[A Child's History of England by Charles Dickens]@TWC D-Link bookA Child's History of England CHAPTER VIII--ENGLAND UNDER WILLIAM THE FIRST, THE NORMAN CONQUEROR 8/18
The English afterwards besought the Danes to come and help them.
The Danes came, with two hundred and forty ships.
The outlawed nobles joined them; they captured York, and drove the Normans out of that city.
Then, William bribed the Danes to go away; and took such vengeance on the English, that all the former fire and sword, smoke and ashes, death and ruin, were nothing compared with it.
In melancholy songs, and doleful stories, it was still sung and told by cottage fires on winter evenings, a hundred years afterwards, how, in those dreadful days of the Normans, there was not, from the River Humber to the River Tyne, one inhabited village left, nor one cultivated field--how there was nothing but a dismal ruin, where the human creatures and the beasts lay dead together. The outlaws had, at this time, what they called a Camp of Refuge, in the midst of the fens of Cambridgeshire.
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