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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12855 ***
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ELIZABETHAN SEA-DOGS
+
+A Chronicle of Drake and His Companions
+
+By William Wood
+
+1918
+
+
+
+
+PREFATORY NOTE
+
+
+Citizen, colonist, pioneer! These three words carry the history of the
+United States back to its earliest form in 'the Newe Worlde called
+America.' But who prepared the way for the pioneers from the Old World
+and what ensured their safety in the New? The title of the present
+volume, _Elizabethan Sea-Dogs_, gives the only answer. It was during
+the reign of Elizabeth, the last of the Tudor sovereigns of England,
+that Englishmen won the command of the sea under the consummate
+leadership of Sir Francis Drake, the first of modern admirals. Drake
+and his companions are known to fame as Sea-Dogs. They won the English
+right of way into Spain's New World. And Anglo-American history begins
+with that century of maritime adventure and naval war in which English
+sailors blazed and secured the long sea-trail for the men of every
+other kind who found or sought their fortunes in America.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PREFATORY NOTE
+ ELIZABETHAN SEA-DOGS
+ CHAPTER I — ENGLAND'S FIRST LOOK
+ CHAPTER II — HENRY VIII, KING OF THE ENGLISH SEA
+ CHAPTER III — LIFE AFLOAT IN TUDOR TIMES
+ CHAPTER IV — ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND
+ CHAPTER V — HAWKINS AND THE FIGHTING TRADERS
+ CHAPTER VI — DRAKE'S BEGINNING
+ CHAPTER VII — DRAKE'S 'ENCOMPASSMENT OF ALL THE WORLDE'
+ CHAPTER VIII — DRAKE CLIPS THE WINGS OF SPAIN
+ CHAPTER IX — DRAKE AND THE SPANISH ARMADA
+ CHAPTER X — 'THE ONE AND THE FIFTY-THREE'
+ CHAPTER XI — RALEIGH AND THE VISION OF THE WEST
+ CHAPTER XII — DRAKE'S END
+ APPENDIX — NOTE ON TUDOR SHIPPING
+ BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+
+
+
+ELIZABETHAN SEA-DOGS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I — ENGLAND'S FIRST LOOK
+
+
+In the early spring of 1476 the Italian Giovanni Caboto, who, like
+Christopher Columbus, was a seafaring citizen of Genoa, transferred his
+allegiance to Venice.
+
+The Roman Empire had fallen a thousand years before. Rome now held
+temporal sway only over the States of the Church, which were weak in
+armed force, even when compared with the small republics, dukedoms, and
+principalities which lay north and south. But Papal Rome, as the head
+and heart of a spiritual empire, was still a world-power; and the
+disunited Italian states were first in the commercial enterprise of the
+age as well as in the glories of the Renaissance. North of the Papal
+domain, which cut the peninsula in two parts, stood three renowned
+Italian cities: Florence, the capital of Tuscany, leading the world in
+arts; Genoa, the home of Caboto and Columbus, teaching the world the
+science of navigation; and Venice, mistress of the great trade route
+between Europe and Asia, controlling the world's commerce.
+
+Thus, in becoming a citizen of Venice, Giovanni Caboto the Genoese was
+leaving the best home of scientific navigation for the best home of
+sea-borne trade. His very name was no bad credential. Surnames often
+come from nicknames; and for a Genoese to be called _Il Caboto_ was as
+much as for an Arab of the Desert to be known to his people as The
+Horseman. _Cabottággio_ now means no more than coasting trade. But
+before there was any real ocean commerce it referred to the regular
+sea-borne trade of the time; and Giovanni Caboto must have either
+upheld an exceptional family tradition or struck out an exceptional
+line for himself to have been known as John the Skipper among the many
+other expert skippers hailing from the port of Genoa.
+
+There was nothing strange in his being naturalized in Venice.
+Patriotism of the kind that keeps the citizen under the flag of his own
+country was hardly known outside of England, France, and Spain. Though
+the Italian states used to fight each other, an individual Italian,
+especially when he was a sailor, always felt at liberty to seek his
+fortune in any one of them, or wherever he found his chance most
+tempting. So the Genoese Giovanni became the Venetian Zuan without any
+patriotic wrench. Nor was even the vastly greater change to plain John
+Cabot so very startling. Italian experts entered the service of a
+foreign monarch as easily as did the 'pay-fighting Swiss' or Hessian
+mercenaries. Columbus entered the Spanish service under Ferdinand and
+Isabella just as Cabot entered the English service under Henry VII.
+Giovanni—Zuan—John: it was all in a good day's work.
+
+Cabot settled in Bristol, where the still existing guild of
+Merchant-Venturers was even then two centuries old. Columbus, writing
+of his visit to Iceland, says, 'the English, _especially those of
+Bristol_, go there with their merchandise.' Iceland was then what
+Newfoundland became, the best of distant fishing grounds. It marked one
+end of the line of English sea-borne commerce. The Levant marked the
+other. The Baltic formed an important branch. Thus English trade
+already stretched out over all the main lines. Long before Cabot's
+arrival a merchant prince of Bristol, named Canyng, who employed a
+hundred artificers and eight hundred seamen, was trading to Iceland, to
+the Baltic, and, most of all, to the Mediterranean. The trade with
+Italian ports stood in high favor among English merchants and was
+encouraged by the King; for in 1485, the first year of the Tudor
+dynasty, an English consul took office at Pisa and England made a
+treaty of reciprocity with Tuscany.
+
+Henry VII, first of the energetic Tudors and grandfather of Queen
+Elizabeth, was a thrifty and practical man. Some years before the event
+about to be recorded in these pages Columbus had sent him a trusted
+brother with maps, globes, and quotations from Plato to prove the
+existence of lands to the west. Henry had troubles of his own in
+England. So he turned a deaf ear and lost a New World. But after
+Columbus had found America, and the Pope had divided all heathen
+countries between the crowns of Spain and Portugal, Henry decided to
+see what he could do.
+
+Anglo-American history begins on the 5th of March, 1496, when the
+Cabots, father and three sons, received the following patent from the
+King:
+
+_Henrie, by the grace of God, King of England and France, and Lord of
+Irelande, to all, to whom these presentes shall come, Greeting—Be it
+knowen, that We have given and granted, and by these presentes do give
+and grant for Us and Our Heyres, to our well beloved John Gabote,
+citizen of Venice, to Lewes, Sebastian, and Santius, sonnes of the
+sayde John, and to the heires of them and every of them, and their
+deputies, full and free authoritie, leave, and Power, to sayle to all
+Partes, Countreys, and Seas, of the East, of the West, and of the
+North, under our banners and ensignes, with five shippes, of what
+burden or quantitie soever they bee: and as many mariners or men as
+they will have with them in the saide shippes, upon their owne proper
+costes and charges, to seeke out, discover, and finde, whatsoever Iles,
+Countreyes, Regions, or Provinces, of the Heathennes and Infidelles,
+whatsoever they bee, and in what part of the worlde soever they bee,
+whiche before this time have been unknowen to all Christians. We have
+granted to them also, and to every of them, the heires of them, and
+every of them, and their deputies, and have given them licence to set
+up Our banners and ensignes in every village, towne, castel, yle, or
+maine lande, of them newly founde. And that the aforesaide John and his
+sonnes, or their heires and assignes, may subdue, occupie, and
+possesse, all such townes, cities, castels, and yles, of them founde,
+which they can subdue, occupie, and possesse, as our vassailes and
+lieutenantes, getting unto Us the rule, title, and jurisdiction of the
+same villages, townes, castels, and firme lande so founde._
+
+The patent then goes on to provide for a royalty to His Majesty of
+one-fifth of the net profits, to exempt the patentees from custom duty,
+to exclude competition, and to exhort good subjects of the Crown to
+help the Cabots in every possible way. This first of all English
+documents connected with America ends with these words: _Witnesse our
+Selfe at Westminster, the Fifth day of March, in the XI yeere of our
+reigne. HENRY R._
+
+_To sayle to all Partes of the East, of the West, and of the North_.
+The pointed omission of the word South made it clear that Henry had no
+intention of infringing Spanish rights of discovery. Spanish claims,
+however, were based on the Pope's division of all the heathen world and
+were by no means bounded by any rights of discovery already acquired.
+
+Cabot left Bristol in the spring of 1497, a year after the date of his
+patent, not with the 'five shippes' the King had authorized, but in the
+little _Matthew_, with a crew of only eighteen men, nearly all
+Englishmen accustomed to the North Atlantic. The _Matthew_ made Cape
+Breton, the easternmost point of Nova Scotia, on the 24th of June, the
+anniversary of St. John the Baptist, now the racial fête-day of the
+French Canadians. Not a single human inhabitant was to be seen in this
+wild new land, shaggy with forests primeval, fronted with bold, scarped
+shores, and beautiful with romantic deep bays leading inland, league
+upon league, past rugged forelands and rocky battlements keeping guard
+at the frontiers of the continent. Over these mysterious wilds Cabot
+raised St. George's Cross for England and the banner of St. Mark in
+souvenir of Venice. Had he now reached the fabled islands of the West
+or discovered other islands off the eastern coast of Tartary? He did
+not know. But he hurried back to Bristol with the news and was welcomed
+by the King and people. A Venetian in London wrote home to say that
+'this fellow-citizen of ours, who went from Bristol in quest of new
+islands, is Zuan Caboto, whom the English now call a great admiral. He
+dresses in silk; they pay him great honour; and everyone runs after him
+like mad.' The Spanish ambassador was full of suspicion, in spite of
+the fact that Cabot had not gone south. Had not His Holiness divided
+all Heathendom between the crowns of Spain and Portugal, to Spain the
+West and to Portugal the East; and was not this landfall within what
+the modern world would call the Spanish sphere of influence? The
+ambassador protested to Henry VII and reported home to Ferdinand and
+Isabella.
+
+Henry VII meanwhile sent a little present 'To Hym that founde the new
+Isle—£10.' It was not very much. But it was about as much as nearly a
+thousand dollars now; and it meant full recognition and approval. This
+was a good start for a man who couldn't pay the King any royalty of
+twenty per cent. because he hadn't made a penny on the way. Besides, it
+was followed up by a royal annuity of twice the amount and by renewed
+letters-patent for further voyages and discoveries in the west. So
+Cabot took good fortune at the flood and went again.
+
+This time there was the full authorized flotilla of five sail, of which
+one turned back and four sailed on. Somewhere on the way John Cabot
+disappeared from history and his second son, Sebastian, reigned in his
+stead. Sebastian, like John, apparently wrote nothing whatever. But he
+talked a great deal; and in after years he seems to have remembered a
+good many things that never happened at all. Nevertheless he was a very
+able man in several capacities and could teach a courtier or a
+demagogue, as well as a geographer or exploiter of new claims, the art
+of climbing over other people's backs, his father's and his brothers'
+backs included. He had his troubles; for King Henry had pressed upon
+him recruits from the gaols, which just then were full of rebels. But
+he had enough seamen to manage the ships and plenty of cargo for trade
+with the undiscovered natives.
+
+Sebastian perhaps left some of his three hundred men to explore
+Newfoundland. He knew they couldn't starve because, as he often used to
+tell his gaping listeners, the waters thereabouts were so thick with
+codfish that he had hard work to force his vessels through. This first
+of American fish stories, wildly improbable as it may seem, may yet
+have been founded on fact. When acres upon acres of the countless
+little capelin swim inshore to feed, and they themselves are preyed on
+by leaping acres of voracious cod, whose own rear ranks are being
+preyed on by hungry seals, sharks, herring-hogs, or dogfish, then
+indeed the troubled surface of a narrowing bay is literally thick with
+the silvery flash of capelin, the dark tumultuous backs of cod, and the
+swirling rushes of the greater beasts of prey behind. Nor were certain
+other fish stories, told by Sebastian and his successors about the land
+of cod, without some strange truths to build on. Cod have been caught
+as long as a man and weighing over a hundred pounds. A whole hare, a
+big guillemot with his beak and claws, a brace of duck so fresh that
+they must have been swallowed alive, a rubber wading boot, and a very
+learned treatise complete in three volumes—these are a few of the
+curiosities actually found in sundry stomachs of the all-devouring cod.
+
+The new-found cod banks were a mine of wealth for western Europe at a
+time when everyone ate fish on fast days. They have remained so ever
+since because the enormous increase of population has kept up a
+constantly increasing demand for natural supplies of food. Basques and
+English, Spaniards, French, and Portuguese, were presently fishing for
+cod all round the waters of northeastern North America and were even
+then beginning to raise questions of national rights that have only
+been settled in this twentieth century after four hundred years.
+
+Following the coast of Greenland past Cape Farewell, Sebastian Cabot
+turned north to look for the nearest course to India and Cathay, the
+lands of silks and spices, diamonds, rubies, pearls, and gold. John
+Cabot had once been as far as Mecca or its neighborhood, where he had
+seen the caravans that came across the Desert of Arabia from the fabled
+East. Believing the proof that the world was round, he, like Columbus
+and so many more, thought America was either the eastern limits of the
+Old World or an archipelago between the extremest east and west already
+known. Thus, in the early days before it was valued for itself, America
+was commonly regarded as a mere obstruction to navigation—the more
+solid the more exasperating. Now, in 1498, on his second voyage to
+America, John Cabot must have been particularly anxious to get through
+and show the King some better return for his money. But he simply
+disappears; and all we know is what various writers gleaned from his
+son Sebastian later on.
+
+Sebastian said he coasted Greenland, through vast quantities of
+midsummer ice, until he reached 67° 30' north, where there was hardly
+any night. Then he turned back and probably steered a southerly course
+for Newfoundland, as he appears to have completely missed what would
+have seemed to him the tempting way to Asia offered by Hudson Strait
+and Bay. Passing Newfoundland, he stood on south as far as the Virginia
+capes, perhaps down as far as Florida. A few natives were caught. But
+no real trade was done. And when the explorers had reported progress to
+the King the general opinion was that North America was nothing to
+boast of, after all.
+
+A generation later the French sent out several expeditions to sail
+through North America and make discoveries by the way. Jacques
+Cartier's second, made in 1535, was the greatest and most successful.
+He went up the St. Lawrence as high as the site of Montreal, the head
+of ocean navigation, where, a hundred and forty years later, the local
+wits called La Salle's seigneury 'La Chine' in derision of his
+unquenchable belief in a transcontinental connection with Cathay.
+
+But that was under the wholly new conditions of the seventeenth
+century, when both French and English expected to make something out of
+what are now the United States and Canada. The point of the witling
+joke against La Salle was a new version of the old adage: Go farther
+and fare worse. The point of European opinion about America throughout
+the wonderful sixteenth century was that those who did go farther north
+than Mexico were certain to fare worse. And—whatever the cause—they
+generally did. So there was yet a third reason why the fame of Columbus
+eclipsed the fame of the Cabots even among those English-speaking
+peoples whose New-World home the Cabots were the first to find. To
+begin with, Columbus was the first of moderns to discover any spot in
+all America. Secondly, while the Cabots gave no writings to the world,
+Columbus did. He wrote for a mighty monarch and his fame was spread
+abroad by what we should now call a monster publicity campaign.
+Thirdly, our present point: the southern lands associated with Columbus
+and with Spain yielded immense and most romantic profits during the
+most romantic period of the sixteenth century. The northern lands
+connected with the Cabots did nothing of the kind.
+
+Priority, publicity, and romantic wealth all favored Columbus and the
+south then as the memory of them does to-day. The four hundredth
+anniversary of his discovery of an island in the Bahamas excited the
+interest of the whole world and was celebrated with great enthusiasm in
+the United States. The four hundredth anniversary of the Cabots'
+discovery of North America excited no interest at all outside of
+Bristol and Cape Breton and a few learned societies. Even contemporary
+Spain did more for the Cabots than that. The Spanish ambassador in
+London carefully collected every scrap of information and sent it home
+to his king, who turned it over as material for Juan de la Cosa's
+famous map, the first dated map of America known. This map, made in
+1500 on a bullock's hide, still occupies a place of honor in the Naval
+Museum at Madrid; and there it stands as a contemporary geographic
+record to show that St. George's Cross was the first flag ever raised
+over eastern North America, at all events north of Cape Hatteras.
+
+The Cabots did great things though they were not great men. John, as we
+have seen already, sailed out of the ken of man in 1498 during his
+second voyage. Sly Sebastian lived on and almost saw Elizabeth ascend
+the throne in 1558. He had made many voyages and served many masters in
+the meantime. In 1512 he entered the service of King Ferdinand of Spain
+as a 'Captain of the Sea' with a handsome salary attached. Six years
+later the Emperor Charles V made him 'Chief Pilot and Examiner of
+Pilots.' Another six years and he is sitting as a nautical assessor to
+find out the longitude of the Moluccas in order that the Pope may know
+whether they fall within the Portuguese or Spanish hemisphere of
+exploitation. Presently he goes on a four years' journey to South
+America, is hindered by a mutiny, explores the River Plate (La Plata),
+and returns in 1530, about the time of the voyage to Brazil of 'Master
+William Haukins,' of which we shall hear later on.
+
+In 1544 Sebastian made an excellent and celebrated map of the world
+which gives a wonderfully good idea of the coasts of North America from
+Labrador to Florida. This map, long given up for lost, and only
+discovered three centuries after it had been finished, is now in the
+National Library in Paris.[1]
+
+[1: An excellent facsimile reproduction of it, together with a copy of
+the marginal text, is in the collections of the American Geographical
+Society of New York.]
+
+
+Sebastian had passed his threescore years and ten before this famous
+map appeared. But he was as active as ever twelve years later again. He
+had left Spain for England in 1548, to the rage of Charles V, who
+claimed him as a deserter, which he probably was. But the English
+boy-king, Edward VI, gave him a pension, which was renewed by Queen
+Mary; and his last ten years were spent in England, where he died in
+the odor of sanctity as Governor of the Muscovy Company and citizen of
+London. Whatever his faults, he was a hearty-good-fellow with his boon
+companions; and the following 'personal mention' about his octogenarian
+revels at Gravesend is well worth quoting exactly as the admiring
+diarist wrote it down on the 27th of April, 1556, when the pinnace
+_Serchthrift_ was on the point of sailing to Muscovy and the Directors
+were giving it a great send-off.
+
+After Master Cabota and divers gentlemen and gentlewomen had viewed our
+pinnace, and tasted of such cheer as we could make them aboard, they
+went on shore, giving to our mariners right liberal rewards; and the
+good old Gentleman, Master Cabota, gave to the poor most liberal alms,
+wishing them to pray for the good fortune and prosperous success of the
+_Serchthrift_, our pinnace. And then, at the sign of the Christopher,
+he and his friends banqueted, and made me and them that were in the
+company great cheer; and for very joy that he had to see the towardness
+of our intended discovery he entered into the dance himself, amongst
+the rest of the young and lusty company—which being ended, he and his
+friends departed, most gently commending us to the governance of
+Almighty God.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II — HENRY VIII, KING OF THE ENGLISH SEA
+
+
+The leading pioneers in the Age of Discovery were sons of Italy, Spain,
+and Portugal.[2] Cabot, as we have seen, was an Italian, though he
+sailed for the English Crown and had an English crew. Columbus, too,
+was an Italian, though in the service of the Spanish Crown. It was the
+Portuguese Vasco da Gama who in the very year of John Cabot's second
+voyage (1498) found the great sea route to India by way of the Cape of
+Good Hope. Two years later the Cortereals, also Portuguese, began
+exploring the coasts of America as far northwest as Labrador. Twenty
+years later again the Portuguese Magellan, sailing for the King of
+Spain, discovered the strait still known by his name, passed through it
+into the Pacific, and reached the Philippines. There he was killed. But
+one of his ships went on to make the first circumnavigation of the
+globe, a feat which redounded to the glory of both Spain and Portugal.
+Meanwhile, in 1513, the Spaniard Balboa had crossed the Isthmus of
+Panama and waded into the Pacific, sword in hand, to claim it for his
+king. Then came the Spanish explorers—Ponce de Leon, De Soto, Coronado,
+and many more—and later on the conquerors and founders of New
+Spain—Cortes, Pizarro, and their successors.
+
+[2: Basque fishermen and whalers apparently forestalled Jacques
+Cartier's discovery of the St. Lawrence in 1535; perhaps they knew the
+mainland of America before John Cabot in 1497. But they left no written
+records; and neither founded an oversea dominion nor gave rights of
+discovery to their own or any other race.]
+
+
+During all this time neither France nor England made any lodgment in
+America, though both sent out a number of expeditions, both fished on
+the cod banks of Newfoundland, and each had already marked out her own
+'sphere of influence.' The Portuguese were in Brazil; the Spaniards, in
+South and Central America. England, by right of the Bristol voyages,
+claimed the eastern coasts of the United States and Canada; France, in
+virtue of Cartier's discovery, the region of the St. Lawrence. But,
+while New Spain and New Portugal flourished in the sixteenth century,
+New France and New England were yet to rise.
+
+In the sixteenth century both France and England were occupied with
+momentous things at home. France was torn with religious wars. Tudor
+England had much work to do before any effective English colonies could
+be planted. Oversea dominions are nothing without sufficient sea power,
+naval and mercantile, to win, to hold, and foster them. But Tudor
+England was gradually forming those naval and merchant services without
+which there could have been neither British Empire nor United States.
+
+Henry VIII had faults which have been trumpeted about the world from
+his own day to ours. But of all English sovereigns he stands foremost
+as the monarch of the sea. Young, handsome, learned, exceedingly
+accomplished, gloriously strong in body and in mind, Henry mounted the
+throne in 1509 with the hearty good will of nearly all his subjects.
+Before England could become the mother country of an empire overseas,
+she had to shake off her medieval weaknesses, become a strongly unified
+modern state, and arm herself against any probable combination of
+hostile foreign states. Happily for herself and for her future
+colonists, Henry was richly endowed with strength and skill for his
+task. With one hand he welded England into political unity, crushing
+disruptive forces by the way. With the other he gradually built up a
+fleet the like of which the world had never seen. He had the advantage
+of being more independent of parliamentary supplies than any other
+sovereign. From his thrifty father he had inherited what was then an
+almost fabulous sum—nine million dollars in cash. From what his friends
+call the conversion, and his enemies the spoliation, of Church property
+in England he obtained many millions more. Moreover, the people as a
+whole always rallied to his call whenever he wanted other national
+resources for the national defence.
+
+Henry's unique distinction is that he effected the momentous change
+from an ancient to a modern fleet. This supreme achievement constitutes
+his real title to the lasting gratitude of English-speaking peoples.
+His first care when he came to the throne in 1509 was for the safety of
+the 'Broade Ditch,' as he called the English Channel. His last great
+act was to establish in 1546 'The Office of the Admiralty and Marine
+Affairs.' During the thirty-seven years between his accession and the
+creation of this Navy Board the pregnant change was made.
+
+'King Henry loved a man.' He had an unerring eye for choosing the right
+leaders. He delighted in everything to do with ships and shipping. He
+mixed freely with naval men and merchant skippers, visited the
+dockyards, promoted several improved types of vessels, and always
+befriended Fletcher of Rye, the shipwright who discovered the art of
+tacking and thereby revolutionized navigation. Nor was the King only a
+patron. He invented a new type of vessel himself and thoroughly
+mastered scientific gunnery. He was the first of national leaders to
+grasp the full significance of what could be done by broadsides fired
+from sailing ships against the mediaeval type of vessel that still
+depended more on oars than on sails.
+
+Henry's maritime rivals were the two greatest monarchs of continental
+Europe, Francis I of France and Charles V of Spain. Henry, Francis, and
+Charles were all young, all ambitious, and all exceedingly capable men.
+Henry had the fewest subjects, Charles by far the most. Francis had a
+compact kingdom well situated for a great European land power. Henry
+had one equally well situated for a great European sea power. Charles
+ruled vast dominions scattered over both the New World and the Old. The
+destinies of mankind turned mostly on the rivalry between these three
+protagonists and their successors.
+
+Charles V was heir to several crowns. He ruled Spain, the Netherlands,
+the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, and important principalities in
+northern Italy. He was elected Emperor of Germany. He owned enormous
+oversea dominions in Africa; and the two Americas soon became New
+Spain. He governed each part of his European dominions by a different
+title and under a different constitution. He had no fixed imperial
+capital, but moved about from place to place, a legitimate sovereign
+everywhere and, for the most part, a popular one as well. It was his
+son Philip II who, failing of election as Emperor, lived only in Spain,
+concentrated the machinery of government in Madrid, and became so
+unpopular elsewhere. Charles had been brought up in Flanders; he was
+genial in the Flemish way; and he understood his various states in the
+Netherlands, which furnished him with one of his main sources of
+revenue. Another and much larger source of revenue poured in its wealth
+to him later on, in rapidly increasing volume, from North and South
+America.
+
+Charles had inherited a long and bitter feud with France about the
+Burgundian dominions on the French side of the Rhine and about domains
+in Italy; besides which there were many points of violent rivalry
+between things French and Spanish. England also had hereditary feuds
+with France, which had come down from the Hundred Years' War, and which
+had ended in her almost final expulsion from France less than a century
+before. Scotland, nursing old feuds against England and always afraid
+of absorption, naturally sided with France. Portugal, small and open to
+Spanish invasion by land, was more or less bound to please Spain.
+
+During the many campaigns between Francis and Charles the English
+Channel swarmed with men-of-war, privateers, and downright pirates.
+Sometimes England took a hand officially against France. But, even when
+England was not officially at war, many Englishmen were privateers and
+not a few were pirates. Never was there a better training school of
+fighting seamanship than in and around the Narrow Seas. It was a
+continual struggle for an existence in which only the fittest survived.
+Quickness was essential. Consequently vessels that could not increase
+their speed were soon cleared off the sea.
+
+Spain suffered a good deal by this continuous raiding. So did the
+Netherlands. But such was the power of Charles that, although his
+navies were much weaker than his armies, he yet was able to fight by
+sea on two enormous fronts, first, in the Mediterranean against the
+Turks and other Moslems, secondly, in the Channel and along the coast,
+all the way from Antwerp to Cadiz. Nor did the left arm of his power
+stop there; for his fleets, his transports, and his merchantmen ranged
+the coasts of both Americas from one side of the present United States
+right round to the other.
+
+Such, in brief, was the position of maritime Europe when Henry found
+himself menaced by the three Roman Catholic powers of Scotland, France,
+and Spain. In 1533 he had divorced his first wife, Catherine of Aragon,
+thereby defying the Pope and giving offence to Spain. He had again
+defied the Pope by suppressing the monasteries and severing the Church
+of England from the Roman discipline. The Pope had struck back with a
+bull of excommunication designed to make Henry the common enemy of
+Catholic Europe.
+
+Henry had been steadily building ships for years. Now he redoubled his
+activity. He blooded the fathers of his daughter's sea-dogs by smashing
+up a pirate fleet and sinking a flotilla of Flemish privateers. The
+mouth of the Scheldt, in 1539, was full of vessels ready to take a
+hostile army into England. But such a fighting fleet prepared to meet
+them that Henry's enemies forbore to strike.
+
+In 1539, too, came the discovery of the art of tacking, by Fletcher of
+Rye, Henry's shipwright friend, a discovery forever memorable in the
+annals of seamanship. Never before had any kind of craft been sailed a
+single foot against the wind. The primitive dugout on which the
+prehistoric savage hoisted the first semblance of a sail, the ships of
+Tarshish, the Roman transport in which St. Paul was wrecked, and the
+Spanish caravels with which Columbus sailed to worlds unknown, were, in
+principle of navigation, all the same. But now Fletcher ran out his
+epoch-making vessel, with sails trimmed fore and aft, and dumbfounded
+all the shipping in the Channel by beating his way to windward against
+a good stiff breeze. This achievement marked the dawn of the modern
+sailing age.
+
+And so it happened that in 1545 Henry, with a new-born modern fleet,
+was able to turn defiantly on Francis. The English people rallied
+magnificently to his call. What was at that time an enormous army
+covered the lines of advance on London. But the fleet, though employing
+fewer men, was relatively a much more important force than the army;
+and with the fleet went Henry's own headquarters. His lifelong interest
+in his navy now bore the first-fruits of really scientific sea power on
+an oceanic scale. There was no great naval battle to fix general
+attention on one dramatic moment. Henry's strategy and tactics,
+however, were new and full of promise. He repeated his strategy of the
+previous war by sending out a strong squadron to attack the base at
+which the enemy's ships were then assembling; and he definitely
+committed the English navy, alone among all the navies in the world, to
+sailing-ship tactics, instead of continuing those founded on the rowing
+galley of immemorial fame. The change from a sort of floating army to a
+really naval fleet, from galleys moved by oars and depending on
+boarders who were soldiers, to ships moved by sails and depending on
+their broadside guns—this change was quite as important as the change
+in the nineteenth century from sails and smooth-bores to steam and
+rifled ordnance. It was, indeed, from at least one commanding point of
+view, much more important; for it meant that England was easily first
+in developing the only kind of navy which would count in any struggle
+for oversea dominion after the discovery of America had made sea power
+no longer a question of coasts and landlocked waters but of all the
+outer oceans of the world.
+
+The year that saw the birth of modern sea power is a date to be
+remembered in this history; for 1545 was also the year in which the
+mines of Potosi first aroused the Old World to the riches of the New;
+it was the year, too, in which Sir Francis Drake was born. Moreover,
+there was another significant birth in this same year. The parole
+aboard the Portsmouth fleet was _God save the King_! The answering
+countersign was _Long to reign over us_! These words formed the nucleus
+of the national anthem now sung round all the Seven Seas. The anthems
+of other countries were born on land. _God save the King_! sprang from
+the navy and the sea.
