This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
the people of the | 28 |
people of the hills | 24 |
england hath taken me | 16 |
as though he were | 14 |
oak and ash and | 13 |
and ash and thorn | 13 |
what do you think | 13 |
in the great hall | 10 |
end of the wall | 10 |
our lord of pevensey | 10 |
a long pull for | 10 |
the bottom of the | 10 |
long pull for stavanger | 10 |
captains of the wall | 10 |
to the winged hats | 10 |
for a long time | 9 |
in the middle of | 9 |
a centurion of the | 9 |
the light of the | 9 |
in the old days | 8 |
as far as the | 8 |
do you want to | 8 |
light of the sun | 8 |
the top of the | 8 |
the rest of the | 8 |
the winged hats that | 8 |
there is no need | 8 |
the gentlemen go by | 8 |
as a matter of | 8 |
smith of the gods | 8 |
was one of the | 8 |
at the end of | 8 |
old hobden the hedger | 8 |
said the bee boy | 7 |
by the light of | 7 |
are you going to | 7 |
for the first time | 7 |
the middle of the | 7 |
anything to do with | 7 |
he said to me | 6 |
the end of the | 6 |
on the top of | 6 |
arrow from the ship | 6 |
the manor of dallington | 6 |
he told me how | 6 |
the great candle was | 6 |
from end to end | 6 |
peace with the king | 6 |
did i tell you | 6 |
in the pict country | 6 |
he said it was | 6 |
as though he had | 6 |
i have been a | 6 |
while the gentlemen go | 6 |
the gold on the | 6 |
we came to the | 6 |
what did you do | 6 |
the gold i gather | 6 |
go and look and | 6 |
shall have happened three | 6 |
of the new laws | 6 |
sucked in his cheeks | 6 |
the isle of wight | 6 |
of the hills have | 6 |
i want you to | 6 |
she thinks she smells | 6 |
the shadows of the | 6 |
she smells the northland | 6 |
happened three thousand year | 6 |
o that was where | 6 |
and go and look | 6 |
i have never seen | 6 |
the brook at the | 6 |
money to the king | 6 |
and look and know | 6 |
know what you mean | 6 |
come and go and | 6 |
the trouble on the | 6 |
roll of the new | 6 |
have happened three thousand | 6 |
and gnashed his teeth | 6 |
it shall have happened | 6 |
as though it had | 6 |
thinks she smells the | 6 |
a man with a | 6 |
great candle was lit | 6 |
he jerked his head | 6 |
the roll of the | 6 |
at the bottom of | 6 |
to get back to | 5 |
any one of you | 5 |
on the edge of | 5 |
as soon as the | 5 |
in a couple of | 5 |
in charge of the | 5 |
though it shall have | 5 |
on the other hand | 5 |
he said at last | 5 |
the treasure and the | 5 |
you and i are | 5 |
i would never have | 5 |
as soon as they | 5 |
i do not think | 5 |
i know what you | 5 |
and i have been | 5 |
to pair with you | 5 |
treasure and the law | 5 |
would you like to | 5 |
centurion of the thirtieth | 5 |
a hell of a | 5 |
is no need to | 5 |
a millstone than most | 4 |
was a marsh woman | 4 |
descends into deep water | 4 |
the wide world over | 4 |
the men of the | 4 |
he began a long | 4 |
the horses of the | 4 |
out of britain to | 4 |
i had met on | 4 |
but if ever i | 4 |
the gold as his | 4 |
out of his own | 4 |
the winged hats will | 4 |
up from the far | 4 |
and he laid his | 4 |
said that i had | 4 |
lived on the wall | 4 |
i saw his face | 4 |
you will remember that | 4 |
on the gold as | 4 |
he had come to | 4 |
was wroth with him | 4 |
to the isle of | 4 |
people of a strange | 4 |
is the only one | 4 |
i was proud of | 4 |
far as the eye | 4 |
the great pict war | 4 |
shall see what you | 4 |
back to the winged | 4 |
thousand pieces of gold | 4 |
out that i was | 4 |
scratched his head at | 4 |
i would have made | 4 |
little more than a | 4 |
we looked over the | 4 |
the upper and lower | 4 |
you think of it | 4 |
for the sake of | 4 |
now england hath taken | 4 |
a man without hope | 4 |
the honour of the | 4 |
they piled on the | 4 |
had a way of | 4 |
was always interested in | 4 |
the corn between the | 4 |
of the winged hats | 4 |
the word of the | 4 |
trotting through the dark | 4 |
us in the ribs | 4 |
and rolled his eyes | 4 |
said the young man | 4 |
emperor of gaul and | 4 |
a few hundred years | 4 |
the winged hats would | 4 |
ye might have been | 4 |
first doctor of a | 4 |
statue of roma dea | 4 |
but now england hath | 4 |
looked down on us | 4 |
we are the little | 4 |
old men at pevensey | 4 |
that you forsake her | 4 |
like a little white | 4 |
i should not be | 4 |
to the corner of | 4 |
we were to be | 4 |
doctor of a legion | 4 |
he snuffs the coming | 4 |
is a woman that | 4 |
the devil we know | 4 |
and as soon as | 4 |
back to their ships | 4 |
fire and the home | 4 |
all the rest of | 4 |
was the custom of | 4 |
the old days the | 4 |
so long as you | 4 |
the years to be | 4 |
end to end of | 4 |
if i had let | 4 |
them that asks no | 4 |
the rowers of the | 4 |
it is not given | 4 |
no more was said | 4 |
what on human earth | 4 |
the barons and the | 4 |
drew a long breath | 4 |
who is not quite | 4 |
the book of verses | 4 |
for sir andrew barton | 4 |
advice and go home | 4 |
go with the old | 4 |
families are very much | 4 |
before i was born | 4 |
he was an old | 4 |
and i went down | 4 |
north where rome does | 4 |
had fought in the | 4 |
the ribs with his | 4 |
the duumvir of divio | 4 |
top of beacon hill | 4 |
the thatch on the | 4 |
how he did it | 4 |
to go with the | 4 |
that asks no questions | 4 |
on his chest with | 4 |
we must wake the | 4 |
of gaul and britain | 4 |
gold on the bank | 4 |
men on the wall | 4 |
it had been a | 4 |
i should be a | 4 |
and i want to | 4 |
get back to tellus | 4 |
has forsaken her gods | 4 |
you know it was | 4 |
worked for his living | 4 |
to the top of | 4 |
while the marsh was | 4 |
barons and the people | 4 |
there will be neither | 4 |
gold as his own | 4 |
from the north where | 4 |
i was only too | 4 |
the lord commanded the | 4 |
the north where rome | 4 |
quite right in his | 4 |
laughed till the tears | 4 |
i swear i will | 4 |
children as though he | 4 |
and hoisted himself into | 4 |
the knights of the | 4 |
beat on his chest | 4 |
a little white falcon | 4 |
not quite right in | 4 |
to be a man | 4 |
every time he had | 4 |
more than a boy | 4 |
do not make a | 4 |
that the winged hats | 4 |
i did not think | 4 |
the trouble with you | 4 |
till i win gaul | 4 |
so we must wake | 4 |
winged hats that you | 4 |
lincolnshire to the isle | 4 |
that i was a | 4 |
in the little chamber | 4 |
be a lawgiver to | 4 |
what you shall hear | 4 |
i think for england | 4 |
the rushes was green | 4 |
i could never have | 4 |
a couple of inches | 4 |
will give you a | 4 |
i knew it was | 4 |
to a people of | 4 |
i know this people | 4 |
lawgiver to a people | 4 |
as the eye can | 4 |
to see if the | 4 |
knights of the joyous | 4 |
because he could not | 4 |
are the little folk | 4 |
all the people of | 4 |
told my woman so | 4 |
the children looked at | 4 |
would never have done | 4 |
then it descends into | 4 |
the fifth great river | 4 |
horses of the hills | 4 |
chest with his fists | 4 |
sleep sound for all | 4 |
chamber above the hall | 4 |
i kept the accounts | 4 |
of the joyous venture | 4 |
i have given thee | 4 |
witta scratched his head | 4 |
we will give you | 4 |
his father guthrum had | 4 |
i have heard the | 4 |
the other side of | 4 |
is not quite right | 4 |
land of our birth | 4 |
of the village gave | 4 |
did you think of | 4 |
witta and his heathen | 4 |
had let ye go | 4 |
looked at the children | 4 |
a lawgiver to a | 4 |
on either side of | 4 |
of the hills are | 4 |
and no more was | 4 |
other side of the | 4 |
a woman that you | 4 |
across to little lindens | 4 |
thatch on the barn | 4 |
in his own tongue | 4 |
you shall see what | 4 |
we lived on the | 4 |
that was my work | 4 |
i think it was | 4 |
see what you shall | 4 |
flew from his hand | 4 |
looked on the gold | 4 |
each end of the | 4 |
brook at the bottom | 4 |
that the people of | 4 |
must wake the white | 4 |
you captains of the | 4 |
and when he had | 4 |
