This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

to be, in which one by the name of Sa-
rasoldak, a Christian, is said to lie
buried, for whom a lamp is said to
burn continually upon his grave, and
to have burned for some
two hundred years, and the
wick thereof is said to be inextinguishable;
above his grave his bow is said to hang,
which is a fathom long and a span wide;
his arrow, being entirely of iron,
is four and a half spans long;
likewise several small antlers
of the fallow deer which he shot
are said to hang round about,
some of them fully set with mirrors;
his two staves on which he walked
are fashioned as cardinal’s staves;
his hat of white felt, quite
wide and large, is stuck round about
with long feathers,
beneath which lie several monk’s
garments: The gravestone, which