<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVIII. </h2>
<p>This work desires a planetary intelligence<br/>
Of Jupiter and Sol; and those great spirits<br/>
Are proud, fantastical. It asks great charges<br/>
To entice them from the guiding of their spheres,<br/>
To wait on mortals.<br/>
ALBUMAZAR.<br/></p>
<p>The hermit followed the ladies from the pavilion of Richard, as shadow
follows a beam of sunshine when the clouds are driving over the face of
the sun. But he turned on the threshold, and held up his hand towards the
King in a warning, or almost a menacing posture, as he said, "Woe to him
who rejects the counsel of the church, and betaketh himself to the foul
divan of the infidel! King Richard, I do not yet shake the dust from my
feet and depart from thy encampment; the sword falls not—but it
hangs but by a hair. Haughty monarch, we shall meet again."</p>
<p>"Be it so, haughty priest," returned Richard, "prouder in thy goatskins
than princes in purple and fine linen."</p>
<p>The hermit vanished from the tent, and the King continued, addressing the
Arabian, "Do the dervises of the East, wise Hakim, use such familiarity
with their princes?"</p>
<p>"The dervise," replied Adonbec, "should be either a sage or a madman;
there is no middle course for him who wears the khirkhah, [Literally, the
torn robe. The habit of the dervises is so called.] who watches by night,
and fasts by day. Hence hath he either wisdom enough to bear himself
discreetly in the presence of princes; or else, having no reason bestowed
on him, he is not responsible for his own actions."</p>
<p>"Methinks our monks have adopted chiefly the latter character," said
Richard. "But to the matter. In what can I pleasure you, my learned
physician?"</p>
<p>"Great King," said El Hakim, making his profound Oriental obeisance, "let
thy servant speak one word, and yet live. I would remind thee that thou
owest—not to me, their humble instrument—but to the
Intelligences, whose benefits I dispense to mortals, a life—"</p>
<p>"And I warrant me thou wouldst have another in requital, ha?" interrupted
the King.</p>
<p>"Such is my humble prayer," said the Hakim, "to the great Melech Ric—even
the life of this good knight, who is doomed to die, and but for such fault
as was committed by the Sultan Adam, surnamed Aboulbeschar, or the father
of all men."</p>
<p>"And thy wisdom might remind thee, Hakim, that Adam died for it," said the
King, somewhat sternly, and then began to pace the narrow space of his
tent with some emotion, and to talk to himself. "Why, God-a-mercy, I knew
what he desired as soon as ever he entered the pavilion! Here is one poor
life justly condemned to extinction, and I, a king and a soldier, who have
slain thousands by my command, and scores with my own hand, am to have no
power over it, although the honour of my arms, of my house, of my very
Queen, hath been attainted by the culprit. By Saint George, it makes me
laugh! By Saint Louis, it reminds me of Blondel's tale of an enchanted
castle, where the destined knight was withstood successively in his
purpose of entrance by forms and figures the most dissimilar, but all
hostile to his undertaking! No sooner one sunk than another appeared! Wife—kinswoman—hermit—Hakim-each
appears in the lists as soon as the other is defeated! Why, this is a
single knight fighting against the whole MELEE of the tournament—ha!
