Page:The reign of William Rufus and the accession of Henry the First.djvu/180

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Death of Robert. of making their way down the steep and rocky height.[1] But Robert was not to be kept back; he still saw what was doing through the whole of the peninsular lowlands. He could not bear to let the favourable moment pass by. Without his cuirass, attended only by a single knight, Osbern of Orgères, he went down to attack the enemy on the shores of the estuary.[2] When the Britons saw him alone, with only a single companion and no defence but his shield, they gathered round him to overwhelm him with darts and arrows, none daring to attack him with the sword.[3] He still stood, wounded, with his shield bristling with missiles, but still defying his enemies. At last his wounds bore him down. The weight of the encumbered shield was too much for him; he sank on his knees[4], and commended his soul to God and His Mother. Then the enemy rushed on him with one accord; they smote off his head in sight of his followers, and fixed it as a trophy on the mast of one of the ships.[5] Men saw all this from the hilltop with grief and rage; but they could give no help.to play the part of Osbern of Orgères.]

  1. Ord. Vit. 670 C. "Prætendunt suorum paucitatem, et per ardui montis præcipitium descendendi difficultatem."
  2. Ib. "Nimis doluit, impatiensque moræ per difficilem descensum sine lorica cum uno milite nomine Osberno de Orgeriis, ad hostes descendit." I cannot identify this Osbern, unless he be "Osbernus filius Tezonis," who in Domesday (267 b, 268 b) holds a good deal of land in Cheshire under Earl Hugh, but none seemingly under Robert himself. For Orgères see Stapleton, ii. lxxxv.
  3. Ib. 670 D. "Quem cum viderent solo clypeo protectum et uno tantum milite stipatum, omnes pariter in illum missilia destinant, et scutum ejus jaculis intolerabiliter onerant, et egregium militem letaliter vulnerant. Nullus tamen, quamdiu stetit et parmam tenuit, ad eum comminus accedere, vel eum ense impetere ausus fuit." Cf. the account of the death of Siccius in Dion. Hal. xi. 26. He has an [Greek: hypaspistês
  4. Ib. "Bellicosus heros spiculis confossus genua flexit, et scutum missilibus nimis onustum viribus effœtus dimisit."
  5. Ib. "In conspectu suorum caput ejus abscindunt ac super malum navis pro signo victoriæ suspendunt."