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第79节

burlesques-第79节

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pale lips ceased to quivershe was no more!





CHAPTER VI。



IVANHOE THE WIDOWER。





Having placed young Cedric at school at the hall of Dotheboyes; in

Yorkshire; and arranged his family affairs; Sir Wilfrid of Ivanhoe

quitted a country which had no longer any charms for him; and in

which his stay was rendered the less agreeable by the notion that

King John would hang him; if ever he could lay hands on the

faithful follower of King Richard and Prince Arthur。



But there was always in those days a home and occupation for a

brave and pious knight。  A saddle on a gallant war…horse; a pitched

field against the Moors; a lance wherewith to spit a turbaned

infidel; or a road to Paradise carved out by his scimitar;these

were the height of the ambition of good and religious warriors; and

so renowned a champion as Sir Wilfrid of Ivanhoe was sure to be

well received wherever blows were stricken for the cause of

Christendom。  Even among the dark Templars; he who had twice

overcome the most famous lance of their Order was a respected

though not a welcome guest: but among the opposition company of the

Knights of St。 John; he was admired and courted beyond measure; and

always affectioning that Order; which offered him; indeed; its

first rank and commanderies; he did much good service; fighting in

their ranks for the glory of heaven and St。 Waltheof; and slaying

many thousands of the heathen in Prussia; Poland; and those savage

Northern countries。  The only fault that the great and gallant;

though severe and ascetic Folko of Heydenbraten; the chief of the

Order of St。 John; found with the melancholy warrior; whose lance

did such good service to the cause; was; that he did not persecute

the Jews as so religious a knight should。  He let off sundry

captives of that persuasion whom he had taken with his sword and

his spear; saved others from torture; and actually ransomed the two

last grinders of a venerable rabbi (that Roger de Cartright; an

English knight of the Order; was about to extort from the elderly

Israelite;) with a hundred crowns and a gimmal ring; which were all

the property he possessed。  Whenever he so ransomed or benefited

one of this religion; he would moreover give them a little token or

a message (were the good knight out of money); saying; 〃Take this

token; and remember this deed was done by Wilfrid the Disinherited;

for the services whilome rendered to him by Rebecca; the daughter

of Isaac of York!〃  So among themselves; and in their meetings and

synagogues; and in their restless travels from land to land; when

they of Jewry cursed and reviled all Christians; as such abominable

heathens will; they nevertheless excepted the name of the Desdichado;

or the doubly…disinherited as he now was; the Desdichado…Doblado。



The account of all the battles; storms; and scaladoes in which Sir

Wilfrid took part; would only weary the reader; for the chopping

off one heathen's head with an axe must be very like the

decapitation of any other unbeliever。  Suffice it to say; that

wherever this kind of work was to be done; and Sir Wilfrid was in

the way; he was the man to perform it。  It would astonish you were

you to see the account that Wamba kept of his master's achievements;

and of the Bulgarians; Bohemians; Croatians; slain or maimed by his

hand。  And as; in those days; a reputation for valor had an immense

effect upon the soft hearts of women; and even the ugliest man; were

he a stout warrior; was looked upon with favor by Beauty: so

Ivanhoe; who was by no means ill…favored; though now becoming rather

elderly; made conquests over female breasts as well as over

Saracens; and had more than one direct offer of marriage made to him

by princesses; countesses; and noble ladies possessing both charms

and money; which they were anxious to place at the disposal of a

champion so renowned。  It is related that the Duchess Regent of

Kartoffelberg offered him her hand; and the ducal crown of

Kartoffelberg; which he had rescued from the unbelieving Prussians;

but Ivanhoe evaded the Duchess's offer; by riding away from her

capital secretly at midnight and hiding himself in a convent of

Knights Hospitallers on the borders of Poland。  And it is a fact

that the Princess Rosalia Seraphina of Pumpernickel; the most lovely

woman of her time; became so frantically attached to him; that she

followed him on a campaign; and was discovered with his baggage

disguised as a horse…boy。  But no princess; no beauty; no female

blandishments had any charms for Ivanhoe: no hermit practised a more

austere celibacy。  The severity of his morals contrasted so

remarkably with the lax and dissolute manner of the young lords and

nobles in the courts which he frequented; that these young

springalds would sometimes sneer and call him Monk and Milksop; but

his courage in the day of battle was so terrible and admirable; that

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 hav

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