Itinerary
202
Book V.
Chapter I. Ñ
By the advice of the Templars, though much against the inclinations
of the army, the march to Jerusalem was abandoned until the walls of Ascalon
should first be rebuilt.
In the year 1192, not many days after the feast of the Epiphany, the
councillors of the army, joining with them some of the more discreet of the
natives, again consulted about the march to Jerusalem. The Hospitallers,
Templars, and Pisans, urged, as before, that the city of Ascalon should first
be rebuilt as a check on the Turkish convoys between Babylonia and
Jerusalem. To this the majority of the council gave their assent, that
Ascalon should be rebuilt to check the arrogance and impede the free
passage of the Turks in those parts. When the decision became known the
army were much dejected, conceiving that their hopes of seeing the LordÕs
sepulchre would altogether be frustrated. Their former hilarity altogether
disappeared, and was succeeded by despair at what they had just heard.
They uttered imprecations on the authors of this counsel as destroyers of
all their most ardent wishes. If, however, they had known the penury and
destitution of those who dwelt in Jerusalem, they would have derived
some little consolation from the tribulation of the enemy. For the Turks in
Jerusalem were enduring many severe sufferings from the hail and snow,
which, melting in the mountains, caused a flood of water to descend upon
the city, either drowning their cattle, or causing them to perish afterwards
from the cold. So great were their sufferings from the state of the weather,
that if the Christians had known of them they might certainly have taken
the city; though they could not long have kept it, for the people would
have returned home after fulfilling their vow of pilgrimage, and there
could not have been a sufficient garrison left to defend it.
Chapter II. Ñ
Of the despondency of the army at the abandonment of their
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