+
+The Reformation quickened seafaring life in many ways. After Henry's
+excommunication every Roman Catholic crew had full Papal sanction for
+attacking every English crew that would not submit to Rome, no matter
+how Catholic its faith might be. Thus, in addition to danger from
+pirates, privateers, and men-of-war, an English merchantman had to risk
+attack by any one who was either passionately Roman or determined to
+use religion as a cloak. Raids and reprisals grew apace. The English
+were by no means always lambs in piteous contrast to the Papal wolves.
+Rather, it might be said, they took a motto from this true Russian
+proverb: 'Make yourself a sheep and you'll find no lack of wolves.'
+But, rightly or wrongly, the general English view was that the Papal
+attitude was one of attack while their own was one of defence. Papal
+Europe of course thought quite the reverse.
+
+Henry died in 1547, and the Lord Protector Somerset at once tried to
+make England as Protestant as possible during the minority of Edward
+VI, who was not yet ten years old. This brought every English seaman
+under suspicion in every Spanish port, where the Holy Office of the
+Inquisition was a great deal more vigilant and businesslike than the
+Custom House or Harbor Master. Inquisitors had seized Englishmen in
+Henry's time. But Charles had stayed their hand. Now that the ruler of
+England was an open heretic, who appeared to reject the accepted forms
+of Catholic belief as well as the Papal forms of Roman discipline, the
+hour had come to strike. War would have followed in ordinary times. But
+the Reformation had produced a cross-division among the subjects of all
+the Great Powers. If Charles went to war with a Protestant Lord
+Protector of England then some of his own subjects in the Netherlands
+would probably revolt. France had her Huguenots; England her
+ultra-Papists; Scotland some of both kinds. Every country had an
+unknown number of enemies at home and friends abroad. All feared war.
+
+Somerset neglected the navy. But the seafaring men among the
+Protestants, as among those Catholics who were anti-Roman, took to
+privateering more than ever. Nor was exploration forgotten. A group of
+merchant-adventurers sent Sir Hugh Willoughby to find the Northeast
+Passage to Cathay. Willoughby's three ships were towed down the Thames
+by oarsmen dressed in sky-blue jackets. As they passed the palace at
+Greenwich they dipped their colors in salute. But the poor young king
+was too weak to come to the window. Willoughby met his death in
+Lapland. But Chancellor, his second-in-command, got through to the
+White Sea, pushed on overland to Moscow, and returned safe in 1554,
+when Queen Mary was on the throne. Next year, strange to say, the
+charter of the new Muscovy Company was granted by Philip of Armada
+fame, now joint sovereign of England with his newly married wife, soon
+to be known as 'Bloody Mary.' One of the directors of the company was
+Lord Howard of Effingham, father of Drake's Lord Admiral, while the
+governor was our old friend Sebastian Cabot, now in his eightieth year.
+Philip was Crown Prince of the Spanish Empire, and his father, Charles
+V, was very anxious that he should please the stubborn English; for if
+he could only become both King of England and Emperor of Germany he
+would rule the world by sea as well as land. Philip did his ineffective
+best: drank English beer in public as if he liked it and made his
+stately Spanish courtiers drink it too and smile. He spent Spanish
+gold, brought over from America, and he got the convenient kind of
+Englishmen to take it as spy-money for many years to come. But with it
+he likewise sowed some dragon's teeth. The English sea-dogs never
+forgot the iron chests of Spanish New-World gold, and presently began
+to wonder whether there was no sure way in far America by which to get
+it for themselves.
+
+In the same year, 1555, the Marian attack on English heretics began and
+the sea became safer than the land for those who held strong anti-Papal
+views. The Royal Navy was neglected even more than it had been lately
+by the Lord Protector. But fighting traders, privateers, and pirates
+multiplied. The seaports were hotbeds of hatred against Mary, Philip,
+Papal Rome, and Spanish Inquisition. In 1556 Sebastian Cabot reappears,
+genial and prosperous as ever, and dances out of history at the sailing
+of the _Serchthrift_, bound northeast for Muscovy. In 1557 Philip came
+back to England for the last time and manoeuvred her into a war which
+cost her Calais, the last English foothold on the soil of France.
+During this war an English squadron joined Philip's vessels in a
+victory over the French off Gravelines, where Drake was to fight the
+Armada thirty years later.
+
+This first of the two battles fought at Gravelines brings us down to
+1558, the year in which Mary died, Elizabeth succeeded her, and a very
+different English age began.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III — LIFE AFLOAT IN TUDOR TIMES
+
+
+Two stories from Hakluyt's _Voyages_ will illustrate what sort of work
+the English were attempting in America about 1530, near the middle of
+King Henry's reign. The success of 'Master Haukins' and the failure of
+'Master Hore' are quite typical of several other adventures in the New
+World.
+
+'Olde M. William Haukins of Plimmouth, a man for his wisdome, valure,
+experience, and skill in sea causes much esteemed and beloved of King
+Henry the eight, and being one of the principall Sea Captaines in the
+West partes of England in his time, not contented with the short
+voyages commonly then made onely to the knowen coastes of Europe, armed
+out a tall and goodlie ship of his owne, of the burthen of 250 tunnes,
+called the Pole of Plimmouth, wherewith he made three long and famous
+voyages vnto the coast of Brasill, a thing in those days very rare,
+especially to our Nation.' Hawkins first went down the Guinea Coast of
+Africa, 'where he trafiqued with the Negroes, and tooke of them
+Oliphants' teeth, and other commodities which that place yeeldeth; and
+so arriving on the coast of Brasil, used there such discretion, and
+behaved himselfe so wisely with those savage people, that he grew into
+great familiaritie and friendship with them. Insomuch that in his 2
+voyage one of the savage kings of the Countrey of Brasil was contented
+to take ship with him, and to be transported hither into England. This
+kinge was presented unto King Henry 8. The King and all the Nobilitie
+did not a little marvel; for in his cheeks were holes, and therein
+small bones planted, which in his Countrey was reputed for a great
+braverie.' The poor Brazilian monarch died on his voyage back, which
+made Hawkins fear for the life of Martin Cockeram, whom he had left in
+Brazil as a hostage. However, the Brazilians took Hawkins's word for it
+and released Cockeram, who lived another forty years in Plymouth. 'Olde
+M. William Haukins' was the father of Sir John Hawkins, Drake's
+companion in arms, whom we shall meet later. He was also the
+grandfather of Sir Richard Hawkins, another naval hero, and of the
+second William Hawkins, one of the founders of the greatest of all
+chartered companies, the Honourable East India Company.
+
+Hawkins knew what he was about. 'Master Hore' did not. Hore was a
+well-meaning, plausible fellow, good at taking up new-fangled ideas,
+bad at carrying them out, and the very cut of a wildcat
+company-promoter, except for his honesty. He persuaded 'divers young
+lawyers of the Innes of Court and Chancerie' to go to Newfoundland. A
+hundred and twenty men set off in this modern ship of fools, which ran
+into Newfoundland at night and was wrecked. There were no provisions;
+and none of the 'divers lawyers' seems to have known how to catch a
+fish. After trying to live on wild fruit they took to eating each
+other, in spite of Master Hore, who stood up boldly and warned them of
+the 'Fire to Come.' Just then a French fishing smack came in; whereupon
+the lawyers seized her, put her wretched crew ashore, and sailed away
+with all the food she had. The outraged Frenchmen found another vessel,
+chased the lawyers back to England, and laid their case before the
+King, who 'out of his Royall Bountie' reimbursed the Frenchmen and let
+the 'divers lawyers' go scot free.
+
+Hawkins and Hore, and others like them, were the heroes of travellers'
+tales. But what was the ordinary life of the sailor who went down to
+the sea in the ships of the Tudor age? There are very few quite
+authentic descriptions of life afloat before the end of the sixteenth
+century; and even then we rarely see the ship and crew about their
+ordinary work. Everybody was all agog for marvellous discoveries.
+Nobody, least of all a seaman, bothered his head about describing the
+daily routine on board. We know, however, that it was a lot of almost
+incredible hardship. Only the fittest could survive. Elizabethan
+landsmen may have been quite as prone to mistake comfort for
+civilization as most of the world is said to be now. Elizabethan
+sailors, when afloat, most certainly were not; and for the simple
+reason that there was no such thing as real comfort in a ship.
+
+Here are a few verses from the oldest genuine English sea-song known.
+They were written down in the fifteenth century, before the discovery
+of America, and were probably touched up a little by the scribe. The
+original manuscript is now in Trinity College, Cambridge. It is a true
+nautical composition—a very rare thing indeed; for genuine sea-songs
+didn't often get into print and weren't enjoyed by landsmen when they
+did. The setting is that of a merchantman carrying passengers whose
+discomforts rather amuse the 'schippemenne.'
+
+Anon the master commandeth fast
+To his ship-men in all the hast[e],
+To dresse them [line up] soon about the mast
+ Their takeling to make.
+
+With _Howe! Hissa!_ then they cry,
+'What howe! mate thou standest too nigh,
+Thy fellow may not haul thee by:'
+ Thus they begin to crake [shout].
+
+A boy or twain anon up-steyn [go aloft]
+And overthwart the sayle-yerde leyn [lie]
+_Y-how! taylia!_ the remnant cryen [cry]
+ And pull with all their might.
+
+Bestow the boat, boat-swain, anon,
+That our pylgrymms may play thereon;
+For some are like to cough and groan
+ Ere it be full midnight.
+
+Haul the bowline! Now veer the sheet;
+Cook, make ready anon our meat!
+Our pylgrymms have no lust to eat:
+ I pray God give them rest.
+
+Go to the helm! What ho! no neare[r]!
+Steward, fellow! a pot of beer!
+Ye shall have, Sir, with good cheer,
+ Anon all of the best.
+
+_Y-howe! Trussa!_ Haul in the brailes!
+Thou haulest not! By God, thou failes[t]
+O see how well our good ship sails!
+ And thus they say among.
+
+
+Thys meane'whyle the pylgrymms lie,
+And have their bowls all fast them by,
+And cry after hot malvesy—
+ 'Their health for to restore.'
+
+
+Some lay their bookys on their knee,
+And read so long they cannot see.
+'Alas! mine head will split in three!'
+ Thus sayeth one poor wight.
+
+
+A sack of straw were there right good;
+For some must lay them in their hood:
+I had as lief be in the wood,
+ Without or meat or drink!
+
+For when that we shall go to bed,
+The pump is nigh our beddës head:
+A man he were as good be dead
+ As smell thereof the stynke!
+
+
+_Howe—hissa!_ is still used aboard deepwater-men as _Ho—hissa!_ instead
+of _Ho—hoist away!_ _What ho, mate!_ is also known afloat, though dying
+out. _Y-howe! taylia!_ is _Yo—ho! tally!_ or _Tally and belay!_ which
+means hauling aft and making fast the sheet of a mainsail or foresail.
+_What ho! no nearer!_ is _What ho! no higher_ now. But old salts
+remember _no nearer!_ and it may be still extant. Seasickness seems to
+have been the same as ever—so was the desperate effort to pretend one
+was not really feeling it:
+
+And cry after hot malvesy—
+'Their health for to restore.'
+
+
+Here is another sea-song, one sung by the sea-dogs themselves. The
+doubt is whether the _Martial-men_ are Navy men, as distinguished from
+merchant-service men aboard a king's ship, or whether they are soldiers
+who want to take all sailors down a peg or two. This seems the more
+probable explanation. Soldiers 'ranked' sailors afloat in the sixteenth
+century; and Drake's was the first fleet in the world in which
+seamen-admirals were allowed to fight a purely naval action.
+
+We be three poor Mariners, newly come from the Seas,
+We spend our lives in jeopardy while others live at ease.
+We care not for those Martial-men that do our states disdain,
+But we care for those Merchant-men that do our states maintain.
+
+
+A third old sea-song gives voice to the universal complaint that
+landsmen cheat sailors who come home flush of gold.
+
+For Sailors they be honest men,
+ And they do take great pains,
+But Land-men and ruffling lads
+ Do rob them of their gains.
+
+
+Here, too, is some _Cordial Advice_ against the wiles of the sea,
+addressed _To all rash young Men, who think to Advance their decaying
+Fortunes by Navigation_, as most of the sea-dogs (and
+gentlemen-adventurers like Gilbert, Raleigh, and Cavendish) tried to
+do.
+
+You merchant men of Billingsgate,
+ I wonder how you thrive.
+You bargain with men for six months
+ And pay them but for five.
+
+
+This was an abuse that took a long time to die out. Even well on in the
+nineteenth century, and sometimes even on board of steamers,
+victualling was only by the lunar month though service went by the
+calendar.
+
+A cursed cat with thrice three tails
+Doth much increase our woe
+
+
+is a poetical way of putting another seaman's grievance.
+
+People who regret that there is such a discrepancy between genuine
+sea-songs and shore-going imitations will be glad to know that the
+_Mermaid_ is genuine, though the usual air to which it was sung afloat
+was harsh and decidedly inferior to the one used ashore. This example
+of the old 'fore-bitters' (so-called because sung from the fore-bitts,
+a convenient mass of stout timbers near the foremast) did not luxuriate
+in the repetitions of its shore-going rival: _With a comb and a glass
+in her hand, her hand, her hand_, etc.
+
+_Solo_. On Friday morn as we set sail
+ It was not far from land,
+ Oh, there I spied a fair pretty maid
+ With a comb and a glass in her hand.
+
+_Chorus_. The stormy winds did blow,
+ And the raging seas did roar,
+ While we poor Sailors went to the tops
+ And the land lubbers laid below.
+
+
+The anonymous author of a curious composition entitled _The Complaynt
+of Scotland_, written in 1548, seems to be the only man who took more
+interest in the means than in the ends of seamanship. He was
+undoubtedly a landsman. But he loved the things of the sea; and his
+work is well worth reading as a vocabulary of the lingo that was used
+on board a Tudor ship. When the seamen sang it sounded like 'an echo in
+a cave.' Many of the outlandish words were Mediterranean terms which
+the scientific Italian navigators had brought north. Others were of
+Oriental origin, which was very natural in view of the long connection
+between East and West at sea. Admiral, for instance, comes from the
+Arabic for a commander-in-chief. _Amir-al-bahr_ means commander of the
+sea. Most of the nautical technicalities would strike a seaman of the
+present day as being quite modern. The sixteenth-century skipper would
+be readily understood by a twentieth-century helmsman in the case of
+such orders as these: _Keep full and by! Luff! Con her! Steady! Keep
+close!_ Our modern sailor in the navy, however, would be hopelessly
+lost in trying to follow directions like the following: _Make ready
+your cannons, middle culverins, bastard culverins, falcons, sakers,
+slings, headsticks, murderers, passevolants, bazzils, dogges, crook
+arquebusses, calivers, and hail shot!_
+
+Another look at life afloat in the sixteenth century brings us once
+more into touch with America; for the old sea-dog DIRECTIONS FOR THE
+TAKYNG OF A PRIZE were admirably summed up in _The Seaman's Grammar_,
+which was compiled by 'Captaine John Smith, sometime Governour of
+Virginia and Admiral of New England'—'Pocahontas Smith,' in fact.
+
+'A sail!'
+
+'How bears she? To-windward or lee-ward? Set him by the compass!'
+
+'Hee stands right a-head' (_or_ On the weather-bow, _or_ lee-bow).
+
+'Let fly your colours!' (if you have a consort—else not). 'Out with all
+your sails! A steadie man at the helm! Give him chace!'
+
+'Hee holds his owne—No, wee gather on him, Captaine!'
+
+_Out goes his flag and pendants, also his waist-cloths and top-armings,
+which is a long red cloth ... that goeth round about the shippe on the
+out-sides of all her upper works and fore and main-tops, as well for
+the countenance and grace of the shippe as to cover the men from being
+seen. He furls and slings his main-yard. In goes his sprit-sail. Thus
+they strip themselves into their fighting sails, which is, only the
+foresail, the main and fore topsails, because the rest should not be
+fired nor spoiled; besides, they would be troublesome to handle, hinder
+our sights and the using of our arms._
+
+'He makes ready his close-fights, fore and aft.' [Bulkheads set up to
+cover men under fire] ...
+
+'Every man to his charge! Dowse your topsail to salute him for the sea!
+Hail him with a noise of trumpets!'
+
+'Whence is your ship?'
+
+'Of Spain—whence is yours?'
+
+'Of England.'
+
+'Are you merchants or men of war?'
+
+'We are of the Sea!'
+
+_He waves us to leeward with his drawn sword,_ _calls out 'Amain' for
+the King of Spain, and springs his luff_[brings his vessel close by the
+wind].
+
+'Give him a chase-piece with your broadside, and run a good berth
+a-head of him!'
+
+'Done, done!'
+
+'We have the wind of him, and now he tacks about!'
+
+'Tack about also and keep your luff! Be yare at the helm! Edge in with
+him! Give him a volley of small shot, also your prow and broadside as
+before, and keep your luff!'
+
+'He pays us shot for shot!'
+
+'Well, we shall requite him!' ...
+
+'Edge in with him again! Begin with your bow pieces, proceed with your
+broadside, and let her fall off with the wind to give him also your
+full chase, your weather-broad-side, and bring her round so that the
+stern may also discharge, and your tacks close aboard again!' ...
+
+'The wind veers, the sea goes too high to board her, and we are shot
+through and through, and between wind and water.'
+
+'Try the pump! Bear up the helm! Sling a man overboard to stop the
+leaks, _that is_, truss him up around the middle in a piece of canvas
+and a rope, with his arms at liberty, with a mallet and plugs lapped in
+oakum and well tarred, and a tar-pauling clout, which he will quickly
+beat into the holes the bullets made.'
+
+'What cheer, Mates, is all Well?'
+
+'All's well!'
+
+'Then make ready to bear up with him again!'
+
+'With all your great and small shot charge him, board him thwart the
+hawse, on the bow, midships, or, rather than fail, on his quarter; or
+make fast your grapplings to his close-fights and sheer off' [which
+would tear his cover down].
+
+'Captain, we are foul of each other and the ship is on fire!'
+
+'Cut anything to get clear and smother the fire with wet cloths!'
+
+_In such a case they will bee presentlie such friends as to help one
+the other all they can to get clear, lest they should both burn
+together and so sink: and, if they be generous, and the fire be
+quenched, they will drink kindly one to the other, heave their canns
+over-board, and begin again as before...._
+
+'Chirurgeon, look to the wounded, and wind up the slain, and give them
+three guns for their funerals! Swabber, make clean the ship! Purser,
+record their names! Watch, be vigilant to keep your berth to windward,
+that we lose him not, in the night! Gunners, spunge your ordnance!
+Souldiers, scour your pieces! Carpenters, about your leaks! Boatswain
+and the rest, repair sails and shrouds! Cook, see you observe your
+directions against the morning watch!' ...
+
+'Boy, hallo! is the kettle boiled?'
+
+'Ay, ay, Sir!'
+
+'Boatswain, call up the men to prayer and breakfast!' ...
+
+_Always have as much care to their wounded as to your own; and if there
+be either young women or aged men, use them nobly ..._
+
+'Sound drums and trumpets: SAINT GEORGE FOR MERRIE ENGLAND!'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV — ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND
+
+
+Elizabethan England is the motherland, the true historic home, of all
+the different peoples who speak the sea-borne English tongue. In the
+reign of Elizabeth there was only one English-speaking nation. This
+nation consisted of a bare five million people, fewer than there are
+to-day in London or New York. But hardly had the Great Queen died
+before Englishmen began that colonizing movement which has carried
+their language the whole world round and established their civilization
+in every quarter of the globe. Within three centuries after Elizabeth's
+day the use of English as a native speech had grown quite thirtyfold.
+Within the same three centuries the number of those living under laws
+and institutions derived from England had grown a hundredfold.
+
+The England of Elizabeth was an England of great deeds, but of greater
+dreams. Elizabethan literature, take it for all in all, has never been
+surpassed; myriad-minded Shakespeare remains unequalled still.
+Elizabethan England was indeed 'a nest of singing birds.' Prose was
+often far too pedestrian for the exultant life of such a mighty
+generation. As new worlds came into their expectant ken, the glowing
+Elizabethans wished to fly there on the soaring wings of verse. To them
+the tide of fortune was no ordinary stream but the 'white-maned, proud,
+neck-arching tide' that bore adventurers to sea 'with pomp of waters
+unwithstood.'
+
+The goodly heritage that England gave her offspring overseas included
+Shakespeare and the English Bible. The Authorized Version entered into
+the very substance of early American life. There was a marked
+difference between Episcopalian Virginia and Puritan New England. But
+both took their stand on this version of the English Bible, in which
+the springs of Holy Writ rejoiced to run through channels of
+Elizabethan prose. It is true that Elizabeth slept with her fathers
+before this book of books was printed, and that the first of the
+Stuarts reigned in her stead. Nevertheless the Authorized Version is
+pure Elizabethan. All its translators were Elizabethans, as their
+dedication to King James, still printed with every copy, gratefully
+acknowledges in its reference to 'the setting of that bright Occidental
+Star, Queen Elizabeth of most happy memory.'
+
+These words of the reverend scholars contain no empty compliment.
+Elizabeth was a great sovereign and in some essential particulars, a
+very great national leader. This daughter of Henry VIII and his second
+wife, Anne Boleyn the debonair, was born a heretic in 1533. Her father
+was then defying both Spain and the Pope. Within three years after her
+birth her mother was beheaded; and by Act of Parliament Elizabeth
+herself was declared illegitimate. She was fourteen when her father
+died, leaving the kingdom to his three children in succession,
+Elizabeth being the third. Then followed the Protestant reign of the
+boy-king Edward VI, during which Elizabeth enjoyed security; then the
+Catholic reign of her Spanish half-sister, 'Bloody Mary,' during which
+her life hung by the merest thread.
+
+At first, however, Mary concealed her hostility to Elizabeth because
+she thought the two daughters of Henry VIII ought to appear together in
+her triumphal entry into London. From one point of view—and a feminine
+one at that—this was a fatal mistake on Mary's part: for never did
+Elizabeth show to more advantage. She was just under twenty, while Mary
+was nearly twice her age. Mary had, indeed, provided herself with one
+good foil in the person of Anne of Cleves, the 'Flemish mare' whose
+flat coarse face and lumbering body had disgusted King Henry thirteen
+years before, when Cromwell had foisted her upon him as his fourth
+wife. But with poor, fat, straw-colored Anne on one side, and
+black-and-sallow, foreign-looking, man-voiced Mary on the other, the
+thoroughly English Princess Elizabeth took London by storm on the spot.
+Tall and majestic, she was a magnificent example of the finest
+Anglo-Norman type. Always 'the glass of fashion' and then the very
+'mould of form' her splendid figure looked equally well on horseback or
+on foot. A little full in the eye, and with a slightly aquiline nose,
+she appeared, as she really was, keenly observant and commanding.
+Though these two features just prevented her from being a beauty, the
+bright blue eyes and the finely chiselled nose were themselves quite
+beautiful enough. Nor was she less taking to the ear than to the eye;
+for, in marked contrast to gruff foreign Mary and wheezy foreign Anne,
+she had a rich, clear, though rather too loud, English voice. When the
+Court reined up and dismounted, Elizabeth became even more the centre
+of attraction. Mary marched stiffly on. Anne plodded after. But as for
+Elizabeth—perfect in dancing, riding, archery, and all the sports of
+chivalry—'she trod the ling like a buck in spring, and she looked like
+a lance in rest.'
+
+When Elizabeth succeeded Mary in the autumn of 1558 she had dire need
+of all she had learnt in her twenty-five years of adventurous life.
+Fortunately for herself and, on the whole, most fortunately for both
+England and America, she had a remarkable power of inspiring devotion
+to the service of their queen and country in men of both the cool and
+ardent types; and this long after her personal charms had gone.
+Government, religion, finance, defence, and foreign affairs were in a
+perilous state of flux, besides which they have never been more
+distractingly mixed up with one another. Henry VII had saved money for
+twenty-five years. His three successors had spent it lavishly for
+fifty. Henry VIII had kept the Church Catholic in ritual while making
+it purely national in government. The Lord Protector Somerset had made
+it as Protestant as possible under Edward VI. Mary had done her best to
+bring it back to the Pope. Home affairs were full of doubts and
+dangers, though the great mass of the people were ready to give their
+handsome young queen a fair chance and not a little favor. Foreign
+affairs were worse. France was still the hereditary enemy; and the loss
+of Calais under Mary had exasperated the whole English nation. Scotland
+was a constant menace in the north. Spain was gradually changing from
+friend to foe. The Pope was disinclined to recognize Elizabeth at all.
+
+To understand how difficult her position was we must remember what sort
+of constitution England had when the germ of the United States was
+forming. The Roman Empire was one constituent whole from the emperor
+down. The English-speaking peoples of to-day form constituent wholes
+from the electorate up. In both cases all parts were and are in
+constant relation to the whole. The case of Elizabethan England,
+however, was very different. There was neither despotic unity from
+above nor democratic unity from below, but a mixed and fluctuating kind
+of government in which Crown, nobles, parliament, and people formed
+certain parts which had to be put together for each occasion. The
+accepted general idea was that the sovereign, supreme as an individual,
+looked after the welfare of the country in peace and war so far as the
+Crown estates permitted; but that whenever the Crown resources would
+not suffice then the sovereign could call on nobles and people for
+whatever the common weal required. _Noblesse oblige_. In return for the
+estates or monopolies which they had acquired the nobles and favored
+commoners were expected to come forward with all their resources at
+every national crisis precisely as the Crown was expected to work for
+the common weal at all times. When the resources of the Crown and
+favored courtiers sufficed, no parliament was called; but whenever they
+had to be supplemented then parliament met and voted whatever it
+approved. Finally, every English freeman was required to do his own
+share towards defending the country in time of need, and he was further
+required to know the proper use of arms.
+
+The great object of every European court during early modern times was
+to get both the old feudal nobility and the newly promoted commoners to
+revolve round the throne as round the centre of their solar system. By
+sheer force of character—for the Tudors, had no overwhelming army like
+the Roman emperors'—Henry VIII had succeeded wonderfully well.
+Elizabeth now had to piece together what had been broken under Edward
+VI and Mary. She, too, succeeded—and with the hearty goodwill of nearly
+all her subjects.
+
+Mary had left the royal treasury deeply in debt. Yet Elizabeth
+succeeded in paying off all arrears and meeting new expenditure for
+defence and for the court. The royal income rose. England became
+immensely richer and more prosperous than ever before. Foreign trade
+increased by leaps and bounds. Home industries flourished and were
+stimulated by new arrivals from abroad, because England was a safe
+asylum for the craftsmen whom Philip was driving from the Netherlands,
+to his own great loss and his rival's gain.
+
+English commercial life had been slowly emerging from medieval ways
+throughout the fifteenth century. With the beginning of the sixteenth
+the rate of emergence had greatly quickened. The soil-bound peasant who
+produced enough food for his family from his thirty acres was being
+gradually replaced by the well-to-do yeoman who tilled a hundred acres
+and upwards. Such holdings produced a substantial surplus for the
+market. This increased the national wealth, which, in its turn,
+increased both home and foreign trade. The peasant merely raised a
+little wheat and barley, kept a cow, and perhaps some sheep. The yeoman
+or tenant farmer had sheep enough for the wool trade besides some
+butter, cheese, and meat for the nearest growing town. He began to
+'garnish his cupboards with pewter and his joined beds with tapestry
+and silk hangings, and his tables with carpets and fine napery.' He
+could even feast his neighbors and servants after shearing day with
+new-fangled foreign luxuries like dates, mace, raisins, currants, and
+sugar.
+
+But Elizabethan society presented striking contrasts. In parts of
+England, the practice of engrossing and enclosing holdings was
+increasing, as sheep-raising became more profitable than farming. The
+tenants thus dispossessed either swelled the ranks of the vagabonds who
+infested the highways or sought their livelihood at sea or in London,
+which provided the two best openings for adventurous young men. The
+smaller provincial towns afforded them little opportunity, for there
+the trades were largely in the hands of close corporations descended
+from the medieval craft guilds. These were eventually to be swept away
+by the general trend of business. Their dissolution had indeed already
+begun; for smart village craftsmen were even then forming the new
+industrial settlements from which most of the great manufacturing towns
+of England have sprung. Camden the historian found Birmingham full of
+ringing anvils, Sheffield 'a town of great name for the smiths
+therein,' Leeds renowned for cloth, and Manchester already a sort of
+cottonopolis, though the 'cottons' of those days were still made of
+wool.
+
+There was a wages question then as now. There were demands for a
+minimum living wage. The influx of gold and silver from America had
+sent all prices soaring. Meat became almost prohibitive for the
+'submerged tenth'—there was a rapidly submerging tenth. Beef rose from
+one cent a pound in the forties to four in 1588, the year of the
+Armada. How would the lowest paid of craftsmen fare on twelve cents a
+day, with butter at ten cents a pound? Efforts were made, again and
+again, to readjust the ratio between prices and wages. But, as a rule,
+prices increased much faster than wages.
+
+All these things—the increase of surplus hands, the high cost of
+living, grievances about wages and interest—tended to make the farms
+and workshops of England recruiting-grounds for the sea; and the young
+men would strike out for themselves as freighters, traders, privateers,
+or downright pirates, lured by the dazzling chance of great and sudden
+wealth.
+
+'The gamble of it' was as potent then as now, probably more potent
+still. It was an age of wild speculation accompanied by all the usual
+evils that follow frenzied ways. It was also an age of monopoly. Both
+monopoly and speculation sent recruits into the sea-dog ranks.
