The Meaning of the Crusade
By G.K. Chesterton
From <The New Jerusalem> 1920
There are three examples of Western work on the
great eastern slope of the Mount of Olives; and they form a sort of triangle
illustrating the truth about the different influences of the West on the East.
At the foot of the hill is the garden kept by the Franciscans on the alleged
site of Gethsemane, and containing the hoary olive that is supposed to be the
terrible tree of the agony of Christ. Given the great age and slow growth of
the olives, the tradition is not so unreasonable as some may suppose. But whether
or not it is historically right, it is not artistically wrong. The instinct, if
it was only an instinct, that made men fix upon this strange growth of grey and
twisted wood, was a true imaginative instinct. One of the strange qualities of
this strange Southern tree is its almost startling hardness; accidentally to
strike the branch of an olive is like striking rock. With its stony surface,
stunted stature, and strange holes and hollows, it is often more like a grotto
than a tree. Hence it does not seem so unnatural that it should be treated as a
holy grotto; or that this strange vegetation should claim to stand for ever
like a sculptured monument. Even the shimmering or shivering silver foliage of
the living olive might well have a legend like that of the aspen; as if it had
grown grey with fear from the apocalyptic paradox of a divine vision of death.
A child from one of the villages said to me, in broken English, that it was the
place where God said his prayers. I for one could not ask for a finer or more
defiant statement of all that separates the Christian from the Moslem or the
Jew; <credo quia impossibile>.
Around this terrible spot the Franciscans have done
something which will strike many good and thoughtful people as quite
fantastically inadequate; and which strikes me as fantastically but precisely
right. They have laid out the garden simply as a garden, in a way that is
completely natural because it is completely artificial. They have made
flower-beds in the shape of stars and moons, and coloured them with flowers
like those in the backyard of a cottage. The combination of these bright
patterns in the sunshine with the awful shadow in the centre is certainly an
incongruity in the sense of a contrast. But it is a poetical contrast, like
that of birds building in a temple or flowers growing on a tomb. The best way
of suggesting what I for one feel bout it would be something like this; suppose
we imagine a company of children, such as those whom Christ blessed in
Jerusalem, afterwards put permanently in charge of a field full of his sorrow;
it is probable that, if they could do anything with it, they would do something
like this. They might cut it up into quaint shapes and dot it with red daisies
or yellow marigolds. I really do not know that there is anything better that
grown up people could do, since anything that the greatest of them could do
must be, must look quite as small. "Shall I, the gnat that dances in Thy
ray, dare to be reverent?" The Franciscans have not dared to be reverent;
they have only dared to be cheerful. It may be too awful an adventure of the
imagination to imagine Christ in that garden. But there is not the smallest
difficulty about imagining St. Francis there; and that is something to say of
an institution which is eight hundred years old.
Immediately above this little garden, overshadowing
and almost overhanging it, is a gorgeous gilded building with golden domes and
minarets glittering in the sun, and filling a splendid situation with almost
shameless splendour; the Russian church built over the upper part of the
garden, belonging to the Orthodox-Greeks. Here again many Western travellers
will be troubled; and will think that golden building much too like a fairy
palace in a pantomime. But here again I shall differ from them, though perhaps
less strongly. It may be that the pleasure is childish rather than childlike;
but I can imagine a child clapping his hands at the mere sight of those great
domes like bubbles of gold against the blue sky. It is a little like Aladdin's
Palace, but it has a place in art as Aladdin has a place in literature;
especially since it is oriental literature. Those wise missionaries in China
who were not afraid to depict the Twelve Apostles in the costume of Chinamen
might have built such a church in a land of glittering mosques. And as it is
said that the Russian has in him something of the child and something of the
oriental, such a style may be quite sincere, and have even a certain simplicity
in its splendour. It is genuine of its kind; it was built for those who like
it; and those who do not like it can look at something else. This sort of thing
may be called tawdry, but it is not what I call meretricious. What I call
really meretricious can be found yet higher on the hill; towering to the sky
and dominating all the valleys.