ha! ha!" And Richard laughed aloud; for he had, in fact, begun to change
his mood, his resentment being usually too violent to be of long
endurance.</p>
<p>The physician meanwhile looked on him with a countenance of surprise, not
unmingled with contempt; for the Eastern people make no allowance for
these mercurial changes in the temper, and consider open laughter, upon
almost any account, as derogatory to the dignity of man, and becoming only
to women and children. At length the sage addressed the King when he saw
him more composed:—</p>
<p>"A doom of death should not issue from laughing lips. Let thy servant hope
that thou hast granted him this man's life."</p>
<p>"Take the freedom of a thousand captives instead," said Richard; "restore
so many of thy countrymen to their tents and families, and I will give the
warrant instantly. This man's life can avail thee nothing, and it is
forfeited."</p>
<p>"All our lives are forfeited," said the Hakim, putting his hand to his
cap. "But the great Creditor is merciful, and exacts not the pledge
rigorously nor untimely."</p>
<p>"Thou canst show me," said Richard, "no special interest thou hast to
become intercessor betwixt me and the execution of justice, to which I am
sworn as a crowned king."</p>
<p>"Thou art sworn to the dealing forth mercy as well as justice," said El
Hakim; "but what thou seekest, great King, is the execution of thine own
will. And for the concern I have in this request, know that many a man's
life depends upon thy granting this boon."</p>
<p>"Explain thy words," said Richard; "but think not to impose upon me by
false pretexts."</p>
<p>"Be it far from thy servant!" said Adonbec. "Know, then, that the medicine
to which thou, Sir King, and many one besides, owe their recovery, is a
talisman, composed under certain aspects of the heavens, when the Divine
Intelligences are most propitious. I am but the poor administrator of its
virtues. I dip it in a cup of water, observe the fitting hour to
administer it to the patient, and the potency of the draught works the
cure."</p>
<p>"A most rare medicine," said the King, "and a commodious! and, as it may
be carried in the leech's purse, would save the whole caravan of camels
which they require to convey drugs and physic stuff; I marvel there is any
other in use."</p>
<p>"It is written," answered the Hakim, with imperturbable gravity, "'Abuse
not the steed which hath borne thee from the battle.' Know that such
talismans might indeed be framed, but rare has been the number of adepts
who have dared to undertake the application of their virtue. Severe
restrictions, painful observances, fasts, and penance, are necessary on
the part of the sage who uses this mode of cure; and if, through neglect
of these preparations, by his love of ease, or his indulgence of sensual
appetite, he omits to cure at least twelve persons within the course of
each moon, the virtue of the divine gift departs from the amulet, and both
the last patient and the physician will be exposed to speedy misfortune,
neither will they survive the year. I require yet one life to make up the
appointed number."</p>
<p>"Go out into the camp, good Hakim, where thou wilt find a-many," said the
King, "and do not seek to rob my headsman of HIS patients; it is
unbecoming a mediciner of thine eminence to interfere with the practice of
another. Besides, I cannot see how delivering a criminal from the death he
deserves should go to make up thy tale of miraculous cures."</p>
<p>"When thou canst show why a draught of cold water should have cured thee
when the most precious drugs failed," said the Hakim, "thou mayest reason
on the other mysteries attendant on this matter. For myself, I am
inefficient to the great work, having this morning touched an unclean
animal. Ask, therefore, no further questions; it is enough that, by
sparing this man's life at my request, you will deliver yourself, great
King, and thy servant, from a great danger."</p>
<p>"Hark thee, Adonbec," replied the King, "I have no objection that leeches
should wrap their words in mist, and pretend to derive knowledge from the
stars; but when you bid Richard Plantagenet fear that a danger will fall
upon HIM from some idle omen, or omitted ceremonial, you speak to no
ignorant Saxon, or doting old woman, who foregoes her purpose because a
hare crosses the path, a raven croaks, or a cat sneezes."</p>
<p>"I cannot hinder your doubt of my words," said Adonbec; "but yet let my
Lord the King grant that truth is on the tongue of his servant—will
he think it just to deprive the world, and every wretch who may suffer by
the pains which so lately reduced him to that couch, of the benefit of
this most virtuous talisman, rather than extend his forgiveness to one
poor criminal? Bethink you, Lord King, that, though thou canst slay
thousands, thou canst not restore one man to health. Kings have the power
