<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XVII. THE SPANIARDS ON THE SEA </h2>
<p>Day had not yet dawned when Nigel was in the chamber of Chandos preparing
him for his departure and listening to the last cheery words of advice and
direction from his noble master. That same morning, before the sun was
half-way up the heaven, the King's great nef Philippa, bearing within it
the most of those present at his banquet the night before, set its huge
sail, adorned with the lions and the lilies, and turned its brazen beak
for England. Behind it went five smaller cogs crammed with squires,
archers and men-at-arms.</p>
<p>Nigel and his companions lined the ramparts of the castle and waved their
caps as the bluff, burly vessels, with drums beating and trumpets
clanging, a hundred knightly pennons streaming from their decks and the
red cross of England over all, rolled slowly out to the open sea. Then
when they had watched them until they were hull down they turned, with
hearts heavy at being left behind, to make ready for their own more
distant venture.</p>
<p>It took them four days of hard work ere their preparations were complete,
for many were the needs of a small force sailing to a strange country.
Three ships had been left to them, the cog Thomas of Romney, the Grace
Dieu of Hythe, and the Basilisk of Southampton, into each of which one
hundred men were stowed, besides the thirty seamen who formed the crew. In
the hold were forty horses, amongst them Pommers, much wearied by his long
idleness, and homesick for the slopes of Surrey where his great limbs
might find the work he craved. Then the food and the water, the bow-staves
and the sheaves of arrows, the horseshoes, the nails, the hammers, the
knives, the axes, the ropes, the vats of hay, the green fodder and a score
of other things were packed aboard. Always by the side of the ships stood
the stern young knight Sir Robert, checking, testing, watching and
controlling, saying little, for he was a man of few words, but with his
eyes, his hands, and if need be his heavy dog-whip, wherever they were
wanted.</p>
<p>The seamen of the Basilisk, being from a free port, had the old feud
against the men of the Cinque Ports, who were looked upon by the other
mariners of England as being unduly favored by the King. A ship of the
West Country could scarce meet with one from the Narrow Seas without blood
flowing. Hence sprang sudden broils on the quay side, when with yell and
blow the Thomases and Grace Dieus, Saint Leonard on their lips and murder
in their hearts, would fall upon the Basilisks. Then amid the whirl of
cudgels and the clash of knives would spring the tiger figure of the young
leader, lashing mercilessly to right and left like a tamer among his
wolves, until he had beaten them howling back to their work. Upon the
morning of the fourth day all was ready, and the ropes being cast off the
three little ships were warped down the harbor by their own pinnaces until
they were swallowed up in the swirling folds of a Channel mist.</p>
<p>Though small in numbers, it was no mean force which Edward had dispatched
to succor the hard-pressed English garrisons in Brittany. There was scarce
a man among them who was not an old soldier, and their leaders were men of
note in council and in war. Knolles flew his flag of the black raven
aboard the Basilisk. With him were Nigel and his own Squire John Hawthorn.
Of his hundred men, forty were Yorkshire Dalesmen and forty were men of
Lincoln, all noted archers, with old Wat of Carlisle, a grizzled veteran
of border warfare, to lead them.</p>
<p>Already Aylward by his skill and strength had won his way to an
under-officership amongst them, and shared with Long Ned Widdington, a
huge North Countryman, the reputation of coming next to famous Wat
Carlisle in all that makes an archer. The men-at-arms too were
war-hardened soldiers, with Black Simon of Norwich, the same who had
sailed from Winchelsea, to lead them. With his heart filled with hatred
for the French who had slain all who were dear to him, he followed like a
bloodhound over land and sea to any spot where he might glut his
vengeance. Such also were the men who sailed in the other ships, Cheshire
men from the Welsh borders in the cog Thomas, and Cumberland men, used to
Scottish warfare, in the Grace Dieu.</p>
<p>Sir James Astley hung his shield of cinquefoil ermine over the quarter of
the Thomas. Lord Thomas Percy, a cadet of Alnwick, famous already for the
high spirit of that house which for ages was the bar upon the landward
gate of England, showed his blue lion rampant as leader of the Grace Dieu.
