The lion-hearted King Richard, who ruled England during the latter part of the twelfth century. Richard organized a crusade to the Holy Land to dispossess the Turks of the sepulcher. But the expedition was unsuccessful and Richard himself was captured and confined to a foreign prison. During his absence from home, traitors took over the government, and when Richard finally effected his escape and returned to England, it was necessary for reasons of his own personal security that he come disguised in plain, unmarked armor. When back in England, he quietly gathered around him a few of his faithful followers with the idea of putting England back in the hands of its rightful rulers. One of the first things he did after this little group had been assembled was to attack the castle at Torquilstone. Torquilstone was the stronghold of the enemy in which Ivanhoe, the faithful friend and follower of the King, was wounded and imprisoned.
When Ivanhoe heard the noises of assault beginning to take place outside
the castle, and since he was unable to raise himself from his couch because of wounds and loss of blood, he asked his nurse, Rebecca, to stand by the window and tell him what was taking place. The first thing he wanted to know was who the leader was. And that is the most important thing that anyone needs to know about any undertaking. So he asked Rebecca to describe for him the insignia or other marks of identification on the armor of the leader and then he would know who he was and what their chances for rescue were
But Rebecca reported back that the leader fought in plain, unmarked armor and that he had no insignia or marks of identification. Ivanhoe said, "Then tell me how he fights and I'll know who he is." That is, everyone has a set of traits about as characteristic as his fingerprints, and the best key to his identity is what he does. So Rebecca tried to describe this great knight clad in plain black armor as he swung his ponderous ax with thunderous blows assaulting this castle stronghold almost single- handed. And here are some of the things that she said about him. "Stones and beams are hurled down from the castle walls upon him, but he regards them no more than if they were thistledown or feathers." Again, she said, "He fights as if there were twenty men's strength in his single arm." Again, she said, "It is fearful yet magnificent to behold how the arm and heart of one man can triumph over hundreds."
I suppose that Richard's arm wasn't much stronger than any other warrior's arm, but that is not where strength comes from. Rebecca had said, "The arm and heart of one man." Richard was fighting with his heart; he was fighting for England. And when one begins to put his heart in what he is doing, then things really begin to happen.
Ivanhoe did not know who this man was. He knew that Richard fought like this, but no one fought like the King, and he believed Richard to he a prisoner in an Austrian dungeon. And then he paid this great tribute to an unknown leader. He didn't know what this man's name was, but he knew the traits That characterized greatness, and he said to Rebecca, I swear by the honor of my house, I would endure ten years of captivity to fight a single day by that great man's side in such a quarrel as this." Captivity would have been the greatest punishment to which Ivanhoe could have been subjected, and yet he said, "I would gladly languish ten years in a dungeon cell for the privilege of fighting by the side and under the banner of a great man in a great cause."
Now we have a great cause, we have the greatest cause ever known in the world. And the only question that remains unanswered is, "How will we fight?" And our own leader has said to us, "O ye that embark in the service of God, see that ye serve him with all your heart, might, mind and strength, that ye may stand blameless before God at the last day." (D&C 4:2.)