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Excerpt from The Monthly Packet of Evening Readings for Members of the English Church, Vol. 19: Parts CIX. To CXIV., January-June, 1875
Neither in Kent nor Christendom is a frequent beast in the garden of England,' the men of Kent and the Kentish men both averring that you must be hard to please if you cannot satisfy yourself in their county, and that you are likely to fare worse if you go further. This axiom is supposed by the learned in such matters to bear reference to the time when St. Augustine converted Kent, though of course it cannot date from those days.
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