The nature of the difference, I think, is worth
noting. The German Hospice, which served as a sort of palace for the German
Emperor, is a very big building with a very high tower, planned I believe with
great efficiency, solidity and comfort, and fitted with a thousand things that
mark its modernity compared with the things around, with the quaint garden of
the Franciscans or the fantastic temple of the Russians. It is what I can only
describe as a handsome building; rather as the more vulgar of the Victorian
wits used to talk about a fine woman. By calling it a handsome building I mean
that from the top of its dizzy tower to the bottom of its deepest foundations
there is not one line or one tint of beauty. This negative fact, however, would
be nothing; it might be honestly ugly and utilitarian like a factory or a
prison; but it is not. It is as pretentious as the gilded dome below it; and it
is pretentious in a wicked way where the other is pretentious in a good and
innocent way. What annoys me about it is that it was not built by children, or
even by savages, but by professors; and the professors could profess the art
and could not practice it. The architects knew everything about a Romanesque
building except how to build it. We feel that they accumulated on that spot all
the learning and organization and information and wealth of the world, to do
this one particular thing; and then did it wrong. They did it wrong, not
through superstition, not through fanatical exaggeration, not through
provincial ignorance, but through pure, profound, internal, intellectual
incompetence; that intellectual incompetence which so often goes with
intellectual pride. I will mention only one matter out of a hundred. All the
columns in the Kaiser's Chapel are in one way very suitable to their place;
every one of them has a swelled head. The column itself is slender but the
capital is not only big but bulging; and it has the air of bulging
<downwards>, as if pressing heavily on something too slender to support
it. This is false, not to any of the particular schools of architecture about
which professors can read in libraries, but to the inmost instinctive idea of
architecture itself. A Norman capital can be heavy because the Norman column is
thick, and the whole thing expresses an elephantine massiveness and repose. And
a Gothic column can be slender, because its strength is energy; and is
expressed in its line, which shoots upwards like the life of a tree, like the
jet of a fountain or even like the rush of a rocket. But a slender thing
beneath, obviously oppressed by a bloated thing above, suggests weakness by one
of those miraculous mistakes that are as precisely wrong as masterpieces are
precisely right. And to all this is added the intolerable intuition; that the
Russians and the Franciscans, even if we credit them with fantastic ignorance,
are at least looking up at the sky; and we know how the learned Germans would
look down upon them, from their monstrous tower upon the hill.
And this is as true of the moral as of the artistic
elements in the modern Jerusalem. To show that I am not unjustly partisan, I
will say frankly that I see little to complain of in that common subject of
complaint, the mosaic portrait of the Emperor on the ceiling of the chapel. It
is but one among many figures; and it is not an unknown practice to include a
figure of the founder in such church decorations. The real example of that
startling moral stupidity which marked the barbaric imperialism can be found in
another figure of which, curiously enough, considerably less notice seems to
have been taken. It is the more remarkable because it is but an artistic shadow
of the actual fact; and merely records in outline and relief the temporary
masquerade in which the man walked about in broad daylight. I mean the really
astounding trick of dressing himself up as a Crusader.
That was, under the circumstances, far more
ludicrous and lunatic a proceeding than if he had filled the whole ceiling with
cherub heads with his own features, or festooned all the walls with one
ornamental pattern of his moustaches.
The German Emperor came to Jerusalem under the
escort of the Turks, as the ally of the Turks, and solely because of the
victory and surpremacy of the Turks. In other words, he came to Jerusalem
solely because the Crusaders had lost Jerusalem; he came there solely because
the Crusaders had been routed, ruined, butchered before and after the disaster
of Hattin; because the Cross had gone down in blood before the Crescent, under
which alone he could ride in with safety. Under those circumstances to dress up
as a Crusader, as if for a fancy dress ball, was a mixture of madness and
vulgarity which literally stops the breath. There is no need whatever to blame
him for being in alliance with the Turks; hundreds of people have been in
alliance with the Turks; the English especially have been far too much in
alliance with them. But if any one wants to appreciate the true difference,
distinct from all the cant of newspaper nationality, between the English and
the Germans (who were classed together by the same newspapers a little time
before the war) let him take this single incident as a test. Lord Palmerston,
for instance, was a firm friend of the Turks. Imagine Lord Palmerston appearing
in chain mail and the shield of a Red Cross Knight.
