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XV

The Rebellion Smolders

The History of King Sweyn Estridsson and His Sons and of the Martyrdom of King Canute the Holy

These actions provoked the enemy of piety and the adversary of truth. Fearing that the number of those obedient to him was steadily diminishing, he set loose a web of deceitful schemes. Determined to disrupt a time of such devotion and to drag a people who were finally being led toward God by a devout ruler into the jaws of his own malice, he set his cunning devices in motion — like a roaring lion prowling about in search of someone to devour.

Just as he had once stirred up the chief priests, Pharisees, and teachers of the law against the very author of truth, using the poison of envy so that the simplicity of the crowd would be incited to condemn the giver of life, so now he stirred up men of greater age and influence, prominent in power and ready through eloquence and audacity to act without regard for right or wrong. By the goads of ancient wickedness he incited them against the devout prince — inciting them, inflaming them, and, once inflamed, bending them toward every crime.

In this way he armed nobles and commoners alike, provoking them through familiar temptation to wipe out entirely the memory of a righteous man. As a result, almost the entire populace of the land, infected with the poison of his injustice and ensnared by the traps of his malice, was made ready for every crime. With minds turned away and faces cast down to the earth, they avoided looking upward, lest they turn aside from the path of wickedness and become companions of those whom divine wisdom declares to have driven God away from themselves.