Itinerary
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wickedness by such a falsehood, and they infused it into the minds of all
the people, that King Richard had vilely brought about the death of the
marquis, and that he had hired these men from the Assassins for that
purpose. Oh, infamous and malicious envy, that always carps at virtue,
hates
what is good, and endeavours to blacken the splendour which it
cannot extinguish! Nor were they content with defaming the character of
King Richard in those quarters, but also sent a warning to the king of
France, to be on his guard against the satellites of the old man of Musse;
detailing the manner in which the marquis died, and stating that King
Richard had directed four of these ministers of superstition against himself.
What did not they deserve who fabricated such misrepresentations, by
means of which so many nations are believed to have been confounded,
and so many provinces shaken! The infamous authors thought, by the
invention
of this malicious slander, to add to their own strength, and
perhaps palliate their own wickedness.
Chapter XXVIII. Ñ
How Count Henry was chosen king at Tyre, and how
messengers were sent to report this and the assassination of the marquis to King
Richard.
After the marquis was buried, the French, who lived in tents outside
the city, to the number of about 10,000, met together, and after a long
discussion, sent orders to the wife of the marquis, bidding her to place the
city in their charge,
without delay or opposition, for the service of the king
of France. But the queen replied, that when King Richard came to see her,
she would give it up to him, and to no one else, for such were the
commands of her dying lord, as there was no one who had laboured so
much to rescue the Holy Land from the hands of the Turks, and restore it
to its former freedom; and that the kingdom ought to be given to the
bravest man, to dispose of it us he thought fit.
The French were
exceedingly indignant at this reply, and while they were striving to obtain
possession of the city, Count Henry, astonished at what he heard had taken
place, came unexpectedly to Tyre; and when the people saw him amongst
them, they forthwith chose him as their prince, as if he had been sent by