It is obvious enough that Palmerston would have
said that he cared no more for the Crusade than for the Siege of Troy; that his
diplomacy was directed by practical patriotic considerations of the moment; and
that he regarded the religious wars of the twelfth century as a rubbish heap of
remote superstitions. In this he would be quite wrong, but quite intelligible
and quite sincere; an English aristocrat of the nineteenth century inheriting
from the English aristocrats of the eighteenth century; whose views were simply
those of Voltaire. And these things are something of an allegory. For the
Voltairian version of the Crusades is still by far the most reasonable of all
merely hostile views of the Crusades. If they were not a creative movement of
religion, then they were simply a destructive movement of superstition; and
whether we agree with Voltaire in calling it superstition or with Villehardouin
in calling it religion, at least both these very clear-headed Frenchmen would agree
that the motive did exist and did explain the facts. But just as there is a
clumsy German building with statues that at once patronise and parody the
Crusaders, so there is a clumsy German theory that at once patronises and
minimises the Crusades. According to this theory the essential truth about a
Crusade was that it was not a Crusade. It was something that the professors, in
the old days before the war, used to call a Teutonic Folk-Wandering. Godfrey
and St. Louis were not, as Villehardouin would say, fighting for the truth;
they were not even, as Voltaire would say, fighting for what they thought was
the truth; this was only what they thought they thought, and they were really
thinking of something entirely different. They were not moved either by piety
or priestcraft, but by a new and unexpected nomadism. They were not inspired
either by faith or fanaticism, but by an unusually aimless taste for foreign
travel. This theory that the war of the two great religions could be explained
by "Wanderlust" was current about twenty years ago among the
historical professors of Germany, and with many of their other views was often
accepted by the historical professors of England. It was swallowed by an
earthquake, along with other rubbish, in the year 1914.
Since then, so far as I know, the only person who
has been patient enough to dig it up again is Mr. Ezra Pound. He is well known
as an American poet; and he is, I believe, a man of great talent and
information. His attempt to recover the old Teutonic theory of the
Folk-Wandering of Peter the Hermit was expressed, however, in prose; in an
article in the <New Age>. I have no reason to doubt that he was to be
counted among the most loyal of our allies; but he is evidently one of those
who, quite without being Pro-German, still manage to be German. The Teutonic
theory was very Teutonic; like the German Hospice on the hill it was put
together with great care and knowledge and it is rotten from top to bottom. I
do not understand, for that matter, why that alliance which we enjoy with Mr.
Pound should not be treated in the same way as the other historical event; or
why the war should not be an example of the Wanderlust. Surely the American
Army in France must have drifted eastward merely through the same vague nomadic
need as the Christian Army in Palestine. Surely Pershing as well as Peter the
Hermit was merely a rather restless gentleman who found his health improved by
frequent change of scene. The Americans said, and perhaps thought, that they
were fighting for democracy; and the Crusaders said, and perhaps thought, that
they were fighting for Christianity. But as we know what the Crusaders meant
better than they did themselves, I cannot quite understand why we do not enjoy
the same valuable omniscience about the Americans. Indeed I do not see why we
should not enjoy it (for it would be very enjoyable) about any individual
American. Surely it was this vague vagabond spirit that moved Mr. Pound, not
only to come to England, but in a fashion to come to Fleet Street. A. dim
tribal tendency, vast and invisible as the wind, carried him and his article
like an autumn leaf to alight on the <New Age> doorstep. Or a blind
aboriginal impulse, wholly without rational motive, led him one day to put on
his hat, and go out with his article in an envelope and put it in a pillar-box.
It is vain to correct by cold logic the power of such primitive appetites;
nature herself was behind the seemingly random thoughtlessness of the deed. And
now that it is irrevocably done, he can look back on it and trace the large
lines of an awful law of averages; wherein it is ruled by a ruthless necessity
that a certain number of such Americans should write a certain number of such
articles, as the leaves fall or the flowers return.
In plain words, this sort of theory is a blasphemy
against the intellectual dignity of man. It is a blunder as well as a
blasphemy; for it goes miles out of its way to find a bestial explanation when
there is obviously a human explanation. It is as if a man told me that a dim survival
of the instincts of a quadruped was the reason of my sitting on a chair with
four legs. I answer that I do it because I foresee that there may be grave
disadvantages in sitting on a chair with one leg. Or it is as if I were told
that I liked to swim in the sea, solely because some early forms of amphibian
life came out of the sea on to the shore. I answer that I know why I swim in
the sea; and it is because the divine gift of reason tells me that it would be
unsatisfactory to swim on the land. In short this sort of vague evolutionary
theorising simply amounts to finding an unconvincing explanation of something
that needs no explanation. And the case is really quite as simple with great
political and religious movements by which man has from time to time changed
the world in this or that respect in which he happened to think it would be the
better for a change. The Crusade was a religious movement, but it was also a
perfectly rational movement; one might almost say a rationalist movement. I
could quite understand Mr. Pound saying that such a campaign for a creed was
immoral; and indeed it often has been, and now perhaps generally is, quite
horribly immoral. But when he implies that it is irrational he has selected
exactly the thing which it is not. It is not enlightenment, on the contrary it
is ignorance and insularity, which causes most of us to miss this fact. But it
certainly is the fact that religious war is in itself much more rational than
patriotic way. I for one have often defended and even encouraged patriotic war,
and should always be ready to defend and encourage patriotic passion. But it
cannot be denied that there is more of mere passion, of mere preference and
prejudice, in short of mere personal accident, in fighting another nation than
in fighting another faith. The Crusader is in every sense more rational than
the modern conscript or professional soldier. He is more rational in his
object, which is the intelligent and intelligible object of conversion; where
the modern militarist has an object much more confused by momentary vanity and
one-sided satisfaction. The Crusader wished to make Jerusalem a Christian town;
but the Englishman does not wish to make Berlin an English town. He has only a
healthy hatred of it as a Prussian town. The Moslem wished to make the
Christian a Moslem; but even the Prussian did not wish to make the Frenchman a
Prussian. He only wished to make the Frenchman admire a Prussian; and not only
were the means he adopted somewhat ill-considered for this purpose, but the purpose
itself is looser and more irrational. The object of all war is peace; but the
object of religious war is mental as well as material peace; it is agreement.