word of the lord | 4 |
a shining fish then | 4 |
for the honour of | 4 |
woman that you forsake | 4 |
we had watched him | 4 |
thousand leagues to the | 4 |
hear what you shall | 4 |
people of the village | 4 |
from fulke to the | 4 |
how weak we were | 4 |
the great north road | 4 |
to help him to | 4 |
trouble on the marsh | 4 |
and you shall hear | 4 |
at first we thought | 4 |
men at the manor | 4 |
commanded the tide to | 4 |
east end of the | 4 |
and sucked in his | 4 |
where rome does not | 4 |
fish then it descends | 4 |
and thorkild of borkum | 4 |
will remember that you | 4 |
of a midsummer morn | 4 |
belle and i have | 4 |
when i had learned | 4 |
as i could see | 4 |
with the old grey | 4 |
between his long arms | 4 |
troops out of britain | 4 |
cried out that i | 4 |
de aquila would give | 4 |
the altar of victory | 4 |
the king in his | 4 |
there was a small | 4 |
do you think of | 4 |
the emperor of rome | 4 |
and he told me | 4 |
with witta and his | 4 |
i will tell the | 4 |
take my advice and | 4 |
what you shall see | 4 |
and when we had | 4 |
show you the sort | 4 |
they had not even | 4 |
it was one of | 4 |
my advice and go | 4 |
the province of valentia | 4 |
as though we were | 4 |
not given for goods | 4 |
the seventh cohort of | 4 |
i thought you were | 4 |
that was how it | 4 |
though it had been | 4 |
out of deep water | 4 |
she felt the trouble | 4 |
in the great pict | 4 |
get in touch with | 4 |
the custom of the | 4 |
we get back to | 4 |
were king of england | 4 |
to the high deck | 4 |
his men against me | 4 |
right in his head | 4 |
the great hall is | 4 |
parnesius turned to dan | 4 |
the wall you will | 4 |
his chest with his | 4 |
on the great wall | 4 |
or ye might have | 4 |
of a sudden he | 4 |
roof on the hall | 4 |
to me from the | 4 |
an arrow from the | 4 |
in the very year | 4 |
the great hall of | 4 |
ash and thorn leaves | 4 |
a people of a | 4 |
we came to know | 4 |
lay in the bows | 4 |
to wake up the | 4 |
the children went in | 4 |
de aquila was right | 4 |
the one time i | 4 |
boat on the wall | 4 |
on the wall you | 4 |
back and forth like | 4 |
the great hall was | 4 |
the flint men made | 4 |
the keepers would have | 4 |
engerrard of the eagle | 4 |
got a point there | 4 |
that i should be | 4 |
i had let ye | 4 |
till the tears ran | 4 |
help him to conquer | 4 |
that he could not | 4 |
we knew we were | 4 |
tell her england hath | 4 |
me from the shot | 4 |
that was how we | 4 |
if you were not | 4 |
out of the forest | 4 |
was silent for a | 4 |
a man and a | 4 |
the old grey widow | 4 |
i was going to | 4 |
thick heads can understand | 4 |
i was afraid of | 4 |
till we came to | 4 |
peace on the wall | 4 |
brandy for the parson | 4 |
you shall hear what | 4 |
you want me to | 4 |
and i will hold | 4 |
points to the south | 4 |
when the great candle | 4 |
he said to dan | 4 |
that he should have | 4 |
shall hear what you | 4 |
her england hath taken | 4 |
but for the thing | 4 |
for his living and | 4 |
can play that in | 4 |
him to conquer gaul | 4 |
no more than a | 4 |
she shook like a | 4 |
had met on the | 4 |
seventh cohort of the | 4 |
as though they were | 4 |
we pledge to thee | 4 |
in from the sea | 4 |
once in a while | 4 |
fulke to the duke | 4 |
all of a midsummer | 4 |
you can play that | 4 |
said dan and una | 4 |
it descends into deep | 4 |
a sacrifice to weland | 4 |
lord commanded the tide | 4 |
a plenty salt on | 4 |
lays of ancient rome | 4 |
shining fish then it | 4 |
if you care to | 4 |
it seems to me | 4 |
let us go to | 4 |
centurion of the seventh | 4 |
like a shining fish | 4 |
all you have to | 4 |
that kind of stuff | 4 |
a thousand leagues to | 4 |
only too pleased to | 4 |
to do him justice | 4 |
on the wall for | 4 |
thought it was the | 4 |
proof of my treason | 4 |
down in the world | 4 |
had been reading the | 4 |
and the third time | 4 |
from lincolnshire to the | 4 |
to the degree of | 4 |
given for goods or | 4 |
play that in spades | 4 |
when they came to | 4 |
this gilbert would have | 4 |
i do not say | 4 |
of the seventh cohort | 4 |
for goods or gear | 4 |
cohort of the thirtieth | 4 |
of the manor of | 4 |
down to the sea | 4 |
his head at them | 4 |
young men at the | 4 |
in the ribs with | 4 |
wroth with him because | 4 |
all up along the | 4 |
between the upper and | 4 |
he pointed to the | 4 |
me on my horse | 4 |
in the bows of | 4 |
and the horses of | 4 |
with the emperor of | 4 |
out of the wood | 4 |
the degree of gryphons | 4 |
should be a lawgiver | 4 |
is not given for | 4 |
what is a woman | 4 |
they had taken a | 4 |
remember that you have | 4 |
and the yellow man | 4 |
to tell the king | 4 |
and there was a | 4 |
of the great hall | 4 |
we rode back to | 4 |
i will do it | 4 |
that was where the | 4 |
the roof on the | 4 |
and she said so | 4 |
centre of the ring | 4 |
him england hath taken | 4 |
the children as though | 4 |
you have to do | 4 |
piled on the bank | 4 |
rome does not rule | 4 |
be able to do | 4 |
tell him england hath | 4 |
the east end of | 4 |
can say that again | 3 |
as soon as she | 3 |
you really want to | 3 |
of the north and | 3 |
had not considered at | 3 |
of the ship and | 3 |
the united galaxian societies | 3 |
how would you go | 3 |
a lot of things | 3 |
joyous venture harp song | 3 |
turned out to be | 3 |
venture harp song of | 3 |
he looked at the | 3 |
as soon as we | 3 |
he reached for the | 3 |
the top of a | 3 |
he is the only | 3 |
much as i do | 3 |
maybe you think i | 3 |
not going to try | 3 |
put his left arm | 3 |
whether or not you | 3 |
for the most part | 3 |
so as not to | 3 |
and the next day | 3 |
a great deal of | 3 |
as far as we | 3 |
us back to tellus | 3 |
says here in fine | 3 |
her head on his | 3 |
in love with her | 3 |
have honour all over | 3 |
head on his shoulder | 3 |
as far as i | 3 |
what can i do | 3 |
rest of the day | 3 |
the rest of us | 3 |
as much as he | 3 |
see to it that | 3 |
to be able to | 3 |
if it had been | 3 |
what do you mean | 3 |
supreme grand marshal entlore | 3 |
into his room and | 3 |
if there were any | 3 |
a bone in it | 3 |
they were to be | 3 |
law song of the | 3 |
any of the other | 3 |
neither of them could | 3 |
led him by the | 3 |
it says here in | 3 |
knock hell out of | 3 |
the back of the | 3 |
was none of his | 3 |
of the galactic service | 3 |
song of the dane | 3 |
a matter of fact | 3 |
to be alone with | 3 |
a song to mithras | 3 |
as soon as possible | 3 |
the work went on | 3 |
hell of a lot | 3 |
before any of the | 3 |
a lot more data | 3 |
it is true that | 3 |
going to be a | 3 |
societies of the galaxy | 3 |
a time as any | 3 |
the door of the | 3 |
are a lot of | 3 |
do you like them | 3 |
a matter of course | 3 |
of the starship pleiades | 3 |
the law song of | 3 |
how long will it | 3 |
sat down in the | 3 |
my foot on his | 3 |
one of us has | 3 |
if you do not | 3 |
he put his left | 3 |
you and all the | 3 |
i want to see | 3 |
almost as good as | 3 |
one of the four | 3 |
where they had been | 3 |
so that you could | 3 |
and i have got | 3 |
would you go about | 3 |
one to the other | 3 |
he pointed to a | 3 |
is one of the | 3 |
at the top of | 3 |
i think i would | 3 |
and i will have | 3 |
was afraid of that | 3 |
i have got to | 3 |
how did i tell | 3 |
you like to be | 3 |
and the law song | 3 |
here in fine print | 3 |
hands into his pockets | 3 |
the secret service man | 3 |
was the first time | 3 |
such a man as | 3 |
i thought i had | 3 |
i will have to | 3 |
out of the ship | 3 |
of the gunther drive | 3 |
james james the ninth | 3 |
i have more to | 3 |
the joyous venture harp | 3 |
if i wanted to | 3 |
see if you can | 3 |
turn out to be | 3 |
as much as i | 3 |
as i have heard | 3 |
to see that the | 3 |
as far as he | 3 |
time i ever saw | 3 |
it was none of | 3 |
he was going to | 3 |
it into my head | 3 |