Such was the goodly company Saint-Malo bound, who warped from Calais
Harbor to plunge into the thick reek of a Channel mist.</p>
<p>A slight breeze blew from the eastward, and the highended, round-bodied
craft rolled slowly down the Channel. The mist rose a little at times, so
that they had sight of each other dipping and rising upon a sleek, oily
sea, but again it would sink down, settling over the top, shrouding the
great yard, and finally frothing over the deck until even the water
alongside had vanished from their view and they were afloat on a little
raft in an ocean of vapor. A thin cold rain was falling, and the archers
were crowded under the shelter of the overhanging poop and forecastle,
where some spent the hours at dice, some in sleep, and many in trimming
their arrows or polishing their weapons.</p>
<p>At the farther end, seated on a barrel as a throne of honor, with trays
and boxes of feathers around him, was Bartholomew the bowyer and Fletcher,
a fat, bald-headed man, whose task it was to see that every man's tackle
was as it should be, and who had the privilege of selling such extras as
they might need. A group of archers with their staves and quivers filed
before him with complaints or requests, while half a dozen of the seniors
gathered at his back and listened with grinning faces to his comments and
rebukes.</p>
<p>"Canst not string it?" he was saying to a young bowman. "Then surely the
string is overshort or the stave overlong. It could not by chance be the
fault of thy own baby arms more fit to draw on thy hosen than to dress a
warbow. Thou lazy lurdan, thus is it strung!" He seized the stave by the
center in his right hand, leaned the end on the inside of his right foot,
and then, pulling the upper nock down with the left hand, slid the eye of
the string easily into place. "Now I pray thee to unstring it again,"
handing it to the bowman.</p>
<p>The youth with an effort did so, but he was too slow in disengaging his
fingers, and the string sliding down with a snap from the upper nock
caught and pinched them sorely against the stave. A roar of laughter, like
the clap of a wave, swept down the deck as the luckless bowman danced and
wrung his hand.</p>
<p>"Serve thee well right, thou redeless fool!" growled the old bowyer. "So
fine a bow is wasted in such hands. How now, Samkin? I can teach you
little of your trade, I trow. Here is a bow dressed as it should be; but
it would, as you say, be the better for a white band to mark the true
nocking point in the center of this red wrapping of silk. Leave it and I
will tend to it anon. And you, Wat? A fresh head on yonder stele? Lord,
that a man should carry four trades under one hat, and be bowyer,
fletcher, stringer and headmaker! Four men's work for old Bartholomew and
one man's pay!"</p>
<p>"Nay, say no more about that," growled an old wizened bowman, with a
brown-parchment skin and little beady eyes. "It is better in these days to
mend a bow than to bend one. You who never looked a Frenchman in the face
are pricked off for ninepence a day, and I, who have fought five stricken
fields, can earn but fourpence."</p>
<p>"It is in my mind, John of Tuxford, that you have looked in the face more
pots of mead than Frenchmen," said the old bowyer. "I am swinking from
dawn to night, while you are guzzling in an alestake. How now, youngster?
Overbowed? Put your bow in the tiller. It draws at sixty pounds—not
a pennyweight too much for a man of your inches. Lay more body to it, lad,
and it will come to you. If your bow be not stiff, how can you hope for a
twenty-score flight. Feathers? Aye, plenty and of the best. Here, peacock
at a groat each. Surely a dandy archer like you, Tom Beverley, with gold
earrings in your ears, would have no feathering but peacocks?"</p>
<p>"So the shaft fly straight, I care not of the feather," said the bowman, a
tall young Yorkshireman, counting out pennies on the palm of his horny
hand.</p>
<p>"Gray goose-feathers are but a farthing. These on the left are a
halfpenny, for they are of the wild goose, and the second feather of a
fenny goose is worth more than the pinion of a tame one. These in the
brass tray are dropped feathers, and a dropped feather is better than a
plucked one. Buy a score of these, lad, and cut them saddle-backed or
swine-backed, the one for a dead shaft and the other for a smooth flyer,
and no man in the company will swing a better-fletched quiver over his
shoulder."</p>
<p>It chanced that the opinion of the bowyer on this and other points
differed from that of Long Ned of Widdington, a surly straw-bearded
Yorkshireman, who had listened with a sneering face to his counsel. Now he
broke in suddenly upon the bowyer's talk. "You would do better to sell
bows than to try to teach others how to use them," said he; "for indeed,
Bartholomew, that head of thine has no more sense within it than it has
hairs without. If you had drawn string for as many months as I have years
you would know that a straight-cut feather flies smoother than a
swine-backed, and pity it is that these young bowmen have none to teach
them better!"</p>
<p>This attack upon his professional knowledge touched the old bowyer on the
raw. His fat face became suffused with blood and his eyes glared with fury
as he turned upon the archer. "You seven-foot barrel of lies!" he cried.
