Itinerary
176
line was composed of chosen warriors, divided into companies. They kept
together so closely, that an apple, if thrown, would not have fallen to the
ground, without touching a man or a horse; and the army stretched from
the army of the Saracens to the sea-shore. There you might have seen their
most appropriate distinctions,standards, and ensigns of various forms, and
hardy soldiers, fresh, and full of spirits, and well fitted for war. There was
the earl of Leicester, Hugh de Gurnay, William de Borriz, Walkin do
Ferrars, Roger de Toony, James dÕAvennes, Robert count of Druell, the
bishop of Beauvais, and William des Barres his brother, William de
Garlande, Drogo de Mirle, and many of his kinsmen. Henry count of
Champagne kept guard on the mountainÕs side, maintaining a constant
look-out on the flank: the foot-soldiers, bowmen and arbalesters, were on
the outside, and the rear of the army was closed by the pack-horses and
waggons, which carried provisions and other things, and journeyed along
between the army and the sea, to avoid an attack from the enemy. This was
the order of the army, as it advanced gradually, to prevent separation; for
the less close the line of battle, the less effective was it for resistance. King
Richard and the duke of Burgundy, with a chosen retinue of warriors, rode
up and down, narrowly watching the position and manner of the Turks, to
correct any thing in their own troops, if they saw occasion; for they had
need, at that moment, of the utmost circumspection.
Chapter XVIII. Ñ
How our armies were much harassed by the Turks, who
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