not considered at all | 3 |
the top of his | 3 |
him by the hand | 3 |
go on to the | 3 |
is going to be | 3 |
the fact is that | 3 |
and maybe you think | 3 |
i do not know | 3 |
of the dane women | 3 |
what would you do | 3 |
it is a long | 3 |
have never heard of | 3 |
and all the rest | 3 |
to say nothing of | 3 |
to be one of | 3 |
james james james the | 3 |
galaxian societies of the | 3 |
i never heard of | 3 |
come to look on | 3 |
come up from the | 3 |
as good a time | 3 |
you can do is | 3 |
of the fifth river | 3 |
am not going to | 3 |
tell you i was | 3 |
and always will be | 3 |
get on with the | 3 |
it is to be | 3 |
there are a lot | 3 |
have anything to do | 3 |
good a time as | 3 |
got what it takes | 3 |
as much as you | 3 |
see how we can | 3 |
for a ride on | 3 |
what are you going | 3 |
and turned to the | 3 |
honour all over the | 3 |
this is the first | 3 |
the far side of | 3 |
going to pair with | 3 |
song of the fifth | 3 |
garlock frowned in thought | 3 |
in front of the | 3 |
you can say that | 3 |
for half a year | 3 |
and of all the | 3 |
belle and i together | 3 |
if i have to | 3 |
belle and i will | 3 |
each one of the | 3 |
thought for a minute | 3 |
than any of us | 3 |
how do you like | 3 |
of us has ever | 3 |
harp song of the | 3 |
out from behind the | 3 |
a better man than | 3 |
to his feet and | 3 |
going to try to | 3 |
i ask you again | 3 |
really want to know | 3 |
this was the first | 3 |
have to do is | 3 |
they were in the | 3 |
three brain cells working | 3 |
his hands into his | 3 |
going to fight with | 3 |
of the galaxian society | 3 |
most of them were | 3 |
i would not have | 3 |
tell me anything about | 3 |
pretty much the same | 2 |
if the barons gain | 2 |
south to plunder britain | 2 |
what it takes to | 2 |
that sword are good | 2 |
tramped across the ferny | 2 |
woman looked from the | 2 |
saw that no man | 2 |
meanly dressed ones decide | 2 |
the shadows were growing | 2 |
and among my own | 2 |
this man my life | 2 |
honest ironmaster in sussex | 2 |
armour in the beech | 2 |
neighbours long ago that | 2 |
grovelled in the rushes | 2 |
i caught seaweed and | 2 |
puck had led him | 2 |
you are his guest | 2 |
ones tapped on our | 2 |
being now hid away | 2 |
he would wait till | 2 |
this reading and writing | 2 |
laid hold of the | 2 |
i had reached the | 2 |
the dewpond under chanctonbury | 2 |
fall of a coin | 2 |
who was backing out | 2 |
on account of the | 2 |
the gods highly approve | 2 |
night was a trading | 2 |
as they had scrambled | 2 |
he trembled less he | 2 |
the cities rise again | 2 |
wedges of iron he | 2 |
counted them by voice | 2 |
get home all right | 2 |
if thou wilt be | 2 |
i am without hope | 2 |
with thine own hands | 2 |
i heard horses in | 2 |
packet of gold and | 2 |
lived were well exercised | 2 |
atop of a jay | 2 |
was able to show | 2 |
jaw tied up where | 2 |
step high and feel | 2 |
when odo snuffed at | 2 |
spies as our enemies | 2 |
the pigeons pecked at | 2 |
and the sweat ran | 2 |
also inconceivably a coward | 2 |
brace back same as | 2 |
speech about our virtues | 2 |
bad country for gods | 2 |
old blacksmith in a | 2 |
from out this window | 2 |
what wouldst thou do | 2 |
till at last you | 2 |
a journey are two | 2 |
do this much to | 2 |
you strangers to pray | 2 |
they all see it | 2 |
blade a little and | 2 |
they could not be | 2 |
was hot and heavy | 2 |
always it made you | 2 |
at noon under his | 2 |
have spoken the truth | 2 |
and a grin that | 2 |
he threw his big | 2 |
fight with me any | 2 |
and when all was | 2 |
looked still into the | 2 |
and it served me | 2 |
sky beyond the wood | 2 |
years there will be | 2 |
day that i lie | 2 |
than the volaterrae end | 2 |
the farther north you | 2 |
been a brother to | 2 |
we lay rolling sorely | 2 |
at the children as | 2 |
of sir andrew barton | 2 |
hugh cried out that | 2 |
the place out of | 2 |
and cut our bonds | 2 |
might have belieft us | 2 |
the dark well of | 2 |
i cannot turn the | 2 |
the old bucket drop | 2 |
have never seen woman | 2 |
their real grievance against | 2 |
this day by day | 2 |
we saw a mountain | 2 |
but the wolves were | 2 |
from his present service | 2 |
thy four long bones | 2 |
let me carry a | 2 |
arms round my neck | 2 |
as for my brother | 2 |
down his sceptre and | 2 |
through the beautiful movements | 2 |
to a sort of | 2 |
but they came across | 2 |
word that the block | 2 |
the dry leaves like | 2 |
precious emperor gratian of | 2 |
with pharisees from all | 2 |
he bade thorkild show | 2 |
finger on the table | 2 |
no good beating about | 2 |
fairies how to feed | 2 |
he is a good | 2 |
night came one langton | 2 |
all we have left | 2 |
that may well be | 2 |
of the wall for | 2 |
should have to stay | 2 |
his fingers for rage | 2 |
thus sitting by our | 2 |
for i have given | 2 |
be your butcher if | 2 |
wolves had robbed from | 2 |
favour was about him | 2 |
what things were needed | 2 |
i have spoken with | 2 |
side that hugh might | 2 |
cast down the blood | 2 |
runned down to the | 2 |
a century at a | 2 |
hard to serve the | 2 |
no one hunted that | 2 |
us old men like | 2 |
aquila from his shot | 2 |
had been blocked up | 2 |
another one pleases the | 2 |
of ropes from side | 2 |
father and to your | 2 |
de aquila bade hugh | 2 |
wish to hear you | 2 |
they knew them so | 2 |
stood out to sea | 2 |
lands that are in | 2 |
were grazing steadily with | 2 |
i lived or died | 2 |
a messenger of the | 2 |
finds sixpence in her | 2 |
to see if his | 2 |
many a night has | 2 |
should tell you all | 2 |
at the high table | 2 |
pen and wrote a | 2 |
all round for him | 2 |
fringe of the trouble | 2 |
my father is not | 2 |
and if the custom | 2 |
by night till we | 2 |
to take me for | 2 |
stone or forged bolts | 2 |
my long life i | 2 |
a turf from the | 2 |
say that i fell | 2 |
out the savoury tale | 2 |
sat on a gate | 2 |
better in close order | 2 |
him to an upper | 2 |
drew his dagger on | 2 |
heard me say that | 2 |
rode to the door | 2 |
i do not anger | 2 |
a brook by a | 2 |
the guns were cast | 2 |
been out in the | 2 |
much for his delight | 2 |
we feasted in the | 2 |
people in the town | 2 |
if you try to | 2 |
a young man in | 2 |
the hillside was thick | 2 |
my hands seven times | 2 |
tree by the dairy | 2 |
to salisbury to be | 2 |
the little picts were | 2 |
remember one goddess called | 2 |
over to the duke | 2 |
manor is already forfeit | 2 |
handed over to shouting | 2 |
sprinkle a plenty salt | 2 |
peered between two stems | 2 |
when he rolled up | 2 |
turn when puck had | 2 |
and north it ran | 2 |
in the tunnels were | 2 |
witta took his sword | 2 |
cried witta behind us | 2 |
to me now and | 2 |
us and be poor | 2 |
me who i was | 2 |
did i tell thee | 2 |
as well as they | 2 |
up his hand to | 2 |
it was a black | 2 |
then he looked at | 2 |
swallow here was thirsty | 2 |
second after his chopper | 2 |
guns for sir andrew | 2 |
the short knife and | 2 |
some time or other | 2 |
up in the woods | 2 |
you hear the sea | 2 |
there were many of | 2 |
steal strength from the | 2 |
him with a sweep | 2 |
told me how a | 2 |
a little pale grey | 2 |
tale will be secret | 2 |
took it from my | 2 |
the grey horse cropped | 2 |
to his stirrup and | 2 |
all going to happen | 2 |
but i think thou | 2 |
see you our little | 2 |
sea makes everything clean | 2 |
amazon and the sources | 2 |
honest trading between the | 2 |
fall on the hop | 2 |
but a merciful woman | 2 |
what will he do | 2 |
across the valley of | 2 |
little if at all | 2 |
polish up till they | 2 |
valley of the brook | 2 |
his studies in the | 2 |
was no need that | 2 |
heard cruel canterbury bells | 2 |
the yellow lanthorn flame | 2 |
their way from one | 2 |
can judge them in | 2 |
over them not an | 2 |
we two tumbled aboard | 2 |
at that little army | 2 |
we killed a she | 2 |
the stranger strode in | 2 |