+Elizabeth would grant, say, to Sir Walter Raleigh, the monopoly of
+sweet wines. Raleigh would naturally want as much sweet wine imported
+as England could be induced to swallow. So, too, would Elizabeth, who
+got the duty. Crews would be wanted for the monopolistic ships. They
+would also be wanted for 'free-trading' vessels, that is, for the ships
+of the smugglers who underbid, undersold, and tried to overreach the
+monopolist, who represented law, though not quite justice. But
+speculation ran to greater extremes than either monopoly or smuggling.
+Shakespeare's 'Putter-out of five for one' was a typical Elizabethan
+speculator exploiting the riskiest form of sea-dog trade for all—and
+sometimes for more than all—that it was worth. A merchant-adventurer
+would pay a capitalist, say, a thousand pounds as a premium to be
+forfeited if his ship should be lost, but to be repaid by the
+capitalist fivefold to the merchant if it returned. Incredible as it
+may seem to us, there were shrewd money-lenders always ready for this
+sort of deal in life—or life-and-death—insurance: an eloquent testimony
+to the risks encountered in sailing unknown seas in the midst of
+well-known dangers.
+
+Marine insurance of the regular kind was, of course, a very different
+thing. It was already of immemorial age, going back certainly to
+medieval and probably to very ancient times. All forms of insurance on
+land are mere mushrooms by comparison. Lloyd's had not been heard of.
+But there were plenty of smart Elizabethan underwriters already
+practising the general principles which were to be formally adopted two
+hundred years later, in 1779, at Lloyd's Coffee House. A policy taken
+out on the _Tiger_ immortalized by Shakespeare would serve as a model
+still. And what makes it all the more interesting is that the
+Elizabethan underwriters calculated the _Tiger's_ chances at the very
+spot where the association known as Lloyd's transacts its business
+to-day, the Royal Exchange in London. This, in turn, brings Elizabeth
+herself upon the scene; for when she visited the Exchange, which Sir
+Thomas Gresham had built to let the merchants do their street work
+under cover, she immediately grasped its full significance and 'caused
+it by an Herald and a Trumpet to be proclaimed The Royal Exchange,' the
+name it bears to-day. An Elizabethan might well be astonished by what
+he would see at any modern Lloyd's. Yet he would find the same
+essentials; for the British Lloyd's, like most of its foreign
+imitators, is not a gigantic insurance company at all, but an
+association of cautiously elected members who carry on their completely
+independent private business in daily touch with each other—precisely
+as Elizabethans did. Lloyd's method differs wholly from ordinary
+insurance. Instead of insuring vessel and cargo with a single company
+or man the owner puts his case before Lloyd's, and any member can then
+write his name underneath for any reasonable part of the risk. The
+modern 'underwriter,' all the world over, is the direct descendant of
+the Elizabethan who wrote his name under the conditions of a given risk
+at sea.
+
+Joint-stock companies were in one sense old when Elizabethan men of
+business were young. But the Elizabethans developed them enormously.
+'Going shares' was doubtless prehistoric. It certainly was ancient,
+medieval, and Elizabethan. But those who formerly went shares generally
+knew each other and something of the business too. The favorite number
+of total shares was just sixteen. There were sixteen land-shares in a
+Celtic household, sixteen shares in Scottish vessels not individually
+owned, sixteen shares in the theatre by which Shakespeare 'made his
+pile.' But sixteenths, and even hundredths, were put out of date when
+speculation on the grander scale began and the area of investment grew.
+The New River Company, for supplying London with water, had only a few
+shares then, as it continued to have down to our own day, when they
+stood at over a thousand times par. The Ulster 'Plantation' in Ireland
+was more remote and appealed to more investors and on wider
+grounds—sentimental grounds, both good and bad, included. The Virginia
+'Plantation' was still more remote and risky and appealed to an
+ever-increasing number of the speculating public. Many an investor put
+money on America in much the same way as a factory hand to-day puts
+money on a horse he has never seen or has never heard of otherwise than
+as something out of which a lot of easy money can be made provided luck
+holds good.
+
+The modern prospectus was also in full career under Elizabeth, who
+probably had a hand in concocting some of the most important specimens.
+Lord Bacon wrote one describing the advantages of the Newfoundland
+fisheries in terms which no promoter of the present day could better.
+Every type of prospectus was tried on the investing public, some
+genuine, many doubtful, others as outrageous in their impositions on
+human credulity as anything produced in our own times. The
+company-promoter was abroad, in London, on 'Change, and at court. What
+with royal favor, social prestige, general prosperity, the new national
+eagerness to find vent for surplus commodities, and, above all, the
+spirit of speculation fanned into flame by the real and fabled wonders
+of America, what with all this the investing public could take its
+choice of 'going the limit' in a hundred different and most alluring
+ways. England was surprised at her own investing wealth. The East India
+Company raised eight million dollars with ease from a thousand
+shareholders and paid a first dividend of 87-1/2 per cent. Spices,
+pearls, and silks came pouring into London; and English goods found
+vent increasingly abroad.
+
+Vastly expanding business opportunities of course produced the spirit
+of the trust—and of very much the same sort of trust that Americans
+think so ultra-modern now. Monopolies granted by the Crown and the
+volcanic forces of widespread speculation prevented some of the abuses
+of the trust. But there were Elizabethan trusts, for all that, though
+many a promising scheme fell through. The Feltmakers' Hat Trust is a
+case in point. They proposed buying up all the hats in the market so as
+to oblige all dealers to depend upon one central warehouse. Of course
+they issued a prospectus showing how everyone concerned would benefit
+by this benevolent plan.
+
+Ben Jonson and other playwrights were quick to seize the salient
+absurdities of such an advertisement. In _The Staple of News_ Jonson
+proposed a News Trust to collect all the news of the world, corner it,
+classify it into authentic, apocryphal, barber's gossip, and so forth,
+and then sell it, for the sole benefit of the consumer, in lengths to
+suit all purchasers. In _The Devil is an Ass_ he is a little more
+outspoken.
+
+We'll take in citizens, commoners, and aldermen
+To bear the charge, and blow them off again
+Like so many dead flies....
+
+
+This was exactly what was at that very moment being done in the case of
+the Alum Trust. All the leading characters of much more modern times
+were there already; Fitzdottrell, ready to sell his estates in order to
+become His Grace the Duke of Drown'dland, Gilthead, the London
+moneylender who 'lives by finding fools,' and My Lady Tailbush, who
+pulls the social wires at court. And so the game went on, usually with
+the result explained by Shakespeare's fisherman in _Pericles_:
+
+'I marvel how the fishes live in the sea'—
+'Why, as men do a-land: the great ones eat up the little ones.'
+
+
+The Newcastle coal trade grew into something very like a modern
+American trust with the additional advantage of an authorized
+government monopoly so long as the agreed-upon duty was paid. Then
+there was the Starch Monopoly, a very profitable one because starch was
+a new delight which soon enabled Elizabethan fops to wear ruffed
+collars big enough to make their heads—as one irreverent satirist
+exclaimed—'look like John Baptist's on a platter.'
+
+But America? Could not America defeat the machinations of all
+monopolies and other trusts? Wasn't America the land of actual gold and
+silver where there was plenty of room for everyone? There soon grew up
+a wild belief that you could tap America for precious metals almost as
+its Indians tapped maple trees for sugar. The 'Mountains of Bright
+Stones' were surely there. Peru and Mexico were nothing to these. Only
+find them, and 'get-rich-quick' would be the order of the day for every
+true adventurer. These mountains moved about in men's imaginations and
+on prospectors' maps, always ahead of the latest pioneer, somewhere
+behind the Back of Beyond. They and their glamour died hard. Even that
+staid geographer of a later day, Thos. Jeffreys, added to his standard
+atlas of America, in 1760, this item of information on the Far
+Northwest: _Hereabouts are supposed to be the Mountains of Bright
+Stones mentioned in the Map of ye Indian Ochagach._
+
+Speculation of the wildcat kind was bad. But it was the seamy side of a
+praiseworthy spirit of enterprise. Monopoly seems worse than
+speculation. And so, in many ways, it was. But we must judge it by the
+custom of its age. It was often unjust and generally obstructive. But
+it did what neither the national government nor joint-stock companies
+had yet learnt to do. Monopoly went by court favor, and its rights were
+often scandalously let and sometimes sublet as well. But, on the whole,
+the Queen, the court, and the country really meant business, and
+monopolists had either to deliver the goods or get out. Monopolists
+sold dispensations from unworkable laws, which was sometimes a good
+thing and sometimes a bad. They sold licenses for indulgence in
+forbidden pleasures, not often harmless. They thought out and collected
+all kinds of indirect taxation and had to face all the troubles that
+confront the framers of a tariff policy to-day. Most of all, however,
+in a rough-and-ready way they set a sort of Civil Service going. They
+served as Boards of Trade, Departments of the Interior, Customs, Inland
+Revenue, and so forth. What Crown and Parliament either could not or
+would not do was farmed out to monopolists. Like speculation the system
+worked both ways, and frequently for evil. But, like the British
+constitution, though on a lower plane, it worked.
+
+A monopoly at home—like those which we have been considering—was
+endurable because it was a working compromise that suited existing
+circumstances more or less, and that could be either mended or ended as
+time went on. But a general foreign monopoly—like Spain's monopoly of
+America—was quite unendurable. Could Spain not only hold what she had
+discovered and was exploiting but also extend her sphere of influence
+over what she had not discovered? Spain said Yes. England said No. The
+Spaniards looked for tribute. The English looked for trade. In
+government, in religion, in business, in everything, the two great
+rivals were irreconcilably opposed. Thus the lists were set; and
+sea-dog battles followed.
+
+Elizabeth was an exceedingly able woman of business and was practically
+president of all the great joint-stock companies engaged in oversea
+trade. Wherever a cargo could be bought or sold there went an English
+ship to buy or sell it. Whenever the authorities in foreign parts tried
+discrimination against English men or English goods, the English
+sea-dogs growled and showed their teeth. And if the foreigners
+persisted, the sea-dogs bit them.
+
+Elizabeth was extravagant at court; but not without state motives for
+at least a part of her extravagance. A brilliant court attracted the
+upper classes into the orbit of the Crown while it impressed the whole
+country with the sovereign's power. Courtiers favored with monopolies
+had to spend their earnings when the state was threatened. And might
+not the Queen's vast profusion of jewelry be turned to account at a
+pinch? Elizabeth could not afford to be generous when she was young.
+She grew to be stingy when she was old. But she saved the state by
+sound finance as well as by arms in spite of all her pomps and
+vanities. She had three thousand dresses, and gorgeous ones at that,
+during the course of her reign. Her bathroom was wainscoted with
+Venetian mirrors so that she could see 'nine-and-ninety' reflections of
+her very comely person as she dipped and splashed or dried her royal
+skin. She set a hot pace for all the votaries of dress to follow. All
+kinds of fashions came in from abroad with the rush of new-found
+wealth; and so, instead of being sanely beautiful, they soon became
+insanely bizarre. 'An Englishman,' says Harrison, 'endeavouring to
+write of our attire, gave over his travail, and only drew the picture
+of a naked man, since he could find no kind of garment that could
+please him any whiles together.
+
+I am an English man and naked I stand here,
+Musing in my mind what raiment I shall were;
+For now I will were this, and now I will were that;
+And now I will were I cannot tell what.
+
+
+Except you see a dog in a doublet you shall not see any so disguised as
+are my countrymen of England. Women also do far exceed the lightness of
+our men. What shall I say of their galligascons to bear out their
+attire and make it fit plum round?' But the wives of 'citizens and
+burgesses,' like all _nouveaux riches_, were still more bizarre than
+the courtiers. 'They cannot tell when or how to make an end, being
+women in whom all kind of curiosity is to be seen in far greater
+measure than in women of higher calling. I might name hues devised for
+the nonce, ver d'oye 'twixt green and yallow, peas-porridge tawny,
+popinjay blue, and the Devil-in-the-head.'
+
+Yet all this crude absurdity, 'from the courtier to the carter,' was
+the glass reflecting the constantly increasing sea-borne trade, ever
+pushing farther afield under the stimulus and protection of the
+sea-dogs. And the Queen took precious good care that it all paid toll
+to her treasury through the customs, so that she could have more money
+to build more ships. And if her courtiers did stuff their breeches out
+with sawdust, she took equally good care that each fighting man among
+them donned his uniform and raised his troops or fitted out his ships
+when the time was ripe for action.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V — HAWKINS AND THE FIGHTING TRADERS
+
+
+Said Francis I of France to Charles V, King of Spain: 'Your Majesty and
+the King of Portugal have divided the world between you, offering no
+part of it to me. Show me, I pray you, the will of our father Adam, so
+that I may see if he has really made you his only universal heirs!'
+Then Francis sent out the Italian navigator Verrazano, who first
+explored the coast from Florida to Newfoundland. Afterwards Jacques
+Cartier discovered the St. Lawrence; Frenchmen took Havana twice,
+plundered the Spanish treasure-ships, and tried to found
+colonies—Catholic in Canada, Protestant in Florida and Brazil.
+
+Thus, at the time when Elizabeth ascended the throne of England in
+1558, there was a long-established New Spain extending over Mexico, the
+West Indies, and most of South America; a small New Portugal confined
+to part of Brazil; and a shadowy New France running vaguely inland from
+the Gulf of St. Lawrence, nowhere effectively occupied, and mostly
+overlapping prior English claims based on the discoveries of the
+Cabots.
+
+England and France had often been enemies. England and Spain had just
+been allied in a war against France as well as by the marriage of
+Philip and Mary. William Hawkins had traded with Portuguese Brazil
+under Henry VIII, as the Southampton merchants were to do later on.
+English merchants lived in Lisbon and Cadiz; a few were even settled in
+New Spain; and a friendly Spaniard had been so delighted by the
+prospective union of the English with the Spanish crown that he had
+given the name of Londres (London) to a new settlement in the Argentine
+Andes.
+
+Presently, however, Elizabethan England began to part company with
+Spain, to become more anti-Papal, to sympathize with Huguenots and
+other heretics, and, like Francis I, to wonder why an immense new world
+should be nothing but New Spain. Besides, Englishmen knew what the rest
+of Europe knew, that the discovery of Potosi had put out of business
+nearly all the Old-World silver mines, and that the Burgundian Ass (as
+Spanish treasure-mules were called, from Charles's love of Burgundy)
+had enabled Spain to make conquests, impose her will on her neighbors,
+and keep paid spies in every foreign court, the English court included.
+Londoners had seen Spanish gold and silver paraded through the streets
+when Philip married Mary—'27 chests of bullion, 99 horseloads + 2
+cartloads of gold and silver coin, and 97 boxes full of silver bars!'
+Moreover, the Holy Inquisition was making Spanish seaports pretty hot
+for heretics. In 1562, twenty-six English subjects were burnt alive in
+Spain itself. Ten times as many were in prison. No wonder sea-dogs were
+straining at the leash.
+
+Neither Philip nor Elizabeth wanted war just then, though each enjoyed
+a thrust at the other by any kind of fighting short of that, and though
+each winked at all kinds of armed trade, such as privateering and even
+downright piracy. The English and Spanish merchants had commercial
+connections going back for centuries; and business men on both sides
+were always ready to do a good stroke for themselves.
+
+This was the state of affairs in 1562 when young John Hawkins, son of
+'Olde Master William,' went into the slave trade with New Spain. Except
+for the fact that both Portugal and Spain allowed no trade with their
+oversea possessions in any ships but their own, the circumstances
+appeared to favor his enterprise. The American Indians were withering
+away before the atrocious cruelties of the Portuguese and Spaniards,
+being either killed in battle, used up in merciless slavery, or driven
+off to alien wilds. Already the Portuguese had commenced to import
+negroes from their West African possessions, both for themselves and
+for trade with the Spaniards, who had none. Brazil prospered beyond
+expectation and absorbed all the blacks that Portuguese shipping could
+supply. The Spaniards had no spare tonnage at the time.
+
+John Hawkins, aged thirty, had made several trips to the Canaries. He
+now formed a joint-stock company to trade with the Spaniards farther
+off. Two Lord Mayors of London and the Treasurer of the Royal Navy were
+among the subscribers. Three small vessels, with only two hundred and
+sixty tons between them, formed the flotilla. The crews numbered just a
+hundred men. 'At Teneriffe he received friendly treatment. From thence
+he passed to Sierra Leona, where he stayed a good time, and got into
+his possession, partly by the sword and partly by other means, to the
+number of 300 Negroes at the least, besides other merchandises.... With
+this prey he sailed over the ocean sea unto the island of Hispaniola
+[Hayti] ... and here he had reasonable utterance [sale] of his English
+commodities, as also of some part of his Negroes, trusting the
+Spaniards no further than that by his own strength he was able still to
+master them.' At 'Monte Christi, another port on the north side of
+Hispaniola ... he made vent of [sold] the whole number of his Negroes,
+for which he received by way of exchange such a quantity of merchandise
+that he did not only lade his own three ships with hides, ginger,
+sugars, and some quantity of pearls, but he freighted also two other
+hulks with hides and other like commodities, which he sent into Spain,'
+where both hulks and hides were confiscated as being contraband.
+
+Nothing daunted, he was off again in 1564 with four ships and a hundred
+and seventy men. This time Elizabeth herself took shares and lent the
+_Jesus of Lubeck_, a vessel of seven hundred tons which Henry VIII had
+bought for the navy. Nobody questioned slavery in those days. The great
+Spanish missionary Las Casas denounced the Spanish atrocities against
+the Indians. But he thought negroes, who could be domesticated, would
+do as substitutes for Indians, who could not be domesticated. The
+Indians withered at the white man's touch. The negroes, if properly
+treated, throve, and were safer than among their enemies at home. Such
+was the argument for slavery; and it was true so far as it went. The
+argument against, on the score of ill treatment, was only gradually
+heard. On the score of general human rights it was never heard at all.
+
+'At departing, in cutting the foresail lashings a marvellous misfortune
+happened to one of the officers in the ship, who by the pulley of the
+sheet was slain out of hand.' Hawkins 'appointed all the masters of his
+ships an Order for the keeping of good company in this manner:—The
+small ships to be always ahead and aweather of the _Jesus_, and to
+speak twice a-day with the _Jesus_ at least.... If the weather be
+extreme, that the small ships cannot keep company with the _Jesus_,
+then all to keep company with the _Solomon_.... If any happen to any
+misfortune, then to show two lights, and to shoot off a piece of
+ordnance. If any lose company and come in sight again, to make three
+yaws [zigzags in their course] and strike the mizzen three times. SERVE
+GOD DAILY. LOVE ONE ANOTHER. PRESERVE YOUR VICTUALS. BEWARE OF FIRE,
+AND KEEP GOOD COMPANY.'
+
+John Sparke, the chronicler of this second voyage, was full of
+curiosity over every strange sight he met with. He was also blessed
+with the pen of a ready writer. So we get a story that is more
+vivacious than Hakluyt's retelling of the first voyage or Hawkins's own
+account of the third. Sparke saw for the first time in his life
+negroes, Caribs, Indians, alligators, flying-fish, flamingoes,
+pelicans, and many other strange sights. Having been told that Florida
+was full of unicorns he at once concluded that it must also be full of
+lions; for how could the one kind exist without the other kind to
+balance it? Sparke was a soldier who never found his sea legs. But his
+diary, besides its other merits, is particularly interesting as being
+the first account of America ever written by an English eyewitness.
+
+Hawkins made for Teneriffe in the Canaries, off the west of Africa.
+There, to everybody's great 'amaze,' the Spaniards 'appeared levelling
+of bases [small portable cannon] and arquebuses, with divers others, to
+the number of fourscore, with halberds, pikes, swords, and targets.'
+But when it was found that Hawkins had been taken for a privateer, and
+when it is remembered that four hundred privateering vessels—English
+and Huguenot—had captured seven hundred Spanish prizes during the
+previous summer of 1563, there was and is less cause for 'amaze.' Once
+explanations had been made, 'Peter de Ponte gave Master Hawkins as
+gentle entertainment as if he had been his own brother.' Peter was a
+trader with a great eye for the main chance.
+
+Sparke was lost in wonder over the famous Arbol Santo tree of Ferro,
+'by the dropping whereof the inhabitants and cattle are satisfied with
+water, for other water they have none on the island.' This is not quite
+the traveller's tale it appears to be. There are three springs on the
+island of Teneriffe. But water is scarce, and the Arbol Santo, a sort
+of gigantic laurel standing alone on a rocky ledge, did actually supply
+two cisterns, one for men and the other for cattle. The morning mist
+condensing on the innumerable smooth leaves ran off and was caught in
+suitable conduits.
+
+In Africa Hawkins took many 'Sapies which do inhabit about Rio Grande
+[now the Jeba River] which do jag their flesh, both legs, arms, and
+bodies as workmanlike as a jerkin-maker with us pinketh a jerkin.' It
+is a nice question whether these Sapies gained or lost by becoming
+slaves to white men; for they were already slaves to black conquerors
+who used them as meat with the vegetables they forced them to raise.
+The Sapies were sleek pacifists who found too late that the warlike
+Samboses, who inhabited the neighboring desert, were not to be denied.
+
+'In the island of Sambula we found almadies or canoas, which are made
+of one piece of wood, digged out like a trough, but of a good
+proportion, being about eight yards long and one in breadth, having a
+beak-head and a stern very proportionably made, and on the outside
+artificially carved, and painted red and blue.' Neither _almadie_ nor
+canoa is, of course, an African word. One is Arabic for a cradle
+(_el-mahd_); the other, from which we get _canoe_, is what the natives
+told Columbus they called their dugouts; and dugout canoes are very
+like primitive cradles. Thus Sparke was the first man to record in
+English, from actual experience, the aboriginal craft whose name, both
+East and West, was suggested to primeval man by the idea of his being
+literally 'rocked in the cradle of the deep.'
+
+Hawkins did not have it all his own way with the negroes, by whom he
+once lost seven of his own men killed and twenty-seven wounded. 'But
+the captain in a singular wise manner carried himself with countenance
+very cheerful outwardly, although inwardly his heart was broken in
+pieces for it; done to this end, that the Portugais, being with him,
+should not presume to resist against him.' After losing five more men,
+who were eaten by sharks, Hawkins shaped his course westward with a
+good cargo of negroes and 'other merchandises.' 'Contrary winds and
+some tornados happened to us very ill. But the Almighty God, who never
+suffereth His elect to perish, sent us the ordinary Breeze, which never
+left us till we came to an island of the Cannibals' (Caribs of
+Dominica), who, by the by, had just eaten a shipload of Spaniards.
+
+Hawkins found the Spanish officials determined to make a show of
+resisting unauthorized trade. But when 'he prepared 100 men well armed
+with bows, arrows, arquebuses, and pikes, with which he marched
+townwards,' the officials let the sale of blacks go on. Hawkins was
+particularly anxious to get rid of his 'lean negroes,' who might die in
+his hands and become a dead loss; so he used the 'gunboat argument' to
+good effect. Sparke kept his eyes open for side-shows and was delighted
+with the alligators, which he called crocodiles, perhaps for the sake
+of the crocodile tears. 'His nature is to cry and sob like a Christian
+to provoke his prey to come to him; and thereupon came this proverb,
+that is applied unto women when they weep, _lachrymoe crocodili_.'
+
+From the West Indies Hawkins made for Florida, which was then an object
+of exceptional desire among adventurous Englishmen. De Soto, one of
+Pizarro's lieutenants, had annexed it to Spain and, in 1539, had
+started off inland to discover the supposed Peru of North America.
+Three years later he had died while descending the valley of the
+Mississippi. Six years later again, the first Spanish missionary in
+Florida 'taking upon him to persuade the people to subjection, was by
+them taken, and his skin cruelly pulled over his ears, and his flesh
+eaten.' Hawkins's men had fair warning on the way; for 'they, being
+ashore, found a dead man, dried in a manner whole, with other heads and
+bodies of men,' apparently smoked like hams. 'But to return to our
+purpose,' adds the indefatigable Sparke, 'the captain in the ship's
+pinnace sailed along the shore and went into every creek, speaking with
+divers of the _Floridians_, because he would understand where the
+Frenchmen inhabited.' Finally he found them 'in the river of _May_ [now
+St. John's River] and standing in 30 degrees and better.' There was
+'great store of maize and mill, and grapes of great bigness. Also deer
+great plenty, which came upon the sands before them.'
+
+So here were the three rivals overlapping again—the annexing Spaniards,
+the would-be colonizing French, and the persistently trading English.
+There were, however, no Spaniards about at that time. This was the
+second Huguenot colony in Florida. René de Laudonnière had founded it
+in 1564. The first one, founded two years earlier by Jean Ribaut, had
+failed and Ribaut's men had deserted the place. They had started for
+home in 1563, had suffered terrible hardships, had been picked up by an
+English vessel, and taken, some to France and some to England, where
+the court was all agog about the wealth of Florida. People said there
+were mines so bright with jewels that they had to be approached at
+night lest the flashing light should strike men blind. Florida became
+proverbial; and Elizabethan wits made endless fun of it. _Stolida_, or
+the land of fools, and _Sordida_, or the land of muck-worms, were some
+of their _jeux d'esprit_. Everyone was 'bound for Florida,' whether he
+meant to go there or not, despite Spanish spheres of influence, the
+native cannibals, and pirates by the way.
+
+Hawkins, on the contrary, did not profess to be bound for Florida.
+Nevertheless he arrived there, and probably had intended to do so from
+the first, for he took with him a Frenchman who had been in Ribaut's
+colony two years before, and Sparke significantly says that 'the land
+is more than any [one] king Christian is able to inhabit.' However this
+may be, Hawkins found the second French colony as well as 'a French
+ship of fourscore ton, and two pinnaces of fifteen ton apiece by her
+... and a fort, in which their captain Monsieur Laudonnière was, with
+certain soldiers therein.' The colony had not been a success. Nor is
+this to be wondered at when we remember that most of the 'certain
+soldiers' were ex-pirates, who wanted gold, and 'who would not take the
+pains so much as to fish in the river before their doors, but would
+have all things put in their mouths.' Eighty of the original two
+hundred 'went a-roving' to the West Indies, 'where they spoiled the
+Spaniards ... and were of such haughty stomachs that they thought their
+force to be such that no man durst meddle with them.... But God ... did
+indurate their hearts in such sort that they lingered so long that a
+[Spanish] ship and galliasse being made out of St. Domingo ... took
+twenty of them, whereof the most part were hanged ... and twenty-five
+escaped ... to Florida, where ... they were put into prison [by
+Laudonnière, against whom they had mutinied] and ... four of the
+chiefest being condemned, at the request of the soldiers did pass the
+arquebusers, and then were hanged upon a gibbet.' Sparke got the
+delightful expression 'at the request of the soldiers did pass the
+arquebusers' from a 'very polite' Frenchman. Could any one tell you
+more politely, in mistranslated language, how to stand up and be shot?
+
+Sparke was greatly taken with the unknown art of smoking. 'The
+Floridians ... have an herb dried, who, with a cane and an earthen cup
+in the end, with fire and the dried herbs put together, do suck through
+the cane the smoke thereof, which smoke satisfieth their hunger, and
+therewith they live four or five days without meat or drink. And this
+all the Frenchmen used for this purpose; yet do they hold opinion
+withal that it causeth water and steam to void from their stomachs.'
+The other 'commodities of the land' were 'more than are yet known to
+any man.' But Hawkins was bent on trade, not colonizing. He sold the
+_Tiger_, a barque of fifty tons, to Laudonnière for seven hundred
+crowns and sailed north on the first voyage ever made along the coast
+of the United States by an all-English crew. Turning east off
+Newfoundland 'with a good large wind, the 20 September 1565 we came to
+Padstow, in Cornwall, God be thanked! in safety, with the loss of
+twenty persons in all the voyage, and with great profit to the
+venturers, as also to the whole realm, in bringing home both gold,
+silver, pearls, and other jewels great store. His name, therefore, be
+praised for evermore. Amen.'
+
+Hawkins was now a rich man, a favorite at court, and quite the rage in
+London. The Queen was very gracious and granted him the well-known coat
+of arms with the crest of 'a demi-Moor, bound and captive' in honor of
+the great new English slave trade. The Spanish ambassador met him at
+court and asked him to dinner, where, over the wine, Hawkins assured
+him that he was going out again next year. Meanwhile, however, the
+famous Captain-General of the Indian trade, Don Pedro Menendez de
+Aviles, the best naval officer that Spain perhaps has ever had, swooped
+down on the French in Florida, killed them all, and built the fort of
+St. Augustine to guard the 'Mountains of Bright Stones' somewhere in
+the hinterland. News of this slaughter soon arrived at Madrid, whence
+orders presently went out to have an eye on Hawkins, whom Spanish
+officials thenceforth regarded as the leading interloper in New Spain.
+
+Nevertheless Hawkins set out on his third and very 'troublesome' voyage
+in 1567, backed by all his old and many new supporters, and with a
+flotilla of six vessels, the _Jesus_, the _Minion_ (which then meant
+darling), the _William and John_, the _Judith_, the _Angel_, and the
+_Swallow_. This was the voyage that began those twenty years of sea-dog
+fighting which rose to their zenith in the battle against the Armada;
+and with this voyage Drake himself steps on to the stage as captain of
+the _Judith_.