In short religious war aims ultimately at equality, where national war aims
relatively at superiority. Conversion is the one sort of conquest in which the
conquered must rejoice.
In that sense alone it is foolish for us in the
West to sneer at those who kill men when a foot is set in a holy place, when we
ourselves kill hundreds of thousands when a foot is put across a frontier. It
is absurd for us to despise those who shed blood for a relic when we have shed
rivers of blood for a rag. But above all the Crusade, or, for that matter, the
Jehad, is by far the most philosophical sort of fighting, not only in its
conception of ending the difference, but in its mere act of recognising the
difference, as the deepest kind of difference. It is to reverse all reason to
suggest that a man's politics matter and his religion does not matter. It is to
say he is affected by the town he lives in, but not by the world he lives in.
It is to say that he is altered when he is a fellow-citizen walking under new
lamp-posts, but not altered when he is another creature walking under strange
stars. It is exactly as if we were to say that two people ought to live in the
same house, but it need not be in the same town. It is exactly as if we said
that so long as the address included York it did not matter whether it was New
York; or that so long as a man is in Essex we do not care whether he is in
England.
Christendom would have been entirely justified in
the abstract in being alarmed or suspicious at the mere rise of a great power
that was not Christian. Nobody nowadays would think it odd to express regret at
the rise of a power because it was Militarist or Socialist or even
Protectionist. But it is far more natural to be conscious of a difference, not
about the order of battle but the battle of life; not about our definable
enjoyment of possessions, but about our much more doubtful possession of
enjoyment; not about the fiscal divisions between us and foreigners but about
the spiritual divisions even between us and friends. These are the things that
differ profoundly with differing views of the ultimate nature of the universe.
For the things of our country are often distant; but the things of our cosmos
are always near; we can shut our doors upon the wheeled traffic of our native
town; but in our own inmost chamber we hear the sound that never ceases; that
wheel which Dante and a popular proverb have dared to christen as the love that
makes the world go round. For this is the great paradox of life; that there are
not only wheels within wheels, but the larger wheels within the smaller. When a
whole community rests on one conception of life and death and the origin of
things, it is quite entitled to watch the rise of another community founded on
another conception as the rise of something certain to be different and likely
to be hostile. Indeed, as I have pointed out touching certain political
theories, we already admit this truth in its small and questionable examples.
We only deny the large and obvious examples.
Christendom might quite reasonably have been
alarmed if it had not been attacked. But as a matter of history it had been
attacked. The Crusader would have been quite justified in suspecting the Moslem
even if the Moslem had merely been a new stranger; but as a matter of history
he was already an old enemy. The critic of the Crusade talks as if it had
sought out some inoffensive tribe or temple in the interior of Thibet, which
was never discovered until it was invaded. They seem entirely to forget that
long before the Crusaders had dreamed of riding to Jerusalem, the Moslems had
almost ridden into Paris. They seem to forget that if the Crusaders nearly
conquered Palestine, it was but a return upon the Moslems who had nearly
conquered Europe. There was no need for them to argue by an appeal to reason,
as I have argued above, that a religious division must make a difference; it had
already made a difference. The difference stared them in the face in the
startling transformation of Roman Barbary and of Roman Spain. In short it was
something which must happen in theory and which did happen in practice; all
expectation suggested that it would be so and all experience said it was so.
