THE INFLUX OF THE DANES: FACTS SHOWING CONCLUSIVELY THEIR INFLUENCE ON
THE BRITON OF TO-DAY.
And now, having led the eager student
up to the year 827 A.D., let us take him forward from
the foundation of the English monarchy to the days
of William the Conqueror, 1066.
Egbert, one of the kings of Wessex,
reigned practically over Roman Britain when the country
was invaded by the Northmen (Swedes, Norwegians, and
Danes), who treated the Anglo-Saxon as the Anglo-Saxon
had formerly treated the poor Briton.
These Northmen were rather coarse
people, and even put the Anglo-Saxons to the blush
sometimes. They exercised vigorously, and thus
their appetites were sharp enough to cut a hair.
They at first came in the capacity of pirates, sliding
stealthily into isolated coast settlements on Saturday
evening and eating up the Sunday victuals, capturing
the girls of the Bible-class and sailing away.
But later they came as conquerors, and boarded with
the peasantry permanently.
Egbert formed an alliance with his
old enemies, the Welsh, and gained a great victory
over the Northmen; but when he died and left Ethelwolf,
his son, in charge of the throne, he made a great mistake.
Ethelwolf was a poor king, “being given more
to religious exercises than reigning,” says
the historian. He would often exhibit his piety
in order to draw attention away from His Royal Incompetency.
He was not the first or last to smother the call to
duty under the cry of Hallelujah. Like the little
steamer engine with the big whistle, when he whistled
the boat stopped. He did not have a boiler big
enough to push the great ship of state and shout Amen
at the same time.
Ethelwolf defeated the enemy in one
great battle, but too late to prevent a hold-up upon
the island of Thanet, and afterwards at Shippey, near
London, where the enemy settled himself.
Yet Ethelwolf made a pilgrimage to
Rome with Alfred, then six years old (A.D. 855).
He was gone a year, during which time very little reigning
was done at home, and the Northmen kept making treaties
and coming over in larger droves.
Ethelwolf visited Charles the Bald
of France at this time, and married his daughter Judith
incidentally. Ethelwolf’s eldest son died
during the king’s absence, and was succeeded
as eldest son by Ethelbald (heir-apparent, though
he had no hair apparent), who did not recognize the
old gentleman or allow him to be seated on his own
throne when he came back; but Ethelwolf gave the naughty
Ethelbald the western half of the kingdom rather than
have trouble. But Baldy died, and was succeeded
by Ethelbert, who died six years later, and Ethelred,
in 866, took charge till 871, when he died of a wound
received in battle and closed out the Ethel business
to Alfred.
The Danes had meantime rifled the
country with their cross-guns and killed Edmund, the
good king of East Anglia, who was afterwards canonized,
though gunpowder had not then been invented.
Alfred was not only a godly king,
but had a good education, and was a great admirer
of Dickens and Thackeray. (This is put in as a titbit
for the critic.)
He preferred literature to the plaudits
of the nobility and the sedentary life on a big white-oak
throne. On the night before his coronation his
pillow was wet with tears.
And in the midst of it all here came
the Danes wearing heavy woollen clothes and introducing
their justly celebrated style of honest sweat.
Alfred fought as many as eight battles
with them in one year. They agreed at last to
accept such portions of the country as were assigned
them, but they were never known to abide by any treaty,
and they put the red man of America to shame as prevaricators.
Thus, by 878, the wretched Saxons
were at their wit’s end, and have never been
able to take a joke since at less than thirty days.
Some fled to Wales and perished miserably
trying to pronounce the names of their new post-office
addresses.
Here Alfred’s true greatness
stood him in good stead. He secured a number
of reliable retainers and camped in the swamps of Somersetshire,
where he made his head-quarters on account of its inaccessibility,
and then he made raids on the Danes. Of course
he had to live roughly, and must deny himself his
upright piano for his country’s good.
In order to obtain a more thorough
knowledge of the Danes and their number, he disguised
himself as a harper, or portable orchestra, and visited
the Danish camp, where he was introduced to Guthrun
and was invited to a banquet, where he told several
new anecdotes, and spoke in such a humorous way that
the army was sorry to see him go away, and still sorrier
when, a few days later, armed cap-a-pie, he
mopped up the greensward with his enemy and secured
the best of terms from him.
While incog., Alfred stopped
at a hut, where he was asked to turn the pancakes
as they required it; but in the absence of the hostess
he got to thinking of esoteric subjects, or something
profound, and allowed the cakes to burn. The
housewife returned in time to express her sentiments
and a large box to his address as shown in the picture.
He now converted Guthrun and had him
immersed, which took first-rate, and other Danes got
immersed. Thus the national antagonism to water
was overcome, and to-day the English who are descended
from the Danes are not appalled at the sight of water.
As a result of Guthrun’s conversion,
the Danes agreed to a permanent settlement along the
exposed portion of Great Britain, by which they became
unconsciously a living rampart between the Saxons and
other incursionists.
Now peace began to reign up to 893,
and Alfred improved the time by rebuilding the desolated
cities, London especially, which had become
a sight to behold. A new stock-law, requiring
the peasantry to shut up their unicorns during certain
seasons of the year and keep them out of the crops,
also protecting them from sportsmen while shedding
their horns in spring, or moulting, it is said, was
passed, but the English historians are such great
jokers that the writer has had much difficulty in
culling the facts and eliminating the persiflage from
these writings.
Alfred the Great only survived his
last victory over the Danes, at Kent, a few years,
when he died greatly lamented. He was a brave
soldier, a successful all-around monarch, and a progressive
citizen in an age of beastly ignorance, crime, superstition,
self-indulgence, and pathetic stupidity.
He translated several books for the
people, established or repaired the University of
Oxford, and originated the idea, adopted by the Japanese
a thousand years later, of borrowing the scholars
of other nations, and cheerfully adopting the improvements
of other countries, instead of following the hide-bound
and stupid conservatism and ignorance bequeathed by
father to son, as a result of blind and offensive pride,
which is sometimes called patriotism.