Dickens, Charles – A Child’s History of England

Still, the spirit of the Britons was not broken. When SUETONIUS

left the country, they fell upon his troops, and retook the Island

of Anglesey. AGRICOLA came, fifteen or twenty years afterwards,

and retook it once more, and devoted seven years to subduing the

country, especially that part of it which is now called SCOTLAND;

but, its people, the Caledonians, resisted him at every inch of

ground. They fought the bloodiest battles with him; they killed

their very wives and children, to prevent his making prisoners of

them; they fell, fighting, in such great numbers that certain hills

in Scotland are yet supposed to be vast heaps of stones piled up

above their graves. HADRIAN came, thirty years afterwards, and

still they resisted him. SEVERUS came, nearly a hundred years

afterwards, and they worried his great army like dogs, and rejoiced

to see them die, by thousands, in the bogs and swamps. CARACALLA,

the son and successor of SEVERUS, did the most to conquer them, for

a time; but not by force of arms. He knew how little that would

do. He yielded up a quantity of land to the Caledonians, and gave

the Britons the same privileges as the Romans possessed. There was

peace, after this, for seventy years.

Then new enemies arose. They were the Saxons, a fierce, sea-faring

people from the countries to the North of the Rhine, the great

river of Germany on the banks of which the best grapes grow to make

the German wine. They began to come, in pirate ships, to the seacoast

of Gaul and Britain, and to plunder them. They were repulsed

by CARAUSIUS, a native either of Belgium or of Britain, who was

appointed by the Romans to the command, and under whom the Britons

first began to fight upon the sea. But, after this time, they

renewed their ravages. A few years more, and the Scots (which was

then the name for the people of Ireland), and the Picts, a northern

people, began to make frequent plundering incursions into the South

of Britain. All these attacks were repeated, at intervals, during

two hundred years, and through a long succession of Roman Emperors

and chiefs; during all which length of time, the Britons rose

against the Romans, over and over again. At last, in the days of

the Roman HONORIUS, when the Roman power all over the world was

fast declining, and when Rome wanted all her soldiers at home, the

Romans abandoned all hope of conquering Britain, and went away.

And still, at last, as at first, the Britons rose against them, in

their old brave manner; for, a very little while before, they had

turned away the Roman magistrates, and declared themselves an

independent people.

Five hundred years had passed, since Julius Caesar’s first invasion

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Dickens, Charles – A Child’s History of England

of the Island, when the Romans departed from it for ever. In the

course of that time, although they had been the cause of terrible

fighting and bloodshed, they had done much to improve the condition

of the Britons. They had made great military roads; they had built

forts; they had taught them how to dress, and arm themselves, much

better than they had ever known how to do before; they had refined

the whole British way of living. AGRICOLA had built a great wall

of earth, more than seventy miles long, extending from Newcastle to

beyond Carlisle, for the purpose of keeping out the Picts and

Scots; HADRIAN had strengthened it; SEVERUS, finding it much in

want of repair, had built it afresh of stone.

Above all, it was in the Roman time, and by means of Roman ships,

that the Christian Religion was first brought into Britain, and its

people first taught the great lesson that, to be good in the sight

of GOD, they must love their neighbours as themselves, and do unto

others as they would be done by. The Druids declared that it was

very wicked to believe in any such thing, and cursed all the people

who did believe it, very heartily. But, when the people found that

they were none the better for the blessings of the Druids, and none

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