Having thought it out theoretically and experienced it practically, they
proceeded to deal with it equally practically. The first division involved
every principle of the science of thought; and the last developments followed
out every principle of the science of war. The Crusade was the counter-attack.
It was the defensive army taking the offensive in its turn, and driving back
the enemy to his base. And it is this process, reasonable from its first axiom
to its last act, that Mr. Pound actually selects as a sort of automatic
wandering of an animal. But a man so intelligent would not have made a mistake
so extraordinary but for another error which it is here very essential to
consider. To suggest that men engaged, rightly or wrongly, in so logical a
military and political operation were only migrating like birds or swarming
like bees is as ridiculous as to say that the Prohibition campaign in America
was only an animal reversion towards lapping as the dog lappeth, or Rowland
Hill's introduction of postage stamps an animal taste for licking as the cat
licks. Why should we provide other people with a remote reason for their own
actions, when they themselves are ready to tell us the reason, and it is a
perfectly reasonable reason?
I have compared this pompous imposture of
scientific history to the pompous and clumsy building of the scientific Germans
on the Mount of Olives, because it substitutes in the same way a modern
stupidity for the medieval simplicity. But just as the German Hospice after all
stands on a fine site, and might have been a fine building, so there is after
all another truth, somewhat analogous, which the German historians of the
Folk-Wanderings might possibly have meant, as distinct from all that they have
actually said. There is indeed one respect in which the case of the Crusade
does differ very much from modern political cases like prohibition or the penny
post. I do not refer to such incidental peculiarities as the fact that
Prohibition could only have succeeded through the enormous power of modern
plutocracy, or that even the convenience of the postage goes along with an
extreme coercion by the police. It is a somewhat deeper difference that I mean;
and it may possibly be what these critics mean. But the difference is not in
the evolutionary, but rather the revolutionary spirit.
The First Crusade was not a racial migration; it
was something much more intellectual and dignified; a riot. In order to
understand this religious war we must class it, not so much with the wars of,
history as with the revolutions of history. As I shall try to show briefly on a
later page, it not only had all the peculiar good and the peculiar evil of
things like the French Revolution or the Russian Revolution, but it was a more
purely popular revolution than either of them. The truly modern mind will of
course regard the contention that it was popular as tantamount to a confession
that it was animal. In these days when papers and speeches are full of words
like democracy and self-determination, anything really resembling the movement
of a mass of angry men Is regarded as no better than a stampede of bulls or a
scurry of rats. The new sociologists call it the herd instinct, just as the old
reactionaries called it the many-headed beast. But both agree in implying that
it is hardly worth while to count how many head there are of such cattle. In
face of such fashionable comparisons it will seem comparatively mild to talk of
migration as it occurs among birds or insects. Nevertheless we may venture to
state with some confidence that both the sociologists and the reactionaries are
wrong. It does not follow that human beings become less than human because
their ideas appeal to more and more of humanity. Nor can we deduce that men are
mindless solely from the fact that they are all of one mind. In plain fact the
virtues of a mob cannot be found in a herd of bulls or a pack of wolves, any
more than the crimes of a mob can be committed by a flock of sheep or a shoal
of herrings. Birds have never been known to besiege and capture an empty cage
of an aviary, on a point of principle, merely because it had kept a few other
birds in captivity, as the mob besieged and captured the almost empty Bastille,
merely because it was the fortress of a historic tyranny. And rats have never
been known to die by thousands merely in order to visit a particular trap in
which a particular rat had perished, as the poor peasants of the First Crusade
died in thousands for a far-off sight of the Sepulchre or a fragment of the
true cross. In this sense indeed the Crusade was not rationalistic, if the rat
is the only rationalist. But it will seem more truly rational to point out that
the inspiration of such a crowd is not in such instincts as we share with the animals,
but precisely in such ideas as the animals never (with all their virtues)
understand.
What is peculiar about the First Crusade is that it
was in quite a new and abnormal sense a popular movement. I might almost say it
was the only popular movement there ever was in the world. For it was not a
thing which the populace followed; it was actually a thing which the populace
led. It was not only essentially a revolution, but it was the only revolution I
know of in which the masses began by acting alone, and practically without any
support from any of the classes. When they had acted, the classes came in; and
it is perfectly true, and indeed only natural, that the masses alone failed
where the two together succeeded. But it was the uneducated who educated the
educated. The case of the Crusade is emphatically not a case in which certain
ideas were first suggested by a few philosophers, and then preached by
demagogues to the democracy. This was to a great extent true of the French
Revolution; it was probably yet more true of the Russian Revolution; and we
need not here pause upon the fine shade of difference that Rousseau was right
and Karl Marx was wrong. In the First Crusade it was the ordinary man who was
right or wrong. He came out in a fury at the insult to his own little images or
private prayers, as if he had come out to fight with his own domestic poker or
private carving-knife. He was not armed with new weapons of wit and logic
served round from the arsenal of an academy. There was any amount of wit and
logic in the academies of the Middle Ages; but the typical leader of the
Crusade was not Abélard or Aquinas but Peter the Hermit, who can hardly be
called even a popular leader, but rather a popular flag. And it was his army,
or rather his enormous rabble, that first marched across the world to die for
the deliverance of Jerusalem.