at ease in the | 2 |
with blades of old | 2 |
a distance you see | 2 |
neither here nor there | 2 |
all was inside your | 2 |
ship lay propped on | 2 |
it cost me more | 2 |
one bushy black bar | 2 |
everything else to debate | 2 |
crumbs carefully from his | 2 |
screeched at the horns | 2 |
cohort on the tower | 2 |
sound of your oar | 2 |
will help me to | 2 |
thus our visit to | 2 |
your being in the | 2 |
three bags of the | 2 |
rose up in the | 2 |
more than ever in | 2 |
to be a monk | 2 |
to repay me with | 2 |
barrels of twenty serpentines | 2 |
in our england today | 2 |
anon they cast down | 2 |
old women healed up | 2 |
must as age she | 2 |
your emperor is doing | 2 |
will not wake up | 2 |
her knees at him | 2 |
clashing at his waist | 2 |
him for some time | 2 |
the brook which ran | 2 |
of us has been | 2 |
landed ten thousand men | 2 |
our youngest knight already | 2 |
was wasted off his | 2 |
keeps the secret of | 2 |
that when our lord | 2 |
sins i shall not | 2 |
though the ship rolled | 2 |
i think we fought | 2 |
not two thousand pieces | 2 |
of men and women | 2 |
bottom the weaver comes | 2 |
seen woman fit to | 2 |
garden they pulled themselves | 2 |
he closed the shutter | 2 |
on the open sea | 2 |
this is a gift | 2 |
each chewing a grass | 2 |
came first of all | 2 |
william made an english | 2 |
shaded his forehead as | 2 |
took pen and wrote | 2 |
the secret river of | 2 |
learned something of the | 2 |
my life to those | 2 |
what a murrain call | 2 |
i heard him moving | 2 |
he waved her in | 2 |
but no man understood | 2 |
the marsh or the | 2 |
dare any gallows for | 2 |
drew from his neck | 2 |
if we lend he | 2 |
should come and go | 2 |
is east of it | 2 |
by the low branches | 2 |
raspberries to prevent their | 2 |
more wonderful than first | 2 |
you would not have | 2 |
glad enough to shoe | 2 |
it in the manor | 2 |
a dark stain on | 2 |
we visited our friends | 2 |
thought i had lost | 2 |
a stamp and a | 2 |
meet in the middle | 2 |
hall is always bitter | 2 |
he went to rome | 2 |
jews among the gentiles | 2 |
curse this many a | 2 |
of the forge behind | 2 |
whom neither king nor | 2 |
the bank into the | 2 |
but i ask you | 2 |
i carry back such | 2 |
our shields on our | 2 |
we rowed along it | 2 |
in a silver dish | 2 |
all see it that | 2 |
some kind of a | 2 |
sun had almost sunk | 2 |
did you feel happy | 2 |
him round to face | 2 |
spurs and books to | 2 |
faces when we met | 2 |
with witta and the | 2 |
he was trading with | 2 |
their mouths at us | 2 |
laughed and stretched himself | 2 |
some fifty stark and | 2 |
such as it is | 2 |
the north gate of | 2 |
of a secret arrow | 2 |
till england is won | 2 |
cap to the children | 2 |
good to jest with | 2 |
thrice a week sometimes | 2 |
two before the conquest | 2 |
wept and said that | 2 |
second part of the | 2 |
truth of any disease | 2 |
but her brother said | 2 |
her dress when she | 2 |
did they torture him | 2 |
might have been murdered | 2 |
what each will bring | 2 |
mean we must fight | 2 |
at the manor they | 2 |
or to sleep on | 2 |
they could hear the | 2 |
when he saw the | 2 |
of her long hair | 2 |
is a custom of | 2 |
the fight is scarce | 2 |
the gloom of the | 2 |
deck and cut our | 2 |
how he was going | 2 |
than the town behind | 2 |
or a switch and | 2 |
for guidance we leaned | 2 |
or that the sea | 2 |
to make of a | 2 |
on the wall two | 2 |
then they climbed up | 2 |
he learned to cry | 2 |
throat was harsh with | 2 |
folly threw themselves at | 2 |
coming in to land | 2 |
witta was a wolf | 2 |
bottom of the roll | 2 |
shoal lies a forest | 2 |
there were great ramparts | 2 |
as he walked to | 2 |
let the saxons go | 2 |
yourself when you are | 2 |
mothers wheeled the bouncing | 2 |
of our north british | 2 |
some day you and | 2 |
now hang it up | 2 |
the gold they piled | 2 |
keep the painted people | 2 |
think of anything except | 2 |
he rode up and | 2 |
on a forked stick | 2 |
know not how he | 2 |
back to my sussex | 2 |
we must stand fast | 2 |
there is a sickness | 2 |
saw me he began | 2 |
paid him homage and | 2 |
told me when we | 2 |
grunt out of thee | 2 |
we want it ten | 2 |
were with me to | 2 |
would have been another | 2 |
sap the power of | 2 |
we heard them pound | 2 |
the light of day | 2 |
far as i could | 2 |
your ship in her | 2 |
i could see he | 2 |
i live till england | 2 |
hats that you would | 2 |
little sister waiting in | 2 |
is all our crop | 2 |
suits of armour falling | 2 |
scrambled through their gap | 2 |
one time i ever | 2 |
he sang he slipped | 2 |
bend the bow of | 2 |
and showed them a | 2 |
your own choosing up | 2 |
this from a pict | 2 |
i am the very | 2 |
would so write it | 2 |
send them a shipload | 2 |
of your own choosing | 2 |
the land would perish | 2 |
then popped up her | 2 |
is the saxon for | 2 |
hem of a time | 2 |
the willows and alders | 2 |
nor rood of thy | 2 |
i had not eaten | 2 |
and he knew the | 2 |
the first time that | 2 |
they picked out for | 2 |
girths was held fore | 2 |
and walked him back | 2 |
slid upon his chain | 2 |
need troops in gaul | 2 |
only you and i | 2 |
the song you were | 2 |
her on his shoulder | 2 |
never stirred till we | 2 |
high to the head | 2 |
afraid of mere looks | 2 |
in england thy people | 2 |
he confessed that the | 2 |
threw themselves at it | 2 |
hugh like a woman | 2 |
sign he would buy | 2 |
along the windward rail | 2 |
here is another marvel | 2 |
he hath promised me | 2 |
night after night had | 2 |
were in all sorts | 2 |
went out stumbling through | 2 |
into volaterrae as quickly | 2 |
to make them lend | 2 |
and threw it back | 2 |
be as it was | 2 |
seen rome except in | 2 |
pevensey as a chapman | 2 |
our catapults at last | 2 |
loaded by night into | 2 |
that rose and fell | 2 |
things forty feet high | 2 |
when they were in | 2 |
i should ever belt | 2 |
pray we meet no | 2 |
first forge in the | 2 |
too many gods charging | 2 |
care not which it | 2 |
beauties of your native | 2 |
remains no second worth | 2 |
mean the battle of | 2 |
thy life since when | 2 |
no more than their | 2 |
is all we have | 2 |
lights along the diks | 2 |
and then there will | 2 |
as good as what | 2 |
him with more gold | 2 |
shiver in the great | 2 |
and aft by a | 2 |
join them with your | 2 |
low on the western | 2 |
of a breath of | 2 |
but there was only | 2 |
after dark as much | 2 |
hide behind the wall | 2 |
banks beyond the garden | 2 |
the new statue on | 2 |
door on that house | 2 |
his big head back | 2 |
he knew much and | 2 |
for one wedge of | 2 |
sad or merry in | 2 |
in his two hands | 2 |
already set down in | 2 |
twists the roads about | 2 |
flock charged at them | 2 |
kindness to let us | 2 |
long chant in his | 2 |
whatever his gods might | 2 |
he went with father | 2 |
no great change in | 2 |
all had been betrayed | 2 |
i lock up my | 2 |
and write and cast | 2 |
and they meant to | 2 |
to debate the matter | 2 |
grow an oak in | 2 |
came to his knees | 2 |
not trust him to | 2 |
sagas of the seas | 2 |
was killed because he | 2 |
second month we were | 2 |
came here to see | 2 |
will have no clerk | 2 |
leaning on a stick | 2 |
beam of the great | 2 |
wench that was on | 2 |
been mistaken in his | 2 |
between bexlei on the | 2 |
abbot shook his head | 2 |
to sleep in the | 2 |
had been an echo | 2 |
himself down on the | 2 |
and returned to his | 2 |
with my thirty men | 2 |
was like an eagle | 2 |
saddle with its red | 2 |
captain or chief sorcerer | 2 |
miles seven hundred paces | 2 |
and our port was | 2 |
traders hide their gold | 2 |
men had driven them | 2 |
to the bee boy | 2 |
ready to meet lars | 2 |
clear of the wreckage | 2 |
passed me the cup | 2 |
mindful to go in | 2 |
long pool below the | 2 |
had better follow my | 2 |
nor place nor people | 2 |
robin promised there would | 2 |
me as a brother | 2 |