"All-hallows be my aid, and I will teach you to open your slabbing mouth
against me! Pluck forth your sword and stand out on yonder deck, that we
may see who is the man of us twain. May I never twirl a shaft over my
thumb nail if I do not put Bartholomew's mark upon your thick head!"</p>
<p>A score of rough voices joined at once in the quarrel, some upholding the
bowyer and others taking the part of the North Countryman. A red-headed
Dalesman snatched up a sword, but was felled by a blow from the fist of
his neighbor. Instantly, with a buzz like a swarm of angry hornets, the
bowmen were out on the deck; but ere a blow was struck Knolles was amongst
them with granite face and eyes of fire.</p>
<p>"Stand apart, I say! I will warrant you enough fighting to cool your blood
ere you see England once more. Loring, Hawthorn, cut any man down who
raises his hand. Have you aught to say, you fox-haired rascal?" He thrust
his face within two inches of that of the red man who had first seized his
sword. The fellow shrank back, cowed, from his fierce eyes. "Now stint
your noise, all of you, and stretch your long ears. Trumpeter, blow once
more!"</p>
<p>A bugle call had been sounded every quarter of an hour so as to keep in
touch with the other two vessels who were invisible in the fog. Now the
high clear note rang out once more, the call of a fierce sea-creature to
its mates, but no answer came back from the thick wall which pent them in.
Again and again they called, and again and again with bated breath they
waited for an answer.</p>
<p>"Where is the Shipman?" asked Knolles. "What is your name, fellow? Do you
dare call yourself master-mariner?"</p>
<p>"My name is Nat Dennis, fair sir," said the gray-bearded old seaman. "It
is thirty years since first I showed my cartel and blew trumpet for a crew
at the water-gate of Southampton. If any man may call himself
master-mariner, it is surely I."</p>
<p>"Where are our two ships?"</p>
<p>"Nay, sir, who can say in this fog?"</p>
<p>"Fellow, it was your place to hold them together."</p>
<p>"I have but the eyes God gave me, fair sir, and they cannot see through a
cloud."</p>
<p>"Had it been fair, I, who am a soldier, could have kept them in company.
Since it was foul, we looked to you, who are called a mariner, to do so.
You have not done it. You have lost two of my ships ere the venture is
begun."</p>
<p>"Nay, fair sir, I pray you to consider—"</p>
<p>"Enough words!" said Knolles sternly. "Words will not give me back my two
hundred men. Unless I find them before I come to Saint-Malo, I swear by
Saint Wilfrid of Ripon that it will be an evil day for you! Enough! Go
forth and do what you may!"</p>
<p>For five hours with a light breeze behind them they lurched through the
heavy fog, the cold rain still matting their beards and shining on their
faces. Sometimes they could see a circle of tossing water for a bowshot or
so in each direction, and then the wreaths would crawl in upon them once
more and bank them thickly round. They had long ceased to blow the trumpet
for their missing comrades, but had hopes when clear weather came to find
them still in sight. By the shipman's reckoning they were now about midway
between the two shores.</p>
<p>Nigel was leaning against the bulwarks, his thoughts away in the dingle at
Cosford and out on the heather-clad slopes of Hindhead, when something
struck his ear. It was a thin clear clang of metal, pealing out high above
the dull murmur of the sea, the creak of the boom and the flap of the
sail. He listened, and again it was borne to his ear.</p>
<p>"Hark, my lord!" said he to Sir Robert. "Is there not a sound in the fog?"</p>
<p>They both listened together with sidelong heads. Then it rang clearly
forth once more, but this time in another direction. It had been on the
bow; now it was on the quarter. Again it sounded, and again. Now it had
moved to the other bow; now back to the quarter again; now it was near;
and now so far that it was but a faint tinkle on the ear. By this time
every man on board, seamen, archers and men-at-arms, were crowding the
sides of the vessel. All round them there were noises in the darkness, and
yet the wall of fog lay wet against their very faces. And the noises were
such as were strange to their ears, always the same high musical clashing.</p>
<p>The old shipman shook his head and crossed himself.</p>
<p>"In thirty years upon the waters I have never heard the like," said he.
"The Devil is ever loose in a fog. Well is he named the Prince of
Darkness."</p>
<p>A wave of panic passed over the vessel, and these rough and hardy men who
feared no mortal foe shook with terror at the shadows of their own minds.
They stared into the cloud with blanched faces and fixed eyes, as though
each instant some fearsome shape might break in upon them. And as they
stared there came a gust of wind. For a moment the fog-bank rose and a
circle of ocean lay before them.</p>
<p>It was covered with vessels. On all sides they lay thick upon its surface.
They were huge caracks, high-ended and portly, with red sides and bulwarks
carved and crusted with gold. Each had one great sail set and was driving
down channel on the same course at the Basilisk. Their decks were thick
with men, and from their high poops came the weird clashing which filled
the air. For one moment they lay there, this wondrous fleet, surging
slowly forward, framed in gray vapor. The next the clouds closed in and
they had vanished from view. There was a long hush, and then a buzz of
excited voices.</p>
<p>"The Spaniards!" cried a dozen bowmen and sailors.</p>
<p>"I should have known it," said the shipman. "I call to mind on the Biscay
Coast how they would clash their cymbals after the fashion of the heathen
Moor with whom they fight; but what would you have me do, fair sir? If the
fog rises we are all dead men."</p>
<p>"There were thirty ships at the least," said Knolles, with a moody brow.