+
+There had been a hitch in 1566, for the Spanish ambassador had reported
+Hawkins's after-dinner speech to his king. Philip had protested to
+Elizabeth, and Elizabeth had consulted with Cecil, afterwards 'the
+great Lord Burleigh,' ancestor of the Marquis of Salisbury, British
+Prime Minister during the Spanish-American War of 1898. The result was
+that orders went down to Plymouth stopping Hawkins and binding him
+over, in a bond of five hundred pounds, to keep the peace with Her
+Majesty's right good friend King Philip of Spain. But in 1567 times had
+changed again, and Hawkins sailed with colors flying, for Elizabeth was
+now as ready to hurt Philip as he was to hurt her, provided always that
+open war was carefully avoided.
+
+But this time things went wrong from the first. A tremendous autumnal
+storm scattered the ships. Then the first negroes that Hawkins tried to
+'snare' proved to be like that other kind of prey of which the
+sarcastic Frenchman wrote: 'This animal is very wicked; when you attack
+it, it defends itself.' The 'envenomed arrows' of the negroes worked
+the mischief. 'There hardly escaped any that had blood drawn of them,
+but died in strange sort, with their mouths shut some ten days before
+they died.' Hawkins himself was wounded, but, 'thanks be to God,'
+escaped the lockjaw. After this the English took sides in a native war
+and captured '250 persons, men, women, and children,' while their
+friend the King captured '600 prisoners, whereof we hoped to have had
+our choice. But the negro, in which nation is seldom or never found
+truth, that night removed his camp and prisoners, so that we were fain
+to content ourselves with those few we had gotten ourselves.'
+
+However, with 'between 400 and 500 negroes,' Hawkins crossed over from
+Africa to the West Indies and 'coasted from place to place, making our
+traffic with the Spaniards as we might, somewhat hardly, because the
+King had straitly commanded all his governors by no means to suffer any
+trade to be made with us. Notwithstanding, we had reasonable trade, and
+courteous entertainment' for a good part of the way. In Rio de la Hacha
+the Spaniards received the English with a volley that killed a couple
+of men, whereupon the English smashed in the gates, while the Spaniards
+retired. But, after this little bit of punctilio, trade went on under
+cover of night so briskly that two hundred negroes were sold at good
+prices. From there to Cartagena 'the inhabitants were glad of us and
+traded willingly,' supply being short and demand extra high.
+
+Then came a real rebuff from the governor of Cartagena, followed by a
+terrific storm 'which so beat the _Jesus_ that we cut down all her
+higher buildings' (deck superstructures). Then the course was shaped
+for Florida. But a new storm drove the battered flotilla back to 'the
+port which serveth the city of Mexico, called St. John de Ulua,' the
+modern Vera Cruz. The historic Vera Cruz was fifteen miles north of
+this harbor. Here 'thinking us to be the fleet of Spain, the chief
+officers of the country came aboard us. Which, being deceived of their
+expectation, were greatly dismayed; but ... when they saw our demand
+was nothing but victuals, were recomforted. I [for it is Hawkins's own
+story] found in the same port 12 ships which had in them by report
+£200,000 in gold and silver, all which, being in my possession [i.e.,
+at my mercy] with the King's Island ... I set at liberty.'
+
+What was to be done? Hawkins had a hundred negroes still to sell. But
+it was four hundred miles to Mexico City and back again; and a new
+Spanish viceroy was aboard the big Spanish fleet that was daily
+expected to arrive in this very port. If a permit to sell came back
+from the capital in time, well and good. If no more than time to
+replenish stores was allowed, good enough, despite the loss of sales.
+But what if the Spanish fleet arrived? The 'King's Island' was a low
+little reef right in the mouth of the harbor, which it all but barred.
+Moreover, no vessel could live through a northerly gale inside the
+harbor—the only one on that coast—unless securely moored to the island
+itself. Consequently whoever held the island commanded the situation
+altogether.
+
+There was not much time for consultation; for the very next morning 'we
+saw open of the haven 13 great ships, the fleet of Spain.' It was a
+terrible predicament. '_Now_, said I, _I am in two dangers, and forced
+to receive the one of them_.... Either I must have kept out the fleet,
+which, with God's help, I was very well able to do, or else suffer them
+to enter with their accustomed treason.... If I had kept them out, then
+there had been present shipwreck of all that fleet, which amounted in
+value to six millions, which was in value of our money £1,800,000,
+which I considered I was not able to answer, fearing the Queen's
+Majesty's indignation.... Thus with myself revolving the doubts, I
+thought better to abide the jut of the uncertainty than of the
+certainty.' So, after conditions had been agreed upon and hostages
+exchanged, the thirteen Spanish ships sailed in. The little island
+remained in English hands; and the Spaniards were profuse in promises.
+
+But, having secretly made their preparations, the Spaniards, who were
+in overwhelming numbers, suddenly set upon the English by land and sea.
+Every Englishman ashore was killed, except a few who got off in a boat
+to the _Jesus_. The _Jesus_ and the _Minion_ cut their headfasts,
+hauled clear by their sternfasts, drove back the boarding parties, and
+engaged the Spanish fleet at about a hundred yards. Within an hour the
+Spanish flagship and another were sunk, a third vessel was burning
+furiously, fore and aft, while every English deck was clear of enemies.
+But the Spaniards had swarmed on to the island from all sides and were
+firing into the English hulls at only a few feet from the cannon's
+mouth. Hawkins was cool as ever. Calling for a tankard of beer he drank
+to the health of the gunners, who accounted for most of the five
+hundred and forty men killed on the Spanish side. 'Stand by your
+ordnance lustily,' he cried, as he put the tankard down and a round
+shot sent it flying. 'God hath delivered me,' he added, 'and so will He
+deliver you from these traitors and villains.'
+
+The masts of the _Jesus_ went by the board and her old, strained
+timbers splintered, loosened up, and were stove in under the storm of
+cannon balls. Hawkins then gave the order to abandon ship after taking
+out what stores they could and changing her berth so that she would
+shield the little _Minion_. But while this desperate manoeuvre was
+being executed down came two fire-ships. Some of the _Minion's_ crew
+then lost their heads and made sail so quickly that Hawkins himself was
+nearly left behind.
+
+The only two English vessels that escaped were the _Minion_ and the
+_Judith_. When nothing else was left to do, Hawkins shouted to Drake to
+lay the _Judith_ aboard the _Minion_, take in all the men and stores he
+could, and put to sea. Drake, then only twenty-three, did this with
+consummate skill. Hawkins followed some time after and anchored just
+out of range. But Drake had already gained an offing that caused the
+two little vessels to part company in the night, during which a whole
+gale from the north sprang up, threatening to put the _Judith_ on a lee
+shore. Drake therefore fought his way to windward; and, seeing no one
+when the gale abated, and having barely enough stores to make a
+friendly land, sailed straight home. Hawkins reported the _Judith_,
+without mentioning Drake's name, as 'forsaking' the _Minion_. But no
+other witness thought Drake to blame.
+
+Hawkins himself rode out the gale under the lee of a little island,
+then beat about for two weeks of increasing misery, when 'hides were
+thought very good meat, and rats, cats, mice, and dogs, parrots and
+monkeys that were got at great price, none escaped.' The _Minion_ was
+of three hundred tons; and so was insufferably overcrowded with three
+hundred men, two hundred English and one hundred negroes. Drake's
+little _Judith_, of only fifty tons, could have given no relief, as she
+was herself overfull. Hawkins asked all the men who preferred to take
+their chance on land to get round the foremast and all those who wanted
+to remain afloat to get round the mizzen. About a hundred chose one
+course and a hundred the other. The landing took place about a hundred
+and fifty miles south of the Rio Grande. The shore party nearly all
+died. But three lived to write of their adventures. David Ingram,
+following Indian trails all round the Gulf of Mexico and up the
+Atlantic seaboard, came out where St. John, New Brunswick, stands now,
+was picked up by a passing Frenchman, and so got safely home. Job
+Hortop and Miles Philips were caught by the Spaniards and sent back to
+Mexico. Philips escaped to England fourteen years later. But Hortop was
+sent to Spain, where he served twelve years as a galley-slave and ten
+as a servant before he contrived to get aboard an English vessel.
+
+The ten Spanish hostages were found safe and sound aboard the _Jesus_;
+though, by all the rules of war, Hawkins would have been amply
+justified in killing them. The English hostages were kept fast
+prisoners. 'If all the miseries of this sorrowful voyage,' says
+Hawkins's report, 'should be perfectly written, there should need a
+painful man with his pen, and as great a time as he had that wrote the
+lives and deaths of martyrs.'
+
+Thus, in complete disaster, ended that third voyage to New Spain on
+which so many hopes were set. And with this disastrous end began those
+twenty years of sea-dog rage which found their satisfaction against the
+Great Armada.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI — DRAKE'S BEGINNING
+
+
+We must now turn back for a moment to 1545, the year in which the Old
+World, after the discovery of the mines of Potosi, first awoke to the
+illimitable riches of the New; the year in which King Henry assembled
+his epoch-making fleet; the year, too, in which the British National
+Anthem was, so to say, born at sea, when the parole throughout the
+waiting fleet was _God save the King!_ and the answering countersign
+was _Long to reign over us!_
+
+In the same year, at Crowndale by Tavistock in Devon, was born Francis
+Drake, greatest of sea-dogs and first of modern admirals. His father,
+Edmund Drake, was a skipper in modest circumstances. But from time
+immemorial there had been Drakes all round the countryside of Tavistock
+and the family name stood high. Francis was called after his godfather,
+Francis Russell, son and heir of Henry's right-hand reforming peer,
+Lord Russell, progenitor of the Dukes of Bedford down to the present
+day.
+
+Though fortune thus seemed to smile upon Drake's cradle, his boyhood
+proved to be a very stormy one indeed. He was not yet five when the
+Protestant zeal of the Lord Protector Somerset stirred the Roman
+Catholics of the West Country into an insurrection that swept the
+anti-Papal minority before it like flotsam before a flood. Drake's
+father was a zealous Protestant, a 'hot gospeller,' much given to
+preaching; and when he was cast up by the storm on what is now Drake's
+Island, just off Plymouth, he was glad to take passage for Kent. His
+friends at court then made him a sort of naval chaplain to the men who
+took care of His Majesty's ships laid up in Gillingham Reach on the
+River Medway, just below where Chatham Dockyard stands to-day. Here, in
+a vessel too old for service, most of Drake's eleven brothers were born
+to a life as nearly amphibious as the life of any boy could be. The
+tide runs in with a rush from the sea at Sheerness, only ten miles
+away; and so, among the creeks and marshes, points and bends, through
+tortuous channels and hurrying waters lashed by the keen east wind of
+England, Drake reveled in the kind of playground that a sea-dog's son
+should have.
+
+During the reign of Mary (1553-58) 'hot gospellers' like Drake's father
+were of course turned out of the Service. And so young Francis had to
+be apprenticed to 'the master of a bark, which he used to coast along
+the shore, and sometimes to carry merchandise into Zeeland and France.'
+It was hard work and a rough life for the little lad of ten. But Drake
+stuck to it, and 'so pleased the old man by his industry that, being a
+bachelor, at his death he bequeathed his bark unto him by will and
+testament.' Moreover, after Elizabeth's accession, Drake's father came
+into his own. He took orders in the Church of England, and in 1561,
+when Francis was sixteen, became vicar of Upchurch on the Medway, the
+same river on which his boys had learned to live amphibious lives.
+
+No dreams of any Golden West had Drake as yet. To the boy in his teens
+_Westward Ho!_ meant nothing more than the usual cry of London boatmen
+touting for fares up-stream. But, before he went out with Sir John
+Hawkins, on the 'troublesome' voyage which we have just followed, he
+must have had a foretaste of something like his future raiding of the
+Spanish Main; for the Channel swarmed with Protestant privateers, no
+gentler, when they caught a Spaniard, than Spaniards were when they
+caught them. He was twenty-two when he went out with Hawkins and would
+be in his twenty-fourth year when he returned to England in the little
+_Judith_ after the murderous Spanish treachery at San Juan de Ulua.
+
+Just as the winter night was closing in, on the 20th of January, 1569,
+the _Judith_ sailed into Plymouth. Drake landed. William Hawkins,
+John's brother, wrote a petition to the Queen-in-Council for
+letters-of-marque in reprisal for Ulua, and Drake dashed off for London
+with the missive almost before the ink was dry. Now it happened that a
+Spanish treasure fleet, carrying money from Italy and bound for
+Antwerp, had been driven into Plymouth and neighboring ports by
+Huguenot privateers. This money was urgently needed by Alva, the very
+capable but ruthless governor of the Spanish Netherlands, who, having
+just drowned the rebellious Dutch in blood, was now erecting a colossal
+statue to himself for having 'extinguished sedition, chastised
+rebellion, restored religion, secured justice, and established peace.'
+The Spanish ambassador therefore obtained leave to bring it overland to
+Dover.
+
+But no sooner had Elizabeth signed the order of safe conduct than in
+came Drake with the news of San Juan de Ulua. Elizabeth at once saw
+that all the English sea-dogs would be flaming for revenge. Everyone
+saw that the treasure would be safer now in England than aboard any
+Spanish vessel in the Channel. So, on the ground that the gold, though
+payable to Philip's representative in Antwerp, was still the property
+of the Italian bankers who advanced it, Elizabeth sent orders down
+post-haste to commandeer it. The enraged ambassador advised Alva to
+seize everything English in the Netherlands. Elizabeth in turn seized
+everything Spanish in England. Elizabeth now held the diplomatic
+trumps; for existing treaties provided that there should be no
+reprisals without a reasonable delay; and Alva had seized English
+property before giving Elizabeth the customary time to explain.
+
+John Hawkins entered Plymouth five days later than Drake and started
+for London with four pack horses carrying all he had saved from the
+wreck. By the irony of fate he travelled up to town in the rear of the
+long procession that carried the commandeered Spanish gold.
+
+The plot thickened fast; for England was now on the brink of war with
+France over the secret aid Englishmen had been giving to the Huguenots
+at La Rochelle. But suddenly Elizabeth was all smiles and affability
+for France. And when her two great merchant fleets put out to sea, one,
+the wine-fleet, bound for La Rochelle, went with only a small naval
+escort, just enough to keep the pirates off; while the other, the big
+wool-fleet, usually sent to Antwerp but now bound for Hamburg, went
+with a strong fighting escort of regular men-of-war.
+
+Aboard this escort went Francis Drake as a lieutenant in the Royal
+Navy. Home in June, Drake ran down to Tavistock in Devon; wooed, won,
+and married pretty Mary Newman, all within a month. He was back on duty
+in July.
+
+For the time being the war cloud passed away. Elizabeth's tortuous
+diplomacy had succeeded, owing to dissension among her enemies. In the
+following year (1570) the international situation was changed by the
+Pope, who issued a bull formally deposing Elizabeth and absolving her
+subjects from their allegiance to her. The French and Spanish monarchs
+refused to publish this order because they did not approve of
+deposition by the Pope. But, for all that, it worked against Elizabeth
+by making her the official standing enemy of Rome. At the same time it
+worked for her among the sea-dogs and all who thought with them. 'The
+case,' said Thomas Fuller, author of _The Worthies of England_, 'the
+case was clear in _sea divinitie_.' Religious zeal and commercial
+enterprise went hand in hand. The case _was_ clear; and the English
+navy, now mobilized and ready for war, made it much clearer still.
+
+_Westward Ho!_ in chief command, at the age of twenty-five, with the
+tiny flotilla of the _Dragon_ and the _Swan_, manned by as good a lot
+of daredevil experts as any privateer could wish to see! Out and back
+in 1570, and again in 1571, Drake took reprisals on New Spain, made
+money for all hands engaged, and gained a knowledge of the American
+coast that stood him in good stead for future expeditions.
+
+It was 1572 when Drake, at the age of twenty-seven, sailed out of
+Plymouth on the Nombre de Dios expedition that brought him into fame.
+He led a Lilliputian fleet: the _Pascha_ and the _Swan_, a hundred tons
+between them, with seventy-three men, all ranks and ratings, aboard of
+them. But both vessels were 'richly furnished with victuals and
+apparels for a whole year, and no less heedfully provided with all
+manner of ammunition, artillery [which then meant every kind of firearm
+as well as cannon], artificers' stuff and tools; but especially three
+dainty pinnaces made in Plymouth, taken asunder all in pieces,' and
+stowed aboard to be set up as occasion served.
+
+Without once striking sail Drake made the channel between Dominica and
+Martinique in twenty-five days and arrived off a previously chosen
+secret harbor on the Spanish Main towards the end of July. To his
+intense surprise a column of smoke was rising from it, though there was
+no settlement within a hundred miles. On landing he found a leaden
+plate with this inscription: 'Captain Drake! If you fortune to come to
+this Port, make hast away! For the Spaniards which you had with you
+here, the last year, have bewrayed the place and taken away all that
+you left here. I depart hence, this present 7th of July, 1572. Your
+very loving friend, John Garrett.' That was fourteen days before.
+Drake, however, was determined to carry out his plan. So he built a
+fort and set up his pinnaces. But others had now found the secret
+harbor; for in came three sail under Ranse, an Englishman, who asked
+that he be taken into partnership, which was done.
+
+Then the combined forces, not much over a hundred strong, stole out and
+along the coast to the Isle of Pines, where again Drake found himself
+forestalled. From the negro crews of two Spanish vessels he discovered
+that, only six weeks earlier, the Maroons had annihilated a Spanish
+force on the Isthmus and nearly taken Nombre de Dios itself. These
+Maroons were the descendants of escaped negro slaves intermarried with
+the most warlike of the Indians. They were regular desperadoes, always,
+and naturally, at war with the Spaniards, who treated them as vermin to
+be killed at sight. Drake put the captured negroes ashore to join the
+Maroons, with whom he always made friends. Then with seventy-three
+picked men he made his dash for Nombre de Dios, leaving the rest under
+Ranse to guard the base.
+
+Nombre de Dios was the Atlantic terminus, as Panama was the Pacific
+terminus, of the treasure trail across the Isthmus of Darien. The
+Spaniards, knowing nothing of Cape Horn, and unable to face the
+appalling dangers of Magellan's straits, used to bring the Peruvian
+treasure ships to Panama, whence the treasure was taken across the
+isthmus to Nombre de Dios by _recuas_, that is, by mule trains under
+escort.
+
+At evening Drake's vessel stood off the harbor of Nombre de Dios and
+stealthily approached unseen. It was planned to make the landing in the
+morning. A long and nerve-racking wait ensued. As the hours dragged on,
+Drake felt instinctively that his younger men were getting demoralized.
+They began to whisper about the size of the town—'as big as
+Plymouth'—with perhaps a whole battalion of the famous Spanish
+infantry, and so on. It wanted an hour of the first real streak of
+dawn. But just then the old moon sent a ray of light quivering in on
+the tide. Drake instantly announced the dawn, issued the orders: 'Shove
+off, out oars, give way!' Inside the bay a ship just arrived from sea
+was picking up her moorings. A boat left her side and pulled like mad
+for the wharf. But Drake's men raced the Spaniards, beat them, and made
+them sheer off to a landing some way beyond the town.
+
+Springing eagerly ashore the Englishmen tumbled the Spanish guns off
+their platforms while the astonished sentry ran for dear life. In five
+minutes the church bells were pealing out their wild alarms, trumpet
+calls were sounding, drums were beating round the general parade, and
+the civilians of the place, expecting massacre at the hands of the
+Maroons, were rushing about in agonized confusion. Drake's men fell
+in—they were all well-drilled—and were quickly told off into three
+detachments. The largest under Drake, the next under Oxenham—the hero
+of Kingsley's _Westward Ho!_—and the third, of twelve men only, to
+guard the pinnaces. Having found that the new fort on the hill
+commanding the town was not yet occupied, Drake and Oxenham marched
+against the town at the head of their sixty men, Oxenham by a flank,
+Drake straight up the main street, each with a trumpet sounding, a drum
+rolling, fire-pikes blazing, swords flashing, and all ranks yelling
+like fiends. Drake was only of medium stature. But he had the strength
+of a giant, the pluck of a bulldog, the spring of a tiger, and the cut
+of a man that is born to command. Broad-browed, with steel-blue eyes
+and close-cropped auburn hair and beard, he was all kindliness of
+countenance to friends, but a very 'Dragon' to his Spanish foes.
+
+As Drake's men reached the Plaza, his trumpeter blew one blast of
+defiance and then fell dead. Drake returned the Spanish volley and
+charged immediately, the drummer beating furiously, pikes levelled, and
+swords brandished. The Spaniards did not wait for him to close; for
+Oxenham's party, fire-pikes blazing, were taking them in flank. Out
+went the Spaniards through the Panama gate, with screaming townsfolk
+scurrying before them. Bang went the gate, now under English guard, as
+Drake made for the Governor's house. There lay a pile of silver bars
+such as his men had never dreamt of: in all, about four hundred tons of
+silver ready for the homeward fleet—enough not only to fill but sink
+the _Pascha_, _Swan_, and pinnaces. But silver was then no more to
+Drake than it was once to Solomon. What he wanted were the diamonds and
+pearls and gold, which were stored, he learned, in the King's Treasure
+House beside the bay.
+
+A terrific storm now burst. The fire-pikes and arquebuses had to be
+taken under cover. The wall of the King's Treasure House defied all
+efforts to breach it. And the Spaniards who had been shut into the
+town, discovering how few the English were, reformed for attack. Some
+of Drake's men began to lose heart. But in a moment he stepped to the
+front and ordered Oxenham to go round and smash in the Treasure House
+gate while he held the Plaza himself. Just as the men stepped off,
+however, he reeled aside and fell. He had fainted from loss of blood
+caused by a wound he had managed to conceal. There was no holding the
+men now. They gave him a cordial, after which he bound up his leg, for
+he was a first-rate surgeon, and repeated his orders as before. But
+there were a good many wounded; and, with Drake no longer able to lead,
+the rest all begged to go back. So back to their boats they went, and
+over to the Bastimentos or Victualling Islands, which contained the
+gardens and poultry runs of the Nombre de Dios citizens.
+
+Here they were visited, under a flag of truce, by the Spanish officer
+commanding the reinforcement just sent across from Panama. He was all
+politeness, airs, and graces, while trying to ferret out the secret of
+their real strength. Drake, however, was not to be outdone either in
+diplomacy or war; and a delightful little comedy of prying and veiling
+courtesies was played out, to the great amusement of the English
+sea-dogs. Finally, when the time agreed upon was up, the Spanish
+officer departed, pouring forth a stream of high-flown compliments,
+which Drake, who was a Spanish scholar, answered with the like. Waving
+each other a ceremonious adieu the two leaders were left no wiser than
+before.
+
+Nombre de Dios, now strongly reinforced and on its guard, was not an
+easy nut to crack. But Panama? Panama meant a risky march inland and a
+still riskier return by the regular treasure trail. But with the help
+of the Maroons, who knew the furtive byways to a foot, the thing might
+yet be done. Ranse thought the game not worth the candle and retired
+from the partnership, much to Drake's delight.
+
+A good preliminary stroke was made by raiding Cartagena. Here Drake
+found a frigate deserted by its crew, who had gone ashore to see fair
+play in a duel fought about a seaman's mistress. The old man left in
+charge confessed that a Seville ship was round the point. Drake cut her
+out at once, in spite of being fired at from the shore. Next, in came
+two more Spanish sail to warn Cartagena that 'Captain Drake has been at
+Nombre de Dios and taken it, and if a blest bullet hadn't hit him in
+the leg he would have sacked it too.'
+
+Cartagena, however, was up in arms already; so Drake put all his
+prisoners ashore unhurt and retired to reconsider his position, leaving
+Diego, a negro fugitive from Nombre de Dios, to muster the Maroons for
+a raid overland to Panama. Then Drake, who sank the _Swan_ and burnt
+his prizes because he had only men enough for the _Pascha_ and the
+pinnaces, disappeared into a new secret harbor. But his troubles were
+only beginning; for word came that the Maroons said that nothing could
+be done inland till the rains were over, five months hence. This meant
+a long wait; however, what with making supply depots and picking up
+prizes here and there, the wet time might pass off well enough.
+
+One day Oxenham's crew nearly mutinied over the shortness of
+provisions. 'Have ye not as much as I,' Drake called to them, 'and has
+God's Providence ever failed us yet?' Within an hour a Spanish vessel
+hove in sight, making such very heavy weather of it that boarding her
+was out of the question. But 'We spent not two hours in attendance till
+it pleased God to send us a reasonable calm, so that we might use our
+guns and approach her at pleasure. We found her laden with victuals,
+which we received as sent of God's great mercy.' Then 'Yellow Jack'
+broke out, and the men began to fall sick and die. The company
+consisted of seventy-three men; and twenty-eight of these perished of
+the fever, among them the surgeon himself and Drake's own brother.
+
+But on the 3d of February, 1573, Drake was ready for the dash on
+Panama. Leaving behind about twenty-five men to guard the base, he
+began the overland march with a company of fifty, all told, of whom
+thirty-one were picked Maroons. The fourth day out Drake climbed a
+forest giant on the top of the Divide, saw the Atlantic behind him and
+the Pacific far in front, and vowed that if he lived he would sail an
+English ship over the great South Sea. Two days more and the party left
+the protecting forest for the rolling pampas where the risk of being
+seen increased at every step. Another day's march and Panama was
+sighted as they topped the crest of one of the bigger waves of ground.
+A clever Maroon went ahead to spy out the situation and returned to say
+that two _recuas_ would leave at dusk, one coming from Venta Cruz,
+fifteen miles northwest of Panama, carrying silver and supplies, and
+the other from Panama, loaded with jewels and gold. Then a Spanish
+sentry was caught asleep by the advanced party of Maroons, who smelt
+him out by the match of his fire-lock. In his gratitude for being
+protected from the Maroons, this man confirmed the previous
+information.
+
+The excitement now was most intense; for the crowning triumph of a
+two-years' great adventure was at last within striking distance of the
+English crew. Drake drew them up in proper order; and every man took
+off his shirt and put it on again outside his coat, so that each would
+recognize the others in the night attack. Then they lay listening for
+the mule-bells, till presently the warning tinkle let them know that
+_recuas_ were approaching from both Venta Cruz and Panama. The first,
+or silver train from Venta Cruz, was to pass in silence; only the
+second, or gold train from Panama, was to be attacked. Unluckily one of
+the Englishmen had been secretly taking pulls at his flask and had just
+become pot-valiant when a stray Spanish gentleman came riding up from
+Venta Cruz. The Englishman sprang to his feet, swayed about, was
+tripped up by Maroons and promptly sat upon. But the Spaniard saw his
+shirt, reined up, whipped round, and galloped back to Panama. This took
+place so silently at the extreme flank in towards Panama that it was
+not observed by Drake or any other Englishman. Presently what appeared
+to be the gold train came within range. Drake blew his whistle; and all
+set on with glee, only to find that the Panama _recua_ they were
+attacking was a decoy sent on to spring the trap and that the gold and
+jewels had been stopped.
+
+The Spaniards were up in arms. But Drake slipped away through the
+engulfing forest and came out on the Atlantic side, where he found his
+rear-guard intact and eager for further exploits. He was met by Captain
+Têtu, a Huguenot just out from France, with seventy men. Têtu gave
+Drake news of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew, and this drew the French
+and English Protestants together. They agreed to engage in further
+raiding of Spaniards, share and share alike by nationalities, though
+Drake had now only thirty-one men against Têtu's seventy. Nombre de
+Dios, they decided, was not vulnerable, as all the available Spanish
+forces were concentrated there for its defence, and so they planned to
+seize a Spanish train of gold and jewels just far enough inland to give
+them time to get away with the plunder before the garrison could reach
+them. Somewhere on the coast they established a base of operations and
+then marched overland to the Panama trail and lay in wait.
+
+This time the marauders were successful. When the Spanish train of gold
+and jewels came opposite the ambush, Drake's whistle blew. The leading
+mules were stopped. The rest lay down, as mule-trains will. The guard
+was overpowered after killing a Maroon and wounding Captain Têtu. And
+when the garrison of Nombre de Dios arrived a few hours later the gold
+and jewels had all gone.
+
+For a day and a night and another day Drake and his men pushed on,
+loaded with plunder, back to their rendezvous along the coast, leaving
+Têtu and two of his devoted Frenchmen to be rescued later. When they
+arrived, worn out, at the rendezvous, not a man was in sight. Drake
+built a raft out of unhewn tree trunks and, setting up a biscuit bag as
+a sail, pushed out with two Frenchmen and one Englishman till he found
+his boats. The plunder was then divided up between the French and the
+English, while Oxenham headed a rescue party to bring Têtu to the
+coast. One Frenchman was found. But Têtu and the other had been caught
+by Spaniards.
+
+The _Pascha_ was given to the accumulated Spanish prisoners to sail
+away in. The pinnaces were kept till a suitable, smart-sailing Spanish
+craft was found, boarded, and captured to replace them; whereupon they
+were broken up and their metal given to the Maroons. Then, in two
+frigates, with ballast of silver and cargo of jewels and gold, the
+thirty survivors of the adventure set sail for home. 'Within 23 days we
+passed from the Cape of Florida to the Isles of Scilly, and so arrived
+at Plymouth on Sunday about sermon time, August 9, 1573, at what time
+the news of our Captain's return, brought unto his friends, did so
+speedily pass over all the church, and surpass their minds with desire
+to see him, that very few or none remained with the preacher, all
+hastening to see the evidence of God's love and blessing towards our
+Gracious Queen and country, by the fruit of our Captain's labour and
+success. _Soli Deo Gloria._'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII — DRAKE'S 'ENCOMPASSMENT OF ALL THE WORLDE'
+
+
+When Drake left for Nombre de Dios in the spring of 1572, Spain and
+England were both ready to fly at each other's throats. When he Came
+back in the summer of 1573, they were all for making
+friends—hypocritically so, but friends. Drake's plunder stank in the
+nostrils of the haughty Dons. It was a very inconvenient factor in the
+diplomatic problem for Elizabeth. Therefore Drake disappeared and his
+plunder too. He went to Ireland on service in the navy. His plunder was
+divided up in secrecy among all the high and low contracting parties.
+
+In 1574 the Anglo-Spanish scene had changed again. The Spaniards had
+been so harassed by the English sea-dogs between the Netherlands and
+Spain that Philip listened to his great admiral, Menendez, who,
+despairing of direct attack on England, proposed to seize the Scilly
+Isles and from that naval base clear out a way through all the pirates
+of the English Channel. War seemed certain. But a terrible epidemic
+broke out in the Spanish fleet. Menendez died. And Philip changed his
+policy again.
+
+This same year John Oxenham, Drake's old second-in-command, sailed over
+to his death. The Spaniards caught him on the Isthmus of Darien and
+hanged him as a pirate at Lima in Peru.
+
+In the autumn of 1575 Drake returned to England with a new friend,
+Thomas Doughty, a soldier-scholar of the Renaissance, clever and good
+company, but one of those 'Italianate' Englishmen who gave rise to the
+Italian proverb: _Inglese italianato è diavolo incarnato—_'an
+Italianized Englishman is the very Devil.' Doughty was patronized by
+the Earl of Essex, who had great influence at court.
+
+The next year, 1576, is noted for the 'Spanish Fury.' Philip's sea
+power was so hampered by the Dutch and English privateers, and he was
+so impotent against the English navy, that he could get no ready money,
+either by loan or from America, to pay his troops in Antwerp. These
+men, reinforced by others, therefore mutinied and sacked the whole of
+Antwerp, killing all who opposed them and practically ruining the city
+from which Charles V used to draw such splendid subsidies. The result
+was a strengthening of Dutch resistance everywhere.
+
+Elizabeth had been unusually tortuous in her policy about this time.
+But in 1577 she was ready for another shot at Spain, provided always
+that it entailed no open war. Don John of Austria, natural son of
+Charles V, had all the shining qualities that his legitimate
+half-brother Philip lacked. He was the hero of Lepanto and had offered
+to conquer the Moors in Tunis if Philip would let him rule as king.
+Philip, crafty, cold, and jealous, of course refused and sent him to
+the Netherlands instead. Here Don John formed the still more aspiring
+plan of pacifying the Dutch, marrying Mary Queen of Scots, deposing
+Elizabeth, and reigning over all the British Isles. The Pope had
+blessed both schemes. But the Dutch insisted on the immediate
+withdrawal of the Spanish troops. This demolished Don John's plan. But
+it pleased Philip, who could now ruin his brilliant brother by letting
+him wear himself out by trying to govern the Netherlands without an
+army. Then the Duke of Anjou, brother to the King of France, came into
+the fast-thickening plot at the head of the French rescuers of the
+Netherlands from Spain. But a victorious French army in the Netherlands
+was worse for England than even Spanish rule there. So Elizabeth tried
+to support the Dutch enough to annoy Philip and at the same time keep
+them independent of the French.
+
+In her desire to support them against Philip indirectly she found it
+convenient to call Drake into consultation. Drake then presented to Sir
+Francis Walsingham his letter of commendation from the Earl of Essex,
+under whom he had served in Ireland; whereupon 'Secretary Walsingham
+[the first civilian who ever grasped the principle of modern sea power]
+declared that Her Majesty had received divers injuries of the King of
+Spain, for which she desired revenge. He showed me a plot [map] willing
+me to note down where he might be most annoyed. But I refused to set my
+hand to anything, affirming that Her Majesty was mortal, and that if it
+should please God to take Her Majesty away that some prince might reign
+that might be in league with the King of Spain, and then would my own
+hand be a witness against myself.' Elizabeth was forty-four. Mary Queen
+of Scots was watching for the throne. Plots and counter-plots were
+everywhere.
+
+Shortly after this interview Drake was told late at night that he
+should have audience of Her Majesty next day. On seeing him, Elizabeth
+went straight to the point. 'Drake, I would gladly be revenged on the
+King of Spain for divers injuries that I have received.' 'And withal,'
+says Drake, 'craved my advice therein; who told Her Majesty the only
+way was to annoy him by the Indies.' On that he disclosed his whole
+daring scheme for raiding the Pacific. Elizabeth, who, like her father,
+'loved a man' who was a man, fell in with this at once. Secrecy was of
+course essential. 'Her Majesty did swear by her Crown that if any
+within her realm did give the King of Spain to understand hereof they
+should lose their heads therefor.' At a subsequent audience 'Her
+Majesty gave me special commandment that of all men my Lord Treasurer
+should not know of it.' The cautious Lord Treasurer Burleigh was
+against what he considered dangerous forms of privateering and was for
+keeping on good terms with Spanish arms and trade as long as possible.
+Mendoza, lynx-eyed ambassador of Spain, was hoodwinked. But Doughty,
+the viper in Drake's bosom, was meditating mischief: not exactly
+treason with Spain, but at least a breach of confidence by telling
+Burleigh.
+
+De Guaras, chief Spanish spy in England, was sorely puzzled. Drake's
+ostensible destination was Egypt, and his men were openly enlisted for
+Alexandria. The Spaniards, however, saw far enough through this to
+suppose that he was really going back to Nombre de Dios. It did not
+seem likely, though quite possible, that he was going in search of the
+Northwest Passage, for Martin Frobisher had gone out on that quest the
+year before and had returned with a lump of black stone from the arctic
+desolation of Baffin Island. No one seems to have divined the truth.
+Cape Horn was unknown. The Strait of Magellan was supposed to be the
+only opening between South America and a huge antarctic continent, and
+its reputation for disasters had grown so terrible, and rightly
+terrible, that it had been given up as the way into the Pacific. The
+Spanish way, as we have seen, was overland from Nombre de Dios to
+Panama, more or less along the line of the modern Panama Canal.
+
+In the end Drake got away quietly enough, on the 15th of November,
+1577. The court and country were in great excitement over the
+conspiracy between the Spaniards and Mary Queen of Scots, now a
+prisoner of nine years' standing.
+
+'THE FAMOUS VOYAGE OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE _into the South Sea, and
+therehence about the whole Globe of the Earth, begun in the year of our
+Lord 1577_' well deserves its great renown. Drake's flotilla seems
+absurdly small. But, for its own time, it was far from insignificant;
+and it was exceedingly well found. The _Pelican_, afterwards called the
+_Golden Hind_, though his flagship, was of only a hundred tons. The
+_Elizabeth_, the _Swan_, the _Marigold_, and the _Benedict_ were of
+eighty, fifty, thirty, and fifteen. There were altogether less than
+three hundred tons and two hundred men. The crews numbered a hundred
+and fifty. The rest were gentlemen-adventurers, special artificers, two
+trained surveyors, musicians, boys, and Drake's own page, Jack Drake.
+There was great store of wild-fire, chain-shot, harquebusses, pistols,
+corslets, bows and other like weapons in great abundance. Neither had
+he omitted to make provision for ornament and delight, carrying with
+him expert musicians, rich furniture (all the vessels for his table,
+yea, many belonging even to the cook-room, being of pure silver), and
+divers shows of all sorts of curious workmanship whereby the civility
+and magnificence of his native country might amongst all nations
+withersoever he should come, be the more admired.'[3]
+
+[3: The little handbook issued by Pette and Jackman in 1580, for those
+whom we should now call commercial travellers, is full of 'tips' about
+'Thinges to be carried with you, whereof more or lesse is to be carried
+for a shewe of our commodities to bee made.' For instance:—'Kersies of
+all orient couleurs, specially of stamel (fine worsted), brode cloth of
+orient couleurs also. Taffeta hats. Deepe cappes for mariners. Quilted
+Cappes of Levant Taffeta of divers coulours, for the night. Garters of
+Silke. Girdels of Buffe and all leathers, with gilt and ungilt Buckles,
+specially wast girdels. Wast girdels of velvet. Gloves of all sortes,
+knit and of leather. Gloves perfumed. Shooes of Spanish leather, of
+divers colours. Looking glasses for Women, great and fayre. Comes of
+Ivorie. Handkerchewes, with silk of divers colours, wrought. Glasen
+eyes to ride with against dust [so motor goggles are not so new, after
+all!]. Boxes with weightes of golde, and every kind of coyne of golde,
+to shewe that the people here use weight and measure, which is a
+certayne shewe of wisedome, and of a certayne government settled here.'
+ There are also elaborate directions about what to take 'For
+ banketing on shipborde of persons of credite' [and prospective
+ customers]. 'First, the sweetest perfumes to set under hatches to
+ make the place smell sweete against their coming aborde. Marmelade.
+ Sucket [candies]. Figges barrelled. Raisins of the Sun. Comfets
+ that shall not dissolve. Prunes damaske. Dried peres. Walnuttes.
+ Almondes. Olives, to make them taste their wine. The Apple John
+ that dureth two yeares, to make showe of our fruites. Hullocke [a
+ sweet wine]. Sacke. Vials of good sweet waters, and casting-bottels
+ of glass, to besprinckel the gests withal, after their coming
+ aborde. The sweet oyle of Xante and excellent French vinegar and a
+ fine kind of Bisket steeped in the same do make a banketting dishe.
+ and a little Sugar cast in it cooleth and comforteth, and
+ refresheth the spirittes of man. Synomomme Water and Imperiall
+ Water is to be had with you to comfort your sicke in the voyage.'
+ No feature is neglected. 'Take with you the large mappe of London
+ and let the river be drawn full of shippes to make the more showe
+ of your great trade. The booke of the Attyre of All Nations carried
+ with you and bestowed in gift would be much esteemed. Tinder boxes,
+ with steel, flint, and matches. A painted Bellowes, for perhaps
+ they have not the use of them. All manner of edge tools. Note
+ specially what dyeing they use.' After many more items the authors
+ end up with two bits of good advice. 'Take with you those things
+ that bee in the Perfection of Goodnesse to make your commodities in
+ credit in time to come.' 'Learn what the Country hath before you
+ offer your commodities for sale; for if you bring thither what you
+ yourself desire to lade yourself home with, you must not sell yours
+ deare lest hereafter you purchase theirs not so cheape as you
+ would.']
+
+
+Sou'sou'west went Drake's flotilla and made its landfall 'towards the
+Pole Antartick' off the 'Land of Devils' in 31° 40' south, northeast of
+Montevideo. Frightful storms had buffeted the little ships about for
+weary weeks together, and all hands thought they were the victims of
+some magician on board, perhaps the 'Italianate' Doughty, or else of
+native witchcraft from the shore. The experienced old pilot, who was a
+Portuguese, explained that the natives had sold themselves to Devils,
+who were kinder masters than the Spaniards, and that 'now when they see
+ships they cast sand into the air, whereof ariseth a most gross thick
+fogg and palpable darkness, and withal horrible, fearful, and
+intolerable winds, rains, and storms.'
+
+But witchcraft was not Thomas Doughty's real offence. Even before
+leaving England, and after betraying Elizabeth and Drake to Burleigh,
+who wished to curry favor with the Spanish traders rather than provoke
+the Spanish power, Doughty was busy tampering with the men. A
+storekeeper had to be sent back for peculation designed to curtail
+Drake's range of action. Then Doughty tempted officers and men: talked
+up the terrors of Magellan's Strait, ran down his friend's authority,
+and finally tried to encourage downright desertion by underhand means.
+This was too much for Drake. Doughty was arrested, tied to the mast,
+and threatened with dire punishment if he did not mend his ways. But he
+would not mend his ways. He had a brother on board and a friend, a
+'very craftie lawyer'; so stern measures were soon required. Drake held
+a sort of court-martial which condemned Doughty to death. Then Doughty,
+having played his last card and lost, determined to die 'like an
+officer and gentleman.'
+
+Drake solemnly 'pronounced him the child of Death and persuaded him
+that he would by these means make him the servant of God.' Doughty fell
+in with the idea and the former friends took the Sacrament together,
+'for which Master Doughty gave him hearty thanks, never otherwise
+terming him than "My good Captaine."' Chaplain Fletcher having ended
+with the absolution, Drake and Doughty sat down together 'as cheerfully
+as ever in their lives, each cheering up the other and taking their
+leave by drinking to each other, as if some journey had been in hand.'
+Then Drake and Doughty went aside for a private conversation of which
+no record has remained. After this Doughty walked to the place of
+execution, where, like King Charles I,
+
+He nothing common did or mean
+Upon that memorable scene.
+
+
+'And so bidding the whole company farewell he laid his head on the
+block.' 'Lo! this is the end of traitors!' said Drake as the
+executioner raised the head aloft.
+
+Drake, like Magellan, decided to winter where he was, in Port St.
+Julian on the east coast of Patagonia. His troubles with the men were
+not yet over; for the soldiers resented being put on an equality with
+the sailors, and the 'very craftie lawyer' and Doughty's brother were
+anything but pleased with the turn events had taken. Then, again, the
+faint-hearts murmured in their storm-beaten tents against the horrors
+of the awful Straits. So Drake resolved to make things clear for good
+and all. Unfolding a document he began: 'My Masters, I am a very bad
+orator, for my bringing up hath not been in learning, but what I shall
+speak here let every man take good notice of and let him write it down;
+for I will speak nothing but I will answer it in England, yea, and
+before Her Majesty, and I have it here already set down.' Then, after
+reminding them of the great adventure before them and saying that
+mutiny and dissension must stop at once, he went on: 'For by the life
+of God it doth even take my wits from me to think of it. Here is such
+controversy between the gentlemen and sailors that it doth make me mad
+to hear it. I must have the gentleman to haul with the mariner and the
+mariner with the gentleman. I would know him that would refuse to set
+his hand to a rope! But I know there is not any such here.' To those
+whose hearts failed them he offered the _Marigold_. 'But let them go
+homeward; for if I find them in my way, I will surely sink them.' Not a
+man stepped forward. Then, turning to the officers, he discharged every
+one of them for re-appointment at his pleasure. Next, he made the worst
+offenders, the 'craftie lawyer' included, step to the front for
+reprimand. Finally, producing the Queen's commission, he ended by a
+ringing appeal to their united patriotism. 'We have set by the ears
+three mighty Princes [the sovereigns of England, Spain, and Portugal];
+and if this voyage should not have success we should not only be a
+scorning unto our enemies but a blot on our country for ever. What
+triumph would it not be for Spain and Portugal! The like of this would
+never more be tried.' Then he gave back every man his rank again,
+explaining that he and they were all servants of Her Majesty together.
+With this the men marched off, loyal and obedient, to their tents.
+
+Next week Drake sailed for the much dreaded Straits, before entering
+which he changed the _Pelican's_ name to the _Golden Hind_, which was
+the crest of Sir Christopher Hatton, one of the chief promoters of the
+enterprise and also one of Doughty's patrons. Then every vessel struck
+her topsail to the bunt in honor of the Queen as well as to show that
+all discoveries and captures were to be made in her sole name.
+Seventeen days of appalling dangers saw them through the Straits, where
+icy squalls came rushing down from every quarter of the baffling
+channels. But the Pacific was still worse. For no less than fifty-two
+consecutive days a furious gale kept driving them about like so many
+bits of driftwood. 'The like of it no traveller hath felt, neither hath
+there ever been such a tempest since Noah's flood.' The little English
+vessels fought for their very lives in that devouring hell of waters,
+the loneliest and most stupendous in the world. The _Marigold_ went
+down with all hands, and Parson Fletcher, who heard their dying call,
+thought it was a judgment. At last the gale abated near Cape Horn,
+where Drake landed with a compass, while Parson Fletcher set up a stone
+engraved with the Queen's name and the date of the discovery.
+
+Deceived by the false trend of the coast shown on the Spanish charts
+Drake went a long way northwest from Cape Horn. Then he struck in
+northeast and picked up the Chilean Islands. It was December, 1578; but
+not a word of warning had reached the Spanish Pacific when Drake stood
+in to Valparaiso. Seeing a sail, the crew of the _Grand Captain of the
+South_ got up a cask of wine and beat a welcome on their drums. In the
+twinkling of an eye gigantic Tom Moone was over the side at the head of
+a party of boarders who laid about them with a will and soon drove the
+Spaniards below. Half a million dollars' worth of gold and jewels was
+taken with this prize.
+
+Drake then found a place in Salado Bay where he could clean the _Golden
+Hind_ while the pinnace ranged south to look for the other ships that
+had parted company during the two months' storm. These were never
+found, the _Elizabeth_ and the _Swan_ having gone home after parting
+company in the storm that sank the _Marigold_. After a prolonged search
+the _Golden Hind_ stood north again. Meanwhile the astounding news of
+her arrival was spreading dismay all over the coast, where the old
+Spanish governor's plans were totally upset. The Indians had just been
+defeated when this strange ship came sailing in from nowhere, to the
+utter confusion of their enemies. The governor died of vexation, and
+all the Spanish authorities were nearly worried to death. They had
+never dreamt of such an invasion. Their crews were small, their
+lumbering vessels very lightly armed, their towns unfortified.
+
+But Drake went faster by sea than their news by land. Every vessel was
+overhauled, taken, searched, emptied of its treasure, and then sent
+back with its crew and passengers at liberty. One day a watering party
+chanced upon a Spaniard from Potosi fast asleep with thirteen bars of
+silver by him. The bars were lifted quietly and the Spaniard left
+sleeping peacefully. Another Spaniard suddenly came round a corner with
+half a ton of silver on eight llamas. The Indians came off to trade;
+and Drake, as usual, made friends with them at once. He had already
+been attacked by other Indians on both coasts. But this was because the
+unknown English had been mistaken for the hated Spaniards.
+
+As he neared Lima, Drake quickened his pace lest the great annual
+treasure ship of 1579 should get wind of what was wrong. A minor
+treasure ship was found to have been cleared of all her silver just in
+time to balk him. So he set every stitch of canvas she possessed and
+left her driving out to sea with two other empty prizes. Then he stole
+into Lima after dark and came to anchor surrounded by Spanish vessels
+not one of which had set a watch. They were found nearly empty. But a
+ship from Panama looked promising; so the pinnace started after her,
+but was fired on and an Englishman was killed. Drake then followed her,
+after cutting every cable in the harbor, which soon became a
+pandemonium of vessels gone adrift. The Panama ship had nothing of
+great value except her news, which was that the great treasure ship
+_Nuestra Señora de la Concepcion_, 'the chiefest glory of the whole
+South Sea,' was on her way to Panama.
+
+She had a very long start; and, as ill luck would have it, Drake got
+becalmed outside Callao, where the bells rang out in wild alarm. The
+news had spread inland and the Viceroy of Peru came hurrying down with
+all the troops that he could muster. Finding from some arrows that the
+strangers were Englishmen, he put four hundred soldiers into the only
+two vessels that had escaped the general wreck produced by Drake's
+cutting of the cables. When Drake saw the two pursuing craft, he took
+back his prize crew from the Panama vessel, into which he put his
+prisoners. Meanwhile a breeze sprang up and he soon drew far ahead. The
+Spanish soldiers overhauled the Panama prize and gladly gave up the
+pursuit. They had no guns of any size with which to fight the _Golden
+Hind_; and most of them were so sea-sick from the heaving ground-swell
+that they couldn't have boarded her in any case.
+
+Three more prizes were then taken by the swift _Golden Hind_. Each one
+had news which showed that Drake was closing on the chase. Another week
+passed with every stitch of canvas set. A fourth prize, taken off Cape
+San Francisco, said that the treasure ship was only one day ahead. But
+she was getting near to Panama; so every nerve was strained anew.
+Presently Jack Drake, the Captain's page, yelled out _Sail-ho!_ and
+scrambled down the mainmast to get the golden chain that Drake had
+promised to the first lookout who saw the chase. It was ticklish work,
+so near to Panama; and local winds might ruin all. So Drake, in order
+not to frighten her, trailed a dozen big empty wine jars over the stern
+to moderate his pace. At eight o'clock the jars were cut adrift and the
+_Golden Hind_ sprang forward with the evening breeze, her crew at
+battle quarters and her decks all cleared for action The chase was
+called the 'Spitfire' by the Spaniards because she was much better
+armed than any other vessel there. But, all the same, her armament was
+nothing for her tonnage. The Spaniards trusted to their remoteness for
+protection; and that was their undoing.
+
+To every Englishman's amazement the chase was seen to go about and
+calmly come to hail the _Golden Hind_, which she mistook for a despatch
+vessel sent after her with some message from the Viceroy! Drake, asking
+nothing better, ran up alongside as Anton her captain hailed him with a
+_Who are you? A ship of Chili!_ answered Drake. Anton looked down on
+the stranger's deck to see it full of armed men from whom a roar of
+triumph came. _English! strike sail!_ Then Drake's whistle blew sharply
+and instant silence followed; on which he hailed Don Anton:—_Strike
+sail! Señor Juan de Anton, or I must send you to the bottom!—Come
+aboard and do it yourself!_ bravely answered Anton. Drake's whistle
+blew one shrill long blast, which loosed a withering volley at less
+than point-blank range. Anton tried to bear away and shake off his
+assailant. But in vain. The English guns now opened on his masts and
+rigging. Down came the mizzen, while a hail of English shot and arrows
+prevented every attempt to clear away the wreckage. The dumbfounded
+Spanish crew ran below, Don Anton looked overside to port; and there
+was the English pinnace, from which forty English boarders were nimbly
+climbing up his own ship's side. Resistance was hopeless; so Anton
+struck and was taken aboard the _Golden Hind_. There he met Drake, who
+was already taking off his armor. 'Accept with patience the usage of
+war,' said Drake, laying his hand on Anton's shoulder.
+
+For all that night, next day, and the next night following Drake sailed
+west with his fabulous prize so as to get well clear of the trade route
+along the coast. What the whole treasure was has never been revealed.
+But it certainly amounted to the equivalent of many millions at the
+present day. Among the official items were: 13 chests of pieces of
+eight, 80 lbs. of pure gold, jewels and plate, 26 ton weight of silver,
+and sundries unspecified. As the Spanish pilot's son looked over the
+rail at this astounding sight, the Englishmen called out to say that
+his father was no longer the pilot of the old Spit-_fire_ but of the
+new Spit-_silver_.
+
+The prisoners were no less gratified than surprised by Drake's kind
+treatment. He entertained Don Anton at a banquet, took him all over the
+_Golden Hind_, and entrusted him with a message to Don Martin, the
+traitor of San Juan de Ulua. This was to say that if Don Martin hanged
+any more Englishmen, as he had just hanged Oxenham, he should soon be
+given a present of two thousand Spanish heads. Then Drake gave every
+Spanish officer and man a personal gift proportioned to his rank, put
+all his accumulated prisoners aboard the emptied treasure ship, wished
+them a prosperous voyage and better luck next time, furnished the brave
+Don Anton with a letter of protection in case he should fall in with an
+English vessel, and, after many expressions of goodwill on both sides,
+sailed north, the voyage 'made'; while the poor 'spit-silver' treasure
+ship turned sadly east and steered for Panama.
+
+Lima, Panama, and Nombre de Dios were in wild commotion at the news;
+and every sailor and soldier that the Spaniards had was going to and
+fro, uncertain whether to attack or to defend, and still more
+distracted as to the most elusive English whereabouts. One good Spanish
+captain, Don Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa, was all for going north, his
+instinct telling him that Drake would not come back among the angry
+bees after stealing all the honey. But, by the time the Captain-General
+of New Spain had made up his mind to take one of the many wrong
+directions he had been thinking of, Drake was already far on his way
+north to found New Albion.
+
+Drake's triumph over all difficulties had won the hearts of his men
+more than ever before, while the capture of the treasure ship had done
+nothing to loosen the bonds of discipline. Don Francisco de Zarate
+wrote a very intimate account of his experience as a prisoner on board
+the _Golden Hind._ 'The English captain is one of the greatest mariners
+at sea, alike from his skill and his powers of command. His ship is a
+very fast sailer and her men are all skilled hands of warlike age and
+so well trained that they might be old soldiers of the Italian
+tertias,' the crack corps of the age in Spanish eyes. 'He is served
+with much plate and has all possible kinds of delicacies and scents,
+many of which he says the Queen of England gave him. None of the
+gentlemen sit or cover in his presence without first being ordered to
+do so. They dine and sup to the music of violins. His galleon carries
+about thirty guns and a great deal of ammunition.' This was in marked
+contrast to the common Spanish practice, even on the Atlantic side. The
+greedy exploiters of New Spain grudged every ton of armament and every
+well-trained fighting sailor, both on account of the expense and
+because this form of protection took up room they wished to fill with
+merchandise. The result was, of course, that they lost more by capture
+than they gained by evading the regulation about the proper armament.
+'His ship is not only of the very latest type but sheathed.' Before
+copper sheathing was invented some generations later, the Teredo worm
+used to honeycomb unprotected hulls in the most dangerous way. John
+Hawkins invented the sheathing used by Drake: a good thick tar-and-hair
+sheeting clamped on with elm.
+
+Northwest to Coronado, then to Aguatulco, then fifteen hundred miles
+due west, brought Drake about that distance west-by-south of the modern
+San Francisco. Here he turned east-north-east and, giving the land a
+wide berth, went on to perhaps the latitude of Vancouver Island, always
+looking for the reverse way through America by the fabled Northwest
+Passage. Either there was the most extraordinary June ever known in
+California and Oregon, or else the narratives of those on board have
+all been hopelessly confused, for freezing rain is said to have fallen
+on the night of June the 3d in the latitude of 42°. In 48° 'there
+followed most vile, thick, and stinking fogs' with still more numbing
+cold. The meat froze when taken off the fire. The wet rigging turned to
+icicles. Six men could hardly do the work of three. Fresh from the
+tropics, the crews were unfit for going any farther. A tremendous
+nor'wester settled the question, anyway; and Drake ran south to 38°
+30', where, in what is now Drake's Bay, he came to anchor just north of
+San Francisco.
+
+Not more than once, if ever at all, and that a generation earlier, had
+Europeans been in northern California. The Indians took the Englishmen
+for gods whom they knew not whether to love or fear. Drake with the
+essential kindliness of most, and the magnetic power of all, great born
+commanders, soon won the natives' confidence. But their admiration 'as
+men ravished in their minds' was rather overpowering; for, after 'a
+kind of most lamentable weeping and crying out,' they came forward with
+various offerings for the new-found gods, prostrating themselves in
+humble adoration and tearing their breasts and faces in a wild desire
+to show the spirit of self-sacrifice. Drake and his men, all
+Protestants, were horrified at being made what they considered idols.
+So kneeling down, they prayed aloud, raising hands and eyes to Heaven,
+hoping thereby to show the heathen where the true God lived. Drake then
+read the Bible and all the Englishmen sang Psalms, the Indians,
+'observing the end of every pause, with one voice still cried _Oh!_
+greatly rejoicing in our exercises.' As this impromptu service ended
+the Indians gave back all the presents Drake had given them and retired
+in attitudes of adoration.
+
+In three days more they returned, headed by a Medicine-man, whom the
+English called the 'mace-bearer.' With the slow and stately measure of
+a mystic dance this great high priest of heathen rites advanced
+chanting a sort of litany. Both litany and dance were gradually taken
+up by tens, by hundreds, and finally by all the thousands of the
+devotees, who addressed Drake with shouts of _Hyoh!_ and invested him
+with a headdress of rare plumage and a necklace of quaint beads. It
+was, in fact, a native coronation without a soul to doubt the divine
+right of their new king. Drake's Protestant scruples were quieted by
+thinking 'to what good end God had brought this to pass, and what
+honour and profit it might bring to our country in time to come. So, in
+the name and to the use of her most excellent Majesty, he took the
+sceptre, crown, and dignity' and proclaimed an English protectorate
+over the land he called New Albion. He then set up a brass plate
+commemorating this proclamation, and put an English coin in the middle
+so that the Indians might see Elizabeth's portrait and armorial device.
+
+The exaltation of the ecstatic devotees continued till the day he left.
+They crowded in to be cured by the touch of his hand—those were the
+times in which the sovereign was expected to cure the King's Evil by a
+touch. They also expected to be cured by inhaling the divine breath of
+any one among the English gods. The chief narrator adds that the gods
+who pleased the Indians most, braves and squaws included, 'were
+commonly the youngest of us,' which shows that the human was not quite
+forgotten in the all-divine. When the time for sailing came, the
+devotees were inconsolable. 'They not only in a sudden did lose all
+mirth, joy, glad countenance, pleasant speeches, agility of body, and
+all pleasure, but, with sighs and sorrowings, they poured out woefull
+complayntes and moans with bitter tears, and wringing of their hands,
+and tormenting of themselves.' The last the English saw of them was the
+whole devoted tribe assembled on the hill around a sacrificial fire,
+whence they implored their gods to bring their heaven back to earth.
+
+From California Drake sailed to the Philippines; and then to the
+Moluccas, where the Portuguese had, if such a thing were possible,
+outdone even the Spaniards in their fiendish dealings with the natives.
+Lopez de Mosquito—viler than his pestilential name—had murdered the
+Sultan, who was then his guest, chopped up the body, and thrown it into
+the sea. Baber, the Sultan's son, had driven out the Portuguese from
+the island of Ternate and was preparing to do likewise from the island
+of Tidore, when Drake arrived. Baber then offered Drake, for Queen
+Elizabeth, the complete monopoly of the trade in spices if only Drake
+would use the _Golden Hind_ as the flagship against the Portuguese.
+Drake's reception was full of Oriental state; and Sultan Baber was so
+entranced by Drake's musicians that he sat all afternoon among them in
+a boat towed by the _Golden Hind_. But it was too great a risk to take
+a hand in this new war with only fifty-six men left. So Drake traded
+for all the spices he could stow away and concluded a sort of
+understanding which formed the sheet anchor of English diplomacy in
+Eastern seas for another century to come. Elizabeth was so delighted
+with this result that she gave Drake a cup (still at the family seat of
+Nutwell Court in Devonshire) engraved with a picture of his reception
+by the Sultan Baber of Ternate.
+
+Leaving Ternate, the _Golden Hind_ beat to and fro among the tortuous
+and only half-known channels of the Archipelago till the 9th of
+January, 1580, when she bore away before a roaring trade wind with all
+sail set and, so far as Drake could tell, a good clear course for home.
+But suddenly, without a moment's warning, there was a most terrific
+shock. The gallant ship reared like a stricken charger, plunged
+forward, grinding her trembling hull against the rocks, and then lay
+pounding out her life upon a reef. Drake and his men at once took in
+half the straining sails; then knelt in prayer; then rose to see what
+could be done by earthly means. To their dismay there was no holding
+ground on which to get an anchor fast and warp the vessel off. The lead
+could find no bottom anywhere aft. All night long the _Golden Hind_
+remained fast caught in this insidious death-trap. At dawn Parson
+Fletcher preached a sermon and administered the Blessed Sacrament. Then
+Drake ordered ten tons overboard—cannon, cloves, and provisions. The
+tide was now low and she sewed seven feet, her draught being thirteen
+and the depth of water only six. Still she kept an even keel as the
+reef was to leeward and she had just sail enough to hold her up. But at
+high tide in the afternoon there was a lull and she began to heel over
+towards the unfathomable depths. Just then, however, a quiver ran
+through her from stem to stern; an extra sail that Drake had ordered up
+caught what little wind there was; and, with the last throb of the
+rising tide, she shook herself free and took the water as quietly as if
+her hull was being launched. There were perils enough to follow:
+dangers of navigation, the arrival of a Portuguese fleet that was only
+just eluded, and all the ordinary risks of travel in times when what
+might be called the official guide to voyagers opened with the ominous
+advice, _First make thy Will_. But the greatest had now been safely
+passed.
+
+Meanwhile all sorts of rumors were rife in Spain, New Spain, and
+England. Drake had been hanged. That rumor came from the hanging of
+John Oxenham at Lima. The _Golden Hind_ had foundered. That tale was
+what Winter, captain of the _Elizabeth_, was not altogether unwilling
+should be thought after his own failure to face another great antarctic
+storm. He had returned in 1578. News from Peru and Mexico came home in
+1579; but no Drake. So, as 1580 wore on, his friends began to despair,
+the Spaniards and Portuguese rejoiced, while Burleigh, with all who
+found Drake an inconvenience in their diplomatic way, began to hope
+that perhaps the sea had smoothed things over. In August the London
+merchants were thrown into consternation by the report of Drake's
+incredible captures; for their own merchant fleet was just then off for
+Spain. They waited on the Council, who soothed them with the assurance
+that Drake's voyage was a purely private venture so far as prizes were
+concerned. With this diplomatic quibble they were forced to be content.
+
+But worse was soon to follow. The king of Portugal died. Philip's army
+marched on Lisbon immediately, and all the Portuguese possessions were
+added to the already overgrown empire of Spain. Worse still, this
+annexation gave Philip what he wanted in the way of ships; for Portugal
+had more than Spain. The Great Armada was now expected to be formed
+against England, unless Elizabeth's miraculous diplomacy could once
+more get her clear of the fast-entangling coils. To add to the general
+confusion, this was also the year in which the Pope sent his picked
+Jesuits to England, and in which Elizabeth was carrying on her last
+great international flirtation with ugly, dissipated Francis of Anjou,
+brother to the king of France.
+
+Into this imbroglio sailed the _Golden Hind_ with ballast of silver and
+cargo of gold. 'Is Her Majesty alive and well?' said Drake to the first
+sail outside of Plymouth Sound. 'Ay, ay, she is, my Master,' answered
+the skipper of a fishing smack, 'but there's a deal o' sickness here in
+Plymouth'; on which Drake, ready for any excuse to stay afloat, came to
+anchor in the harbor. His wife, pretty Mary Newman from the banks of
+Tavy, took boat to see him, as did the Mayor, whose business was to
+warn him to keep quiet till his course was clear. So Drake wrote off to
+the Queen and all the Councillors who were on his side. The answer from
+the Councillors was not encouraging; so he warped out quietly and
+anchored again behind Drake's Island in the Sound. But presently the
+Queen's own message came, commanding him to an audience at which, she
+said, she would be pleased to view some of the curiosities he had
+brought from foreign parts. Straight on that hint he started up to town
+with spices, diamonds, pearls, and gold enough to win any woman's
+pardon and consent.
+
+The audience lasted six hours. Meanwhile the Council sat without any of
+Drake's supporters and ordered all the treasure to be impounded in the
+Tower. But Leicester, Walsingham, and Hatton, all members of Drake's
+syndicate, refused to sign; while Elizabeth herself, the managing
+director, suspended the order till her further pleasure should be
+known. The Spanish ambassador 'did burn with passion against Drake.'
+The Council was distractingly divided. The London merchants trembled
+for their fleet. But Elizabeth was determined that the blow to Philip
+should hurt him as much as it could without producing an immediate war;
+while down among Drake's own West-Countrymen 'the case was clear in sea
+divinitie,' as similar cases had often been before. Tremayne, a
+Devonshire magistrate and friend of the syndicate, could hardly find
+words to express his contentment with Drake, whom he called 'a man of
+great government, and that by the rules of God and His Book.'
+
+Elizabeth decided to stand by Drake. She claimed, what was true, that
+he had injured no actual place or person of the King of Spain's,
+nothing but property afloat, appropriate for reprisals. All England
+knew the story of Ulua and approved of reprisals in accordance with the
+spirit of the age. And the Queen had a special grievance about Ireland,
+where the Spaniards were entrenched in Smerwick, thus adding to the
+confusion of a rebellion that never quite died down at any time. Philip
+explained that the Smerwick Spaniards were there as private volunteers.
+Elizabeth answered that Drake was just the same. The English tide, at
+all events, was turning in his favor. The indefatigable Stowe,
+chronicler of London, records that 'the people generally applauded his
+wonderful long adventures and rich prizes. His name and fame became
+admirable in all places, the people swarming daily in the streets to
+behold him, vowing hatred to all that misliked him.'
+
+The _Golden Hind_ had been brought round to London, where she was the
+greatest attraction of the day. Finally, on the 4th of April, 1581,
+Elizabeth went on board in state, to a banquet 'finer than has ever
+been seen in England since King Henry VIII,' said the furious Spanish
+ambassador in his report to Philip. But this was not her chief offence
+in Spanish eyes. For here, surrounded by her court, and in the presence
+of an enormous multitude of her enthusiastic subjects, she openly
+defied the King of Spain. 'He hath demanded Drake's head of me,' she
+laughed aloud, 'and here I have a gilded sword to strike it off.' With
+that she bade Drake kneel. Then, handing the sword to Marchaumont, the
+special envoy of her French suitor, Francis of Anjou, she ordered him
+to give the accolade. This done, she pronounced the formula of
+immemorial fame: _I bid thee rise, Sir Francis Drake!_
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII — DRAKE CLIPS THE WINGS OF SPAIN
+
+
+For three years after Drake had been dubbed Sir Francis by the Queen he
+was the hero of every class of Englishmen but two: the extreme Roman
+Catholics, who wanted Mary Queen of Scots, and the merchants who were
+doing business with Portugal and Spain. The Marian opposition to the
+general policy of England persisted for a few years longer. But the
+merchants who were the inheritors of centuries of commercial
+intercourse with England's new enemies were soon to receive a shock
+that completely changed their minds. They were themselves one of the
+strongest factors that made for war in the knotty problem now to be
+solved at the cannon's mouth because English trade was seeking new
+outlets in every direction and was beating hard against every door that
+foreigners shut in its face. These merchants would not, however,
+support the war party till they were forced to, as they still hoped to
+gain by other means what only war could win.
+
+The year that Drake came home (1580) Philip at last got hold of a
+sea-going fleet, the eleven big Portuguese galleons taken when Lisbon
+fell. With the Portuguese ships, sailors, and oversea possessions, with
+more galleons under construction at Santander in Spain, and with the
+galleons of the Indian Guard built by the great Menendez to protect New
+Spain: with all this performed or promised, Philip began to feel as if
+the hour was at hand when he could do to England what she had done to
+him.
+
+In 1583 Santa Cruz, the best Spanish admiral since the death of
+Menendez, proposed to form the nucleus of the Great Armada out of the
+fleet with which he had just broken down the last vestige of Portuguese
+resistance in the Azores. From that day on, the idea was never dropped.
+At the same time Elizabeth discovered the Paris Plot between Mary and
+Philip and the Catholics of France, all of whom were bent on her
+destruction. England stood to arms. But false ideas of naval defence
+were uppermost in the Queen's Council. No attempt was made to strike a
+concentrated blow at the heart of the enemy's fleet in his own waters.
+Instead of this the English ships were carefully divided among the
+three squadrons meant to defend the approaches to England, Ireland, and
+Scotland, because, as the Queen-in-Council sagely remarked, who could
+be expected to know what the enemy's point of attack would be? The fact
+is that when wielding the forces of the fleet and army the Queen and
+most of her non-combatant councillors never quite reached that supreme
+point of view from which the greatest statesmen see exactly where civil
+control ends and civilian interference begins. Luckily for England,
+their mistakes were once more covered up by a turn of the international
+kaleidoscope.
+
+No sooner had the immediate danger of a great combined attack on
+England passed away than Elizabeth returned to Drake's plan for a
+regular raid against New Spain, though it had to be one that was not
+designed to bring on war in Europe. Drake, who was a member of the Navy
+Board charged with the reorganization of the fleet, was to have
+command. The ships and men were ready. But the time had not yet come.
+
+Next year (1584) Amadas and Barlow, Sir Walter Raleigh's two
+prospectors for the 'plantation' of Virginia, were being delighted with
+the summer lands and waters of what is now North Carolina. We shall
+soon hear more of Raleigh and his vision of the West. But at this time
+a good many important events were happening in Europe; and it is these
+that we must follow first.
+
+William of Orange, the Washington of Holland, was assassinated at
+Philip's instigation, while plots to kill Elizabeth and place Mary on
+the throne began to multiply. The agents were executed, while a 'Bond
+of Association' was signed by all Elizabeth's chief supporters, binding
+them to hunt down and kill all who tried to kill her—a plain hint for
+Mary Queen of Scots to stop plotting or stand the consequences.
+
+But the merchants trading with Spain and Portugal were more than ever
+for keeping on good terms with Philip because the failure of the
+Spanish harvest had induced him to offer them special protection and
+encouragement if they would supply his country's needs at once. Every
+available ton of shipping was accordingly taken up for Spain. The
+English merchant fleet went out, and big profits seemed assured. But
+presently the _Primrose_, 'a tall ship of London,' came flying home to
+say that Philip had suddenly seized the merchandise, imprisoned the
+men, and taken the ships and guns for use with the Great Armada. That
+was the last straw. The peaceful traders now saw that they were wrong
+and that the fighting ones were right; and for the first time both
+could rejoice over the clever trick by which John Hawkins had got his
+own again from Philip. In 1571, three years after Don Martin's
+treachery at San Juan de Ulna, Hawkins, while commanding the Scilly
+Island squadron, led the Spanish ambassador to believe that he would go
+over to the Spanish cause in Ireland if his claims for damages were
+only paid in full and all his surviving men in Mexico were sent home.
+The cold and crafty Philip swallowed this tempting bait; sent the men
+home with Spanish dollars in their pockets, and paid Hawkins forty
+thousand pounds, the worth of about two million dollars now. Then
+Hawkins used the information he had picked up behind the Spanish scenes
+to unravel the Ridolfi Plot for putting Mary on the throne in 1572, the
+year of St. Bartholomew. No wonder Philip hated sea-dogs!
+
+Things new and old having reached this pass, the whole of England, bar
+the Marians, were eager for the great 'Indies Voyage' of 1585.
+Londoners crowded down to Woolwich 'with great jolitie' to see off
+their own contingent on its way to join Drake's flag at Plymouth. Very
+probably Shakespeare went down too, for that famous London merchantman,
+the _Tiger_, to which he twice alludes—once in _Macbeth_ and once in
+_Twelfth Night_—was off with this contingent. Such a private fleet had
+never yet been seen: twenty-one ships, eight smart pinnaces, and
+twenty-three hundred men of every rank and rating. The Queen was
+principal shareholder and managing director. But, as usual in colonial
+attacks intended for disavowal if necessity arose, no prospectus or
+other document was published, nor were the shareholders of this
+joint-stock company known in any quite official way. It was the size of
+the fleet and the reputation of the officers that made it a national
+affair. Drake, now forty, was 'Admiral'; Frobisher, of
+North-West-Passage fame, was 'Vice'; Knollys, the Queen's own cousin,
+'Rear.' Carleill, a famous general, commanded the troops and sailed in
+Shakespeare's _Tiger_. Drake's old crew from the _Golden Hind_ came
+forward to a man, among them Wright, 'that excellent mathematician and
+ingineer,' and big Tom Moone, the lion of all boarding-parties, each in
+command of a ship.
+
+But Elizabeth was just then weaving the threads of an unusually
+intricate diplomatic pattern; so doubts and delays, orders and
+counter-orders vexed Drake to the last. Sir Philip Sidney, too, came
+down as a volunteer; which was another sore vexation, since his
+European fame would have made him practically joint commander of the
+fleet, although he was not a naval officer at all. But he had the good
+sense to go back; whereupon Drake, fearing further interruptions from
+the court, ordered everything to be tumbled into the nearest ships and
+hurried off to sea under a press of sail.
+
+The first port of call was Vigo in the northwestern corner of Spain,
+where Drake's envoy told the astonished governor that Elizabeth wanted
+to know what Philip intended doing about embargoes now. If the governor
+wanted peace, he must listen to Drake's arguments; if war—well, Drake
+was ready to begin at once. A three-days' storm interrupted the
+proceedings; after which the English intercepted the fugitive townsfolk
+whose flight showed that the governor meant to make a stand, though he
+had said the embargo had been lifted and that all the English prisoners
+were at liberty to go. Some English sailors, however, were still being
+held; so Drake sent in an armed party and brought them off, with a good
+pile of reprisal booty too. Then he put to sea and made for the Spanish
+Main by way of the Portuguese African islands.
+
+The plan of campaign drawn up for Burleigh's information still exists.
+It shows that Drake, the consummate raider, was also an admiral of the
+highest kind. The items, showing how long each part should take and
+what loot each place should yield, are exact and interesting. But it is
+in the relation of every part to every other part and to the whole that
+the original genius of the born commander shines forth in all its
+glory. After taking San Domingo he was to sack Margarita, La Hacha, and
+Santa Marta, razing their fortifications as he left. Cartagena and
+Nombre de Dios came next. Then Carleill was to raid Panama, with the
+help of the Maroons, while Drake himself was to raid the coast of
+Honduras. Finally, with reunited forces, he would take Havana and, if
+possible, hold it by leaving a sufficient garrison behind. Thus he
+would paralyze New Spain by destroying all the points of junction along
+its lines of communication just when Philip stood most in need of its
+help for completing the Great Armada.
+
+But, like a mettlesome steeplechaser, Drake took a leap in his stride
+during the preliminary canter before the great race. The wind being
+foul for the Canaries, he went on to the Cape Verde archipelago and
+captured Santiago, which had been abandoned in terror on the approach
+of the English 'Dragon,' that sinister hero of Lope de Vega's epic
+onslaught _La Dragontea_. As good luck would have it, Carleill marched
+in on the anniversary of the Queen's accession, the 17th of November.
+So there was a royal salute fired in Her Majesty's honor by land and
+sea. No treasure was found, French privateers had sacked the place
+three years before and had killed off everyone they caught; the
+Portuguese, therefore, were not going to wait to meet the English
+'Dragon' too. The force that marched inland failed to unearth the
+governor. So San Domingo, Santiago, and Porto Pravda were all burnt to
+the ground before the fleet bore away for the West Indies.
+
+San Domingo in Hispaniola (Hayti) was made in due course, but only
+after a virulent epidemic had seriously thinned the ranks. San Domingo
+was the oldest town in New Spain and was strongly garrisoned and
+fortified. But Carleill's soldiers carried all before them. Drake
+battered down the seaward walls. The Spaniards abandoned the citadel at
+night, and the English took the whole place as a New Year's gift for
+1586. But again there was no treasure. The Spaniards had killed off the
+Caribs in war or in the mines, so that nothing was now dug out.
+Moreover the citizens were quite on their guard against adventurers and
+ready to hide what they had in the most inaccessible places. Drake then
+put the town up to ransom and sent out his own Maroon boy servant to
+bring in the message from the Spanish officer proposing terms. This
+Spaniard, hating all Maroons, ran his lance through the boy and
+cantered away. The boy came back with the last ounce of his strength
+and fell dead at Drake's feet. Drake sent to say he would hang two
+Spaniards every day if the murderer was not hanged by his own
+compatriots. As no one came he began with two friars. Then the
+Spaniards brought in the offender and hanged him in the presence of
+both armies.
+
+That episode cleared the air; and an interchange of courtesies and
+hospitalities immediately followed. But no business was done. Drake
+therefore began to burn the town bit by bit till twenty-five thousand
+ducats were paid. It was very little for the capital. But the men
+picked up a good deal of loot in the process and vented their
+ultra-Protestant zeal on all the 'graven images' that were not worth
+keeping for sale. On the whole the English were well satisfied. They
+had taken all the Spanish ships and armament they wanted, destroyed the
+rest, liberated over a hundred brawny galley-slaves—some Turks among
+them—all anxious for revenge, and had struck a blow at Spanish prestige
+which echoed back to Europe. Spain never hid her light under a bushel;
+and here, in the Governor's Palace, was a huge escutcheon with a horse
+standing on the earth and pawing at the sky. The motto blazoned on it
+was to the effect that the earth itself was not enough for Spain—_Non
+sufficit orbis._ Drake's humor was greatly tickled, and he and his
+officers kept asking the Spaniards to translate the motto again and
+again.
+
+Delays and tempestuous head winds induced Drake to let intermediate
+points alone and make straight for Cartagena on the South American
+mainland. Cartagena had been warned and was on the alert. It was strong
+by both nature and art. The garrison was good of its kind, though the
+Spaniards' custom of fighting in quilted jackets instead of armor put
+them at a disadvantage. This custom was due to the heat and to the fact
+that the jackets were proof against the native arrows.
+
+There was an outer and an inner harbor, with such an intricate and
+well-defended passage that no one thought Drake would dare go in. But
+he did. Frobisher had failed to catch a pilot. But Drake did the trick
+without one, to the utter dismay of the Spaniards. After some more very
+clever manoeuvres, to distract the enemy's attention from the real
+point of attack, Carleill and the soldiers landed under cover of the
+dark and came upon the town where they were least expected, by wading
+waist-deep through the water just out of sight of the Spanish gunners.
+The entrenchments did not bar the way in this unexpected quarter. But
+wine casks full of rammed earth had been hurriedly piled there in case
+the mad English should make the attempt. Carleill gave the signal.
+Goring's musketeers sprang forward and fired into the Spaniards' faces.
+Then Sampson's pikemen charged through and a desperate hand-to-hand
+fight ensued. Finally the Spaniards broke after Carleill had killed
+their standard-bearer and Goring had wounded and taken their commander.
+The enemies ran pell-mell through the town together till the English
+reformed in the Plaza. Next day Drake moved in to attack the harbor
+fort; whereupon it was abandoned and the whole place fell.
+
+But again there was a dearth of booty. The Spaniards were getting shy
+of keeping too many valuables where they could be taken. So
+negotiations, emphasized by piecemeal destruction, went on till
+sickness and the lateness of the season put the English in a sorry fix.
+The sack of the city had yielded much less than that of San Domingo;
+and the men, who were all volunteers, to be paid out of plunder, began
+to grumble at their ill-success. Many had been wounded, several
+killed—big, faithful Tom Moone among them. A hundred died. More were
+ill. Two councils of war were held, one naval, the other military. The
+military officers agreed to give up all their own shares to the men.
+But the naval officers, who were poorer and who were also responsible
+for the expenses of their vessels, could not concur. Finally 110,000
+ducats (equivalent in purchasing power to nearly three millions of
+dollars) were accepted.
+
+It was now impossible to complete the programme or even to take Havana,
+in view of the renewed sickness, the losses, and the advance of the
+season. A further disappointment was experienced when Drake just missed
+the treasure fleet by only half a day, though through no fault of his
+own. Then, with constantly diminishing numbers of effective men, the
+course was shaped for the Spanish 'plantation' of St. Augustine in
+Florida. This place was utterly destroyed and some guns and money were
+taken from it. Then the fleet stood north again till, on the 9th of
+June, it found Raleigh's colony of Roanoke.
+
+Ralph Lane, the governor, was in his fort on the island ready to brave
+it out. Drake offered a free passage home to all the colonists. But
+Lane preferred staying and going on with his surveys and 'plantation.'
+Drake then filled up a store ship to leave behind with Lane. But a
+terrific three-day storm wrecked the store ship and damped the
+colonists' enthusiasm so much that they persuaded Lane to change his
+mind. The colonists embarked and the fleet then bore away for home.
+Though balked of much it had expected in the way of booty, reduced in
+strength by losses, and therefore unable to garrison any strategic
+point which would threaten the life of New Spain, its purely naval work
+was a true and glorious success. When he arrived at Plymouth, Drake
+wrote immediately to Burleigh: 'My very good Lord, there is now a very
+great gap opened, very little to the liking of the King of Spain.'
+
+This 'very great gap' on the American side of the Atlantic was soon to
+be matched by the still greater gap Drake was to make on the European
+side by destroying the Spanish Armada and thus securing that mightiest
+of ocean highways through which the hosts of emigration afterwards
+poured into a land endowed with the goodly heritage of English liberty
+and the English tongue.
+
+The year of Drake's return (1586) was no less troublous than its
+immediate predecessors. The discovery of the Babington Plot to
+assassinate Elizabeth and to place Mary on the throne, supported by
+Scotland, France, and Spain, proved Mary's complicity, produced an
+actual threat of war from France, and made the Pope and Philip gnash
+their teeth with rage. The Roman Catholic allied powers had no
+sufficient navy, and Philip's credit was at its lowest ebb after
+Drake's devastating raid. The English were exultant, east and west; for
+the _True Report of a Worthie Fight performed in the voiage from Turkie
+by Five Shippes of London against 11 gallies and two frigats of the
+King of Spain at Pantalarea, within the Straits_ [of Gibraltar] _Anno
+1586_ was going the rounds and running a close second to Drake's West
+India achievement. The ignorant and thoughtless, both then and since,
+mistook this fight, and another like it in 1590, to mean that English
+merchantmen could beat off Spanish men-of-war. Nothing of the kind: the
+English Levanters were heavily armed and admirably manned by
+well-trained fighting crews; and what these actions really proved, if
+proof was necessary, was that galleys were no match for broadsides from
+the proper kind of sailing ships.
+
+Turkey came into the problems of 1586 in more than name, for there was
+a vast diplomatic scheme on foot to unite the Turks with such
+Portuguese as would support Antonio, the pretender to the throne of
+Portugal, and the rebellious Dutch against Spain, Catholic France, and
+Mary Stuart's Scotland. Leicester was in the Netherlands with an
+English army, fighting indecisively, losing Sir Philip Sidney and
+angering Elizabeth by accepting the governor-generalship without her
+leave and against her diplomacy, which, now as ever, was opposed to any
+definite avowal that could possibly be helped.
+
+Meanwhile the Great Armada was working up its strength, and Drake was
+commissioned to weaken it as much as possible. But, on the 8th of
+February, 1587, before he could sail, Mary was at last beheaded, and
+Elizabeth was once more entering on a tricky course of tortuous
+diplomacy too long by half to follow here. As the great crisis
+approached, it had become clearer and clearer that it was a case of
+kill or be killed between Elizabeth and Mary, and that England could
+not afford to leave Marian enemies in the rear when there might be a
+vast Catholic alliance in the front. But, as a sovereign, Elizabeth
+disliked the execution of any crowned head; as a wily woman she wanted
+to make the most of both sides; and as a diplomatist she would not have
+open war and direct operations going down to the root of the evil if
+devious ways would do.
+
+So the peace party of the Council prevailed again, and Drake's orders
+were changed. He had been going as a lion. The peace party now tried to
+send him as a fox. But he stretched his instructions to their utmost
+limits and even defied the custom of the service by holding no council
+of war when deciding to swoop on Cadiz.
+
+As they entered the harbor, the English saw sixty ships engaged in
+preparations for the Great Armada. Many had no sails—to keep the crews
+from deserting. Others were waiting for their guns to come from Italy.
+Ten galleys rowed out to protect them. The weather and surroundings
+were perfect for these galleys. But as they came end-on in line-abreast
+Drake crossed their T in line-ahead with the shattering broadsides of
+four Queen's ships which soon sent them flying. Each galley was the
+upright of the T, each English sailing ship the corresponding
+crosspiece. Then Drake attacked the shipping and wrecked it right and
+left. Next morning he led the pinnaces and boats into the inner harbor,
+where they cut out the big galleon belonging to Santa Cruz himself, the
+Spanish commander-in-chief. Then the galleys got their chance again—an
+absolutely perfect chance, because Drake's fleet was becalmed at the
+very worst possible place for sailing ships and the very best possible
+place for the well-oared galleys. But even under these extraordinary
+circumstances the ships smashed the galleys up with broadside fire and
+sent them back to cover. Then the Spaniards towed some fire-ships out.
+But the English rowed for them, threw grappling irons into them, and
+gave them a turn that took them clear. Then, for the last time, the
+galleys came on, as bravely but as uselessly as ever. When Drake sailed
+away he left the shipping of Cadiz completely out of action for months
+to come, though fifteen sail escaped destruction in the inner harbor.
+His own losses were quite insignificant.
+
+The next objective was Cape St. Vincent, so famous through centuries of
+naval history because it is the great strategic salient thrust out into
+the Atlantic from the southwest corner of Europe, and thus commands the
+flank approaches to and from the Mediterranean, to and from the coast
+of Africa, and, in those days, the route to and from New Spain by way
+of the Azores. Here Drake had trouble with Borough, his
+second-in-command, a friend of cautious Burleigh and a man hide-bound
+in the warfare of the past—a sort of English Don. Borough objected to
+Drake's taking decisive action without the vote of a council of war.
+Remembering the terrors of Italian textbooks, he had continued to
+regard the galleys with much respect in the harbor of Cadiz even after
+Drake had broken them with ease. Finally, still clinging to the old
+ways of mere raids and reprisals, he stood aghast at the idea of
+seizing Cape St. Vincent and making it a base of operations. Drake
+promptly put him under arrest.
+
+Sagres Castle, commanding the roadstead of Cape St. Vincent, was
+extraordinarily strong. The cliffs, on which it occupied about a
+hundred acres, rose sheer two hundred feet all round except at a narrow
+and well defended neck only two hundred yards across. Drake led the
+stormers himself. While half his eight hundred men kept up a continuous
+fire against every Spaniard on the wall the other half rushed piles of
+faggots in against the oak and iron gate. Drake was foremost in this
+work, carrying faggots himself and applying the first match. For two
+hours the fight went on; when suddenly the Spaniards sounded a parley.
+Their commanding officer had been killed and the woodwork of the gate
+had taken fire. In those days a garrison that would not surrender was
+put to the sword when captured; so these Spaniards may well be excused.
+Drake willingly granted them the honors of war; and so, even to his own
+surprise, the castle fell without another blow. The minor forts near by
+at once surrendered and were destroyed, while the guns of Sagres were
+thrown over the cliffs and picked up by the men below. The whole
+neighboring coast was then swept clear of the fishing fleet which was
+the main source of supply used for the Great Armada.
+
+The next objective was Lisbon, the headquarters of the Great Armada,
+one of the finest harbors in the world, and then the best fortified of
+all. Taking it was, of course, out of the question without a much
+larger fleet accompanied by an overwhelming army. But Drake
+reconnoitred to good effect, learnt wrinkles that saved him from
+disaster two years later, and retired after assuring himself that an
+Armada which could not fight him then could never get to England during
+the same season.
+
+Ship fevers and all the other epidemics that dogged the old sailing
+fleets and scourged them like the plague never waited long. Drake was
+soon short-handed. To add to his troubles, Borough sailed away for
+home; whereupon Drake tried him and his officers by court-martial and
+condemned them all to death. This penalty was never carried out, for
+reasons we shall soon understand. Since no reinforcements came from
+home, Cape St. Vincent could not be held any longer. There was,
+however, one more stroke to make. The great East-India Spanish treasure
+ship was coming home; and Drake made up his mind to have her.
+
+Off the Azores he met her coming towards him and dipping her colors
+again and again to ask him who he was. 'But we would put out no flag
+till we were within shot of her, when we hanged out flags, streamers,
+and pendants. Which done, we hailed her with cannon-shot; and having
+shot her through divers times, she shot at us. Then we began to ply her
+hotly, our fly boat [lightly armed supply vessel of comparatively small
+size] and one of our pinnaces lying athwart her hawse [across her bows]
+at whom she shot and threw fire-works [incendiary missiles] but did
+them no hurt, in that her ordnance lay so high over them. Then she,
+seeing us ready to lay her aboard [range up alongside], all of our
+ships plying her so hotly, and resolutely determined to make short work
+of her, they yielded to us.' The Spaniards fought bravely, as they
+generally did. But they were only naval amateurs compared with the
+trained professional sea-dogs.