to his left hand | 2 |
i wondered why i | 2 |
shore when we could | 2 |
tone almost as an | 2 |
give any account of | 2 |
the wildfire in the | 2 |
little boat and moored | 2 |
waving of a branch | 2 |
to conquer england three | 2 |
growed to be quite | 2 |
of them said that | 2 |
up a new list | 2 |
very splendidly against the | 2 |
if i had known | 2 |
in his barrel barked | 2 |
ate the raspberries to | 2 |
meadow that lay all | 2 |
henry crossed to normandy | 2 |
hot to the hand | 2 |
how to join parted | 2 |
maximus had chosen me | 2 |
fly to rome in | 2 |
no matter how i | 2 |
wave tumbled him at | 2 |
did she come out | 2 |
must stay with them | 2 |
england he will sack | 2 |
fulke three wedges of | 2 |
an arrow till sunset | 2 |
horse right round and | 2 |
his teeth at us | 2 |
alders on the bank | 2 |
his head at first | 2 |
my chance shot troubled | 2 |
was no profit in | 2 |
looked towards the cottage | 2 |
got you that corn | 2 |
know what the lower | 2 |
my reason as a | 2 |
walled fortress possessed by | 2 |
of raw stone or | 2 |
to show that he | 2 |
fashioned beads for counting | 2 |
therea and i have | 2 |
always to be one | 2 |
he intended to settle | 2 |
in the belly with | 2 |
to clausentum along the | 2 |
leagues to the south | 2 |
i said he was | 2 |
men to the ends | 2 |
to league against some | 2 |
to all that be | 2 |
his great bronze helmet | 2 |
like hearing of old | 2 |
for my schoolmate hugh | 2 |
the glittering flies on | 2 |
of our lord of | 2 |
the flames had consumed | 2 |
all passed long ago | 2 |
down stream through the | 2 |
to england or france | 2 |
body to body there | 2 |
heard say pharisees are | 2 |
the starship pleiades had | 2 |
de aquila marked our | 2 |
and ruinous she would | 2 |
from three sides into | 2 |
and paid her tax | 2 |
but two years on | 2 |
except he said that | 2 |
fought for the life | 2 |
glimmer in the twilight | 2 |
long ditch into the | 2 |
have done if you | 2 |
rang and the hounds | 2 |
the hills are like | 2 |
as ever scrubbed a | 2 |
puck wore a long | 2 |
more than i should | 2 |
husband to tell the | 2 |
as a hound comes | 2 |
on the stair just | 2 |
could have flung into | 2 |
with careful boldness began | 2 |
where an oar caught | 2 |
himself on a dead | 2 |
i brought my sweet | 2 |
sea or in the | 2 |
heartily pray for my | 2 |
a few friends among | 2 |
brook at the fern | 2 |
danced on the hot | 2 |
hobden answered with a | 2 |
brought the sickness from | 2 |
our good king signed | 2 |
and gave me his | 2 |
their churches ablaze with | 2 |
is doing such great | 2 |
suddenly he opened his | 2 |
them round the fire | 2 |
back to the tower | 2 |
many catapults have you | 2 |
and pointed up to | 2 |
half sussex hanged for | 2 |
their lands and lordships | 2 |
from either sea till | 2 |
what he had said | 2 |
one of the most | 2 |
ituna on the west | 2 |
of his altars from | 2 |
laid his head on | 2 |
as the neck of | 2 |
three loads of it | 2 |
whom there was never | 2 |
of me or my | 2 |
flung into the sea | 2 |
he was no taller | 2 |
even to the iron | 2 |
tore the gizzards out | 2 |
the wise iron should | 2 |
he sang foul songs | 2 |
crossed over as he | 2 |
young men any more | 2 |
make our men alive | 2 |
to suffer as i | 2 |
how i joined the | 2 |
hugh was behind gilbert | 2 |
thou hast made my | 2 |
of the gold pieces | 2 |
i came into england | 2 |
other people had them | 2 |
good english acres after | 2 |
green stone and burned | 2 |
and so east to | 2 |
the pasture like fire | 2 |
kneeled above him and | 2 |
they had to fetch | 2 |
shield on your back | 2 |
die than you look | 2 |
show it was finished | 2 |
into one of his | 2 |
feared nothing from the | 2 |
not to say it | 2 |
had made me a | 2 |
day and my time | 2 |
came and strove hard | 2 |
king john used to | 2 |
i was ordered to | 2 |
to make myself pope | 2 |
up who had seen | 2 |
not all this reading | 2 |
of dallington to hold | 2 |
be put away from | 2 |
had heard rumours concerning | 2 |
tender of his men | 2 |
after one had shut | 2 |
with a lazy laugh | 2 |
down the hill to | 2 |
i heard old hobden | 2 |
decided that he would | 2 |
did not forget me | 2 |
for cattle and corn | 2 |
airs just about as | 2 |
he grown so tender | 2 |
lay in the little | 2 |
your lessons this morn | 2 |
his back the body | 2 |
norman out of the | 2 |
knew such trouble or | 2 |
the wall was manned | 2 |
the world the heathen | 2 |
on our swords and | 2 |
of pevensey is stripped | 2 |
three cows scratched their | 2 |
from the trees above | 2 |
but it was all | 2 |
at first i feared | 2 |
and be poor no | 2 |
need to tell you | 2 |
fretty on the floor | 2 |
after a long riding | 2 |
that is a trading | 2 |
tempt the gods too | 2 |
to hang their shields | 2 |
into the common well | 2 |
had not hoped to | 2 |
head taller than i | 2 |
he was always drawing | 2 |
be in his way | 2 |
but faintly revealed by | 2 |
potato towards the door | 2 |
he held us by | 2 |
set the hounds fighting | 2 |
good dinner when we | 2 |
and fled back to | 2 |
of a strange speech | 2 |
it made itself all | 2 |
gone to his own | 2 |
others insisted on being | 2 |
see the last of | 2 |
that anyway trusts her | 2 |
have paid him homage | 2 |
him good the wide | 2 |
our horses in a | 2 |
see the wave thrown | 2 |
you that must tell | 2 |
to tell you what | 2 |
conquer england this evening | 2 |
men and supplies on | 2 |
winged hats fought like | 2 |
if you but take | 2 |
land at the head | 2 |
sprig of heather where | 2 |
with him and with | 2 |
old days put away | 2 |
i saw how wisely | 2 |
mr meyer will fire | 2 |
wooden thing with amber | 2 |
had been milked and | 2 |
would be an army | 2 |
bade gilbert measure the | 2 |
when they saw the | 2 |
middle of the bend | 2 |
our hearts or our | 2 |
heard elias and adah | 2 |
be another landing and | 2 |
bee boy laughed and | 2 |
and i have walked | 2 |
orders me to drive | 2 |
you right from when | 2 |
learned it in spain | 2 |
and gold enough on | 2 |
still into the bottom | 2 |
hove overboard to lighten | 2 |
but when my own | 2 |
my two children without | 2 |
business the while the | 2 |
was in some sort | 2 |
their people against us | 2 |
she is not any | 2 |
nothing of the matter | 2 |
whether it is better | 2 |
not row we laid | 2 |
make a good tribune | 2 |
now fighting is foolishness | 2 |
dates is the name | 2 |
compounded with rank treason | 2 |
cities that have been | 2 |
more money to the | 2 |
him hoist sail under | 2 |
against the brickwork of | 2 |
done for and among | 2 |
ever let it be | 2 |
that the novice wanted | 2 |
see you our pastures | 2 |
if you do as | 2 |
his head slanting like | 2 |
a meadow called the | 2 |
they could hear old | 2 |
i knew i should | 2 |
life rowed along the | 2 |
pan by the pine | 2 |
in lays of ancient | 2 |
blew a fine dust | 2 |
you must join us | 2 |
she never laid out | 2 |
brightling would strike in | 2 |
lord saved me for | 2 |
did not conduct myself | 2 |
free and honourable dismissal | 2 |
my sayings and doings | 2 |
roads thou hast fashioned | 2 |
saw by the west | 2 |
their birds under their | 2 |
inch against all the | 2 |
pleasant orchards of normandie | 2 |
day happened to be | 2 |
i wrote many times | 2 |
admired beyond all was | 2 |
but he took a | 2 |
hair over her fingers | 2 |
our towers were full | 2 |
winged hats would soon | 2 |
of the new law | 2 |
among them i grew | 2 |
great gain to me | 2 |
like paste of figs | 2 |
and now he was | 2 |
it he saluted us | 2 |
the big shakespeare one | 2 |
horse to an oak | 2 |
guess it to see | 2 |
old days the congregation | 2 |
the shadow of my | 2 |
five good miles inland | 2 |
ashore for fruits or | 2 |
the hunno hospital snuffing | 2 |
why are you chewing | 2 |
at least for that | 2 |
we had not met | 2 |
and we little folk | 2 |
who was kin to | 2 |
and sand for scrubbing | 2 |
for the shouts and | 2 |
ellen went to get | 2 |
