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To
Walter, by the grace of God archbishop of Palermo, once associate,
now lord and dearest friend in Christ, Peter of Blois sends greeting
and wished continual success of your desires.
The blessed
Lord God of Israel, who visited and made his mercy upon you, raised
you up in need from the dust, so that you may sit with kings and
princes and may hold the throne of glory. Terrible is the Lord in
his judgments, and great in his compassion, very worthy of praise,
for "His compassion is over all that he made." Therefore
of his compassion, which he has magnified in you, you have continual
and steadfast memory, nor is that Judaic reproach seen in you: "They
are not mindful of His benefits and of his wonders which he has
shown to them." There is nothing like ingratitude to provoke
the indignation of the Most High: the very provocation of evils,
deprivation of benefits, extermination of merits. On account of
reverence for that one, who delivered you from contemptible poverty,
may you exhibit most fully the office of humanity to the Cisalpine
poor; truly those who go to, or return from the land in which walked
the feet of our Lord, you could strike down in many ways, but you
must fulfill their needs with the solace of more humane grace, just
as your predecessors in office. You will recognize that the Father
is himself Father of orphans and paupers, who exalts the humble,
and humiliates the proud: for which on behalf of his poor pilgrims
he will uncover you, so that they may find among you aid of customary
goodness. And therefore let it frighten you, lest their clamor and
complaint ascend to the ears of that one, who is terrible among
the kings of the earth, who judges the case of the poor, and accuses
on behalf of the meek of the earth.
For the golden
sash and silken girdle, and samite, and other exotic goods, which
through the bearer of gifts from your largess I receive not as much
as I wish, but as much as I deserve, I give back thanks. Truly from
this the ancient integrity of your liberality is clear, which neither
intervening time nor distance of places, nor assumption of honor,
nor other things destructive to friendship were able to undo.
Since however
you have demanded from me with all insistence that I should send
to you the shape and habits of the lord king of England in an accurate
description - which exceeds my faculties, and for which indeed the
vein of Mantuan genius would seem insufficient enough - I nevertheless
will communicate to you what I know without envy and detraction.
About David it was said to the commendation of his beauty, that
he was red-haired; however you will know that the lord king has
been red-haired so far, except that the coming of old age and gray
hair has altered that color somewhat. His height is medium, so that
neither does he appear great among the small, nor yet does he seem
small among the great. His head is round, just as if the seat of
great wisdom, and specially a shrine of lofty counsel. Such is the
size of his head, that so it matches with his neck and with the
whole body in proportionate moderation. His eyes are round, and
white and plain, while he is of calm spirit; but in anger and disorder
of heart they shine like fire and flash in fury. His hair is not
in fear of the losses of baldness, nevertheless on top there is
a tonsure of hairs; his leonine face is rather square. The eminence
of his nose is weighed to the beauty of the whole body with natural
moderation; curved legs, a horseman's shins, broad chest, and a
boxer's arms all announce him as a man strong, agile and bold; nevertheless,
in a certain joint of his foot the part of the toenail is grown
into the flesh of his foot, to the vehement outrage of the whole
foot. His hands testify grossly to the same neglect of his men;
truly he neglects their care all the time; nor at any time, unless
carrying birds, does he use gloves. Daily in mass, in counsels and
in other public doings of the realm always from morning until vespers
he stands on his feet. And, he never sits, unless riding a horse
or eating, although he has shins greatly wounded and bruised with
frequent blows of horses' hooves. In a single day, if necessary,
he can run through four or five day-marches and, thus foiling the
plots of his enemies, frequently mocks their plots with surprise
sudden arrivals; he wears boots without a fold, caps without decoration,
light apparel. He is a passionate lover of woods; while not engaged
in battles, he occupies himself with birds and dogs. For in fact
his flesh would weigh him down enormously with a great burden of
fat, if he did not subdue the insolence of his belly with fasts
and exercise; and also in getting onto a horse, preserving the lightness
of youth, he fatigues almost every day the most powerful for the
labor. Truly he does not, like other kings, linger in his palace,
but traveling through the provinces he investigates the doings of
all, judging powerfully those whom he has made judges of others.
No one is more cunning in counsel, more fiery in speech, more secure
in the midst of dangers, more cautious in fortune, more constant
in adversity. Whom once he has esteemed, with difficulty he unloves
them; whom once he has hated, with difficulty he receives into the
grace of his familiarity. Always are in his hands bow, sword, spear
and arrow, unless he be in council or in books. As often as he is
able to rest from cares and anxieties, he occupies himself by reading
alone, or in a crowd of clerics he labors to untangle some knot
of inquiry. For while your king knows his letters well, our king
is more literate by far. Truly I have judged the abilities of both
in learned matters. You know that the king of Sicily was my student
for a year, and had had from you the basic arts of versification
and literature; he obtained more benefit of knowledge through my
industry and solicitude. However as soon as I had departed the kingdom,
that one turned himself over to abject books in imperial leisure.