"If we have seen them I trow that they have also seen us. They will lay us
aboard."</p>
<p>"Nay, fair sir, it is in my mind that our ship is lighter and faster than
theirs. If the fog hold another hour we should be through them."</p>
<p>"Stand to your arms!" yelled Knolles. "Stand to your arms—! They are
on us!"</p>
<p>The Basilisk had indeed been spied from the Spanish Admiral's ship before
the fog closed down. With so light a breeze, and such a fog, he could not
hope to find her under sail. But by an evil chance not a bowshot from the
great Spanish carack was a low galley, thin and swift, with oars which
could speed her against wind or tide. She also had seen the Basilisk and
it was to her that the Spanish leader shouted his orders. For a few
minutes she hunted through the fog, and then sprang out of it like a lean
and stealthy beast upon its prey. It was the sight of the long dark shadow
gliding after them which had brought that wild shout of alarm from the
lips of the English knight. In another instant the starboard oars of the
galley had been shipped, the sides of the two vessels grated together, and
a stream of swarthy, red-capped Spaniards were swarming up the sides of
the Basilisk and dropped with yells of triumph upon her deck.</p>
<p>For a moment it seemed as if the vessel was captured without a blow being
struck, for the men of the English ship had run wildly in all directions
to look for their arms. Scores of archers might be seen under the shadow
of the forecastle and the poop bending their bowstaves to string them with
the cords from their waterproof cases. Others were scrambling over
saddles, barrels and cases in wild search of their quivers. Each as he
came upon his arrows pulled out a few to lend to his less fortunate
comrades. In mad haste the men-at-arms also were feeling and grasping in
the dark corners, picking up steel caps which would not fit them, hurling
them down on the deck, and snatching eagerly at any swords or spears that
came their way.</p>
<p>The center of the ship was held by the Spaniards; and having slain all who
stood before them, they were pressing up to either end before they were
made to understand that it was no fat sheep but a most fierce old wolf
which they had taken by the ears.</p>
<p>If the lesson was late, it was the more thorough. Attacked on both sides
and hopelessly outnumbered, the Spaniards, who had never doubted that this
little craft was a merchant-ship, were cut off to the last man. It was no
fight, but a butchery. In vain the survivors ran screaming prayers to the
saints and threw themselves down into the galley alongside. It also had
been riddled with arrows from the poop of the Basilisk, and both the crew
on the deck and the galley-slaves in the outriggers at either side lay
dead in rows under the overwhelming shower from above. From stem to rudder
every foot of her was furred with arrows. It was but a floating coffin
piled with dead and dying men, which wallowed in the waves behind them as
the Basilisk lurched onward and left her in the fog.</p>
<p>In their first rush on to the Basilisk, the Spaniards had seized six of
the crew and four unarmed archers. Their throats had been cut and their
bodies tossed overboard. Now the Spaniards who littered the deck, wounded
and dead, were thrust over the side in the same fashion. One ran down into
the hold and had to be hunted and killed squealing under the blows like a
rat in the darkness. Within half an hour no sign was left of this grim
meeting in the fog save for the crimson splashes upon bulwarks and deck.
The archers, flushed and merry, were unstringing their bows once more, for
in spite of the water glue the damp air took the strength from the cords.
Some were hunting about for arrows which might have stuck inboard, and
some tying up small injuries received in the scuffle. But an anxious
shadow still lingered upon the face of Sir Robert, and he peered fixedly
about him through the fog.</p>
<p>"Go among the archers, Hawthorne," said he to his Squire. "Charge them on
their lives to make no sound! You also, Loring. Go to the afterguard and
say the same to them. We are lost if one of these great ships should spy
us."</p>
<p>For an hour with bated breath they stole through the fleet, still hearing
the cymbals clashing all round them, for in this way the Spaniards held
themselves together. Once the wild music came from above their very prow,
and so warned them to change their course. Once also a huge vessel loomed
for an instant upon their quarter, but they turned two points away from
her, and she blurred and vanished. Soon the cymbals were but a distant
tinkling, and at last they died gradually away.</p>
<p>"It is none too soon," said the old shipman, pointing to a yellowish tint
in the haze above them. "See yonder! It is the sun which wins through. It
will be here anon. Ah! said I not so?"</p>
<p>A sickly sun, no larger and far dimmer than the moon, had indeed shown its
face, with cloud-wreaths smoking across it. As they looked up it waxed
larger and brighter before their eyes—a yellow halo spread round it,
one ray broke through, and then a funnel of golden light poured down upon
them, widening swiftly at the base. A minute later they were sailing on a
clear blue sea with an azure cloud-flecked sky above their heads, and such
a scene beneath it as each of them would carry in his memory while memory
remained.</p>
<p>They were in mid-channel. The white and green coasts of Picardy and of
Kent lay clear upon either side of them. The wide channel stretched in
front, deepening from the light blue beneath their prow to purple on the