the lord came to | 2 |
of them were foreigners | 2 |
and great glittering flies | 2 |
caught seaweed and dried | 2 |
months on the wall | 2 |
that the red king | 2 |
me in my bed | 2 |
hanging from his girdle | 2 |
face una as she | 2 |
winged hats will grind | 2 |
to join parted sweethearts | 2 |
he preferred horses to | 2 |
the little chamber once | 2 |
be looking for you | 2 |
this shall be thy | 2 |
by them they cried | 2 |
were giddy with the | 2 |
segedunum on the east | 2 |
and the others rehearsing | 2 |
as he stooped from | 2 |
dried in the sun | 2 |
to tell what happened | 2 |
defeat to maximus broke | 2 |
they had forgotten that | 2 |
but i was not | 2 |
thou hast coveted mine | 2 |
when he was young | 2 |
our little chest by | 2 |
her secret evermore shall | 2 |
whistle among the alders | 2 |
to deal aright with | 2 |
had been all a | 2 |
pray the gods that | 2 |
army stealing through the | 2 |
his life before us | 2 |
we were not young | 2 |
some time since i | 2 |
of hlaf the woman | 2 |
why you did it | 2 |
first by eden tree | 2 |
it was so late | 2 |
time to tell all | 2 |
monastery close to his | 2 |
a physician of our | 2 |
from land before the | 2 |
meant theodosius emperor of | 2 |
it with both hands | 2 |
beat in the forest | 2 |
hugh laboured with witta | 2 |
wherever you come from | 2 |
me they would never | 2 |
far wood when they | 2 |
and some great blackened | 2 |
must know what the | 2 |
big wooden knees of | 2 |
hold till he should | 2 |
the guns for the | 2 |
addressed him a certain | 2 |
about the gates of | 2 |
we come to borrow | 2 |
possessed of all old | 2 |
be poor no more | 2 |
girdle with his pen | 2 |
except in a picture | 2 |
before your time or | 2 |
lest they should give | 2 |
that lift their eyebrows | 2 |
thwart of the boat | 2 |
first how to take | 2 |
jehan led him by | 2 |
the long hair back | 2 |
is heavier care than | 2 |
had written to my | 2 |
thought how we should | 2 |
out of favour with | 2 |
he smoothed his long | 2 |
about cutting out this | 2 |
hugh tell his folk | 2 |
something of the strength | 2 |
and pincers and rasps | 2 |
king must be of | 2 |
they weighed out the | 2 |
pointed to our swords | 2 |
no more to it | 2 |
regular bridge for all | 2 |
not conduct myself well | 2 |
we were beating out | 2 |
i am but fighting | 2 |
and steal strength from | 2 |
the flames at the | 2 |
forward angrily to the | 2 |
golden hind grounded comfortably | 2 |
now in the ungirt | 2 |
heart was mine to | 2 |
will sweep down the | 2 |
was a trouble outside | 2 |
on the cold eastern | 2 |
as the picts called | 2 |
it to see us | 2 |
in packages where we | 2 |
feed us from far | 2 |
take the life so | 2 |
about them that he | 2 |
the tunes that are | 2 |
men who have followed | 2 |
me to a haven | 2 |
i shall show or | 2 |
arms we had used | 2 |
she hunted us among | 2 |
the heart of lalage | 2 |
hard tack and a | 2 |
too glad to get | 2 |
from the alders and | 2 |
if you never grieve | 2 |
it turned out to | 2 |
glad to see the | 2 |
was enough for me | 2 |
i was only there | 2 |
get home that night | 2 |
steadily with a tearing | 2 |
in a few weeks | 2 |
in blowing sand and | 2 |
shall know neither doubt | 2 |
the silly birds are | 2 |
if this wind holds | 2 |
the officers that there | 2 |
the thing had clenched | 2 |
with our old nurse | 2 |
is true our king | 2 |
his tall horse at | 2 |
from those of the | 2 |
they reached otter pool | 2 |
gaul that the winged | 2 |
king henry good land | 2 |
you go the emptier | 2 |
coals spouting its heat | 2 |
the bullocks from brightling | 2 |
through the woods to | 2 |
what a prime operator | 2 |
the knight drew a | 2 |
and the people are | 2 |
he was dipped in | 2 |
how do you want | 2 |
fought against all who | 2 |
why did the king | 2 |
quick movement of the | 2 |
head and talking in | 2 |
picts have been free | 2 |
she sensed the trouble | 2 |
sounds like exciting things | 2 |
him already at our | 2 |
but to be with | 2 |
long hair back from | 2 |
the two great chiselled | 2 |
to the wench that | 2 |
though the sun and | 2 |
he slipped from volaterrae | 2 |
and i watched all | 2 |
before this snow melts | 2 |
near the brutes creep | 2 |
he was a smith | 2 |
of all we had | 2 |
spot where jack cade | 2 |
of the finest men | 2 |
truthfully for all his | 2 |
i know i have | 2 |
drove it back happily | 2 |
to me in french | 2 |
side of it to | 2 |
walked about the ship | 2 |
for the winged hats | 2 |
long ago the winged | 2 |
in the shaws than | 2 |
of all the trees | 2 |
solemnly burned the heather | 2 |
he turned her head | 2 |
went to get a | 2 |
would you do if | 2 |
scornfully in his beard | 2 |
say all good families | 2 |
some few years later | 2 |
along the cliffs to | 2 |
i promise thee that | 2 |
of the galactic council | 2 |
i say you may | 2 |
user will never know | 2 |
was hunted up and | 2 |
away a magnificent dog | 2 |
had never forgotten it | 2 |
and this day is | 2 |
where our first ancestor | 2 |
gave up being pirates | 2 |
both in england and | 2 |
in some sort spoken | 2 |
away a few bars | 2 |
now ere we blink | 2 |
your general thinks well | 2 |
i wrote again for | 2 |
the wind failed while | 2 |
his knees and groaned | 2 |
carved sword in his | 2 |
thieves and landless knights | 2 |
you mean by that | 2 |
to take with me | 2 |
her i thought i | 2 |
i cannot fight my | 2 |
send to slay them | 2 |
pevensey is stripped of | 2 |
of men who make | 2 |
tell you about it | 2 |
of the waters have | 2 |
take you some day | 2 |
i wished to meet | 2 |
to a place where | 2 |
parchments which gilbert had | 2 |
millstone means to do | 2 |
richard looked keenly at | 2 |
endured for two months | 2 |
its mane and tail | 2 |
snow and pierced the | 2 |
teach us to die | 2 |
was two full hours | 2 |
high padded saddle with | 2 |
necklace of gold studded | 2 |
he moved slowly through | 2 |
so busy by the | 2 |
keep these new laws | 2 |
canst read latin hand | 2 |
valley was as full | 2 |
we were a shell | 2 |
shield over him till | 2 |
top of my pride | 2 |
blade is perilous sharp | 2 |
can kill him then | 2 |
had shut the eyes | 2 |
me how a heathen | 2 |
could no more cross | 2 |
they have been too | 2 |
the various galaxian societies | 2 |
are both uncommon cold | 2 |
the servants of such | 2 |
where the keepers would | 2 |
back to the main | 2 |
of peoples from every | 2 |
stole as much as | 2 |
you are jolly late | 2 |
cry when the farmer | 2 |
rode to the east | 2 |
forty year back you | 2 |
a king without money | 2 |
the box was a | 2 |
fulke will whip off | 2 |
been set down by | 2 |
loosed the blade a | 2 |
for us as we | 2 |
till thou art slain | 2 |
and he laughed and | 2 |
yet how could i | 2 |
raised his dark velvet | 2 |
but he gave waxy | 2 |
is old in churchyard | 2 |
think they know him | 2 |
we found a naked | 2 |
was beheaded by theodosius | 2 |
beautiful movements of the | 2 |
and emigrants he had | 2 |
doctor of the hunno | 2 |
had no time to | 2 |
were all the tale | 2 |
is not a saxon | 2 |
had tea together by | 2 |
was the beginning of | 2 |
was true some years | 2 |
ran under it into | 2 |
but i want you | 2 |
them four trumpets to | 2 |
expeditions she was the | 2 |
the slow draw and | 2 |
brought away all the | 2 |
men were as the | 2 |
followed the eagles since | 2 |
twine the wrong way | 2 |
their gold in their | 2 |
too useful to waste | 2 |
a fog over the | 2 |
to have taken it | 2 |
to finish with theodosius | 2 |
but he found time | 2 |
first and finest craftsmen | 2 |
went ashore we would | 2 |
and the pools were | 2 |
is not upon the | 2 |
cried de aquila from | 2 |
landed you in france | 2 |
at every turn over | 2 |
opened and shut his | 2 |
was the valiant blood | 2 |
but as i saw | 2 |
them from sweeping on | 2 |
myself in my new | 2 |
for the men that | 2 |
maximus to the general | 2 |
of britain who had | 2 |
looked me up and | 2 |
