Dubious miracles increased with
jordan 15 the competition for pilgrims. The Rood of Boxley, a life-size figure of Christ on the Cross that actually shed tears, rolled its eyes, and foamed at the mouth, was finally discovered to contain"certain engines and old wires with old rotten sticks in the back." After that Tuesday evening, Decem'oer 29, 1170, when four knights of Henry II splashed the blood and brains of Archbishop Thomas Becket on the cathedral pavement, pilgrims traveled to the shrine of his martyrdom. From all over England they came and even from abroad. Their route fromSouthampton through Winchester to Canterbury is still called the Pilgrims' Way. Some
pink and white jordan fusion went to fulfill a vow made when they had recovered from illness or escaped disaster, some simply for penance, others to annoy the king by honoring his ancestral enemy. But kings came too. The barefoot Henry II, in haircloth and woolen shirt, hastened to Canterbury on July I2, n74, to avoid excommunication. But
jordan XIII red and white many had no better reason than the modern tourist.By Chaucer's day (1340?-1400) pilgrimage had become a pleasurable, emphatically secular, and delightfully sociable adventure.Whan that Aprile with his showres soote The droughte of March hath perced to the roote, And bathed every veine in swich licour, Of which vertu engendred is the flowr . . . And small fowles maken melodye That sleepen al the night with open ye-
half off air jordan basketball shoes So priketh hem Nature in hir corages- Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages. Rare among medieval institutions, it brought together on speaking terms men and women of all ranks and conditions. Kings and peasants, doctors and patients, lawyers and clients, were not just in one another's presence, as they might have been in church. On a long journey together they relieved boredom by learning about one another with conversation and tale-telling. The pilgrims tried other sorts of entertainment, not always decorous oredifying. A priest in Chaucer's time, William Thorpe, preached against that passion "to seek and visit the bones or images . . . of this saint or that.""Runners thus madly hither and thither into pilgrimage borrow hereto other men's goods (yea and sometimes they steal men's goods hereto), and they pay them never again." The pardoner himself warns:A lecherous thing is wyn, and dronkenesse Is ful of stryving and of wrecchednesses
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