far sky-line. Behind them was that thick bank of cloud from which they had
just burst. It lay like a gray wall from east to west, and through it were
breaking the high shadowy forms of the ships of Spain. Four of them had
already emerged, their red bodies, gilded sides and painted sails shining
gloriously in the evening sun. Every instant a fresh golden spot grew out
of the fog, which blazed like a star for an instant, and then surged
forward to show itself as the brazen beak of the great red vessel which
bore it. Looking back, the whole bank of cloud was broken by the
widespread line of noble ships which were bursting through it. The
Basilisk lay a mile or more in front of them and two miles clear of their
wing. Five miles farther off, in the direction of the French coast, two
other small ships were running down Channel. A cry of joy from Robert
Knolles and a hearty prayer of gratitude to the saints from the old
shipman hailed them as their missing comrades, the cog Thomas and the
Grace Dieu.</p>
<p>But fair as was the view of their lost friends, and wondrous the
appearance of the Spanish ships, it was not on those that the eyes of the
men of the Basilisk were chiefly bent. A greater sight lay before them—a
sight which brought them clustering to the forecastle with eager eyes and
pointing fingers. The English fleet was coming forth from the Winchelsea
Coast. Already before the fog lifted a fast galleass had brought the news
down Channel that the Spanish were on the sea, and the King's fleet was
under way. Now their long array of sails, gay with the coats and colors of
the towns which had furnished them, lay bright against the Kentish coast
from Dungeness Point to Rye. Nine and twenty ships were there from
Southampton, Shoreham, Winchelsea, Hastings, Rye, Hythe, Romney,
Folkestone, Deal, Dover and Sandwich. With their great sails slued round
to catch the wind they ran out, whilst the Spanish, like the gallant foes
that they have ever been, turned their heads landward to meet them. With
flaunting banners and painted sails, blaring trumpets and clashing
cymbals, the two glittering fleets, dipping and rising on the long Channel
swell, drew slowly together.</p>
<p>King Edward had been lying all day in his great ship the Philippa, a mile
out from the Camber Sands, waiting for the coming of the Spaniards. Above
the huge sail which bore the royal arms flew the red cross of England.
Along the bulwarks were shown the shields of forty knights, the flower of
English chivalry, and as many pennons floated from the deck. The high ends
of the ship glittered with the weapons of the men-at-arms, and the waist
was crammed with the archers. From time to time a crash of nakers and
blare of trumpets burst from the royal ship, and was answered by her great
neighbors, the Lion on which the Black Prince flew his flag, the
Christopher with the Earl of Suffolk, the Salle du Roi of Robert of Namur,
and the Grace Marie of Sir Thomas Holland. Farther off lay the White Swan,
bearing the arms of Mowbray, the Palmer of Deal, flying the Black Head of
Audley, and the Kentish man under the Lord Beauchamp. The rest lay,
anchored but ready, at the mouth of Winchelsea Creek.</p>
<p>The King sat upon a keg in the fore part of his ship, with little John of
Richmond, who was no more than a schoolboy, perched upon his knee. Edward
was clad in the black velvet jacket which was his favorite garb, and wore
a small brown-beaver hat with a white plume at the side. A rich cloak of
fur turned up with miniver drooped from his shoulders. Behind him were a
score of his knights, brilliant in silks and sarcenets, some seated on an
upturned boat and some swinging their legs from the bulwark.</p>
<p>In front stood John Chandos in a party-colored jupon, one foot raised upon
the anchor-stock, picking at the strings of his guitar and singing a song
which he had learned at Marienburg when last he helped the Teutonic
knights against the heathen. The King, his knights, and even the archers
in the waist below them, laughed at the merry lilt and joined lustily in
the chorus, while the men of the neighboring ships leaned over the side to
hearken to the deep chant rolling over the waters.</p>
<p>But there came a sudden interruption to the song. A sharp, harsh shout
came down from the lookout stationed in the circular top at the end of the
mast. "I spy a sail—two sails!" he cried.</p>
<p>John Bunce the King's shipman shaded his eyes and stared at the long
fog-bank which shrouded the northern channel. Chandos, with his fingers
over the strings of his guitar, the King, the knights, all gazed in the
same direction. Two small dark shapes had burst forth, and then after some
minutes a third.</p>
<p>"Surely they are the Spaniards?" said the King.</p>
<p>"Nay, sire," the seaman answered, "the Spaniards are greater ships and are
painted red. I know not what these may be."</p>
<p>"But I could hazard a guess!" cried Chandos. "Surely they are the three
ships with my own men on their way to Brittany."</p>
<p>"You have hit it, John," said the King. "But look, I pray you! What in the
name of the Virgin is that?"</p>
<p>Four brilliant stars of flashing light had shone out from different points
of the cloud-bank. The next instant as many tall ships had swooped forth
into the sunshine. A fierce shout rang from the King's ship, and was taken
up all down the line, until the whole coast from Dungeness to Winchelsea
echoed the warlike greeting. The King sprang up with a joyous face.</p>
<p>"The game is afoot, my friends!" said he. "Dress, John! Dress, Walter!
