Page:Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation (tr. Jane).djvu/70

32 sixth year of the reign of Marcianus, and with him ended the empire of the West.

the meantime, in Britain, there was some respite from foreign, but not from civil war. There still remained the ruins of cities destroyed by the enemy, and abandoned; and the natives, who had escaped the enemy, now fought against each other. However, the kings, priests, private men, and the nobility, still remembering the late calamities and slaughters, in some measure kept within bounds; but when these died, and another generation succeeded, which knew nothing of those times, and was only acquainted with the present peaceable state of things, all the bonds of sincerity and justice were so entirely broken, that there was not only no trace of them remaining, but few persons seemed to be aware that such virtues had ever existed. Among other most wicked actions, not to be expressed, which their own historian, Gildas, mournfully takes notice of, they added this—that they never preached the faith to the Saxons, or English, who dwelt amongst them; however, the goodness of God did not forsake his people whom He foreknew, but sent to the aforesaid nation much more worthy preachers, to bring it to the faith.

the year of our Lord 582, Maurice, the fifty-­fourth from Augustus, ascended the throne, and reigned twenty-­one years. In the tenth year of his reign, Gregory, a man renowned for learning and behaviour, was promoted to the