But yet in the household of the lord king of the English every day
is school, in the constant conversation of the most literate and
discussion of questions. No one is more honest in speech than our
king, more polite in eating, more moderate in drinking; no one is
more magnificent in gift-giving, no one more munificent in alms-giving:
and therefore his name is like poured oil, and the entire church
of saints describes the alms of such a one. Our king is peaceable,
victorious in war, glorious in peace: he is zealous for the things
to be desired in this world and he procures peace for his people.
He considers whatever pertains to the peace of the people, in whatever
he speaks, in whatever he does; so that his people may rest, he
incessantly takes on troubled and enormous labors. It aims to the
peace of his people that he calls councils, that he makes laws,
that he makes friendships, that he brings low the proud, that he
threatens battles, that he launches terror to the princes. Also
that immensity of money aims at the peace of his people, which he
gives out, which he receives, which he gathers, which he disperses.
In walls, in ramparts, in fortifications, in ditches, in enclosures
of wild beasts and fish, and in palaces there is no one more subtle,
and no one more magnificent to be found.
His most powerful
and most noble father the count [of Anjou] extended his borders
greatly; but the king added to his paternal lands with abundance
in his strong hands the duchy of Normandy, the duchy of Brittany,
the kingdom of England, the kingdom of Scotland, the kingdom of
Ireland, the kingdom of Wales; he increased inestimably the titles
of his magnificent inheritance. No one is more mild to the afflicted,
no one more friendly to the poor, no one more unbearable to the
proud; he always strives to oppress the proud with the semblance
of divinity, to raise up the oppressed, and to stir up against swelling
of pride continual persecutions and deadly troubles. When however
he may according to the custom of the kingdom have had roles in
making elections of most important and most powerful, he nevertheless
always had his hands pure and free from all venality. I merely touch
upon, I will not describe these and other endowments of soul as
much as body, with which nature has marked him out before others;
truly I confess my insufficiency and would believe that Cicero and
Virgil themselves would sweat under such a labor. I have briefly
tasted this little morsel of his appearance and habits at your request;
truly I shall seem either to have undertaken an unbearable work,
or to have cut back much about the magnificence of so great a man
through jealousy. Nevertheless I, serving your charity, do what
I can do, and what I know without envy and without detraction, I
communicate with most prompt good will, and also among other great
men, who write in praise of my lord, I put my might of devotion
in a treasure chest along with the poor widow.
Because however
you asked about the death of the blessed martyr Thomas, I say in
the word of the Lord and in the order of deacon to you, that in
conscience I believe in no way that the king was guilty of this
thing; and the most complete confirmation of this the lord Theodinus,
bishop of San Vitale and the lord Albert the chancellor [the future
Pope Gregory VIII] will make to you, who because of this matter
investigated in our regions performing the office of legate; they
confirmed the innocence of the man: and also they will assure you
that this deed was done by certain men under his shadow, that all
this iniquity came out from the sanctuary. For in fact, the canonical
purgation having been accepted by them, they pronounced a judgment
publicly by order of the highest pontiff, that he was free of this
crime before God and men, and they bent back the mark of infamy
on those very magnates, whose malice they had clearly proven in
this matter.
Also you will
have learned that the lord king has made the glorious martyr his
chief patron in all his needs. For in fact on the very day when
he first visited the tomb of the martyr, he subjected the king of
Scots, persecutor and attacker most strong in prison chains. Thereafter
he has triumphed most gloriously with the continual favor of successes
by the help of the martyr over all his enemies. You know therefore
most certainly what kind of love it was, by which once king and
martyr loved each other mutually, which neither death nor the sword
has abolished: For "love is strong as death"; and while
everything passes away, "love never faileth." This is
the beautiful gate, which remained whole and intact in the destruction
of Jerusalem; and while all is destroyed in death, love does not
perish in death, to whose strength death itself succumbs.
Indeed the
kingdom of England, which he won by the sweat of war from King Stephen,
most strong in arms, although but a youth and of no account, his
sons, with the counsel and aid of the neighboring princes, have
thrown into confusion by grave sedition. That one however, destitute
of his men, and attacked by foreigners, with the martyr helping
him, in whose virtue one alone has put to flight ten thousand, prevailed
over all, and the Lord delivered into his hands his enemies, "To
bind their kings with chains, and their nobles with fetters of iron".
That one therefore, who turned the hearts of the sons toward their
father, himself stirred up or sent filial and devoted affection
to the sons of our king; may he himself establish the seat of our
father for a long time, and may he bring peace. For I know that
if they stir up wars against their parents, the Lord will mow them
down. For by the judgment and fatal law of God it is sanctified,
that whenever they presume to assault that one from their own blood
with wars, he will not even have half his days. This however we
read in the book of experience now about many people, and we know
it by visible proof.
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