Quick all of you! Squires, bring the harness! Let each tend to himself,
for the time is short."</p>
<p>A strange sight it was to see these forty nobles tearing off their clothes
and littering the deck with velvets and satins, whilst the squire of each,
as busy as an ostler before a race, stooped and pulled and strained and
riveted, fastening the bassinets, the legpieces, the front and the back
plates, until the silken courtier had become the man of steel. When their
work was finished, there stood a stern group of warriors where the light
dandies had sung and jested round Sir John's guitar. Below in orderly
silence the archers were mustering under their officers and taking their
allotted stations. A dozen had swarmed up to their hazardous post in the
little tower in the tops.</p>
<p>"Bring wine, Nicholas!" cried the King. "Gentlemen, ere you close your
visors I pray you to take a last rouse with me. You will be dry enough, I
promise you, before your lips are free once more. To what shall we drink,
John?"</p>
<p>"To the men of Spain," said Chandos, his sharp face peering like a gaunt
bird through the gap in his helmet. "May their hearts be stout and their
spirits high this day!"</p>
<p>"Well said, John!" cried the King, and the knights laughed joyously as
they drank. "Now, fair sirs, let each to his post! I am warden here on the
forecastle. Do you, John, take charge of the afterguard. Walter, James,
William, Fitzallan, Goldesborough, Reginald—you will stay with me!
John, you may pick whom you will and the others will bide with the
archers. Now bear straight at the center, master-shipman. Ere yonder sun
sets we will bring a red ship back as a gift to our ladies, or never look
upon a lady's face again."</p>
<p>The art of sailing into a wind had not yet been invented, nor was there
any fore-and-aft canvas, save for small headsails with which a vessel
could be turned. Hence the English fleet had to take a long slant down
channel to meet their enemies; but as the Spaniards coming before the wind
were equally anxious to engage there was the less delay. With stately pomp
and dignity, the two great fleets approached.</p>
<p>It chanced that one fine carack had outstripped its consorts and came
sweeping along, all red and gold, with a fringe of twinkling steel, a good
half-mile before the fleet. Edward looked at her with a kindling eye, for
indeed she was a noble sight with the blue water creaming under her gilded
prow.</p>
<p>"This is a most worthy and debonair vessel, Master Bunce," said he to the
shipman beside him. "I would fain have a tilt with her. I pray you to hold
us straight that we may bear her down."</p>
<p>"If I hold her straight, then one or other must sink, and it may be both,"
the seaman answered.</p>
<p>"I doubt not that with the help of our Lady we shall do our part," said
the King. "Hold her straight, master-shipman, as I have told you."</p>
<p>Now the two vessels were within arrow flight, and the bolts from the
crossbowmen pattered upon the English ship. These short thick devil's
darts were everywhere humming like great wasps through the air, crashing
against the bulwarks, beating upon the deck, ringing loudly on the armor
of the knights, or with a soft muffled thud sinking to the socket in a
victim.</p>
<p>The bowmen along either side of the Philippa had stood motionless waiting
for their orders, but now there was a sharp shout from their leader, and
every string twanged together. The air was full of their harping, together
with the swish of the arrows, the long-drawn keening of the bowmen and the
short deep bark of the under-officers. "Steady, steady! Loose steady!
Shoot wholly together! Twelve score paces! Ten score! Now eight! Shoot
wholly together!" Their gruff shouts broke through the high shrill cry
like the deep roar of a wave through the howl of the wind.</p>
<p>As the two great ships hurtled together the Spaniard turned away a few
points so that the blow should be a glancing one. None the less it was
terrific. A dozen men in the tops of the carack were balancing a huge
stone with the intention of dropping it over on the English deck. With a
scream of horror they saw the mast cracking beneath them. Over it went,
slowly at first, then faster, until with a crash it came down on its side,
sending them flying like stones from a sling far out into the sea. A swath
of crushed bodies lay across the deck where the mast had fallen. But the
English ship had not escaped unscathed. Her mast held, it is true, but the
mighty shock not only stretched every man flat upon the deck, but had
shaken a score of those who lined her sides into the sea. One bowman was
hurled from the top, and his body fell with a dreadful crash at the very
side of the prostrate King upon the forecastle. Many were thrown down with
broken arms and legs from the high castles at either end into the waist of
the ship. Worst of all, the seams had been opened by the crash and the
water was gushing in at a dozen places.</p>
<p>But these were men of experience and of discipline, men who had already
fought together by sea and by land, so that each knew his place and his
duty. Those who could staggered to their feet and helped up a score or
more of knights who were rolling and clashing in the scuppers unable to
rise for the weight of their armor. The bowmen formed up as before. The
seamen ran to the gaping seams with oakum and with tar. In ten minutes
order had been restored and the Philippa, though shaken and weakened, was
ready for battle once more. The King was glaring round him like a wounded
boar.</p>
<p>"Grapple my ship with that," he cried, pointing to the crippled Spaniard,
"for I would have possession of her!"</p>
<p>But already the breeze had carried them past it, and a dozen Spanish ships
were bearing down full upon them.</p>
<p>"We cannot win back to her, lest we show our flank to these others," said
the shipman.</p>
<p>"Let her go her way!" cried the knights. "You shall have better than her."</p>
<p>"By Saint George! you speak the truth," said the King, "for she is ours
when we have time to take her. These also seem very worthy ships which are
drawing up to us, and I pray you, master-shipman, that you will have a
tilt with the nearest."</p>
<p>A great carack was within a bowshot of them and crossing their bows. Bunce
looked up at his mast, and he saw that already it was shaken and drooping.