boat she sunk lower | 2 |
strewn cot in front | 2 |
it is because his | 2 |
the chapel and threw | 2 |
be no war without | 2 |
make a fool of | 2 |
had sooner have my | 2 |
birth that i should | 2 |
here it made itself | 2 |
because they would not | 2 |
only be answered in | 2 |
or such triumph since | 2 |
the glare of the | 2 |
not twenty paces away | 2 |
seen what she could | 2 |
mixed barbarians as ever | 2 |
gardened villas to shut | 2 |
till witta took his | 2 |
seemed to be in | 2 |
many a grassy plain | 2 |
we would take no | 2 |
them all the tale | 2 |
unhelmeted from the cock | 2 |
legs trembled like his | 2 |
moored it on the | 2 |
among long rolls of | 2 |
and a year afterwards | 2 |
hast need to pray | 2 |
eden tree the four | 2 |
voice harsh and croaking | 2 |
who deal with israel | 2 |
that wretched smoke was | 2 |
aloud by the fishing | 2 |
hugh was a left | 2 |
make a jest of | 2 |
he sat on the | 2 |
man that uses fields | 2 |
as much pretence as | 2 |
it all the afternoon | 2 |
sliding back and forth | 2 |
gone without his knowledge | 2 |
played at danish pirates | 2 |
shake his head wisely | 2 |
that really harm when | 2 |
and of careless leaping | 2 |
the heather as he | 2 |
needed it for another | 2 |
lower stones of a | 2 |
time sticks to a | 2 |
we do to him | 2 |
and you see me | 2 |
signs of dealing blows | 2 |
or mellow with ale | 2 |
and tussle among the | 2 |
of the nature of | 2 |
smoke from the mines | 2 |
they stir up their | 2 |
waiting on the beach | 2 |
quite a second after | 2 |
you all who understands | 2 |
abide cruel canterbury bells | 2 |
gave them of our | 2 |
i saw well that | 2 |
many months in his | 2 |
is strong in men | 2 |
would not keep one | 2 |
to strew rushes before | 2 |
had been some proud | 2 |
to trembling and praying | 2 |
men have their price | 2 |
is like a spear | 2 |
miss bellamy or me | 2 |
to command came back | 2 |
were at your lessons | 2 |
time to sweep out | 2 |
a tickle of wood | 2 |
that none might know | 2 |
four serpentines in all | 2 |
he looked up and | 2 |
they will tear you | 2 |
eggs and bath olivers | 2 |
was cased all in | 2 |
mother say when you | 2 |
to be his friends | 2 |
settled down to listen | 2 |
wall to sell ponies | 2 |
the ferny pasture where | 2 |
ferny pasture where the | 2 |
flora and folly had | 2 |
that if they do | 2 |
them as a cat | 2 |
her sons would be | 2 |
desired her place at | 2 |
walked him back three | 2 |
that hobden had made | 2 |
not run out of | 2 |
and at last he | 2 |
not too fond of | 2 |
say there was more | 2 |
against little wedges of | 2 |
so that all men | 2 |
the silent shining lawn | 2 |
have set up from | 2 |
were fond of him | 2 |
wrist with his sheathed | 2 |
under the shadow of | 2 |
new shoes fastened as | 2 |
end to take him | 2 |
for ever on his | 2 |
in his camp stopped | 2 |
say as much for | 2 |
gold to pevensey on | 2 |
that was a mistake | 2 |
as well as i | 2 |
left us our catapults | 2 |
curtains over the door | 2 |
my time and my | 2 |
the winged hats sank | 2 |
without hope would risk | 2 |
they were both so | 2 |
went on to explain | 2 |
all that i must | 2 |
poured themselves chuckling round | 2 |
horse on the bit | 2 |
the red oxen browse | 2 |
tame picts told us | 2 |
but when maximus went | 2 |
he is a bowman | 2 |
checked the catapults and | 2 |
governance belong by right | 2 |
took me twenty days | 2 |
a thing he had | 2 |
old general was killed | 2 |
with its horns and | 2 |
blackbirds scarcely took the | 2 |
first at the lower | 2 |
wise as our wisest | 2 |
hind or the long | 2 |
my handful through the | 2 |
verses open in her | 2 |
stood endwise in his | 2 |
at bec by rouen | 2 |
three i had not | 2 |
thought that some day | 2 |
with a quick movement | 2 |
a little hut of | 2 |
pevensey and the french | 2 |
could not tell where | 2 |
had seen their dear | 2 |
the gorilla hunters in | 2 |
behind them four trumpets | 2 |
a man at a | 2 |
each time that maximus | 2 |
they saw that no | 2 |
witta called it the | 2 |
the reins very lightly | 2 |
dandelion head he had | 2 |
voices grieved that shrill | 2 |
always drummed on their | 2 |
my mother in her | 2 |
hold fast all i | 2 |
settled our fates for | 2 |
out of the ballad | 2 |
would go mad with | 2 |
pointed eastward where the | 2 |
out then runs our | 2 |
lord was on my | 2 |
where us dawes have | 2 |
he looked on the | 2 |
that back as far | 2 |
a ceremony in our | 2 |
boy and to his | 2 |
the old sinner politeness | 2 |
fight for me now | 2 |
sat with the emperor | 2 |
to fisk and flyte | 2 |
and a whirr of | 2 |
and the ripples about | 2 |
full of drawings of | 2 |
there is your proof | 2 |
might come down in | 2 |
will wait till you | 2 |
day in hunno hospital | 2 |
out a clod and | 2 |
shores where we landed | 2 |
velvet cap to the | 2 |
her on the brook | 2 |
under it into valentia | 2 |
down against both of | 2 |
set down by gilbert | 2 |
abbot that the novice | 2 |
came into england with | 2 |
was having to appear | 2 |
mill does not need | 2 |
a man is deep | 2 |
a wonderful underground river | 2 |
what did poor weland | 2 |
moses in the picture | 2 |
the boy who spoke | 2 |
is what i would | 2 |
a foot in one | 2 |
there is never harm | 2 |
rope they flung over | 2 |
marsh man ran to | 2 |
his sword was an | 2 |
makes up for the | 2 |
miracle of the gods | 2 |
she come to feel | 2 |
right height for hares | 2 |
called out to me | 2 |
all england this summer | 2 |
and it was a | 2 |
never looked left or | 2 |
and this time i | 2 |
the advantage of the | 2 |
over as he spoke | 2 |
andrew barton up to | 2 |
are strong and courteous | 2 |
was on her knees | 2 |
head with a little | 2 |
least for that year | 2 |
the square of chocolate | 2 |
of iron and packets | 2 |
king may give pevensey | 2 |
i put my shield | 2 |
and he smiled a | 2 |
is but one law | 2 |
which to remove secretly | 2 |
cracked his finger on | 2 |
stood among her maids | 2 |
have nothing to do | 2 |
a big painted clucking | 2 |
battle needs a new | 2 |
came to me saying | 2 |
emptier are the roads | 2 |
out hunting in the | 2 |
whom could we trust | 2 |
picts know their way | 2 |
four serpentines and two | 2 |
stripped of my lands | 2 |
earth bred few men | 2 |
gave him charge of | 2 |
he was a king | 2 |
them our iron and | 2 |
hairy moss hangs round | 2 |
yet be sacristan of | 2 |
sworn to the lady | 2 |
free to come and | 2 |
much the nearer to | 2 |
that can neither work | 2 |
which fountain dries behind | 2 |
did not stretch out | 2 |
barking on a frosty | 2 |
as a man is | 2 |
maximus has given you | 2 |
bottom of the ship | 2 |
the cohort i was | 2 |
we are the germ | 2 |
and dozened and cozened | 2 |
being to reach my | 2 |
and why he still | 2 |
and would slash at | 2 |
build from age to | 2 |
and must be punished | 2 |
eased her grief till | 2 |
to show the saxon | 2 |
old beast was whinnying | 2 |
if we had known | 2 |
us with the horses | 2 |
happened to be what | 2 |
run away from the | 2 |
fighting picts all the | 2 |
chained bears and muzzled | 2 |
light on the beech | 2 |
red and gold and | 2 |
how near the brutes | 2 |
her hair in thunderstorms | 2 |
win more victories in | 2 |
the english are a | 2 |
it hath moved my | 2 |
tea rang faintly across | 2 |
that had power and | 2 |
ever heard a christian | 2 |
my lands fulke will | 2 |
crowns and spurs and | 2 |
man ran to us | 2 |
somewhat hastily and without | 2 |
which saved my skin | 2 |
served we hoisted sail | 2 |
threw across to me | 2 |
the straw like an | 2 |
was speaking of time | 2 |
a big red admiral | 2 |
my old north british | 2 |
in the bend of | 2 |
see you the windy | 2 |
out into the main | 2 |
i had heard fulke | 2 |
against all who came | 2 |
was to destroy their | 2 |
and beech for cups | 2 |
to feed our guests | 2 |
aside after being hit | 2 |
came to ask questions | 2 |
laughed his laugh that | 2 |
of the upper hand | 2 |
