Itinerary
139
tells upon those below, since its iron point falls downwards. Hence, their
ardour relaxed, but the spirit of the king increased, and he exclaimed
aloud, ÒWill you allow the ship to get away untouched and uninjured?
Shame upon you! are you grown cowards from sloth, after so many
triumphs? The whole world knows that you engaged in the service of the
Cross, and you will have to undergo the severest punishment, if you
permit an enemy to escape while he lives, and is thrown in your way.Ó Our
men, therefore,
making a virtue of necessity, plunged eagerly into the
water under the shipÕs side, and bound the rudder with ropes to turn and
retard its progress, and some, catching hold of the cables, leapt on board
the ship. The Turks receiving them manfully, cut them to pieces as they
came on board, and lopping off the head of this one, and the hands of that,
and the arms of another, cast their bodies into the sea.
Our men seeing this,
and glowing with anger, gained fresh courage from the thirst for
vengeance, and crossing over the bulwarks of the vessel, attacked the
Turks in a body with great fierceness,who, though giving way a little,made
an obstinate resistance. The Turks gathering boldness from despair, used
all their efforts to repel those who threatened them, cutting off the arms,
hands, and even heads of our men; but they, after a mighty struggle, drove
the Turks back
as far as the prow of the ship, while from the interior others
rushed upon our men in a body, preparing to die bravely or repel the foe;
they were the choice youth of the Turks, fitted for war, and suitably armed.
The battle lasted a long time, and many fell on both sides; but at last, the
Turks, pressing boldly on our men, drove them back, though they resisted
with all their might, and forced them from the ship.
Upon which our men
retired to their galleys, and surrounding the vessel on all sides, tried to find
a more easy mode of attacking it. The king seeing the danger his men were
in, and that while the ship was uninjured it would not be easy to take the
Turks with the arms and provisions therein, commanded that each of the
galleys should attack the ship with its spur, i.e. its iron beak. Then the
galleys drawing back, were borne by rapid strokes of the oar against the
shipÕs sides to pierce them, and thus the
vessel was instantly broken, and
becoming pervious to the waves, began to sink. When the Turks saw it,
they leapt into the sea to die, and our men killed some of them and