+
+The voyage was now 'made' in the old sense of that term; for this prize
+was 'the greatest ship in all Portugal, richly laden, to our Happy
+Joy.' The relative values, then and now, are impossible to fix, because
+not only was one dollar the equivalent in most ways of ten dollars now
+but, in view of the smaller material scale on which men's lives were
+lived, these ten dollars might themselves be multiplied by ten, or
+more, without producing the same effect as the multiplied sum would now
+produce on international affairs. Suffice it to say that the ship was
+worth nearly five million dollars of actual cash, and ten, twenty,
+thirty, or many more millions if present sums of money are to be
+considered relatively to the national incomes of those poorer days.
+
+But better than spices, jewels, and gold were the secret documents
+which revealed the dazzling profits of the new East-India trade by sea.
+From that time on for the next twelve years the London merchants and
+their friends at court worked steadily for official sanction in this
+most promising direction. At last, on the 31st of December, 1600, the
+documents captured by Drake produced their result, and the East-India
+Company, by far the greatest corporation of its kind the world has ever
+seen, was granted a royal charter for exclusive trade. Drake may
+therefore be said not only to have set the course for the United States
+but to have actually discovered the route leading to the Empire of
+India, now peopled by three hundred million subjects of the British
+Crown.
+
+So ended the famous campaign of 1587, popularly known as the singeing
+of King Philip's beard. Beyond a doubt it was the most consummate work
+of naval strategy which, up to that time, all history records.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX — DRAKE AND THE SPANISH ARMADA
+
+
+With 1588 the final crisis came. Philip—haughty, gloomy, and ambitious
+Philip, unskilled in arms, but persistent in his plans—sat in his
+palace at Madrid like a spider forever spinning webs that enemies tore
+down. Drake and the English had thrown the whole scheme of the Armada's
+mobilization completely out of gear. Philip's well-intentioned orders
+and counter-orders had made confusion worse confounded; and though the
+Spanish empire held half the riches of the world it felt the lack of
+ready money because English sea power had made it all parts and no
+whole for several months together. Then, when mobilization was resumed,
+Philip found himself distracted by expert advice from Santa Cruz, his
+admiral, and from Parma, Alva's successor in the Netherlands.
+
+The general idea was to send the Invincible Armada up the English
+Channel as far as the Netherlands, where Parma would be ready with a
+magnificent Spanish army waiting aboard troopships for safe conduct
+into England. The Spanish regulars could then hold London up to ransom
+or burn it to the ground. So far, so good. But Philip, to whom
+amphibious warfare remained an unsolved mystery, thought that the
+Armada and the Spanish army could conquer England without actually
+destroying the English fleet. He could not see where raids must end and
+conquest must begin. Most Spaniards agreed with him. Parma and Santa
+Cruz did not. Parma, as a very able general, wanted to know how his
+oversea communications could be made quite safe. Santa Cruz, as a very
+able admiral, knew that no such sea road could possibly be safe while
+the ubiquitous English navy was undefeated and at large. Some time or
+other a naval battle must be won, or Parma's troops, cut off from their
+base of supplies and surrounded like an island by an angry sea of
+enemies, must surely perish. Win first at sea and then on land, said
+the expert warriors, Santa Cruz and Parma. Get into hated England with
+the least possible fighting, risk, or loss, said the mere politician,
+Philip, and then crush Drake if he annoys you.
+
+Early and late persistent Philip slaved away upon this 'Enterprize of
+England.' With incredible toil he spun his web anew. The ships were
+collected into squadrons; the squadrons at last began to wear the
+semblance of a fleet. But semblance only. There were far too many
+soldiers and not nearly enough sailors. Instead of sending the fighting
+fleet to try to clear the way for the troopships coming later on,
+Philip mixed army and navy together. The men-of-war were not bad of
+their kind; but the kind was bad. They were floating castles, high out
+of the water, crammed with soldiers, some other landsmen, and stores,
+and with only light ordnance, badly distributed so as to fire at
+rigging and superstructures only, not at the hulls as the English did.
+Yet this was not the worst. The worst was that the fighting fleet was
+cumbered with troopships which might have been useful in boarding, but
+which were perfectly useless in fighting of any other kind—and the
+English men-of-war were much too handy to be laid aboard by the
+lubberly Spanish troopships. Santa Cruz worked himself to death. In one
+of his last dispatches he begged for more and better guns. All Philip
+could do was to authorize the purchase of whatever guns the foreign
+merchantmen in Lisbon harbor could be induced to sell. Sixty
+second-rate pieces were obtained in this way.
+
+Then, worn out by work and worry, Santa Cruz died, and Philip forced
+the command on a most reluctant landlubber, the Duke of Medina Sidonia,
+a very great grandee of Spain, but wholly unfitted to lead a fleet. The
+death of Santa Cruz, in whom the fleet and army had great confidence,
+nearly upset the whole 'Enterprize of England.' The captains were as
+unwilling to serve under bandylegged, sea-sick Sidonia as he was
+unwilling to command them. Volunteering ceased. Compulsion failed to
+bring in the skilled ratings urgently required. The sailors were now
+not only fewer than ever—sickness and desertion had been thinning their
+ranks—but many of these few were unfit for the higher kinds of
+seamanship, while only the merest handful of them were qualified as
+seamen gunners. Philip, however, was determined; and so the doomed
+Armada struggled on, fitting its imperfect parts together into a still
+more imperfect whole until, in June, it was as ready as it ever could
+be made.
+
+Meanwhile the English had their troubles too. These were also
+political. But the English navy was of such overwhelming strength that
+it could stand them with impunity. The Queen, after thirty years of
+wonderful, if tortuous, diplomacy, was still disinclined to drop the
+art in which she was supreme for that in which she counted for so much
+less and by which she was obliged to spend so very much more. There was
+still a little peace party also bent on diplomacy instead of war.
+Negotiations were opened with Parma at Flushing and diplomatic
+'feelers' went out towards Philip, who sent back some of his own. But
+the time had come for war. The stream was now too strong for either
+Elizabeth or Philip to stem or even divert into minor channels.
+
+Lord Howard of Effingham, as Lord High Admiral of England, was charged
+with the defence at sea. It was impossible in those days to have any
+great force without some great nobleman in charge of it, because the
+people still looked on such men as their natural viceroys and
+commanders. But just as Sir John Norreys, the most expert professional
+soldier in England, was made Chief of the Staff to the Earl of
+Leicester ashore, so Drake was made Chief of the Staff to Howard
+afloat, which meant that he was the brain of the fleet.
+
+A directing brain was sadly needed—not that brains were lacking, but
+that some one man of original and creative genius was required to bring
+the modern naval system into triumphant being. Like all political
+heads, Elizabeth was sensitive to public opinion; and public opinion
+was ignorant enough to clamor for protection by something that a man
+could see; besides which there were all those weaklings who have been
+described as the old women of both sexes and all ages, and who have
+always been the nuisance they are still. Adding together the old views
+of warfare, which nearly everybody held, and the human weaknesses we
+have always with us, there was a most dangerously strong public opinion
+in favor of dividing up the navy so as to let enough different places
+actually see that they had some visible means of divided defence.
+
+The 30th of March, 1588, is the day of days to be remembered in the
+history of sea power because it was then that Drake, writing from
+Plymouth to the Queen-in-Council, first formulated the true doctrine of
+modern naval warfare, especially the cardinal principle that the best
+of all defence is to attack your enemy's main fleet as it issues from
+its ports. This marked the birth of the system perfected by Nelson and
+thence passed on, with many new developments, to the British Grand
+Fleet in the Great War of to-day. The first step was by far the
+hardest, for Drake had to convert the Queen and Howard to his own
+revolutionary views. He at last succeeded; and on the 7th of July
+sailed for Corunna, where the Armada had rendezvoused after being
+dispersed by a storm.
+
+Every man afloat knew that the hour had come. Yet Elizabeth, partly on
+the score of expense, partly not to let Drake snap her apron-strings
+completely, had kept the supply of food and even of ammunition very
+short; so much so that Drake knew he would have to starve or else
+replenish from the Spanish fleet itself. As he drew near Corunna on the
+8th, the Spaniards were again reorganizing. Hundreds of perfectly
+useless landlubbers, shipped at Lisbon to complete the absurdly
+undermanned ships, were being dismissed at Corunna. On the 9th, when
+Sidonia assembled a council of war to decide whether to put to sea or
+not, the English van was almost in sight of the coast. But then the
+north wind flawed, failed, and at last chopped round. A roaring
+sou'wester came on; and the great strategic move was over.
+
+On the 12th the fleet was back in Plymouth replenishing as hard as it
+could. Howard behaved to perfection. Drake worked the strategy and
+tactics. But Howard had to set the tone, afloat and ashore, to all who
+came within his sphere of influence; and right well he set it. His
+dispatches at this juncture are models of what such documents should
+be; and their undaunted confidence is in marked contrast to what the
+doomed Spanish officers were writing at the selfsame time.
+
+The southwest wind that turned Drake back brought the Armada out and
+gave it an advantage which would have been fatal to England had the
+fleets been really equal, or the Spaniards in superior strength, for a
+week was a very short time in which to replenish the stores that
+Elizabeth had purposely kept so low. Drake and Howard, so the story
+goes, were playing a game of bowls on Plymouth Hoe on Friday afternoon
+the 19th of July when Captain Fleming of the _Golden Hind_ rushed up to
+say the Spanish fleet was off the Lizard, only sixty miles away! All
+eyes turned to Drake. Divining the right way to calm the people, he
+whispered an order and then said out loud: 'There's time to end our
+game and beat the Spaniards too.' The shortness of food and ammunition
+that had compelled him to come back instead of waiting to blockade now
+threatened to get him nicely caught in the very trap he had wished to
+catch the Great Armada in himself; for the Spaniards, coming up with
+the wind, might catch him struggling out against the wind and crush his
+long emerging column, bit by bit, precisely as he had intended crushing
+their own column as it issued from the Tagus or Corunna.
+
+But it was only the van that Fleming had sighted. Many a Spanish
+straggler was still hull-down astern; and Sidonia had to wait for all
+to close and form up properly.
+
+Meanwhile Drake and Howard were straining every nerve to get out of
+Plymouth. It was not their fault, but the Queen's-in-Council, that
+Sidonia had unwittingly stolen this march on them. It was their glory
+that they won the lost advantage back again. All afternoon and evening,
+all through that summer night, the sea-dog crews were warping out of
+harbor. Torches, flares, and cressets threw their fitful light on
+toiling lines of men hauling on ropes that moved the ships apparently
+like snails. But once in Plymouth Sound the whinnying sheaves and long
+_yo-hoes_! told that all the sail the ships could carry was being made
+for a life-or-death effort to win the weather gage. Thus beat the heart
+of naval England that momentous night in Plymouth Sound, while beacons
+blazed from height to height ashore, horsemen spurred off post-haste
+with orders and dispatches, and every able-bodied landsman stood to
+arms.
+
+Next morning Drake was in the Channel, near the Eddystone, with
+fifty-four sail, when he sighted a dim blur to windward through the
+thickening mist and drizzling rain. This was the Great Armada. Rain
+came on and killed the wind. All sail was taken in aboard the English
+fleet, which lay under bare poles, invisible to the Spaniards, who
+still announced their presence with some show of canvas.
+
+In actual size and numbers the Spaniards were superior at first. But as
+the week-long running fight progressed the English evened up with
+reinforcements. Spanish vessels looked bigger than their tonnage, being
+high built; and Spanish official reports likewise exaggerated the size
+because their system of measurement made their three tons equal to an
+English four. In armament and seamen-gunners the English were perhaps
+five times as strong as the Armada—and seamen-gunners won the day. The
+English seamen greatly outnumbered the Spanish seamen, utterly
+surpassed them in seamanship, and enjoyed the further advantage of
+having far handier vessels to work. The Spanish grand total, for all
+ranks and ratings was thirty thousand men; the English, only fifteen.
+But the Spaniards were six thousand short on arrival; and their actual
+seamen, many of whom were only half-trained, then numbered a bare seven
+thousand. The seventeen thousand soldiers only made the ships so many
+death-traps; for they were of no use afloat except as boarding
+parties—and no boarding whatever took place. The English fifteen
+thousand, on the other hand, were three-quarters seamen and one-quarter
+soldiers who were mostly trained as marines, and this total was
+actually present. On the whole, it is hardly an exaggeration to say
+that the Armada was mostly composed of armed transports while all the
+English vessels that counted in the fighting were real men-of-war.
+
+In every one of the Armada's hundred and twenty-eight vessels, says an
+officer of the Spanish flagship, 'our people kneeled down and offered a
+prayer, beseeching our Lord to give us victory against the enemies of
+His holy faith.' The crews of the hundred and ninety-seven English
+vessels which, at one time or another, were present in some capacity on
+the scene of action also prayed for victory to the Lord of Hosts, but
+took the proper naval means to win it. 'Trust in the Lord—and keep your
+powder dry,' said Oliver Cromwell when about to ford a river in the
+presence of the enemy. And so, in other words, said Drake.
+
+All day long, on that fateful 20th of July, the visible Armada with its
+swinging canvas was lying-to fifteen miles west of the invisible,
+bare-masted English fleet. Sidonia held a council of war, which,
+landsman-like, believed that the English were divided, one-half
+watching Parma, the other the Armada. The trained soldiers and sailors
+were for the sound plan of attacking Plymouth first. Some admirals even
+proposed the only perfect plan of crushing Drake in detail as he issued
+from the Sound. All were in blissful ignorance of the astounding feat
+of English seamanship which had already robbed them of the only chance
+they ever had. But Philip, also landsman-like, had done his best to
+thwart his own Armada; for Sidonia produced the royal orders forbidding
+any attack on England till he and Parma had joined hands. Drake,
+however, might be crushed piecemeal in the offing when still with his
+aftermost ships in the Sound. So, with this true idea, unworkable
+because based on false information, the generals and admirals dispersed
+to their vessels and waited. But then, just as night was closing in,
+the weather lifted enough to reveal Drake's astonishing position.
+Immediately pinnaces went scurrying to Sidonia for orders. But he had
+none to give. At one in the morning he learnt some more dumbfounding
+news: that the English had nearly caught him at Corunna, that Drake and
+Howard had joined forces, and that both were now before him.
+
+Nor was even this the worst. For while the distracted Sidonia was
+getting his fleet into the 'eagle formation,' so suitable for galleys
+whose only fighting men were soldiers, the English fleet was stealing
+the weather gage, his one remaining natural advantage. An English
+squadron of eight sail manoeuvred coast-wise on the Armada's inner
+flank, while, unperceived by the Spanish lookout, Drake stole away to
+sea, beat round its outer flank, and then, making the most of a
+westerly slant in the shifting breeze, edged in to starboard. The
+Spaniards saw nothing till it was too late, Drake having given them a
+berth just wide enough to keep them quiet. But when the sun rose,
+there, only a few miles off to windward, was the whole main body of the
+English fleet, coming on in faultless line-ahead, heeling nicely over
+on the port tack before the freshening breeze, and, far from waiting
+for the Great Armada, boldly bearing down to the attack. With this
+consummate move the victory was won.
+
+The rest was slaughter, borne by the Spaniards with a resolution that
+nothing could surpass. With dauntless tenacity they kept their 'eagle
+formation,' so useful at Lepanto, through seven dire days of most
+one-sided fighting. Whenever occasion seemed to offer, the Spaniards
+did their best to close, to grapple, and to board, as had their heroes
+at Lepanto. But the English merely laughed, ran in, just out of reach,
+poured in a shattering broadside between wind and water, stood off to
+reload, fired again, with equal advantage, at longer range, caught the
+slow galleons end-on, raked them from stem to stern, passed to and fro
+in one, long, deadly line-ahead, concentrating at will on any given
+target; and did all this with well-nigh perfect safety to themselves.
+In quite a different way close-to, but to the same effect at either
+distance, long or short, the English 'had the range of them,' as
+sailors say to-day. Close-to, the little Spanish guns fired much too
+high to hull the English vessels, lying low and trim upon the water,
+with whose changing humors their lines fell in so much more happily
+than those of any lumbering Spaniards could. Far-off, the little
+Spanish guns did correspondingly small damage, even when they managed
+to hit; while the heavy metal of the English, handled by real
+seamen-gunners, inflicted crushing damage in return.
+
+But even more important than the Englishmen's superiority in rig, hull,
+armament, and expert seamanship was their tactical use of the
+thoroughly modern line-ahead. Any one who will take the letter T as an
+illustration can easily understand the advantage of 'crossing his T.'
+The upright represents an enemy caught when in column-ahead, as he
+would be, for instance, when issuing from a narrow-necked port. In this
+formation he can only use bow fire, and that only in succession, on a
+very narrow front. But the fleet represented by the crosspiece, moving
+across the point of the upright, is in the deadly line-ahead, with all
+its near broadsides turned in one long converging line of fire against
+the helplessly narrow-fronted enemy. If the enemy, sticking to medieval
+tactics, had room to broaden his front by forming column-abreast, as
+galleys always did, that is, with several uprights side by side, he
+would still be at the same sort of disadvantage; for this would only
+mean a series of T's with each nearest broadside crossing each opposing
+upright as before.
+
+The herded soldiers and non-combatants aboard the Great Armada stood by
+their useless duties to the last. Thousands fell killed or wounded.
+Several times the Spanish scuppers actually ran a horrid red, as if the
+very ships were bleeding. The priests behaved as bravely as the Jesuits
+of New France—and who could be braver than those undaunted missionaries
+were? Soldiers and sailors were alike. 'What shall we do now?' asked
+Sidonia after the slaughter had gone on for a week. 'Order up more
+powder,' said Oquendo, as dauntless as before. Even then the eagle
+formation was still kept up. The van ships were the head. The biggest
+galleons formed the body. Lighter vessels formed the wings. A reserve
+formed the tail.
+
+As the unflinching Armada stood slowly up the Channel a sail or two
+would drop out by the way, dead-beat. One night several strange sail
+passed suddenly by Drake. What should he do? To go about and follow
+them with all astern of him doing the same in succession was not to be
+thought of, as his aftermost vessels were merchantmen, wholly untrained
+to the exact combined manoeuvres required in a fighting fleet, though
+first-rate individually. There was then no night signal equivalent to
+the modern 'Disregard the flagship's movements.' So Drake dowsed his
+stern light, went about, overhauled the strangers, and found they were
+bewildered German merchantmen. He had just gone about once more to
+resume his own station when suddenly a Spanish flagship loomed up
+beside his own flagship the _Revenge_. Drake immediately had his
+pinnace lowered away to demand instant surrender. But the Spanish
+admiral was Don Pedro de Valdes, a very gallant commander and a very
+proud grandee, who demanded terms; and, though his flagship (which had
+been in collision with a run-amuck) seemed likely to sink, he was quite
+ready to go down fighting. Yet the moment he heard that his summoner
+was Drake he surrendered at discretion, feeling it a personal honor,
+according to the ideas of the age, to yield his sword to the greatest
+seaman in the world. With forty officers he saluted Drake,
+complimenting him on 'valour and felicity so great that Mars and
+Neptune seemed to attend him, as also on his generosity towards the
+fallen foe, a quality often experienced by the Spaniards; whereupon,'
+adds this eyewitness, 'Sir Francis Drake, requiting his Spanish
+compliments with honest English courtesies, placed him at his own table
+and lodged him in his own cabin.' Drake's enemies at home accused him
+of having deserted his fleet to capture a treasure ship—for there was a
+good deal of gold with Valdes. But the charge was quite unfounded.
+
+A very different charge against Howard had more foundation. The Armada
+had anchored at Calais to get its breath before running the gauntlet
+for the last time and joining Parma in the Netherlands. But in the dead
+of night, when the flood was making and a strong west wind was blowing
+in the same direction as the swirling tidal stream, nine English
+fire-ships suddenly burst into flame and made for the Spanish
+anchorage. There were no boats ready to grapple the fire-ships and tow
+them clear. There was no time to weigh; for every vessel had two
+anchors down. Sidonia, enraged that the boats were not out on patrol,
+gave the order for the whole fleet to cut their cables and make off for
+their lives. As the great lumbering hulls, which had of course been
+riding head to wind, swung round in the dark and confusion, several
+crashing collisions occurred. Next morning the Armada was strung along
+the Flemish coast in disorderly flight. Seeing the impossibility of
+bringing the leewardly vessels back against the wind in time to form
+up, Sidonia ran down with the windward ones and formed farther off.
+Howard then led in pursuit. But seeing the _capitana_ of the renowned
+Italian galleasses in distress near Calais, he became a medieval knight
+again, left his fleet, and took the galleasse. For the moment that one
+feather in his cap seemed better worth having than a general victory.
+
+Drake forged ahead and led the pursuit in turn. The Spaniards fought
+with desperate courage, still suffering ghastly losses. But, do what
+they could to bear up against the English and the wind, they were
+forced to leeward of Dunkirk, and so out of touch with Parma. This was
+the result of the Battle of Gravelines, fought on Monday the 29th of
+July, 1588, just ten days after Captain Fleming had rushed on to the
+bowling green of Plymouth Hoe where Drake and Howard, their shore work
+done, were playing a game before embarking. In those ten days the
+gallant Armada had lost all chance of winning the overlordship of the
+sea and shaking the sea-dog grip off both Americas. A rising gale now
+forced it to choose between getting pounded to death on the shoals of
+Dunkirk or running north, through that North Sea in which the British
+Grand Fleet of the twentieth century fought against the fourth attempt
+in modern times to win a world-dominion.
+
+North, and still north, round by the surf-lashed Orkneys, then down the
+wild west coasts of the Hebrides and Ireland, went the forlorn Armada,
+losing ships and men at every stage, until at last the remnant
+straggled into Spanish ports like the mere wreckage of a storm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X — 'THE ONE AND THE FIFTY-THREE'
+
+
+The next year, 1589, is famous for the unsuccessful Lisbon Expedition.
+Drake had the usual troubles with Elizabeth, who wanted him to go about
+picking leaves and breaking branches before laying the axe to the root
+of the tree. Though there were in the Narrow Seas defensive squadrons
+strong enough to ward off any possible blow, yet the nervous landsmen
+wanted Corunna and other ports attacked and their shipping destroyed,
+for fear England should be invaded before Drake could strike his blow
+at Lisbon. Then there were troubles about stores and ammunition. The
+English fleet had been reduced to the last pound of powder twice during
+the ten-days' battle with the Armada. Yet Elizabeth was again alarmed
+at the expense of munitions. She never quite rose to the idea of one
+supreme and finishing blow, no matter what the cost might be.
+
+This was a joint expedition, the first in which a really modern English
+fleet and army had ever taken part, with Sir John Norreys in command of
+the army. There was no trouble about recruits, for all men of spirit
+flocked in to follow Drake and Norreys. The fleet was perfectly
+organized into appropriate squadrons and flotillas, such as then
+corresponded with the battleships, cruisers, and mosquito craft of
+modern navies. The army was organized into battalions and brigades,
+with a regular staff and all the proper branches of the service.
+
+The fleet made for Corunna, where Norreys won a brilliant victory. A
+curious little incident of exact punctilio is worth recording. After
+the battle, and when the fleet was waiting for a fair wind to get out
+of the harbor, the ships were much annoyed by a battery on the heights.
+Norreys undertook to storm the works and sent in the usual summons by a
+_parlementaire_ accompanied by a drummer. An angry Spaniard fired from
+the walls and the drummer fell dead. The English had hostages on whom
+to take reprisals. But the Spaniards were too quick for them. Within
+ten minutes the guilty man was tried inside the fort by drum-head
+court-martial, condemned to death, and swung out neatly from the walls,
+while a polite Spanish officer came over to assure the English troops
+that such a breach of discipline should not occur again.
+
+Lisbon was a failure. The troops landed and marched over the ground
+north of Lisbon where Wellington in a later day made works whose fame
+has caused their memory to become an allusion in English literature for
+any impregnable base—the Lines of Torres Vedras. The fleet and the army
+now lost touch with each other; and that was the ruin of them all.
+Norreys was persuaded by Don Antonio, pretender to the throne of
+Portugal which Philip had seized, to march farther inland, where
+Portuguese patriots were said to be ready to rise _en masse_. This
+Antonio was a great talker and a first-rate fighter with his tongue.
+But his Portuguese followers, also great talkers, wanted to see a
+victory won by arms before they rose.
+
+Before leaving Lisbon Drake had one stroke of good luck. A Spanish
+convoy brought in a Hanseatic Dutch and German fleet of merchantmen
+loaded down with contraband of war destined for Philip's new Armada.
+Drake swooped on it immediately and took sixty well-found ships. Then
+he went west to the Azores, looking for what he called 'some
+comfortable little dew of Heaven,' that is, of course, more prizes of a
+richer kind. But sickness broke out. The men died off like flies.
+Storms completed the discomfiture. And the expedition got home with a
+great deal less than half its strength in men and not enough in value
+to pay for its expenses. It was held to have failed; and Drake lost
+favor.
+
+With the sun of Drake's glory in eclipse at court and with Spain and
+England resting from warfare on the grander scale, there were no more
+big battles the following year. But the year after that, 1591, is
+rendered famous in the annals of the sea by Sir Richard Grenville's
+fight in Drake's old flagship, the _Revenge_. This is the immortal
+battle of 'the one and the fifty-three' from which Raleigh's prose and
+Tennyson's verse have made a glory of the pen fit to match the glory of
+the sword.
+
+Grenville had sat, with Drake and Sir Philip Sidney, on the
+Parliamentary committee which recommended the royal charter granted to
+Sir Walter Raleigh for the founding of the first English colony in what
+is now the United States. Grenville's grandfather, Marshal of Calais to
+Henry VIII, had the faculty of rhyme, and, in a set of verses very
+popular in their own day, showed what the Grenville family ambitions
+were.
+
+Who seeks the way to win renown,
+Or flies with wings to high desire,
+Who seeks to wear the laurel crown,
+Or hath the mind that would aspire—
+Let him his native soil eschew,
+Let him go range and seek a new.
+
+
+Grenville himself was a wild and roving blade, no great commander, but
+an adventurer of the most daring kind by land or sea. He rather enjoyed
+the consternation he caused by aping the airs of a pirate king. He had
+a rough way with him at all times; and Ralph Lane was much set against
+his being the commander of the 'Virginia Voyage' of which Lane himself
+was the governor on land. But in action he always was, beyond a doubt,
+the very _beau idéal_ of a 'first-class fighting man.' A striking
+instance of his methods was afforded on his return from Virginia, when
+he found an armed Spanish treasure ship ahead of him at sea. He had no
+boat to board her with. But he knocked some sort of one together out of
+the ship's chests and sprang up the Spaniard's side with his boarding
+party just as this makeshift boat was sinking under them.
+
+The last fight of the _Revenge_ is almost incredible from the odds
+engaged—fifty-three vessels to one. But it is true; and neither
+Raleigh's glowing prose nor Tennyson's glowing verse exaggerates it.
+Lord Thomas Howard, 'almost famished for want of prey,' had been
+cruising in search of treasure ships when Captain Middleton, one of the
+gentlemen-adventurers who followed the gallant Earl of Cumberland, came
+in to warn him that Don Alonzo de Bazan was following with fifty-three
+sail. The English crews were partly ashore at the Azores; and Howard
+had barely time to bring them off, cut his cables, and work to windward
+of the overwhelming Spaniards.
+
+Grenville's men were last. The _Revenge_ had only 'her hundred fighters
+on deck and her ninety sick below' when the Spanish fleet closed round
+him. Yet, just as he had sworn to cut down the first man who touched a
+sail when the master thought there was still a chance to slip through,
+so now he refused to surrender on any terms at all. Then, running down
+close-hauled on the starboard tack, decks cleared for action and crew
+at battle quarters, he steered right between two divisions of the
+Spanish fleet till 'the mountain-like _San Felipe_, of fifteen hundred
+tons,' ranging up on his weather side, blanketed his canvas and left
+him almost becalmed. Immediately the vessels which the _Revenge_ had
+weathered hauled their wind and came up on her from to-leeward. Then,
+at three o'clock in the afternoon of the 1st of September, 1591, that
+immortal fight began.
+
+The first broadside from the _Revenge_ took the _San Felipe_ on the
+water-line and forced her to give way and stop her leaks. Then two
+Spaniards ranged up in her place, while two more kept station on the
+other side. And so the desperate fight went on all through that
+afternoon and evening and far on into the night. Meanwhile Howard,
+still keeping the weather gage, attacked the Spaniards from the rear
+and thought of trying to cut through them. But his sailing master swore
+it would be the end of all Her Majesty's ships engaged, as it probably
+would; so he bore away, wisely or not as critics may judge for
+themselves. One vessel, the little _George Noble_ of London, a
+victualler, stood by the _Revenge_, offering help before the fight
+began. But Grenville, thanking her gallant skipper, ordered him to save
+his vessel by following Howard.