of Satan to torment, sages that of Allah to heal—beware how thou
hinderest the good to humanity which thou canst not thyself render. Thou
canst cut off the head, but not cure the aching tooth."</p>
<p>"This is over-insolent," said the King, hardening himself, as the Hakim
assumed a more lofty and almost a commanding tone. "We took thee for our
leech, not for our counsellor or conscience-keeper."</p>
<p>"And is it thus the most renowned Prince of Frangistan repays benefit done
to his royal person?" said El Hakim, exchanging the humble and stooping
posture in which he had hitherto solicited the King, for an attitude lofty
and commanding. "Know, then," he said, "that: through every court of
Europe and Asia—to Moslem and Nazarene—to knight and lady—wherever
harp is heard and sword worn—wherever honour is loved and infamy
detested—to every quarter of the world—will I denounce thee,
Melech Ric, as thankless and ungenerous; and even the lands—if there
be any such—that never heard of thy renown shall yet be acquainted
with thy shame!"</p>
<p>"Are these terms to me, vile infidel?" said Richard, striding up to him in
fury. "Art weary of thy life?"</p>
<p>"Strike!" said El Hakim; "thine own deed shall then paint thee more
worthless than could my words, though each had a hornet's sting."</p>
<p>Richard turned fiercely from him, folded his arms, traversed the tent as
before, and then exclaimed, "Thankless and ungenerous!—as well be
termed coward and infidel! Hakim, thou hast chosen thy boon; and though I
had rather thou hadst asked my crown jewels, yet I may not, kinglike,
refuse thee. Take this Scot, therefore, to thy keeping; the provost will
deliver him to thee on this warrant."</p>
<p>He hastily traced one or two lines, and gave them to the physician. "Use
him as thy bond-slave, to be disposed of as thou wilt—only, let him
beware how he comes before the eyes of Richard. Hark thee—thou art
wise—he hath been over-bold among those in whose fair looks and weak
judgments we trust our honour, as you of the East lodge your treasures in
caskets of silver wire, as fine and as frail as the web of a gossamer."</p>
<p>"Thy servant understands the words of the King," said the sage, at once
resuming the reverent style of address in which he had commenced. "When
the rich carpet is soiled, the fool pointeth to the stain—the wise
man covers it with his mantle. I have heard my lord's pleasure, and to
hear is to obey."</p>
<p>"It is well," said the King; "let him consult his own safety, and never
appear in my presence more. Is there aught else in which I may do thee
pleasure?"</p>
<p>"The bounty of the King hath filled my cup to the brim," said the sage—"yea,
it hath been abundant as the fountain which sprung up amid the camp of the
descendants of Israel when the rock was stricken by the rod of Moussa Ben
Amram."</p>
<p>"Ay, but," said the King, smiling, "it required, as in the desert, a hard
blow on the rock ere it yielded its treasures. I would that I knew
something to pleasure thee, which I might yield as freely as the natural
fountain sends forth its waters."</p>
<p>"Let me touch that victorious hand," said the sage, "in token that if
Adonbec el Hakim should hereafter demand a boon of Richard of England, he
may do so, yet plead his command."</p>
<p>"Thou hast hand and glove upon it, man," replied Richard; "only, if thou
couldst consistently make up thy tale of patients without craving me to
deliver from punishment those who have deserved it, I would more willingly
discharge my debt in some other form."</p>
<p>"May thy days be multiplied!" answered the Hakim, and withdrew from the
apartment after the usual deep obeisance.</p>
<p>King Richard gazed after him as he departed, like one but half-satisfied
with what had passed.</p>
<p>"Strange pertinacity," he said, "in this Hakim, and a wonderful chance to
interfere between that audacious Scot and the chastisement he has merited
so richly. Yet let him live! there is one brave man the more in the world.
And now for the Austrian. Ho! is the Baron of Gilsland there without?"</p>
<p>Sir Thomas de Vaux thus summoned, his bulky form speedily darkened the
opening of the pavilion, while behind him glided as a spectre,
unannounced, yet unopposed, the savage form of the hermit of Engaddi,
wrapped in his goatskin mantle.</p>
<p>Richard, without noticing his presence, called in a loud tone to the
baron, "Sir Thomas de Vaux, of Lanercost and Gilsland, take trumpet and
herald, and go instantly to the tent of him whom they call Archduke of
Austria, and see that it be when the press of his knights and vassals is
greatest around him, as is likely at this hour, for the German boar
breakfasts ere he hears mass—enter his presence with as little
reverence as thou mayest, and impeach him, on the part of Richard of
England, that he hath this night, by his own hand, or that of others,
stolen from its staff the Banner of England. Wherefore say to him our
pleasure that within an hour from the time of my speaking he restore the
said banner with all reverence—he himself and his principal barons
waiting the whilst with heads uncovered, and without their robes of
honour. And that, moreover, he pitch beside it, on the one hand, his own
Banner of Austria reversed, as that which hath been dishonoured by theft
and felony, and on the other, a lance, bearing the bloody head of him who
was his nearest counsellor, or assistant, in this base injury. And say,
that such our behests being punctually discharged we will, for the sake of
our vow and the weal of the Holy Land, forgive his other forfeits."</p>
<p>"And how if the Duke of Austria deny all accession to this act of wrong
and of felony?" said Thomas de Vaux.</p>
<p>"Tell him," replied the King, "we will prove it upon his body—ay,
were he backed with his two bravest champions. Knightlike will we prove
it, on foot or on horse, in the desert or in the field, time, place, and
arms all at his own choice."</p>
<p>"Bethink you of the peace of God and the church, my liege lord," said the
Baron of Gilsland, "among those princes engaged in this holy Crusade."</p>
<p>"Bethink you how to execute my commands, my liege vassal," answered
Richard impatiently. "Methinks men expect to turn our purpose by their
breath, as boys blow feathers to and fro. Peace of the church! Who, I
prithee, minds it? The peace of the church, among Crusaders, implies war
with the Saracens, with whom the princes have made truce; and the one ends
with the other. And besides, see you not how every prince of them is
seeking his own several ends? I will seek mine also—and that is
honour. For honour I came hither; and if I may not win it upon the
Saracens, at least I will not lose a jot from any respect to this paltry
Duke, though he were bulwarked and buttressed by every prince in the
Crusade."</p>
<p>De Vaux turned to obey the King's mandate, shrugging his shoulders at the
same time, the bluntness of his nature being unable to conceal that its
tenor went against his judgment. But the hermit of Engaddi stepped
forward, and assumed the air of one charged with higher commands than
those of a mere earthly potentate. Indeed, his dress of shaggy skins, his
uncombed and untrimmed hair and beard, his lean, wild, and contorted
features, and the almost insane fire which gleamed from under his bushy
eyebrows, made him approach nearly to our idea of some seer of Scripture,
who, charged with high mission to the sinful Kings of Judah or Israel,
descended from the rocks and caverns in which he dwelt in abstracted
solitude, to abash earthly tyrants in the midst of their pride, by
discharging on them the blighting denunciations of Divine Majesty, even as
the cloud discharges the lightnings with which it is fraught on the
pinnacles and towers of castles and palaces. In the midst of his most
wayward mood, Richard respected the church and its ministers; and though
offended at the intrusion of the hermit into his tent, he greeted him with
respect—at the same time, however, making a sign to Sir Thomas de
Vaux to hasten on his message.</p>
<p>But the hermit prohibited the baron, by gesture, look, and word, to stir a
yard on such an errand; and holding up his bare arm, from which the
goatskin mantle fell back in the violence of his action, he waved it
aloft, meagre with famine, and wealed with the blows of the discipline.</p>
<p>"In the name of God, and of the most holy Father, the vicegerent of the
Christian Church upon earth, I prohibit this most profane, bloodthirsty,
and brutal defiance betwixt two Christian princes, whose shoulders are
signed with the blessed mark under which they swore brotherhood. Woe to
him by whom it is broken!—Richard of England, recall the most
unhallowed message thou hast given to that baron. Danger and death are
nigh thee!—the dagger is glancing at thy very throat!—"</p>
<p>"Danger and death are playmates to Richard," answered the Monarch proudly;
"and he hath braved too many swords to fear a dagger."</p>
<p>"Danger and death are near," replied the seer, and sinking his voice to a
hollow, unearthly tone, he added, "And after death the judgment!"</p>
<p>"Good and holy father," said Richard, "I reverence thy person and thy
sanctity—"</p>
<p>"Reverence not me!" interrupted the hermit; "reverence sooner the vilest
insect that crawls by the shores of the Dead Sea, and feeds upon its
accursed slime. But reverence Him whose commands I speak—reverence
Him whose sepulchre you have vowed to rescue—revere the oath of
concord which you have sworn, and break not the silver cord of union and
fidelity with which you have bound yourself to your princely
confederates."</p>
<p>"Good father," said the King, "you of the church seem to me to presume
somewhat, if a layman may say so much, upon the dignity of your holy
character. Without challenging your right to take charge of our
conscience, methinks you might leave us the charge of our own honour."</p>
<p>"Presume!" repeated the hermit. "Is it for me to presume, royal Richard,
who am but the bell obeying the hand of the sexton—but the senseless
and worthless trumpet carrying the command of him who sounds it? See, on
my knees I throw myself before thee, imploring thee to have mercy on
Christendom, on England, and on thyself!"</p>
<p>"Rise, rise," said Richard, compelling him to stand up; "it beseems not
that knees which are so frequently bended to the Deity should press the
ground in honour of man. What danger awaits us, reverend father? and when
stood the power of England so low that the noisy bluster of this new-made
Duke's displeasure should alarm her or her monarch?"</p>
<p>"I have looked forth from my mountain turret upon the starry host of
heaven, as each in his midnight circuit uttered wisdom to another, and
knowledge to the few who can understand their voice. There sits an enemy
in thy House of Life, Lord King, malign at once to thy fame and thy
prosperity—an emanation of Saturn, menacing thee with instant and
bloody peril, and which, but thou yield thy proud will to the rule of thy
duty, will presently crush thee even in thy pride."</p>
<p>"Away, away—this is heathen science," said the King. "Christians
practise it not—wise men believe it not. Old man, thou dotest."</p>
<p>"I dote not, Richard," answered the hermit—"I am not so happy. I
know my condition, and that some portion of reason is yet permitted me,
not for my own use, but that of the Church and the advancement of the
Cross. I am the blind man who holds a torch to others, though it yields no
light to himself. Ask me touching what concerns the weal of Christendom,
and of this Crusade, and I will speak with thee as the wisest counsellor
on whose tongue persuasion ever sat. Speak to me of my own wretched being,
and my words shall be those of the maniac outcast which I am."</p>
<p>"I would not break the bands of unity asunder among the princes of the
Crusade," said Richard, with a mitigated tone and manner; "but what
atonement can they render me for the injustice and insult which I have
sustained?"</p>
<p>"Even of that I am prepared and commissioned to speak by the Council,
which, meeting hastily at the summons of Philip of France, have taken
measures for that effect."</p>
<p>"Strange," replied Richard, "that others should treat of what is due to
the wounded majesty of England!"</p>
<p>"They are willing to anticipate your demands, if it be possible," answered
the hermit. "In a body, they consent that the Banner of England be
replaced on Saint George's Mount; and they lay under ban and condemnation
the audacious criminal, or criminals, by whom it was outraged, and will
announce a princely reward to any who shall denounce the delinquent's
guilt, and give his flesh to the wolves and ravens."</p>
<p>"And Austria," said Richard, "upon whom rest such strong presumptions that
he was the author of the deed?"</p>
<p>"To prevent discord in the host," replied the hermit, "Austria will clear
himself of the suspicion by submitting to whatsoever ordeal the Patriarch
of Jerusalem shall impose."</p>
<p>"Will he clear himself by the trial by combat?" said King Richard.</p>
<p>"His oath prohibits it," said the hermit; "and, moreover, the Council of
the Princes—"</p>
<p>"Will neither authorize battle against the Saracens," interrupted Richard,
"nor against any one else. But it is enough, father—thou hast shown
me the folly of proceeding as I designed in this matter. You shall sooner
light your torch in a puddle of rain than bring a spark out of a
cold-blooded coward. There is no honour to be gained on Austria, and so
let him pass. I will have him perjure himself, however; I will insist on
the ordeal. How I shall laugh to hear his clumsy fingers hiss, as he
grasps the red-hot globe of iron! Ay, or his huge mouth riven, and his
gullet swelling to suffocation, as he endeavours to swallow the
consecrated bread!"</p>
<p>"Peace, Richard," said the hermit—"oh, peace, for shame, if not for
charity! Who shall praise or honour princes who insult and calumniate each
other? Alas! that a creature so noble as thou art—so accomplished in
princely thoughts and princely daring—so fitted to honour
Christendom by thy actions, and, in thy calmer mood, to rule her by thy
wisdom, should yet have the brute and wild fury of the lion mingled with
the dignity and courage of that king of the forest!"</p>
<p>He remained an instant musing with his eyes fixed on the ground, and then
proceeded—"But Heaven, that knows our imperfect nature, accepts of
our imperfect obedience, and hath delayed, though not averted, the bloody
end of thy daring life. The destroying angel hath stood still, as of old
by the threshing-floor of Araunah the Jebusite, and the blade is drawn in
his hand, by which, at no distant date, Richard, the lion-hearted, shall
be as low as the meanest peasant."</p>
<p>"Must it, then, be so soon?" said Richard. "Yet, even so be it. May my
course be bright, if it be but brief!"</p>
<p>"Alas! noble King," said the solitary, and it seemed as if a tear
(unwonted guest) were gathering in his dry and glazened eye, "short and
melancholy, marked with mortification, and calamity, and captivity, is the
span that divides thee from the grave which yawns for thee—a grave
in which thou shalt be laid without lineage to succeed thee—without
the tears of a people, exhausted by thy ceaseless wars, to lament thee—without
having extended the knowledge of thy subjects—without having done
aught to enlarge their happiness."</p>
<p>"But not without renown, monk—not without the tears of the lady of
my love! These consolations, which thou canst neither know nor estimate,
await upon Richard to his grave."</p>
<p>"DO I not know, CAN I not estimate the value of minstrel's praise and of
lady's love?" retorted the hermit, in a tone which for a moment seemed to
emulate the enthusiasm of Richard himself. "King of England," he
continued, extending his emaciated arm, "the blood which boils in thy blue
veins is not more noble than that which stagnates in mine. Few and cold as
the drops are, they still are of the blood of the royal Lusignan—of
the heroic and sainted Godfrey. I am—that is, I was when in the
world—Alberick Mortemar—"</p>
<p>"Whose deeds," said Richard, "have so often filled Fame's trumpet! Is it
so?—can it be so? Could such a light as thine fall from the horizon
of chivalry, and yet men be uncertain where its embers had alighted?"</p>
<p>"Seek a fallen star," said the hermit, "and thou shalt only light on some
foul jelly, which, in shooting through the horizon, has assumed for a
moment an appearance of splendour. Richard, if I thought that rending the
bloody veil from my horrible fate could make thy proud heart stoop to the
discipline of the church, I could find in my heart to tell thee a tale,
which I have hitherto kept gnawing at my vitals in concealment, like the
self-devoted youth of heathenesse. Listen, then, Richard, and may the
grief and despair which cannot avail this wretched remnant of what was
once a man be powerful as an example to so noble, yet so wild, a being as
thou art! Yes—I will—I WILL tear open the long-hidden wounds,
although in thy very presence they should bleed to death!"</p>
<p>King Richard, upon whom the history of Alberick of Mortemar had made a
deep impression in his early years, when minstrels were regaling his
father's halls with legends of the Holy Land, listened with respect to the
outlines of a tale, which, darkly and imperfectly sketched, indicated
sufficiently the cause of the partial insanity of this singular and most
unhappy being.</p>
<p>"I need not," he said, "tell thee that I was noble in birth, high in
fortune, strong in arms, wise in counsel. All these I was. But while the
noblest ladies in Palestine strove which should wind garlands for my
helmet, my love was fixed—unalterably and devotedly fixed—on a
maiden of low degree. Her father, an ancient soldier of the Cross, saw our
passion, and knowing the difference betwixt us, saw no other refuge for
his daughter's honour than to place her within the shadow of the cloister.
I returned from a distant expedition, loaded with spoils and honour, to
find my happiness was destroyed for ever! I too sought the cloister; and
Satan, who had marked me for his own, breathed into my heart a vapour of
spiritual pride, which could only have had its source in his own infernal
regions. I had risen as high in the church as before in the state. I was,
forsooth, the wise, the self-sufficient, the impeccable!—I was the
counsellor of councils—I was the director of prelates. How should I
stumble?—wherefore should I fear temptation? Alas! I became
confessor to a sisterhood, and amongst that sisterhood I found the
long-loved—the long-lost. Spare me further confession!—A
fallen nun, whose guilt was avenged by self-murder, sleeps soundly in the
vaults of Engaddi; while, above her very grave, gibbers, moans, and roars
a creature to whom but so much reason is left as may suffice to render him
completely sensible to his fate!"</p>
<p>"Unhappy man!" said Richard, "I wonder no longer at thy misery. How didst
thou escape the doom which the canons denounce against thy offence?"</p>
<p>"Ask one who is yet in the gall of worldly bitterness," said the hermit,
"and he will speak of a life spared for personal respects, and from
consideration to high birth. But, Richard, I tell thee that Providence
hath preserved me to lift me on high as a light and beacon, whose ashes,
when this earthly fuel is burnt out, must yet be flung into Tophet.
