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burlesques-第102部分

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I promise you the youthful libertines did not sneer THEN; and the

most reckless of them often turned pale when they couched their

lances to follow Ivanhoe。  Holy Waltheof! it was an awful sight to

see him with his pale calm face; his shield upon his breast; his

heavy lance before him; charging a squadron of heathen Bohemians; or

a regiment of Cossacks!  Wherever he saw the enemy; Ivanhoe

assaulted him: and when people remonstrated with him; and said if he

attacked such and such a post; breach; castle; or army; he would be

slain; 〃And suppose I be?〃 he answered; giving them to understand

that he would as lief the Battle of Life were over altogether。





While he was thus making war against the Northern infidels news was

carried all over Christendom of a catastrophe which had befallen

the good cause in the South of Europe; where the Spanish Christians

had met with such a defeat and massacre at the hands of the Moors

as had never been known in the proudest day of Saladin。



Thursday; the 9th of Shaban; in the 605th year of the Hejira; is

known all over the West as the amun…al…ark; the year of the battle

of Alarcos; gained over the Christians by the Moslems of Andaluz;

on which fatal day Christendom suffered a defeat so signal; that it

was feared the Spanish peninsula would be entirely wrested away

from the dominion of the Cross。  On that day the Franks lost

150;000 men and 30;000 prisoners。  A man…slave sold among the

unbelievers for a dirhem; a donkey for the same; a sword; half a

dirhem; a horse; five dirhems。  Hundreds of thousands of these

various sorts of booty were in the possession of the triumphant

followers of Yakoobal…Mansoor。  Curses on his head!  But he was a

brave warrior; and the Christians before him seemed to forget that

they were the descendants of the brave Cid; the Kanbitoor; as the

Moorish hounds (in their jargon) denominated the famous Campeador。



A general move for the rescue of the faithful in Spaina crusade

against the infidels triumphing there; was preached throughout

Europe by all the most eloquent clergy; and thousands and thousands

of valorous knights and nobles; accompanied by well…meaning varlets

and vassals of the lower sort; trooped from all sides to the

rescue。  The Straits of Gibel…al…Tariff; at which spot the Moor;

passing from Barbary; first planted his accursed foot on the

Christian soil; were crowded with the galleys of the Templars and

the Knights of St。 John; who flung succors into the menaced

kingdoms of the peninsula; the inland sea swarmed with their ships

hasting from their forts and islands; from Rhodes and Byzantium;

from Jaffa and Ascalon。  The Pyrenean peaks beheld the pennons and

glittered with the armor of the knights marching out of France into

Spain; and; finally; in a ship that set sail direct from Bohemia;

where Sir Wilfrid happened to be quartered at the time when the

news of the defeat of Alarcos came and alarmed all good Christians;

Ivanhoe landed at Barcelona; and proceeded to slaughter the Moors

forthwith。



He brought letters of introduction from his friend Folko of

Heydenbraten; the Grand Master of the Knights of Saint John; to the

venerable Baldomero de Garbanzos; Grand Master of the renowned

order of Saint Jago。  The chief of Saint Jago's knights paid the

greatest respect to a warrior whose fame was already so widely

known in Christendom; and Ivanhoe had the pleasure of being

appointed to all the posts of danger and forlorn hopes that could

be devised in his honor。  He would be called up twice or thrice in

a night to fight the Moors: he led ambushes; scaled breaches; was

blown up by mines; was wounded many hundred times (recovering;

thanks to the elixir; of which Wamba always carried a supply); he

was the terror of the Saracens; and the admiration and wonder of

the Christians。



To describe his deeds; would; I say; be tedious; one day's battle

was like that of another。  I am not writing in ten volumes like

Monsieur Alexandre Dumas; or even in three like other great

authors。  We have no room for the recounting of Sir Wilfrid's deeds

of valor。  Whenever he took a Moorish town; it was remarked; that

he went anxiously into the Jewish quarter; and inquired amongst the

Hebrews; who were in great numbers in Spain; for Rebecca; the

daughter of Isaac。  Many Jews; according to his wont; he ransomed;

and created so much scandal by this proceeding; and by the manifest

favor which he showed to the people of that nation; that the Master

of Saint Jago remonstrated with him; and it is probable he would

have been cast into the Inquisition and roasted; but that his

prodigious valor and success against the Moors counterbalanced his

heretical partiality for the children of Jacob。



It chanced that the good knight was present at the siege of Xixona

in Andalusia; entering the breach first; according to his wont; and

slaying; with his own hand; the Moorish lieutenant of the town; and

several hundred more of its unbelieving defenders。  He had very

nearly done for the Alfaqui; or governora veteran warrior with a

crooked scimitar and a beard as white as snowbut a couple of

hundred of the Alfaqui's bodyguard flung themselves between Ivanhoe

and their chief; and the old fellow escaped with his life; leaving

a handful of his beard in the grasp of the English knight。  The

strictly military business being done; and such of the garrison as

did not escape put; as by right; to the sword; the good knight; Sir

Wilfrid of Ivanhoe; took no further part in the proceedings of the

conquerors of that ill…fated place。  A scene of horrible massacre

and frightful reprisals ensued; and the Christian warriors; hot

with victory and flushed with slaughter; were; it is to be feared;

as savage in their hour of triumph as ever their heathen enemies

had been。



Among the most violent and least scrupulous was the ferocious

Knight of Saint Jago; Don Beltran de Cuchilla y Trabuco y Espada y

Espelon。  Raging through the vanquished city like a demon; he

slaughtered indiscriminately all those infidels of both sexes whose

wealth did not tempt him to a ransom; or whose beauty did not

reserve them for more frightful calamities than death。  The

slaughter over; Don Beltran took up his quarters in the Albaycen;

where the Alfaqui had lived who had so narrowly escaped the sword

of Ivanhoe; but the wealth; the treasure; the slaves; and the

family of the fugitive chieftain; were left in possession of the

conqueror of Xixona。  Among the treasures; Don Beltran recognized

with a savage joy the coat…armors and ornaments of many brave and

unfortunate companions…in…arms who had fallen in the fatal battle

of Alarcos。  The sight of those bloody relics added fury to his

cruel disposition; and served to steel a heart already but little

disposed to sentiments of mercy。



Three days after the sack and plunder of the place; Don Beltran was

seated in the hall…court lately occupied by the proud Alfaqui;

lying in 
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