THE HESPERIAN STUDENT AngleH, Saxons iinil Jutec In their extremity they in vited tlm Jules to aid Ilium, promising to glvo III ui In return llui llnml of Thnnct and rations mid pay. I ! Jutes agreed, and for several years fought side by side with tho Britons. Tho Isle of Thmiet was particularly agrcoallu to both partius. To tho .futOB because they had no faith in tho Bri'ons' word, and to tho Britons be cause thoy feared and trembled lest thoy had invited to tliolr island a foe more loniblo than tho Plot or Scot The settlement of the Juloa drew hither, others of thoir kinsmon, until tho Britons refused to comply with tho terms of ngreen.onl. The Teutons turned upon them and after stubborn lighting inado the first Toil tonic settlement in the lltllo county of Kent. The Jutes were followed by the Angles and Suxions, and bo foic tho end of tho sixth century tho Teutons claimed as their own all tho land from llio German Ocean to tho Severn, and from tho English Channel to tho Firth of Forth. Lotus now Inquire Into tho character of thu conquest' Did the conquerors merely ovei run tho country, leav ing tho inhabitants undisturbed, and only supplying tho ruling power, or did thoy make England truly English, leaving no trace of tho former inhabitants? When the Euglisb undertook the conquest of tho Island, tboy entered upon a fierce struggle. The Briton was as stubborn and as determined us in Roman times. The English wrested from him, bit by bit, tho land for which every inch was heroically fought. Tho Britons were aided In their resistance by tho nature of the coun try. Vast lorcsts and swamps covered tho island, and in llic&o, and in ihc numerous caves they took refuge, only to bo driven from them by tho barbarians. Tho English, savuge and ferocious by nature, were made more so by the stubborn resistance oilcred. In their heathen creed, death in battle admitted them directly to thoir heaven and having little regard for their own lives, they had still less for the lives of others, especially those of thoir cue mies. Wearouotto suppose that tlio Colls in Britain were entirely exterminated. But as tho Teutons ad. vanccd, the Colts returned, and from the nature of the conquest wo may reasonably conchulo that those who were not expelled, were cither slain or reduced to sla very. Stubba bays, "The same weak obstinacy which failed to combine against Invasion refused to accept tlio now dominion, and tho Saxons, merciless by nature, were made moro so by tho sullen and treacherous ulti tudo of tliolr vllctims. Tho Britons lledrom their homes ; whom the sword spared, famine and pestilence devoured. The few that remained, either refused or failed altogether to civilize the conquerors." After the English had established themselves on tho island, the age became one of divarication; tho cities went to ruin; Christianity became extinct, and all culture with it; England became heathen and barbarous. The Celtists have claimed Uhu ihu luwor clas3cs were Colts, and that tho Anglo-Saxons formed only the landed aristoc racy. Would not the mere settlement of predatory bands without their homes or families, have resulted in their adoption of the native institutions, (hose natives being their superiors in civilization? Can anything pure be produced frommixed materials? Could tlio Teutons have retained their tribal organization go long and so closely If it had been shattered at starting? Wlien tlio English came, thoy camo not to conquer merely but to sottlo, and thoy brought with thorn thoir families, thoir cattle and slaves, without which thoy could not havo oc cupied the land. In tho days of Bode, tho laud Connolly occupied by tho Anglos on tho continent was without, an inhabitant, testifying to tho truth of tho statement. If there had been numerous Celts In the commmiili o would thoy not havo had some inlluenco upon the lan guage and religion, upon tlio laws and civilization of the people v Yet wo carefully examine all records and sur vivals, but And no such trace Contemporary tradition is everwhere tlio same. Had Celts been numerous In Eng lish settlements they must havo been known to tho Welsh beyond tho bordor. But In tho one British record which wo possess, that o( Glldas, no hint of such a thing is given. To Jiim and his countrymen, England and tier in habitants are utterly foreign. In tho English clironlclo we find no Biitish names. Had tho Cells boon bo nu. mcrous it is quite probable that there would have been Celtic names in the history of tho joint population. In tlio"IIiHtory of Gaul," by Gregory of Tours, we llnd al most as many Roman names as Frank, but in tlio history of England aftor tho conquest we find no British or Roman names at all, although Britons of tho independent districts are sometimes mentioned. Wo havo tho same evidence in language. Would the language of the ago havo been so purely Teutonic if (he Celts had been numerous? Would they, with their in tenso hatred of all things English, have immediately adopted the language mid religion, laws and customs of the conquerors? If Eng'and had been conquered Ilk tho other'Roman provinces, the cuso would have been tho veVy reverse When tho Teutons were conquered by tlio Western Roman Empire thoy formed tlio ruling class, but tho language did not change, French still remained a dia. lectof tiicLntin: tho only chaugo was a largo infusion of Teutonic words. Tho religion was tho same, tlio laws wore tlio laws of the province. Now If England had been conquered in a similar manner, would not the result have been similar? How is it then that after the English conquest the language remained, not Welsh but became purely Teutonic? All tho Welsh words in tho English vocabulary, such as basket, funnel, mop, etc., apply to the smallest domestic matters, and can bo compared to tlm words which Americans havo borrowed from the Indi ans. While these words are so few In number, all the terms of government and war, and nearly all the terms of agriculture are exclusively Teutonic. Tho Celts, under their Roman lords, had tilled the soil, and if thoy had remained in largo numbers In English settlements they would probably rgain havo formed the peasantry, and must havo introduced a large number of words, since tho English wore preeminently a warlike race. Tho con. version of tho English, and later thu Norman conquest , paved tho way for a largo infusion of Latin and French words, but, wo are told, as In French it it impossible to compose asenteucs without a Romance word, while it is perfectly possible to composo sentence after sentence without a foreign word, so in Engiish it Is impossiblo to compose a sentence without a Teutonic word, while it is perfectly possiblo to compose senlcuco after sentence without a foreign word. Thus it isJsoon how tho con quest affected the different lauguages. Had tho Colts been as numerous as the Celtists would have us believe, would not English be today, not English but Wclsh,wilh "