Historians say that in that huge host of thousands
there were only nine knights. To any one who knows even a little of medieval
war the fact seems astounding. It is indeed a long exploded fallacy to regard
medievalism as identical with feudalism. There were countless democratic
institutions, such as the guilds; sometimes as many as twenty guilds in one
small town. But it is really true that the military organization of the Middle
Ages was almost entirely feudal; indeed we might rather say that feudalism was
the name of their military organization. That so vast a military mass should
have attempted to move at all, with only nine of the natural military leaders,
seems to me a prodigy of popular initiative. It is as if a parliament were
elected at the next general election, in which only two men could afford to
read a daily newspaper.
This mob marched against the military discipline of
the Moslems and was massacred; or, might I so mystically express it, martyred.
Many of the great kings and knights who followed in their tracks did not so
clearly deserve any haloes for the simplicity and purity of their motives. The
canonization of such a crowd might be impossible, and would certainly be
resisted in modern opinion; chiefly because they indulged their democratic
violence on the way by killing various usurers; a course which naturally fills
modern society with an anger verging on alarm. A perversity leads me to weep
rather more over the many slaughtered peasants than over the few slaughtered
usurers; but in any case the peasants certainly were not slaughtered in vain.
The common conscience of all classes, in a time when all had a common creed,
was aroused, and a new army followed of a very different type of skill and
training; led by most of the ablest captains and by some of the most chivalrous
gentlemen of the age. For curiously enough, the host contained more than one
cultured gentleman who was as simple a Christian as any peasant, and as
recklessly ready to be butchered or tortured for the mere name of Christ.
It is a tag of the materialists that the truth
about history rubs away the romance of history. It is dear to the modern mind
because it is depressing; but it does not happen to be true. Nothing emerges
more clearly from a study that is truly realistic, than the curious fact that
romantic people were really romantic. It is rather the historical novels that
will lead a modern man vaguely to expect to find the leader of the new knights,
Godfrey de Bouillon, to have been merely a brutal baron. The historical facts
are all in favour of his having been much more like a knight of the Round
Table. In fact he was a far better man than most of the knights of the Round
Table, in whose characters the fabulist, knowing that he was writing a fable,
was tactful enough to introduce a larger admixture of vice. Truth is not only
stranger than fiction, but often saintlier than fiction. For truth is real,
while fiction is bound to be realistic. Curiously enough Godfrey seems to have
been heroic even in those admirable accidents which are generally and perhaps
rightly regarded as the trappings of fiction. Thus he was of heroic stature, a
handsome red-bearded man of great personal strength and daring; and he was
himself the first man over the wall of Jerusalem, like any boy hero in a boy's
adventure story. But he was also, the realist will be surprised to hear, a
perfectly honest man, and a perfectly genuine practicer of the theoretical
magnanimity of knighthood. Everything about him suggests it; from his first
conversion from the imperial to the papal (and popular) cause, to his great
refusal of the kinghood of the city he had taken; "I will not wear a crown
of gold where my Master wore a crown of thorns." He was a just ruler, and
the laws he made were full of the plainest public spirit. But even if we
dismiss all that was written of him by Christian chroniclers because they might
be his friends (which would be a pathetic and exaggerated compliment to the harmonious
unity of Crusaders and of Christians) he would still remain sufficiently
assailed crowned with the words of his enemies. For a Saracen chronicler wrote
of him, with a fine simplicity, that if all truth and honour had otherwise
withered off the earth, there would still remain enough of them so long as Duke
Godfrey was alive.
