur duke of Britany-The king expelled
the French provinces-The king's quarrel with the
court of Rome-Cardinal Langton appointed archbishop
of Canterbury-Interdict of the kingdom-Excommu-
nication of the king-The king's submission to the pope
-Discontents of the barons-Insurrection of the barons
-Magna Charta-Renewal of the civil wars-Prince
Lewis called over-Death-and character of the king.

PAGE 435

THE

HISTORY OF ENGLAND.

CHAP. I.

The Britons-Romans-Saxons-the Heptarchy.-The Kingdom of Kent-of Northumberland-of East Anglia-of Mercia-of Essex-of Sussex-of Wessex.

THE BRITONS.

THE curiosity, entertained by all civilized na- CHAP. tions, of enquiring into the exploits and adventures of their ancestors, commonly excites a regret that the history of remote ages should always be so much involved in obscurity, uncertainty, and contradiction. Ingenious men, possessed of leisure, are apt to push their researches beyond the period in which literary monuments are framed or preserved; without reflecting, that the history of past events is immediately lost or disfigured when entrusted to memory and oral tradition, and that the adventures of barbarous nations, even if they were recorded, could afford little or no entertainment to men born in a more cultivated age. The convulsions of a civilized state usually compose the most instructive and most interesting part of its history; but the sudden, violent, and unprepared revolutions incident to barbarians, are so much guided by caprice and terminate so often in cruelty, that they disgust us by the uniformity of their appearance; and it is rather fortunate for letters that they are buried in silence and oblivion. The only certain means by which nations can indulge their curiosity in researches VOL. I.

B

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