SUMMARY OF THE REIGN OF WILLIAM II. SURNAMED RUFUS. Born, A. D. 1056. Began to reign, September 23, 1087. Died, without issue, August 2, 1100, after reigning thirteen years. PRINCIPAL EVENTS. Normandy invaded, and an expedition undertaken to the Holy Land. Quarrels between the King and Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury. The Tower, Westminster-hall, and London-bridge built. The King killed in New Forest. EMINENT PERSONS. Janfranc and Anselm, Archbishops of Canterbury, Odo, Bishop of Baieux. Flamlard, Bishop of Durham. COTEMPORARY SOVEREIGNS. Popes. Victor III. 1086. Urban II, 1088. Paschal II. 1099. WILLIAM RUFUS. " And that Red King, who, while of old "Too low for a high praise, and too little for a great praise." SHAKESPEARE. "So, so is good, very good, very excellent good, and yet it is not, it is but so so." SHAKESPEARE. KING WILLIAM RUFUS wore red hair, Was rather short, and very fat, His eyes, we're told, were not a pair, Yet who could blame the King for that? His brother ROBERT claim'd a right The holy war, by zealots led, Began, and much the muse it irks, That Infidels like Christians bled, And Christian soldiers fought like Turks. VOL. I. K Westminster Westminster Hall King William rear'd, Not half-a-quarter large enough.* The sea, which, as CANUTE had shown, New Forest, which the conqu'ror meant Here too, his brother and his nephew fell, By darts dispatch'd from undiscovered hand, Which folks around, as fearful judgments tell, On those, who for the chace despoil'd the poor man's land. *The author hopes he has not exceeded the reported character of William's coarseness and vulgarity.-When ten Englishmen had been cleared by the ordeal of fire, for the charge of killing dear, Rufus exclaimed, "Pretty justice above, indeed, to let ❝ten such scoundrels escape!" J. P. ANDREWS. Yet William exhibited a mixture of firmness and naivete, when a pilot was fearful of embarking with him on an expedition in tempestuous weather; the Monarch asked, "whether he had ever heard of a King being drowned.” Nor Nor much lamented was the Norman King, Whose people were in most reduced condition; His Ministers had tax'd each sort of thing, For there were then no Whigs in opposition. Of his attire the Sov'reign took due heed, POETRY of the Year 1098. Which the author of the Medulla Historia Anglicanæ calleth "a pretty passage." "His Chamberlain him brought, as he rose on a day, "A morrow for to wear, a pair of hose of say; "He ask❜d what they costen'd? "Three shillings," he said, "Fie a dible," quoth the King, "to say so vile a deed, King's to wear so vile a cloths, that costened no more!. "Buy a pair for a marke, or thou shall reu it sore." "A worse pair, sure enough, the other him brought, "And said they costened a marke-Unneath he then bought; "Aye!-Bel-ami," quoth the King," these are well bought; "In this manner serve me, otherwise serve me not." SUMMARY |