Another blow and it would be over the side and his ship a helpless log
upon the water. He jammed his helm round therefore, and ran his ship
alongside the Spaniard, throwing out his hooks and iron chains as he did
so.</p>
<p>They, no less eager, grappled the Philippa both fore and aft, and the two
vessels, linked tightly together, surged slowly over the long blue
rollers. Over their bulwarks hung a cloud of men locked together in a
desperate struggle, sometimes surging forward on to the deck of the
Spaniard, sometimes recoiling back on to the King's ship, reeling this way
and that, with the swords flickering like silver flames above them, while
the long-drawn cry of rage and agony swelled up like a wolf's howl to the
calm blue heaven above them.</p>
<p>But now ship after ship of the English had come up, each throwing its iron
over the nearest Spaniard and striving to board her high red sides. Twenty
ships were drifting in furious single combat after the manner of the
Philippa, until the whole surface of the sea was covered with a succession
of these desperate duels. The dismasted carack, which the King's ship had
left behind it, had been carried by the Earl of Suffolk's Christopher, and
the water was dotted with the heads of her crew. An English ship had been
sunk by a huge stone discharged from an engine, and her men also were
struggling in the waves, none having leisure to lend them a hand. A second
English ship was caught between two of the Spanish vessels and overwhelmed
by a rush of boarders so that not a man of her was left alive. On the
other hand, Mowbray and Audley had each taken the caracks which were
opposed to them, and the battle in the center, after swaying this way and
that, was turning now in favor of the Islanders.</p>
<p>The Black Prince, with the Lion, the Grace Marie and four other ships had
swept round to turn the Spanish flank; but the movement was seen, and the
Spaniards had ten ships with which to meet it, one of them their great
carack the St. Iago di Compostella. To this ship the Prince had attached
his little cog and strove desperately to board her, but her side was so
high and the defense so desperate that his men could never get beyond her
bulwarks but were hurled down again and again with a clang and clash to
the deck beneath. Her side bristled with crossbowmen, who shot straight
down on to the packed waist of the Lion, so that the dead lay there in
heaps. But the most dangerous of all was a swarthy black-bearded giant in
the tops, who crouched so that none could see him, but rising every now
and then with a huge lump of iron between his hands, hurled it down with
such force that nothing would stop it. Again and again these ponderous
bolts crashed through the deck and hurtled down into the bottom of the
ship, starting the planks and shattering all that came in their way.</p>
<p>The Prince, clad in that dark armor which gave him his name, was directing
the attack from the poop when the shipman rushed wildly up to him with
fear on his face.</p>
<p>"Sire!" he cried. "The ship may not stand against these blows. A few more
will sink her! Already the water floods inboard."</p>
<p>The Prince looked up, and as he did so the shaggy beard showed once more
and two brawny arms swept downward. A great slug, whizzing down, beat a
gaping hole in the deck, and fell rending and riving into the hold below.
The master-mariner tore his grizzled hair.</p>
<p>"Another leak!" he cried. "I pray to Saint Leonard to bear us up this day!
