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Speech to St Augustine

From Wikisource
Speech to Augustine
by Ethelbert

The speech was given by the Saxon King Ethelbert of Kent on meeting Augustine, who would become a Saint and first Archbishop of Canterbury. Source comes from The London Quarterly and Holborn Review, Volume 54, p. 55.

1495504Speech to AugustineEthelbert


Your words are fair, and your promises - but because they are new and doubtful, I cannot give my assent to them, and leave the customs which I have so long observed, with the whole Anglo-Saxon race. But because you have come hither as strangers from a long distance, and as I seem to have myself seen clearly, that what you yourselves believed to be true and good, you wish to impart to us, we do not wish to molest you; nay, rather we are anxious to receive you hospitably, and to give you all that is needed for your support, nor do we hinder you from joining all whom you can to the faith of your religion.


This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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