"Bethink thee, my son," said Alred, in a tender voice tremulous with emotion; "the young Atheling is too much an infant yet for these anxious times."
"Harold, Book 10. The Last Of The Saxon Kings"
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
To the young Atheling he accorded a respect not before paid to him; and, while investing the descendant of the ancient line with princely state, and endowing him with large domains, his soul, too great for jealousy, sought to give more substantial power to his own most legitimate rival, by tender care and noble counsels,-by efforts to raise a character feeble by nature, and denationalised by foreign rearing.
"Harold, Book 10. The Last Of The Saxon Kings"
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
You would naturally suppose that the worst possible place for the fugitives to seek safety was in Norman England; for Edgar the Atheling, a Saxon prince, had twice been declared king of England by the Saxon enemies of the Norman conquerors, and the children of King Malcolm and Queen Margaret-half Scotch, half Saxon-were, by blood and birth, of the two races most hateful to the conquerors.
"Historic Girls"
E. S. Brooks