Twenty of my shipmen are bailing with buckets, but the water rises on them
fast. The vessel may not float another hour."</p>
<p>The Prince had snatched a crossbow from one of his attendants and leveled
it at the Spaniard's tops. At the very instant when the seaman stood erect
with a fresh bar in his hands, the bolt took him full in the face, and his
body fell forward over the parapet, hanging there head downward. A howl of
exultation burst from the English at the sight, answered by a wild roar of
anger from the Spaniards. A seaman had run from the Lion's hold and
whispered in the ear of the shipman. He turned an ashen face upon the
Prince.</p>
<p>"It is even as I say, sire. The ship is sinking beneath our feet!" he
cried.</p>
<p>"The more need that we should gain another," said he. "Sir Henry Stokes,
Sir Thomas Stourton, William, John of Clifton, here lies our road! Advance
my banner, Thomas de Mohun! On, and the day is ours!"</p>
<p>By a desperate scramble a dozen men, the Prince at their head, gained a
footing on the edge of the Spaniard's deck. Some slashed furiously to
clear a space, others hung over, clutching the rail with one hand and
pulling up their comrades from below. Every instant that they could hold
their own their strength increased, till twenty had become thirty and
thirty forty, when of a sudden the newcomers, still reaching forth to
their comrades below, saw the deck beneath them reel and vanish in a
swirling sheet of foam. The Prince's ship had foundered.</p>
<p>A yell went up from the Spaniards as they turned furiously upon the small
band who had reached their deck. Already the Prince and his men had
carried the poop, and from that high station they beat back their swarming
enemies. But crossbow darts pelted and thudded among their ranks till a
third of their number were stretched upon the planks. Lined across the
deck they could hardly keep an unbroken front to the leaping, surging
crowd who pressed upon them. Another rush, or another after that, must
assuredly break them, for these dark men of Spain, hardened by an endless
struggle with the Moors, were fierce and stubborn fighters. But hark to
this sudden roar upon the farther side of them—</p>
<p>"Saint George! Saint George! A Knolles to the rescue!" A small craft had
run alongside and sixty men had swarmed on the deck of the St. Iago.
Caught between two fires, the Spaniards wavered and broke. The fight
became a massacre. Down from the poop sprang the Prince's men. Up from the
waist rushed the new-corners. There were five dreadful minutes of blows
and screams and prayers with struggling figures clinging to the bulwarks
and sullen splashes into the water below. Then it was over, and a crowd of
weary, overstrained men leaned panting upon their weapons, or lay
breathless and exhausted upon the deck of the captured carack.</p>
<p>The Prince had pulled up his visor and lowered his beaver. He smiled
proudly as he gazed around him and wiped his streaming face. "Where is the
shipman?" he asked. "Let him lead us against another ship."</p>
<p>"Nay, sire, the shipman and all his men have sunk in the Lion," said
Thomas de Mohun, a young knight of the West Country, who carried the
standard. "We have lost our ship and the half of our following. I fear
that we can fight no more."</p>
<p>"It matters the less since the day is already ours," said the Prince,
looking over the sea. "My noble father's royal banner flies upon yonder
Spaniard. Mowbray, Audley, Suffolk, Beauchamp, Namur, Tracey, Stafford,
Arundel, each has his flag over a scarlet carack, even as mine floats over
this. See, yonder squadron is already far beyond our reach. But surely we
owe thanks to you who came at so perilous a moment to our aid. Your face I
have seen, and your coat-armor also, young sir, though I cannot lay my
tongue to your name. Let me know that I may thank you."</p>
<p>He had turned to Nigel, who stood flushed and joyous at the head of the
boarders from the Basilisk.</p>
<p>"I am but a Squire, sire, and can claim no thanks, for there is nothing
that I have done. Here is our leader."</p>
<p>The Prince's eyes fell upon the shield charged with the Black Raven and
the stern young face of him who bore it. "Sir Robert Knolles," said he, "I
had thought you were on your way to Brittany."</p>
<p>"I was so, sire, when I had the fortune to see this battle as I passed."</p>
<p>The Prince laughed. "It would indeed be to ask too much, Robert, that you
should keep on your course when much honor was to be gathered so close to
you. But now I pray you that you will come back with us to Winchelsea, for
well I know that my father would fain thank you for what you have done
this day."</p>
<p>But Robert Knolles shook his head. "I have your father's command, sire,
and without his order I may not go against it. Our people are hard-pressed
in Brittany, and it is not for me to linger on the way. I pray you, sire,
if you must needs mention me to the King, to crave his pardon that I
should have broken my journey thus."</p>
<p>"You are right, Robert. God-speed you on your way! And I would that I were
sailing under your banner, for I see clearly that you will take your
people where they may worshipfully win worship. Perchance I also maybe in
Brittany before the year is past."</p>
<p>The Prince turned to the task of gathering his weary people together, and
the Basilisks passed over the side once more and dropped down on to their
own little ship. They poled her off from the captured Spaniard and set
their sail with their prow for the south. Far ahead of them were their two
consorts, beating towards them in the hope of giving help, while down
Channel were a score of Spanish ships with a few of the English vessels
hanging upon their skirts. The sun lay low on the water, and its level
beams glowed upon the scarlet and gold of fourteen great caracks, each
flying the cross of Saint George, and towering high above the cluster of
English ships which, with brave waving of flags and blaring of music, were
moving slowly towards the Kentish coast.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />