. Social England; a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . ny journeyed far afield,and cauje back strengthened by the change; many were con- 1 A Ijook coutaiiiing-—partly in Englisli and partly in Latin, or sometimeswholly in English—the •?Hours of Our Lady, Evensoiiff and Compline, theSeven Penitential Psalms, the fifteen Psalms on the Seven Deadly Sins, theLitany, the Placebo and Dirge, the Psalms of Commendation. Ptiter XnHfr,Aiv Maria, the Creed, the Ten Comman
. Social England; a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . ny journeyed far afield,and cauje back strengthened by the change; many were con- 1 A Ijook coutaiiiing-—partly in Englisli and partly in Latin, or sometimeswholly in English—the •?Hours of Our Lady, Evensoiiff and Compline, theSeven Penitential Psalms, the fifteen Psalms on the Seven Deadly Sins, theLitany, the Placebo and Dirge, the Psalms of Commendation. Ptiter XnHfr,Aiv Maria, the Creed, the Ten Commandments, the Seven Deadly Sins. [Perry,Students History of the Church of England, I., .513.] 85 642 THE BEGINXIXGS (iF .V()IlET!X ENGLAXT). [1485-1509 tditcil \vit:h their own laml :inil tlio water cif St. Tlioinas at,Canterbury. Amkl so many pilgrims, not all were religious ; andthe ]_)icture of their journeyings is written for all time in the(anterl)ury Tales. The witV of ilalli. it will lie remembered, Tliries liadilc sclie lieu at Jcrusalciii :Sihe liaddc passeil luauy a strauiifio .strceui;At Rome sclie hadde ben and at Bolo,s;ue,At Galifc. at Sovnt James, and at Culone:. ;a\i.\(: cAXTiuuauv (Ms i> d. \\). ami it is i-eem-ded tliat in one year of Henry \ ) English]iilgrims went to Com]>ostella. At the close of the iliddle Ages pilgrimages had not greatlychanged their character since (Jhaucers day. AVe have vividjiictnrcs in Erasmuss account of his visits to A\alsingham andCanterbury. The shrine of St. Thomas was the most gor-gcoMS. as it was the most jiopular, in England. Erasmus, whosaw everyrliing with tiio keenest , yet not witiiout an s -?^ .^^ aU- nil iiii Hi/ |rii^^#l ff i^it
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