[History of the English People, Volume I (of 8) by John Richard Green]@TWC D-Link book
History of the English People, Volume I (of 8)

CHAPTER II
16/92

Civilization, letters, science, religion itself, have done little to change the inner mood of Englishmen.

That love of venture and of toil, of the sea and the fight, that trust in manhood and the might of man, that silent awe of the mysteries of life and death which lay deep in English souls then as now, passed with Englishmen to the land which Englishmen had won.
[Sidenote: The King] But though English society passed thus in its completeness to the soil of Britain, its primitive organization was affected in more ways than one by the transfer.

In the first place conquest begat the King.

It seems probable that the English had hitherto known nothing of kings in their own fatherland, where each tribe was satisfied in peace time with the customary government of village-reeve and hundred-reeve and ealdonnan, while it gathered at fighting times under war leaders whom it chose for each campaign.

But in the long and obstinate warfare which they waged against the Britons it was needful to find a common leader whom the various tribes engaged in conquests such as those of Wessex or Mercia might follow; and the ceaseless character of a struggle which left few intervals of rest or peace raised these leaders into a higher position than that of temporary chieftains.


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