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THE BIBLE OF AMIENS.

these four districts, briefly and clearly, as ' Britain,' 'Gaul,' 'Germany,' and ' Dacia.'

10. North of these rudely but patiently resident races, possessing fields and orchards, quiet herds, homes of a sort, moralities and memories not ignoble, dwelt, or rather drifted, and shook, a shattered chain of gloomier tribes, piratical mainly, and predatory, nomade essentially; homeless, of necessity, finding no stay nor comfort in earth, or bitter sky: desperately wandering along the waste sands and drenched morasses of the flat country stretching from the mouths of the Rhine to those of the Vistula, and beyond Vistula nobody knows where, nor needs to know. Waste sands and rootless bogs their portion, ice-fastened and cloud-shadowed, for many a day of the rigorous year: shallow pools and oozings and windings of retarded streams, black decay of neglected woods, scarcely habitable, never loveable; to this day the inner mainlands little changed for good[1]—and their inhabitants now fallen even on sadder times.

11. For in the fifth century they had herds of cattle[2] to drive and kill, unpreserved hunting-grounds

  1. See generally any description that Carlyle has had occasion to give of Prussian or Polish ground, or edge of Baltic shore.
  2. Gigantic—and not yet fossilized! See Gibbon's note on the death of Theodebert: "The King pointed his spear—the Bull overturned a tree on his head,—he died the same day."—vii. 255. The Horn of