Allied with Godfrey were Tancred the Italian,
Raymond of Toulouse with the southern French and Robert of Normandy, the
adventurous son of the Conqueror, with the Normans and the English. But it
would be an error, I think, and one tending to make the whole subsequent story
a thing not so much misunderstood as unintelligible, to suppose that the whole
crusading movement had been suddenly and unnaturally stiffened with the highest
chivalric discipline. Unless I am much mistaken, a great mass of that army was
still very much of a mob. It is probable <a priori>, since the great
popular movement was still profoundly popular. It is supported by a thousand
things in the story of the campaign; the extraordinary emotionalism that made
throngs of men weep and wail together, the importance of the demagogue, Peter
the Hermit, in spite of his unmilitary character, and the wide differences
between the designs of the leaders and the actions of the rank and file. It was
a crowd of rude and simple men that cast themselves on the sacred dust at the
first sight of the little mountain town which they had tramped for two thousand
miles to see. Tancred saw it first from the slope by the village of Bethlehem,
which had opened its gates willingly to his hundred Italian knights; for
Bethlehem then as now was an island of Christendom in the sea of Islam.
Meanwhile Godfrey came up the road from Jaffa, and crossing the mountain ridge,
saw also with his living eyes his vision of the world's desire. But the poorest
men about him probably felt the same as he; all ranks knelt together in the
dust, and the whole story is one wave of numberless and nameless men. It was a
mob that had risen like a man for the faith. It was a mob that had truly been
tortured like a man for the faith. It was already transfigured by pain as well
as passion. Those that know war in those deserts through the summer months,
even with modern supplies and appliances and modern maps and calculations, know
that it could only be described as a hell full of heroes. What it must have
been to those little local serfs and peasants from the Northern villages, who
had never dreamed in nightmares of such landscapes or such a sun, who knew not
how men lived at all in such a furnace and could neither guess the alleviations
nor get them, is beyond the imagination of man. They arrived dying with thirst,
dropping with weariness, lamenting the loss of the dead that rotted along their
road; they arrived shrivelled to rags or already raving with fever and they did
what they had come to do.
Above all, it is clear that they had the vices as
well as the virtues of a mob. The shocking massacre in which they indulged in
the sudden relaxation of success is quite obviously a massacre by a mob. It is
all the more profoundly revolutionary because it must have been for the most
part a French mob. It was of the same order as the Massacre of September, and
it is but a part of the same truth that the First Crusade was as revolutionary
as the French Revolution. It was of the same order as the Massacre of St.
Bartholomew, which was also a piece of purely popular fanaticism, directed
against what was also regarded as an anti-national aristocracy. It is
practically self-evident that the Christian commanders were opposed to it, and
tried to stop it. Tancred promised their lives to the Moslems in the mosque,
but the mob clearly disregarded him. Raymond of Toulouse himself saved those in
the Tower of David, and managed to send them safely with their property to
Ascalon. But revolution with all its evil as well as its good was loose and
raging in the streets of the Holy City. And in nothing do we see that spirit of
revolution more clearly than in the sight of all those peasants and serfs and vassals,
in that one wild moment in revolt, not only against the conquered lords of
Islam, but even against the conquering lords of Christendom.
The whole strain of the siege indeed had been one
of high and even horrible excitement. Those who tell us to-day about the
psychology of the crowd will agree that men who have so suffered and so
succeeded are not normal; that their brains are in a dreadful balance which may
turn either way. They entered the city at last in a mood in which they might
all have become monks; and instead they all became murderers. A brilliant
general, who played a decisive part in our own recent Palestinian campaign,
told me with a sort of grim humour that he hardly wondered at the story; for he
himself had entered Jerusalem in a sort of fury of disappointment; "We
went through such a hell to get there, and now it's spoilt for all of us."