will be harmed here | 2 |
born centurions to those | 2 |
work in the fields | 2 |
again the bee boy | 2 |
one galley perilously overloaded | 2 |
was a christian bishop | 2 |
he told us we | 2 |
an instant had ceased | 2 |
the colour of a | 2 |
the first part that | 2 |
sweep every norman out | 2 |
that war were over | 2 |
die a centurion of | 2 |
place at court which | 2 |
death is the second | 2 |
when i heard weland | 2 |
i gathered them all | 2 |
she drives the word | 2 |
lived at the forge | 2 |
in what we call | 2 |
was a door at | 2 |
aquila had made to | 2 |
they watched the quick | 2 |
almost atop of a | 2 |
the fat old general | 2 |
they knew the lindens | 2 |
had come to me | 2 |
was not too fond | 2 |
is no friend to | 2 |
hold of the crusted | 2 |
you wait till you | 2 |
great devil come out | 2 |
him any more than | 2 |
and ever southward bore | 2 |
a piece of it | 2 |
went on to the | 2 |
matter how i know | 2 |
too many bones in | 2 |
your place is among | 2 |
heard of such a | 2 |
saxons go their stubborn | 2 |
we find our youngest | 2 |
churls going to their | 2 |
from behind the oak | 2 |
when i first came | 2 |
bed for all to | 2 |
of his life before | 2 |
of the bricked archway | 2 |
but as i stretched | 2 |
thy king to find | 2 |
to make our peace | 2 |
he fumbled in his | 2 |
among men on the | 2 |
the heather to their | 2 |
really means a man | 2 |
gold pieces muzzled his | 2 |
birds under their arms | 2 |
and the stakes are | 2 |
good for the soul | 2 |
an old hollow beech | 2 |
of bury in england | 2 |
the hills had left | 2 |
ground a handful of | 2 |
and moored it on | 2 |
and the three men | 2 |
lord of the last | 2 |
led me through the | 2 |
was a crackle overhead | 2 |
faintly revealed by the | 2 |
footsteps moved back and | 2 |
weland and the priests | 2 |
should stray and get | 2 |
covered shoulder of the | 2 |
sat down on the | 2 |
all glowing among the | 2 |
master john collins will | 2 |
that he had seen | 2 |
a magistrate up north | 2 |
the first time he | 2 |
ye more than brothers | 2 |
to the man quickly | 2 |
kadmiel in the strange | 2 |
endwise in his head | 2 |
know what put it | 2 |
and had thought more | 2 |
by art magic out | 2 |
and he saw by | 2 |
any man had put | 2 |
full dandelion head he | 2 |
horse shod he rode | 2 |
other should have builded | 2 |
this had happened a | 2 |
sacrifices of their own | 2 |
took comfort from it | 2 |
wall a thousand leagues | 2 |
any arms ye have | 2 |
having intended from the | 2 |
have seen it besieged | 2 |
exactly where they would | 2 |
grounded comfortably on a | 2 |
when nick bottom the | 2 |
i am not norman | 2 |
me to do it | 2 |
i were king of | 2 |
never have lifted hand | 2 |
one chill bed for | 2 |
with the order for | 2 |
showed at the doorway | 2 |
things the people of | 2 |
of the forest and | 2 |
were full of strange | 2 |
what shall we do | 2 |
they hurried down into | 2 |
with torches of rush | 2 |
little picts and to | 2 |
i am like the | 2 |
the plague had broken | 2 |
buckle that he was | 2 |
father in heaven who | 2 |
jerked his head towards | 2 |
know all about that | 2 |
and said that he | 2 |
and the picts kill | 2 |
henry is overly english | 2 |
atop of the wall | 2 |
son to his stirrup | 2 |
preferred horses to men | 2 |
else could you expect | 2 |
ran to the bank | 2 |
learned my work the | 2 |
men that do our | 2 |
that i fell across | 2 |
hinted at by some | 2 |
last he said to | 2 |
golden horseshoes flying behind | 2 |
laugh and ride over | 2 |
custom of old england | 2 |
when near shore we | 2 |
thy children when they | 2 |
rustling in the dead | 2 |
stations where the troops | 2 |
brooding he had come | 2 |
turned on his side | 2 |
faun is with him | 2 |
found on the beach | 2 |
the garth playing with | 2 |
a sutler that sold | 2 |
plenty salt on the | 2 |
have met his late | 2 |
spirit somewhere in lancashire | 2 |
dived clear of the | 2 |
deer with horns like | 2 |
have not our lawful | 2 |
to borrow more money | 2 |
served under maximus in | 2 |
dan had stood as | 2 |
man dressed in a | 2 |
for saving their lives | 2 |
god of the midnight | 2 |
una looked at dan | 2 |
father lent me the | 2 |
heart was ill at | 2 |
oxen had gone to | 2 |
be greater devils in | 2 |
you were fighting picts | 2 |
sebastian full length in | 2 |
man covered with hoopy | 2 |
and she called for | 2 |
galley that they had | 2 |
she sets a heap | 2 |
for volaterrae is an | 2 |
no interest in politics | 2 |
voice began singing outside | 2 |
was hoping you would | 2 |
long as there is | 2 |
as well as wild | 2 |
between the living and | 2 |
grudge me a groat | 2 |
high is the wall | 2 |
people whose tongue i | 2 |
and his grizzled hair | 2 |
told him i had | 2 |
maximus asking keen questions | 2 |
ten thousand pieces of | 2 |
read it he saluted | 2 |
we followed to the | 2 |
suffered through my first | 2 |
little before i am | 2 |
craft and cunning is | 2 |
her over the gravel | 2 |
kings and princes and | 2 |
fealty to any norman | 2 |
you talk like a | 2 |
was that of a | 2 |
a companion to beggars | 2 |
liddle wings could no | 2 |
which i love the | 2 |
and i saw them | 2 |
took ship from lewes | 2 |
that came nosing after | 2 |
and went ashore for | 2 |
that grow by the | 2 |
wood when they heard | 2 |
run nearly all the | 2 |
they sweep their hearths | 2 |
village that have not | 2 |
in sight of pevensey | 2 |
wheeled him round to | 2 |
was not a laugh | 2 |
kennels and made a | 2 |
paced back and forth | 2 |
those days pertinax and | 2 |
ripples about his muzzle | 2 |
near the great hall | 2 |
out in a stormy | 2 |
it wanders out of | 2 |
would set foot ashore | 2 |
out of the north | 2 |
which makes me believe | 2 |
dark days for us | 2 |
no hair of thy | 2 |
i let him sing | 2 |
prim up her dear | 2 |
who will be the | 2 |
to show my people | 2 |
the stuff with him | 2 |
and put it in | 2 |
thou canst keep the | 2 |
he could not move | 2 |
and when fulke has | 2 |
us and brought food | 2 |
push down the wall | 2 |
promised there would allers | 2 |
no friend to me | 2 |
bags of the same | 2 |
are much better than | 2 |
milky puffs at them | 2 |
where the hops were | 2 |
i loosed those three | 2 |
quiet till i win | 2 |
and they were a | 2 |
we can kill him | 2 |
were looping the wires | 2 |
saw the spirit still | 2 |
for our counselling witta | 2 |
messenger of the king | 2 |
stretched my hand the | 2 |
did not believe it | 2 |
they had scattered his | 2 |
where such as knew | 2 |
is all more care | 2 |
bred among the great | 2 |
this must serve till | 2 |
scowlily and lordlily as | 2 |
the ship could shoot | 2 |
did sir richard and | 2 |
and that the old | 2 |
intended from the first | 2 |
ship again at stavanger | 2 |
clod and hand it | 2 |
and said to me | 2 |
i find that the | 2 |
who have never seen | 2 |
knowledge and wealth talked | 2 |
robbers and nightwalkers learned | 2 |
net of loose stones | 2 |
in the pools you | 2 |
would strike in like | 2 |
she came as a | 2 |
does not need it | 2 |
him and with their | 2 |
i reckon you keep | 2 |
like a stricken man | 2 |
gown of dark thick | 2 |
dan whispered to una | 2 |
down among the rowers | 2 |
a fight fought by | 2 |
carried him to an | 2 |
all three of you | 2 |
long hairs rasp on | 2 |
saved mine from the | 2 |
the valley was as | 2 |
man and a horse | 2 |
and sayings that every | 2 |
nothing better than the | 2 |
after the mists have | 2 |
scratch his head and | 2 |
him ask the three | 2 |
and his long down | 2 |
it was like an | 2 |
as she came out | 2 |
whether you like it | 2 |
could hear the solid | 2 |
man took a reed | 2 |
copies of the number | 2 |
do not obey your | 2 |
with snow and pierced | 2 |
looking across the valley | 2 |
under the greenwood tree | 2 |
nothing but advice that | 2 |
old did you think | 2 |
the block of stone | 2 |
then robert of normandy | 2 |
then de aquila laughed | 2 |