Itinerary
197
the least repose, but continually attacked us with their javelins. On the eve
of St. Thomas the Apostle, King Richard had sallied forth with a small
retinue towards a fort called Whitecastle, on some enterprise against the
Turks,
but foreboding something wrong, by inspiration as is thought from
heaven, he returned to the camp. The same hour he was told that Saladin
had a little before sent a body of three hundred of his choicest troops to
Whitecastle, where Richard was going. The same day also King Guy went
to Acre, whither he was followed the next day by Stephen de Torneham. In
the middle of the night of the Holy Innocents, the Hospitallers and
Templars left the camp, and returned in the morning with two hundred
oxen, which they had driven off from the mountains near Jerusalem.
Chapter XXXIII. Ñ
Of the glorious victory gained by the earl of Leicester against
the Turks, when our men at last came to his assistance.
The noble earl of Leicester, one day,
followed by a few men only,
endeavoured to drive off a large body of Turks who were passing by with
much arrogance and boasting. The enemy fled with precipitation, and were
followed by three of the swiftest knights in the earlÕs train: by this act of
imprudence they placed themselves in the power of the Turks, who turned
back and made them prisoners. The earl, seeing this, spurred his horse and
rode into the midst of more than a hundred Turks, to rescue the knights.
His men, following him,
pursued the enemy over a river, when a fresh
force of about five hundred Turkish cavalry charged them with bows and
lances of reed, and cutting off the retreat of the earl and his small party,
essayed to make him prisoner. Already was Garin Fitz-Gerald dismounted
and severely beaten with the iron maces. A fierce struggle took place.
Drogo de Fontenille Putrell and Robert Nigel were unhorsed, and the
Turks made such exertions to seize the earl that at last they struck him also
from his horse, and almost drowned him in the river. but the earl defended
himself bravely, and dealt his blows on every side of him, seconded by
Henry Fitz-Nicholas and
the brave Robert de Newbury, whose generosity
has gained for him immortal renown; for, seeing the earl hard pressed, in
the midst of his enemies, and engaged in a doubtful contest, he gave his