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If our soldiers are not overburdened with money, it is not because they have a distaste for riches; if their lives are not unduly long, it is not because they are disinclined to longevity. -- Sun Tzu |
The tournament at Lagny-sur-Marne, from the History of William the Marshal(1446 total words in this text)(2366 Reads) alongside the young King, 4752 were those here named, eighty chosen knights. Not merely chosen, but the pick of the chosen. Why were they called the pick of the chosen? 4756 Because those well capable of picking them out had chosen them from amongst the best. That is the right gloss to put on the text. But eighty is still an under-estimate, 4760 and I shall undertake to prove to you that there were yet seven times as many such after them: whoever raised his banner in the company of the young King, 4764 whoever was under his command, received twenty shillings a day for each man he had with him from the moment they left their own lands, whether they were on the move or in lodgings. 4768 It was a source of wonder where this wealth was to be found, and one can only say that God shared out to him the wealth placed at his disposal. There were fifteen flying their banners, 4772 and so I can swear to you that there were at least two hundred and more, as you have already heard, who lived off the purse of the young King 4776 and were knights of his.
There is no account of all these, for there were at least nineteen counts with the King on that occasion, 4780 and the duke of Burgundy besides. Why should I spin out my tale? The knights who were there to tourney were estimated 4784 at more than three thousand or so, some with the King, some with the count. I shall not spin out my tale further: they armed, joined in combat, 4788 and did what they had come to do. There were to be seen banners unfurled, so many of them and of such diverse types that no man could make them out sufficiently 4792 to be able to describe them in detail. The entire field of combat was swarming with them, the plain so full of them that there was not an inch of ground to be seen. 4796 One company spurred to meet the other.
I can tell you that that encounter was not a stealthy affair, indeed, there was great noise and tumult 4800 as all strove to deal mighty blows. There you would have heard such a great clash of lances, from which the splinters fell to the ground as the companies met 4804 and impeded the forward charge of the horses. The throng across that plain was huge, with each company shouting out its battle cry. There you might have learned something of armed combat, 4808 there you might have seen knights taken by the bridles of their horses, and others being rescued. On all sides you would have seen horses running and sweating with their exertions. 4812 Every man strove hard and did all within his power to perform high deeds, for it is in such a situation that prowess is shown and displayed for all to see. It was a very fiercely fought contest, 4816 many were the feats of arms performed that day; the tournament was an exceedingly fine one, even before the King and the count had arrived to join in combat. 4820 But when they did, then you would have seen the earth shake, as the King said: "This has gone on long enough; spur on, I shall have not a moment's further delay." The King spurred forward, but the count cleverly 4824 held back, and did not move forward until he saw that the time was exactly right. But when it was, he did not hesitate for a moment. Those on the King's side rode forward 4828 so impetuously that they did not wait a moment for the King, and they fought so fiercely that the other side were sent on their way. 4832 Actually, not so much on their way as off their way. Once they had driven them back through the vines and the ditches, off they rode between the closely planted 4836 vine stocks. Horses fell down there thick and fast, and the men who fell with them were badly trampled and injured, 4840 damaged and disfigured. Count Geoffrey and his company rode on with such incredible speed that, when the King arrived, all those who should have been with 4844 him were in the far distance, so that on his arrival he was nowhere able to reach his opponents, for off they went 4848 with the others in hot pursuit. Some were intent on performing well in combat, others were bent on booty, and the King was greatly disturbed 4852 by the fact that he had been left completely on his own.
He saw a company belonging to the other side on his right, consisting of some forty knights at least. 4856 With his lance in hand, he galloped to engage them in combat, and the clash was so ferocious that his lance was shattered as easily 4860 as if it had been made of glass. And those on the other side, who were very numerous, soon took him by the bridle and brought him to a halt. They had come up from all sides, 4864 but the situation with the King was that, out of his entire company, all he had with him were the Marshal, who was following closely 4868 behind him, for it was his wont to be at his side in a difficult situation and never be far away from him, and William de Préaux, 4872 who, that day, had just been taken prisoner and had left the throng, and, in great secrecy, had donned a hauberk under his tunic, 4876 and, apart from this, nothing more than an iron cap on his head. The others had the King within their grasp; each of them strove might and main 4880 to knock off his helmet by force. The Marshal rode forward, then launched himself into their midst; he dealt so many blows in front and behind him, 4884 showed them so much the stuff he was made of, pushed and pulled to such an extent that he forced the harness off the head of the King's horse, 4888 together with the bridle, and pulled it to the ground. And William de Préaux took the horse by the neck and put every effort into escaping the fray, 4892 for those who were intent on capturing him had hemmed him in. They tried hard to strike William as often as they could, 4896 but the King protected him skilfully with his shield, so that they did not touch him or do him injury. However, the force of their assault had been such 4900 that they had torn the King's helmet from his head, and that was a source of great annoyance to him. The tussle lasted for a long time, 4904 but the Marshal hounded them, fighting them with great ferocity and meting out powerful blows.
The count of Flanders was filled with joy 4908 when he heard the battle-cry raised by the King, there in the midst of that fray where he had been for some time. There was no question now of holding back: 4912 now he rode hard to cut them off, and, reaching them, overwhelmed them. The men who had tourneyed there and were by now suffering from fatigue, 4916 could not withstand the onslaught. [They fled] and were given chase, and every horse was given its head. Count Geoffrey was greatly grieved by this 4920 and very much dismayed. Often he turned round to face his opponents, but nobody in his company turned to do the same, so there was no possibility of his standing his ground. 4924 But when he was in a position to strike them, they found the games he played were wicked ones, and often he left them face up on the ground.
But, before the rout occurred, 4928 there was another incident which should have been recounted earlier; as I find it in my written source, so should I relate it word for word. 4932 It is not possible to resume in a sentence the whole course of a tournament, or the blows dealt there. Anyway, at the point where the King was thus making off, 4936 Sir Herluin de Vancy, who was the seneschal of Flanders, had at least thirty knights with him, outside the press of battle. 4940 One of his knights galloped up to inform his lord, Herluin. "My lord," he said, "in God's name, look over there, the King is on the point of being captured. 4944 You take him and get the praise for it; he's already lost his helmet and is much distraught by that." When sir Herluin heard this, 4948 his heart was filled with joy, and he said: "He's ours, I think." They all spurred on at a fast gallop in pursuit of the King. 4952 The Marshal was not idle, instead he rode to meet them with lance in hand. They clashed so violently that his lance was completely shattered .... 4956 as far as his horse's hocks, but I can assure you that he was soon upright again. The fight homed in around him; they attacked him, and he defended. 4960 Everything he struck was broken and split, shields were hacked to pieces, helmets staved in. My lord William the Marshal performed so many feats that nobody present had the slightest idea 4964 what had become of the King. Afterwards, the King, those who witnessed the event, and those who heard speak of it, said that never before had finer blows been witnessed 4968 from a single knight, or known of, as those dealt by the Marshal that day. The bravest amongst them gave him high praise for this.
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