William the Conqueror was obliged to let Normandy fall to
Robert, his eldest son; but he thought he could do as he pleased
about England, which he had won for himself. He had sent off his
second son, William, to England, with his ring to Westminster,
giving him a message that he hoped the English people would have
him for their king. And they did take him, though they would hardly
have done do if they had known what he would be like when he was
left to himself. But while he was kept under by his father, they
only knew that he had red hair and a ruddy face, and had more sense
than his brother Robert. He is sometimes called the Red King, but
more commonly William Rufus. Things went worse than ever with the
poor English in his time; for at lest William the Conqueror had
made everybody mind the law, but now William Rufus let his cruel
soldiers do just as they pleased, and spoil what they did not want.
It was of no use to complain, for the king would only laugh and
make jokes. He did not care for God or man; only for being
powerful, for feasting, and for hunting.
Just at this time there was a great stir in Europe.
Jerusalem—that holy city, where our blessed Lord had taught,
where he had been crucified, and where he had risen from the
dead—was a place where everyone wished to go and worship, and
this they called going on pilgrimage. A beautiful church had once
been built over the sepulchre where our Lord had lain, and enriched
with gifts. But for a long time past Jerusalem had been in the
hands of an Eastern people, who think their false prophet,
Mahommed, greater than our blessed Lord. These Mahommedans used to
rob and ill-treat the pilgrims, and make them pay great sums of
money for leave to come into Jerusalem. At last a pilgrim, named
Peter the Hermit, came home, and got leave from the Pope to try to
go to the Holy Land, and fight to get the Holy Sepulchre back into
Christian hands again. He used to preach in the open air, and the
people who heard him were so stirred up that they all shouted out,
"It is God's will! It is God's will!" And each who undertook to go
and fight in the East received a cross cut out into cloth, red or
white, to wear on his shoulder. Many thousands promised to go on
this crusade, as they called it, among them was Robert, Duke of
Normandy. But he had wasted his money, so that he could not fit out
an army to take with him. So he offered to give up Normandy to his
brother William while he was gone, if William would let him have
the money he wanted. The Red King was very ready to make such a
bargain, and he laughed at the Crusaders, and thought that they
were wasting their time and trouble.
They had a very good man to lead them, named Geoffrey de
Buillon; and, after many toils and troubles, they did gain
Jerusalem, and could kneel, weeping, at the Holy Sepulchre. It was
proposed to make Robert King of Jerusalem, but he would not accept
the offer, and Godfrey was made king instead, and staid to guard
the holy places, while Duke Robert set out on his return home.
In the meantime, the Red King had gone on in as fierce and
ungodly a way as ever, laughing good advice to scorn, and driving
away the good Archbishop of Canterbury, St. Anselm, and everyone
else who tried to warn him or withstand his wickedness. One day, in
the year 1100, he went out to hunt deer in the New Forest, which
his father had wasted, laughing and jesting in his rough way. By
and by he was found under an oak tree, with an arrow through his
heart; and a wood-cutter took up his body in his cart, and carried
it to Winchester Cathedral, where is was buried.
Who shot the arrow nobody knew, and nobody ever will know. Some
thought it must be a knight, named Walter Tyrrell, to whom the king
had given three long good arrows that morning. He rode straight
away to Southampton, and went off to the Holy Land; so it is likely
that he knew something about the king's death. But he never seems
to have told any one, whether it was only an accident, or a murder,
or who did it. Anyway, it was a fearful end, for a bad man to die
in his sin, without a moment to repent and pray.
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