Such is the heavy irony that hangs over our human nature, making it enter the
Holy City as if it were the Heavenly City, and more than any earthly city can
be. But the struggle which led to the scaling of Jerusalem in the First Crusade
was something much wilder and more incalculable than anything that can be
conceived in modern war. We can hardly wonder that the crusading crowd saw the
town in front of them as a sort of tower full of demons, and the hills around
them as an enchanted and accursed land. For in one very real sense it really
was so; for all the elements and expedients were alike unknown qualities. All
their enemies' methods were secrets sprung upon them. All their own methods
were new things made out of nothing. They wondered alike what would be done on
the other side and what could be done on their own side; every movement against
them was a stab out of the darkness and every movement they made was a leap in
the dark. First, on the one side, we have Tancred trying to take the whole
fortified city by climbing up a single slender ladder, as if a man tried to
lasso the peak of a mountain. Then we have the flinging from the turrets of a
strange and frightful fiery rain, as if water itself had caught fire. It was
afterwards known as the Greek Fire and was probably petroleum; but to those who
had never seen (or felt) it before it may well have seemed the flaming oil of
witchcraft. Then Godfrey and the wiser of the warriors set about to build
wooden siege-towers and found they had next to no wood to build them. There was
scarcely anything in that rocky waste but the dwarf trees of olive; a poetic
fantasy woven about that war in after ages described them as hindered even in
their wood-cutting by the demons of that weird place. And indeed the fancy had
an essential truth, for the very nature of the land fought against them; and
each of those dwarf trees, hard and hollow and twisted, may well have seemed like
a grinning goblin. It is said that they found timbers by accident in a cavern;
they tore down the beams from ruined houses; at last they got into touch with
some craftsmen from Genoa who went to work more successfully; skinning the
cattle, who had died in heaps, and covering the timbers. They built three high
towers on rollers, and men and beasts dragged them heavily against the high
towers of the city. The catapaults of the city answered them, the cataracts of
devouring fire came down; the wooden towers swayed and tottered, and two of
them suddenly stuck motionless and useless. And as the darkness fell a great
flare must have told them that the third and last was in flames.
All that night Godfrey was toiling to retrieve the
disaster. He took down the whole tower from where it stood and raised it again
on the high ground to the north of the city which is now marked by the pine
tree that grows outside Herod's gate. And all the time he toiled, it was said,
sinister sorcerers sat upon the battlements, working unknown marvels for the
undoing of the labour of man. If the great knight had a touch of such symbolism
on his own side, he might have seen in his own strife with the solid timber
something of the craft that had surrounded the birth of his creed, and the
sacred trade of the carpenter. And indeed the very pattern of all carpentry is
cruciform, and there is something more than an accident in the allegory. The
transverse position of the timber does indeed involve many of those
mathematical that are analogous to moral truths and almost every structural
shape has the shadow of the mystic rood, as the three dimensions have a shadow
of the Trinity. Here is the true mystery of equality; since the longer beam
might lengthen itself to infinity, and never be nearer to the symbolic shape
without the help of the shorter. Here is that war and wedding between two
contrary forces, resisting and supporting each other; the meeting-place of contraries
which we, by a sort of pietistic pun, still call the crux of the question. Here
is our angular and defiant answer to the self-devouring circle of Asia. It may
be improbable, though it is far from impossible (for the age was philosophical
enough) that a man like Godfrey thus extended the mystical to the metaphysical;
but the writer of a real romance about him would be well within his rights in
making him see the symbolism of his own tower, a tower rising above him through
the clouds of night as if taking hold on the heaven or showing its network of
beams black against the daybreak; scaling the skies and open to all the winds,
a ladder and a labyrinth, repeating till it was lost in the twilight the
pattern of the sign of the cross.
When dawn was come all those starving peasants may
well have stood before the high impregnable walls in the broad daylight of
despair. Even their nightmares during the night, of unearthly necromancers
looking down at them from the battlements and with signs and spells paralysing
all their potential toils, may well have been a sort of pessimistic
consolation, anticipating and accounting for failure. The Holy City had become
for them a fortress full of fiends, when Godfrey de Bouillon again set himself
sword in hand upon the wooden tower and gave the order once more to drag it
tottering towards the towers on either side of the pastern gate. So they
crawled again across the fosse full of the slain, dragging their huge house of
timber behind them, and all the blast and din of war broke again about their
heads. A hail of bolts hammered such shields as covered them for a canopy,
stones and rocks fell on them and crushed them like flies in the mire, and from
the engines of the Greek Fire all the torrents of their torment came down on them
like red rivers of hell. For indeed the souls of those peasants must have been
sickened with something of the topsy-turvydom felt by too many peasants of our
own time under the frightful flying batteries of scientific war; a blasphemy of
inverted battle in which hell itself has occupied heaven. Something of the
vapours vomited by such cruel chemistry may have mingled with the dust of
battle, and darkened such light as showed where shattering rocks were rending a
roof of shields, to men bowed and blinded as they are by such labour of
dragging and such a hailstorm of death. They may have heard through all the
racket of nameless noises the high minaret cries of Moslem triumph rising
shriller like a wind in shrill pipes, and known little else of what was happening
above or beyond them. It was most likely that they laboured and strove in that
lower darkness, not knowing that high over their heads, and up above the cloud
of battle, the tower of timber and the tower of stone had touched and met in
mid-heaven; and great Godfrey, alone and alive had leapt upon the wall of
Jerusalem.
http://chesterton.org/gkc/historian/crusade.html