Difference between revisions of "The Pilgrimage"
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"Godwyn invited me to go on a pilgrimage with himself, Thomas, and some awful man Godwyn is friends with. We traveled quite some distance before the piggish man finally decreed the pilgrimage had started. The behavior of the awful man, and Thomas too, was reprehensible. God saw to correct these men in their behavior, and me for my own sins I had not confessed. Godwyn was overcome, at the sight of a white deer, by the urge to let loose his inner beast. We were lead to the bones of a Brother of the Church, and his ghost tasked us to bring his bones to Canturbury...as the animals we embodied. We completed the task, not without trial, and my companions were quite humbled." | "Godwyn invited me to go on a pilgrimage with himself, Thomas, and some awful man Godwyn is friends with. We traveled quite some distance before the piggish man finally decreed the pilgrimage had started. The behavior of the awful man, and Thomas too, was reprehensible. God saw to correct these men in their behavior, and me for my own sins I had not confessed. Godwyn was overcome, at the sight of a white deer, by the urge to let loose his inner beast. We were lead to the bones of a Brother of the Church, and his ghost tasked us to bring his bones to Canturbury...as the animals we embodied. We completed the task, not without trial, and my companions were quite humbled." | ||
− | [[ | + | *[[Owain]] the Boar |
− | [[Godwyn]] the Wolf | + | *[[Godwyn]] the Wolf |
− | [[Thomas]] the Hart | + | *[[Thomas]] the Hart |
− | [[Paul]] the Bear | + | *[[Paul]] the Bear |
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Boar.jpg]] |
Latest revision as of 08:16, 26 July 2014
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Paul described this story in his diary as:
"Godwyn invited me to go on a pilgrimage with himself, Thomas, and some awful man Godwyn is friends with. We traveled quite some distance before the piggish man finally decreed the pilgrimage had started. The behavior of the awful man, and Thomas too, was reprehensible. God saw to correct these men in their behavior, and me for my own sins I had not confessed. Godwyn was overcome, at the sight of a white deer, by the urge to let loose his inner beast. We were lead to the bones of a Brother of the Church, and his ghost tasked us to bring his bones to Canturbury...as the animals we embodied. We completed the task, not without trial, and my companions were quite humbled."