The Northmen in Britain
si REFERENCE \n U BRARV LIBRARIES 3 3333 REFERENOB C V\ J ' TOB CmRATCHMPM^fRbm DONNSLL LIB2MY CENTER 20 WEST 53 STREET HEW YORK, N.Y. 10019 THE NORTHMEN IN BRITAIN " There is no man so high-hearted over earth, nor so good in gifts, nor so keen in youth, nor so brave in deeds, nor so loyal to his lord, that he may not have always sad yearning towards the sea-faring, for what the Lord will give him there. "His heart is not for the harp, nor receiving of rings, nor delight in a wife, nor the joy of the world, nor about any- thing else but the rolling of the waves. And he hath ever longing who wishethfor the Sea." " THE SEAFARER " (Old English Poem). PUELLJ L A"") TILDES FOU!; / , Tin- duiiim: of I In' .\in-ilunfn THE NORTHMEN IN BRITAIN BY ELEANOR HULL AUTHOR OF ' ' 'THE POEM-BOOK OF THE GAEL ' CUCHULAIN, THE HOUND OF ULSTER ' ' * PAGAN IRELAND EARLY CHRISTIAN IRELAND ETC. WITH SIXTEEN FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS BT M. MEREDITH WILLIAMS NEW YORK Y: C&QWELl,' COMPANY THOMAS' - . , i .- j FUBt.aiSiH.ERS , . .,...., , . Tiu-nbull , ,Ptittrf,Jidi>iburgh V\ Foreword great streams of Northern immigration met on the shores of Britain during the ninth, I tenth, and eleventh centuries. The Norsemen from the deep fiords of Western Norway, fishing and raiding along the coasts, pushed out their adventurous boats into the Atlantic, and in the dawn of Northern history we find them already settled in the Orkney and Shetland Isles, whence they raided and settled south- ward to Caithness, Fife, and Northumbria on the east, and to the Hebrides, Galloway, and Man on the western coast.
[Show full text]