Withered and shrunk as this poor form is, it is yet animated with two
spirits—one active, shrewd, and piercing, to advocate the cause of
the Church of Jerusalem; one mean, abject, and despairing, fluctuating
between madness and misery, to mourn over my own wretchedness, and to
guard holy relics on which it would be most sinful for me even to cast my
eye. Pity me not!—it is but sin to pity the loss of such an abject;
pity me not, but profit by my example. Thou standest on the highest, and,
therefore, on the most dangerous pinnacle occupied by any Christian
prince. Thou art proud of heart, loose of life, bloody of hand. Put from
thee the sins which are to thee as daughters—though they be dear to
the sinful Adam, expel these adopted furies from thy breast—thy
pride, thy luxury, thy bloodthirstiness."</p>
<p>"He raves," said Richard, turning from the solitary to De Vaux, as one who
felt some pain from a sarcasm which yet he could not resent; then turned
him calmly, and somewhat scornfully, to the anchoret, as he replied, "Thou
hast found a fair bevy of daughters, reverend father, to one who hath been
but few months married; but since I must put them from my roof, it were
but like a father to provide them with suitable matches. Therefore, I will
part with my pride to the noble canons of the church—my luxury, as
thou callest it, to the monks of the rule—and my bloodthirstiness to
the Knights of the Temple."</p>
<p>"O heart of steel, and hand of iron," said the anchoret, "upon whom
example, as well as advice, is alike thrown away! Yet shalt thou be spared
for a season, in case it so be thou shouldst turn, and do that which is
acceptable in the sight of Heaven. For me I must return to my place. Kyrie
Eleison! I am he through whom the rays of heavenly grace dart like those
of the sun through a burning-glass, concentrating them on other objects,
until they kindle and blaze, while the glass itself remains cold and
uninfluenced. Kyrie Eleison!—the poor must be called, for the rich
have refused the banquet—Kyrie Eleison!"</p>
<p>So saying, he burst from the tent, uttering loud cries.</p>
<p>"A mad priest!" said Richard, from whose mind the frantic exclamations of
the hermit had partly obliterated the impression produced by the detail of
his personal history and misfortunes. "After him, De Vaux, and see he
comes to no harm; for, Crusaders as we are, a juggler hath more reverence
amongst our varlets than a priest or a saint, and they may, perchance, put
some scorn upon him."</p>
<p>The knight obeyed, and Richard presently gave way to the thoughts which
the wild prophecy of the monk had inspired. "To die early—without
lineage—without lamentation! A heavy sentence, and well that it is
not passed by a more competent judge. Yet the Saracens, who are
accomplished in mystical knowledge, will often maintain that He, in whose
eyes the wisdom of the sage is but as folly, inspires wisdom and prophecy
into the seeming folly of the madman. Yonder hermit is said to read the
stars, too, an art generally practised in these lands, where the heavenly
host was of yore the object of idolatry. I would I had asked him touching
the loss of my banner; for not the blessed Tishbite, the founder of his
order, could seem more wildly rapt out of himself, or speak with a tongue
more resembling that of a prophet.—How now, De Vaux, what news of
the mad priest?"</p>
<p>"Mad priest, call you him, my lord?" answered De Vaux. "Methinks he
resembles more the blessed Baptist himself, just issued from the
wilderness. He has placed himself on one of the military engines, and from
thence he preaches to the soldiers as never man preached since the time of
Peter the Hermit. The camp, alarmed by his cries, crowd around him in
thousands; and breaking off every now and then from the main thread of his
discourse, he addresses the several nations, each in their own language,
and presses upon each the arguments best qualified to urge them to
perseverance in the delivery of Palestine."</p>
<p>"By this light, a noble hermit!" said King Richard. "But what else could
come from the blood of Godfrey? HE despair of safety, because he hath in
former days lived PAR AMOURS? I will have the Pope send him an ample
remission, and I would not less willingly be intercessor had his BELLE
AMIE been an abbess."</p>
<p>As he spoke, the Archbishop of Tyre craved audience, for the purpose of
requesting Richard's attendance, should his health permit, on a secret
conclave of the chiefs of the Crusade, and to explain to him the military
and political incidents which had occurred during his illness.</p>
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