Page [unnumbered]
LONGSWORD, Earl of SALISBURY.
BOOK IV.
SECT. I.
IN the religious house to which Oswald had retired, was a Monk, called Reginhald, whose mind but ill suited his profession, or his residence in a seat of piety. He was brother to Grey, and by his interest had been not long since admitted into the Monastery, and promoted to some degree of dignity and authori∣ty. His manners were equally brutal with those of Grey, but less disguised by art and hypocrisy. He was like him, abject and servile, but by no means so well skilled in the arts of flattery: insolent and assum∣ing, but not careful to distinguish between those who feared and those who defied his power. Hence was he frequently controuled and mortified by his bre∣thren, whom he dreaded from a consciousness of his own excesses; and who detested and scorned him in∣deed, yet feared the power which supported, or seemed to support him. They regarded his brother as the fa∣vourite of Lord Raymond, and Lord Raymond as heir to the house of Salisbury, and already possessed of all its greatness. To purchace his protection, therefore, they turned their eyes from his offences, and suffered him to disgrace and disturb their house by scandalous excesses, utterly subversive of holy discipline and or∣der. Drunkenness, and riot, and lewdness, had oft∣entimes profaned their walls with impunity. They