Edwy the Fair or the First Chronicle of Aescendune by A. D. (Augustine David) Crake
page 54 of 305 (17%)
page 54 of 305 (17%)
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the rest of the company, who perceived his hesitation. So he yielded,
and, shaking off all restraint, ate heartily. Dish followed dish, and the wine cup circulated with great freedom. Excited as he was, Elfric could but remark the loose tone of the conversation. Subjects were freely discussed which had never found admittance either in the palace of King Edred or at Aescendune, and which, indeed, caused him to look up with surprise, remembering in whose presence he sat. But, as is often the case in an age where opinion is severely repressed in its outward expression, and amongst those compelled against their will to observe silence on such subjects on ordinary occasions, all restraint seemed abandoned at the table of Ethelgiva. It was not that the language was coarse, but whether the conversation turned upon the restraints of the clergy, or the court, or upon the fashionable frivolities of the day--for there were frivolities and fashions even in that primitive age--there was a freedom of expression bordering upon profanity or licentiousness. Edred was mocked as an old babbler; Dunstan was sometimes a fool, sometimes a hypocrite, sometimes even a sorcerer, although this was said sneeringly; the clergy were divided into fools and knaves; the claims of the Church--that is of Christianity--derided, and the principle freely avowed--"Enjoy life while you can, for you know not what may come after." Excited by the wine he had drunk, Elfric became as wild in his talk as the other young men, and as the intoxicating drink mounted to his brain, seemed to think that he had just learnt how to enjoy life. |
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