+
+With never less than one enemy on each side of her, the _Revenge_
+fought furiously on. _Boarders away!_ shouted the Spanish colonels as
+the vessels closed. _Repel boarders!_ shouted Grenville in reply. And
+they did repel them, time and again, till the English pikes dripped red
+with Spanish blood. A few Spaniards gained the deck, only to be shot,
+stabbed, or slashed to death. Towards midnight Grenville was hit in the
+body by a musket-shot fired from the tops—the same sort of shot that
+killed Nelson. The surgeon was killed while dressing the wound, and
+Grenville was hit in the head. But still the fight went on. The
+_Revenge_ had already sunk two Spaniards, a third sank afterwards, and
+a fourth was beached to save her. But Grenville would not hear of
+surrender. When day broke not ten unwounded Englishmen remained. The
+pikes were broken. The powder was spent. The whole deck was a wild
+entanglement of masts, spars, sails, and rigging. The undaunted
+survivors stood dumb as their silent cannon. But every Spanish hull in
+the whole encircling ring of death bore marks of the _Revenge's_ rage.
+Four hundred Spaniards, by their own admission, had been killed, and
+quite six hundred wounded. One hundred Englishmen had thus accounted
+for a thousand Spaniards besides all those that sank!
+
+Grenville now gave his last order: 'Sink me the ship, Master-Gunner!'
+But the sailing master and flag-captain, both wounded, protesting that
+all lives should be saved to avenge the dead, manned the only remaining
+boat and made good terms with the Spanish admiral. Then Grenville was
+taken very carefully aboard Don Bazan's flagship, where he was received
+with every possible mark of admiration and respect. Don Bazan gave him
+his own cabin. The staff surgeon dressed his many wounds. The Spanish
+captains and military officers stood hat in hand, 'wondering at his
+courage and stout heart, for that he showed not any signs of faintness
+nor changing of his colour.' Grenville spoke Spanish very well and
+handsomely acknowledged the compliments they paid him. Then, gathering
+his ebbing strength for one last effort, he addressed them in words
+they have religiously recorded: '"Here die I, Richard Grenville, with a
+joyful and quiet mind; for that I have ended my life as a true soldier
+ought to do, that hath fought for his country, queen, religion, and
+honour. Wherefore my soul most joyfully departeth out of this body."
+... And when he had said these and other suchlike words he gave up the
+ghost with a great and stout courage.'
+
+Grenville's latest wish was that the _Revenge_ and he should die
+together; and, though he knew it not, he had this wish fulfilled. For,
+two weeks later, when Don Bazan had collected nearly a hundred more
+sail around him for the last stage home from the West Indies, a cyclone
+such as no living man remembered burst full on the crowded fleet. Not
+even the Great Armada lost more vessels than Don Bazan did in that
+wreck-engulfing week. No less than seventy went down. And with them
+sank the shattered _Revenge_, beside her own heroic dead.
+
+Drake might be out of favor at court. The Queen might grumble at the
+sad extravagance of fleets. Diplomats might talk of untying Gordian
+knots that the sword was made to cut. Courtiers and politicians might
+wonder with which side to curry favor when it was an issue between two
+parties—peace or war. The great mass of ordinary landsmen might wonder
+why the 'sea-affair' was a thing they could not understand. But all
+this was only the mint and cummin of imperial things compared with the
+exalting deeds that Drake had done. For, once the English sea-dogs had
+shown the way to all America by breaking down the barriers of Spain,
+England had ceased to be merely an island in a northern sea and had
+become the mother country of such an empire and republic as neither
+record nor tradition can show the like of elsewhere.
+
+And England felt the triumph. She thrilled with pregnant joy. Poet and
+proseman both gave voice to her delight. Hear this new note of
+exultation born of England's victory on the sea:
+
+ As God hath combined the sea and land into one globe, so their mutual
+ assistance is necessary to secular happiness and glory. The sea
+ covereth one-half of this patrimony of man. Thus should man at once
+ lose the half of his inheritance if the art of navigation did not
+ enable him to manage this untamed beast; and with the bridle of the
+ winds and the saddle of his shipping make him serviceable. Now for the
+ services of the sea, they are innumerable: it is the great purveyor of
+ the world's commodities; the conveyor of the excess of rivers; uniter,
+ by traffique, of all nations; it presents the eye with divers colors
+ and motions, and is, as it were with rich brooches, adorned with many
+ islands. It is an open field for merchandise in peace; a pitched field
+ for the most dreadful fights in war; yields diversity of fish and fowl
+ for diet, material for wealth; medicine for sickness; pearls and
+ jewels for adornment; the wonders of the Lord in the deep for all
+ instruction; multiplicity of nature for contemplation; to the thirsty
+ Earth fertile moisture; to distant friends pleasant meeting; to weary
+ persons delightful refreshing; to studious minds a map of knowledge, a
+ school of prayer, meditation, devotion, and sobriety; refuge to the
+ distressed, portage to the merchant, customs to the prince, passage to
+ the traveller; springs, lakes, and rivers to the Earth. It hath
+ tempests and calms to chastise sinners and exercise the faith of
+ seamen; manifold affections to stupefy the subtlest philosopher,
+ maintaineth (as in Our Island) a wall of defence and watery garrison
+ to guard the state. It entertains the Sun with vapors, the Stars with
+ a natural looking-glass, the sky with clouds, the air with
+ temperateness, the soil with suppleness, the rivers with tides, the
+ hills with moisture, the valleys with fertility. But why should I
+ longer detain you? The Sea yields action to the body, meditation to
+ the mind, and the World to the World, by this art of arts—Navigation.
+
+
+Well might this pious Englishman, the Reverend Samuel Purchas, exclaim
+with David: _Thy ways are in the Sea, and Thy paths in the great
+waters, and Thy footsteps are not known_.
+
+The poets sang of Drake and England, too. Could his 'Encompassment of
+All the Worlde' be more happily admired than in these four short lines:
+
+The Stars of Heaven would thee proclaim
+ If men here silent were.
+The Sun himself could not forget
+ His fellow traveller.
+
+
+What wonder that after Nombre de Dios and the Pacific, the West Indies
+and the Spanish Main, Cadiz and the Armada, what wonder, after this,
+that Shakespeare, English to the core, rings out:—
+
+This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle,
+This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
+This other Eden, demi-paradise;
+This fortress built by nature for herself
+Against infection and the hand of war;
+This happy breed of men, this little world;
+This precious stone set in the silver sea,
+Which serves it in the office of a wall,
+Or as a moat defensive to a house,
+Against the envy of less happy lands:
+This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.
+
+
+This England never did, nor never shall,
+Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror,
+But when it first did help to wound itself.
+Now these her princes are come home again,
+Come the three corners of the world in arms
+And we shall shock them. Nought shall make us rue,
+If England to herself do rest but true.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI — RALEIGH AND THE VISION OF THE WEST
+
+
+Conquerors first, prospectors second, then the pioneers: that is the
+order of those by whom America was opened up for English-speaking
+people. No Elizabethan colonies took root. Therefore the age of
+Elizabethan sea-dogs was one of conquerors and prospectors, not one of
+pioneering colonists at all.
+
+Spain and Portugal alone founded sixteenth-century colonies that have
+had a continuous life from those days to our own. Virginia and New
+England, like New France, only began as permanent settlements after
+Drake and Queen Elizabeth were dead: Virginia in 1607, New France in
+1608, New England in 1620.
+
+It is true that Drake and his sea-dogs were prospectors in their way.
+So were the soldiers, gentlemen-adventurers, and fighting traders in
+theirs. On the other hand, some of the prospectors themselves belong to
+the class of conquerors, while many would have gladly been the pioneers
+of permanent colonies. Nevertheless the prospectors form a separate
+class; and Sir Walter Raleigh, though an adventurer in every other way
+as well, is undoubtedly their chief. His colonies failed. He never
+found his El Dorado. He died a ruined and neglected man. But still he
+was the chief of those whom we can only call prospectors, first,
+because they tried their fortune ashore, one step beyond the conquering
+sea-dogs, and, secondly, because their fortune failed them just one
+step short of where the pioneering colonists began.
+
+A man so various that he seemed to be
+Not one but all mankind's epitome
+
+
+is a description written about a very different character. But it is
+really much more appropriate to Sir Walter Raleigh. Courtier and
+would-be colonizer, soldier and sailor, statesman and scholar, poet and
+master of prose, Raleigh had one ruling passion greater than all the
+rest combined. In a letter about America to Sir Robert Cecil, the son
+of Queen Elizabeth's principal minister of state, Lord Burleigh, he
+expressed this great determined purpose of his life: _I shall yet live
+to see it an Inglishe nation_. He had other interests in abundance,
+perhaps in superabundance; and he had much more than the usual
+temptations to live the life of fashion with just enough of public duty
+to satisfy both the queen and the very least that is implied by the
+motto _Noblesse oblige_. He was splendidly handsome and tall, a perfect
+blend of strength and grace, full of deep, romantic interest in great
+things far and near: the very man whom women dote on. And yet, through
+all the seductions of the Court and all the storm and stress of Europe,
+he steadily pursued the vision of that West which he would make 'an
+Inglishe nation.'
+
+He left Oxford as an undergraduate to serve the Huguenots in France
+under Admiral Coligny and the Protestants in Holland under William of
+Orange. Like Hawkins and Drake, he hated Spain with all his heart and
+paid off many a score against her by killing Spanish troops at Smerwick
+during an Irish campaign marked by ruthless slaughter on both sides. On
+his return to England he soon attracted the charmed attention of the
+queen. His spreading his cloak for her to tread on, lest she might wet
+her feet, is one of those stories which ought to be true if it's not.
+In any case he won the royal favor, was granted monopolies, promotion,
+and estates, and launched upon the full flood-stream of fortune.
+
+He was not yet thirty when he obtained for his half-brother, Sir
+Humphrey Gilbert, then a man of thirty-eight, a royal commission 'to
+inhabit and possess all remote and Heathen lands not in the possession
+of any Christian prince.' The draft of Gilbert's original prospectus,
+dated at London, the 6th of November, 1577, and still kept there in the
+Record Office, is an appeal to Elizabeth in which he proposed 'to
+discover and inhabit some strange place.' Gilbert was a soldier and
+knew what fighting meant; so he likewise proposed 'to set forth certain
+ships of war to the New Land, which, with your good licence, I will
+undertake without your Majesty's charge.... The New Land fish is a
+principal and rich and everywhere vendible merchandise; and by the gain
+thereof shipping, victual, munition, and the transporting of five or
+six thousand soldiers may be defrayed.'
+
+But Gilbert's associates cared nothing for fish and everything for
+gold. He went to the West Indies, lost a ship, and returned without a
+fortune. Next year he was forbidden to repeat the experiment.
+
+The project then languished until the fatal voyage of 1583, when
+Gilbert set sail with six vessels, intending to occupy Newfoundland as
+the base from which to colonize southwards until an armed New England
+should meet and beat New Spain. How vast his scheme! How pitiful its
+execution! And yet how immeasurably beyond his wildest dreams the
+actual development to-day! Gilbert was not a sea-dog but a soldier with
+an uncanny reputation for being a regular Jonah who 'had no good hap at
+sea.' He was also passionately self-willed, and Elizabeth had doubts
+about the propriety of backing him. But she sent him a gilt anchor by
+way of good luck and off he went in June, financed chiefly by Raleigh,
+whose name was given to the flagship.
+
+Gilbert's adventure never got beyond its base in Newfoundland. His ship
+the _Delight_ was wrecked. The crew of the _Raleigh_ mutinied and ran
+her home to England. The other four vessels held on. But the men, for
+the most part, were neither good soldiers, good sailors, nor yet good
+colonists, but ne'er-do-wells and desperadoes. By September the
+expedition was returning broken down. Gilbert, furious at the sailors'
+hints that he was just a little sea-shy, would persist in sticking to
+the Lilliputian ten-ton _Squirrel_, which was woefully top-hampered
+with guns and stores. Before leaving Newfoundland he was implored to
+abandon her and bring her crew aboard a bigger craft. But no. 'Do not
+fear,' he answered; 'we are as near to Heaven by sea as land.' One wild
+night off the Azores the _Squirrel_ foundered with all hands.
+
+Amadas and Barlow sailed in 1584. Prospecting for Sir Walter Raleigh,
+they discovered several harbors in North Carolina, then part of the
+vast 'plantation' of Virginia. Roanoke Island, Pamlico and Albemarle
+Sounds, as well as the intervening waters, were all explored with
+enthusiastic thoroughness and zeal. Barlow, a skipper who was handy
+with his pen, described the scent of that fragrant summer land in terms
+which attracted the attention of Bacon at the time and of Dryden a
+century later. The royal charter authorizing Raleigh to take what he
+could find in this strange land had a clause granting his prospective
+colonists 'all the privileges of free denizens and persons native of
+England in such ample manner as if they were born and personally
+resident in our said realm of England.'
+
+Next year Sir Richard Grenville, who was Raleigh's cousin, convoyed out
+to Roanoke the little colony which Ralph Lane governed and which, as we
+have seen in an earlier chapter, Drake took home discomfited in 1586.
+There might have been a story to tell of successful colonization,
+instead of failure, if Drake had kept away from Roanoke that year or if
+he had tarried a few days longer. For no sooner had the colony departed
+in Drake's vessels than a ship sent out by Sir Walter Raleigh,
+'freighted with all maner of things in most plentiful maner,' arrived
+at Roanoke; and 'after some time spent in seeking our Colony up in the
+countrey, and not finding them, returned with all the aforesayd
+provision into England.' About a fortnight later Sir Richard Grenville
+himself arrived with three ships. Not wishing to lose possession of the
+country where he had planted a colony the year before, he 'landed
+fifteene men in the Isle of Roanoak, furnished plentifully with all
+maner of provision for two yeeres, and so departed for England.'
+Grenville unfortunately had burnt an Indian town and all its standing
+corn because the Indians had stolen a silver cup. Lane, too, had been
+severe in dealing with the natives and they had turned from friends to
+foes. These and other facts were carefully recorded on the spot by the
+official chronicler, Thomas Harriot, better known as a mathematician.
+
+Among the captains who had come out under Grenville in 1585 was Thomas
+Cavendish, a young and daring gentleman-adventurer, greatly
+distinguished as such even in that adventurous age, and the second
+English leader to circumnavigate the globe. When Drake was taking
+Lane's men home in June, 1586, Cavendish was making the final
+preparations for a two-year voyage. He sailed mostly along the route
+marked out by Drake, and many of his adventures were of much the same
+kind. His prime object was to make the voyage pay a handsome dividend.
+But he did notable service in clipping the wings of Spain. He raided
+the shipping off Chile and Peru, took the Spanish flagship, the famous
+_Santa Anna_, off the coast of California, and on his return home in
+1588 had the satisfaction of reporting: 'I burned and sank nineteen
+sail of ships, both small and great; and all the villages and towns
+that ever I landed at I burned and spoiled.'
+
+While Cavendish was preying on Spanish treasure in America, and Drake
+was 'singeing the King of Spain's beard' in Europe, Raleigh still
+pursued his colonizing plans. In 1587 John White and twelve associates
+received incorporation as the 'Governor and Assistants of the City of
+Ralegh in Virginia.' The fortunes of this ambitious city were not
+unlike those of many another 'boomed' and 'busted' city of much more
+recent date. No time was lost in beginning. Three ships arrived at
+Roanoke on the 22nd of July, 1587. Every effort was made to find the
+fifteen men left behind the year before by Grenville to hold possession
+for the Queen. Mounds of earth, which may even now be traced, so
+piously have their last remains been cared for, marked the site of the
+fort. From natives of Croatoan Island the newcomers learned that
+Grenville's men had been murdered by hostile Indians.
+
+One native friend was found in Manteo, a chief whom Barlow had taken to
+England and Grenville had brought back. Manteo was now living with his
+own tribe of sea-coast Indians on Croatoan Island. But the mischief
+between red and white had been begun; and though Manteo had been
+baptized and was recognized as 'The Lord of Roanoke' the races were
+becoming fatally estranged.
+
+After a month Governor White went home for more men and supplies,
+leaving most of the colonists at Roanoke. He found Elizabeth, Raleigh,
+and the rest all working to meet the Great Armada. Yet, even during the
+following year, the momentous year of 1588, Raleigh managed to spare
+two pinnaces, with fifteen colonists aboard, well provided with all
+that was most needed. A Spanish squadron, however, forced both pinnaces
+to run back for their lives. After this frustrated attempt two more
+years passed before White could again sail for Virginia. In August,
+1590, his trumpeter sounded all the old familiar English calls as he
+approached the little fort. No answer came. The colony was lost for
+ever. White had arranged that if the colonists should be obliged to
+move away they should carve the name of the new settlement on the fort
+or surrounding trees, and that if there was either danger or distress
+they should cut a cross above. The one word CROATOAN was all White ever
+found. There was no cross. White's beloved colony, White's favorite
+daughter and her little girl, were perhaps in hiding. But supplies were
+running short. White was a mere passenger on board the ship that
+brought him; and the crew were getting impatient, so impatient for
+refreshment' and a Spanish prize that they sailed past Croatoan,
+refusing to stop a single hour.
+
+Perhaps White learnt more than is recorded and was satisfied that all
+the colonists were dead. Perhaps not. Nobody knows. Only a wandering
+tradition comes out of that impenetrable mystery and circles round the
+not impossible romance of young Virginia Dare. Her father was one of
+White's twelve 'Assistants.' Her mother, Eleanor, was White's daughter.
+Virginia herself, the first of all true 'native-born' Americans, was
+born on the 18th of August, 1587. Perhaps Manteo, 'Lord of Roanoke,'
+saved the whole family whose name has been commemorated by that of the
+North Carolina county of Dare. Perhaps Virginia Dare alone survived to
+be an 'Indian Queen' about the time the first permanent Anglo-American
+colony was founded in 1607, twenty years after her birth. Who knows?
+
+These twenty sundering years, from the end of this abortive colony in
+1587 to the beginning of the first permanent colony in 1607, constitute
+a period that saw the close of one age and the opening of another in
+every relation of Anglo-American affairs.
+
+Nor was it only in Anglo-American affairs that change was rife. 'The
+Honourable East India Company' entered upon its wonderful career.
+Shakespeare began to write his immortal plays. The chosen translators
+began their work on the Authorized Version of the English Bible. The
+Puritans were becoming a force within the body politic as well as in
+religion. Ulster was 'planted' with Englishmen and Lowland Scots. In
+the midst of all these changes the great Queen, grown old and very
+lonely, died in 1603; and with her ended the glorious Tudor dynasty of
+England. James, pusillanimous and pedantic son of Darnley and Mary
+Queen of Scots, ascended the throne as the first of the sinister
+Stuarts, and, truckling to vindictive Spain, threw Raleigh into prison
+under suspended sentence of death.
+
+There was a break of no less than fifteen years in English efforts to
+colonize America. Nothing was tried between the last attempt at Roanoke
+in 1587 and the first attempt in Massachusetts in 1602, when thirty-two
+people sailed from England with Bartholomew Gosnold, formerly a skipper
+in Raleigh's employ. Gosnold made straight for the coast of Maine,
+which he sighted in May. He then coasted south to Cape Cod. Continuing
+south he entered Buzzard's Bay, where he landed on Cuttyhunk Island.
+Here, on a little island in a lake—an island within an island—he built
+a fort round which the colony was expected to grow. But supplies began
+to run out. There was bad blood over the proper division of what
+remained. The would-be colonists could not agree with those who had no
+intention of staying behind. The result was that the entire project had
+to be given up. Gosnold sailed home with the whole disgusted crew and a
+cargo of sassafras and cedar. Such was the first prospecting ever done
+for what is now New England.
+
+The following year, 1603, just after the death of Queen Elizabeth, some
+merchant-venturers of Bristol sent out two vessels under Martin Pring.
+Like Gosnold, Pring first made the coast of Maine and then felt his way
+south. Unlike Gosnold, however, he 'bore into the great Gulfe' of
+Massachusetts Bay, where he took in a cargo of sassafras at Plymouth
+Harbor. But that was all the prospecting done this time. There was no
+attempt at colonizing.
+
+Two years later another prospector was sent out by a more important
+company. The Earl of Southampton and Sir Ferdinando Gorges were the
+chief promoters of this enterprise. Gorges, as 'Lord Proprietary of the
+Province of Maine,' is a well-known character in the subsequent history
+of New England. Lord Southampton, as Shakespeare's only patron and
+greatest personal friend, is forever famous through the world. The
+chief prospector chosen by the company was George Weymouth, who landed
+on the coast of Maine, explored a little of the surrounding country,
+kidnapped five Indians, and returned to England with a glowing account
+of what he had seen.
+
+The cumulative effect of the three expeditions of Gosnold, Pring, and
+Weymouth was a revival of interest in colonization. Prominent men soon
+got together and formed two companies which were formally chartered by
+King James on the 10th of April, 1606. The 'first' or 'southern
+colony,' which came to be known as the London Company because most of
+its members lived there, was authorized to make its 'first plantation
+at any place upon the coast of Virginia or America between the
+four-and-thirty and one-and-forty degrees of latitude.' The northern or
+'second colony,' afterwards called the Plymouth Company, was authorized
+to settle any place between 38° and 45° north, thus overlapping both
+the first company to the south and the French to the north.
+
+In the summer of the same year, 1606, Henry Challons took two ships of
+the Plymouth Company round by the West Indies, where he was caught in a
+fog by the Spaniards. Later in the season Pring went out and explored
+'North Virginia.' In May, 1607, a hundred and twenty men, under George
+Popham, started to colonize this 'North Virginia.' In August they
+landed in Maine at the mouth of the Kennebec, where they built a fort,
+some houses, and a pinnace. Finding themselves short of provisions,
+two-thirds of their number returned to England late in the same year.
+The remaining third passed a terrible winter. Popham died, and Raleigh
+Gilbert succeeded him as governor. When spring came all the survivors
+of the colony sailed home in the pinnace they had built and the
+enterprise was abandoned. The reports of the colonists, after their
+winter in Maine, were to the effect that the second or northern colony
+was 'not habitable for Englishmen.'
+
+In the meantime the permanent foundation of the first or southern
+colony, the real Virginia, was well under way. The same number of
+intending emigrants went out, a hundred and twenty. On the 26th of
+April, 1607, 'about four a-clocke in the morning, wee descried the Land
+of Virginia: the same day wee entered into the Bay of Chesupioc'
+[Chesapeake]. Thus begins the tale of Captain John Smith, of the
+founding of Jamestown, and of a permanent Virginia, the first of the
+future United States.
+
+Now that we have seen one spot in vast America really become the
+promise of the 'Inglishe nation' which Raleigh had longed for, we must
+return once more to Raleigh himself as, mocked by his tantalizing
+vision, he looked out on a changing world from his secular Mount Pisgah
+in the prison Tower of London.
+
+By this time he had felt both extremes of fortune to the full. During
+the travesty of justice at his trial the attorney-general, having no
+sound argument, covered him with slanderous abuse. These are three of
+the false accusations on which he was condemned to death: 'Viperous
+traitor,' 'damnable atheist,' and 'spider of hell.' Hawkins, Drake,
+Frobisher, and Grenville, all were dead. So Raleigh, last of the great
+Elizabethan lions, was caged and baited for the sport of Spain.
+
+Six of his twelve years of imprisonment were lightened by the
+companionship of his wife, Elizabeth Throgmorton, most beautiful of all
+the late Queen's maids of honor. Another solace was the _History of the
+World_, the writing of which set his mind free to wander forth at will
+although his body stayed behind the bars. But the contrast was too
+poignant not to wring this cry of anguish from his preface: 'Yet when
+we once come in sight of the Port of death, to which all winds drive
+us, and when by letting fall that fatal Anchor, which can never be
+weighed again, the navigation of this life takes end: Then it is, I
+say, that our own cogitations (those sad and severe cogitations,
+formerly beaten from us by our health and felicity) return again, and
+pay us to the uttermost for all the pleasing passages of our life
+past.'
+
+At length, in the spring of 1616, Raleigh was released, though still
+unpardoned. He and his devoted wife immediately put all that remained
+of their fortune into a new venture. Twenty years before this he
+thought he could make 'Discovery of the mighty, rich, and beautiful
+Empire of Guiana, and of that great and golden city, which the
+Spaniards call El Dorado, and the natives call Manoa.' Now he would go
+back to find the El Dorado of his dreams, somewhere inland, that
+mysterious Manoa among those southern Mountains of Bright Stones which
+lay behind the Spanish Main. The king's cupidity was roused; and so, in
+1617, Raleigh was commissioned as the admiral of fourteen sail. In
+November he arrived off the coast that guarded all the fabled wealth
+still lying undiscovered in the far recesses of the Orinocan wilds.
+_Guiana, Manoa, El Dorado_—the inland voices called him on.
+
+But Spaniards barred the way; and Raleigh, defying the instructions of
+the King, attacked them. The English force was far too weak and
+disaster followed. Raleigh's son and heir was killed and his lieutenant
+committed suicide. His men began to mutiny. Spanish troops and ships
+came closing in; and the forlorn remnant of the expedition on which
+such hopes were built went straggling home to England. There Raleigh
+was arrested and sent to the block on the 29th of October, 1618. He had
+played the great game of life-and-death and lost it. When he mounted
+the scaffold, he asked to see the axe. Feeling the edge, he smiled and
+said: 'Tis a sharp medicine, but a cure for all diseases.' Then he
+bared his neck and died like one who had served the Great Queen as her
+Captain of the Guard.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII — DRAKE'S END
+
+
+Drake in disfavor after 1589 seems a contradiction that nothing can
+explain. It can, however, be quite easily explained, though never
+explained away. He had simply failed to make the Lisbon Expedition
+pay—a heinous offence in days when the navy was as much a revenue
+department as the customs or excise. He had also failed to take Lisbon
+itself. The reasons why mattered nothing either to the disappointed
+government or to the general public.
+
+But, six years later, in 1595, when Drake was fifty and Hawkins
+sixty-three, England called on them both to strike another blow at
+Spain. Elizabeth was helping Henry IV of France against the League of
+French and Spanish Catholics. Henry, astute as he was gallant, had
+found Paris 'worth a mass' and, to Elizabeth's dismay, had gone
+straight over to the Church of Rome with terms of toleration for the
+Huguenots. The war against the Holy League, however, had not yet ended.
+The effect of Henry's conversion was to make a more united France
+against the encroaching power of Spain. And every eye in England was
+soon turned on Drake and Hawkins for a stroke at Spanish power beyond
+the sea.
+
+Drake and Hawkins formed a most unhappy combination, made worse by the
+fact that Hawkins, now old beyond his years, soured by misfortune, and
+staled for the sea by long spells of office work, was put in as a check
+on Drake, in whom Elizabeth had lost her former confidence. Sir Thomas
+Baskerville was to command the troops. Here, at least, no better choice
+could have possibly been made. Baskerville had fought with rare
+distinction in the Brest campaign and before that in the Netherlands.
+
+There was the usual hesitation about letting the fleet go far from
+home. The 'purely defensive' school was still strong; Elizabeth in
+certain moods belonged to it; and an incident which took place about
+this time seemed to give weight to the arguments of the defensivists. A
+small Spanish force, obliged to find water and provisions in a hurry,
+put into Mousehole in Cornwall and, finding no opposition, burnt
+several villages down to the ground. The moment these Spaniards heard
+that Drake and Hawkins were at Plymouth they decamped. But this
+ridiculous raid threw the country into doubt or consternation.
+Elizabeth was as brave as a lion for herself. But she never grasped the
+meaning of naval strategy, and she was supersensitive to any strong
+general opinion, however false. Drake and Hawkins, with Baskerville's
+troops (all in transports) and many supply vessels for the West India
+voyage, were ordered to cruise about Ireland and Spain looking for
+enemies. The admirals at once pointed out that this was the work of the
+Channel Fleet, not that of a joint expedition bound for America. Then,
+just as the Queen was penning an angry reply, she received a letter
+from Drake, saying that the chief Spanish treasure ship from Mexico had
+been seen in Porto Rico little better than a wreck, and that there was
+time to take her if they could only sail at once. The expedition was on
+the usual joint-stock lines and Elizabeth was the principal
+shareholder. She swallowed the bait whole; and sent sailing orders down
+to Plymouth by return.
+
+And so, on the 28th of August, 1595, twenty-five hundred men in
+twenty-seven vessels sailed out, bound for New Spain. Surprise was
+essential; for New Spain, taught by repeated experience, was well
+armed; and twenty-five hundred men were less formidable now than five
+hundred twenty years before. Arrived at the Canaries, Las Palmas was
+found too strong to carry by immediate assault; and Drake had no time
+to attack it in form. He was two months late already; so he determined
+to push on to the West Indies.
+
+When Drake reached Porto Rico, he found the Spanish in a measure
+forewarned and forearmed. Though he astonished the garrison by standing
+boldly into the harbor and dropping anchor close to a masked battery,
+the real surprise was now against him. The Spanish gunners got the
+range to an inch, brought down the flagship's mizzen, knocked Drake's
+chair from under him, killed two senior officers beside him, and
+wounded many more. In the meantime Hawkins, worn out by his exertions,
+had died. This reception, added to the previous failures and the
+astonishing strength of Porto Rico, produced a most depressing effect.
+Drake weighed anchor and went out. He was soon back in a new place,
+cleverly shielded from the Spanish guns by a couple of islands. After
+some more manoeuvres he attacked the Spanish fleet with fire-balls and
+by boarding. When a burning frigate lit up the whole wild scene, the
+Spanish gunners and musketeers poured into the English ships such a
+concentrated fire that Drake was compelled to retreat. He next tried
+the daring plan of running straight into the harbor, where there might
+still be a chance. But the Spaniards sank four of their own valuable
+vessels in the harbor mouth—guns, stores, and all—just in the nick of
+time, and thus completely barred the way.
+
+Foiled again, Drake dashed for the mainland, seized La Hacha, burnt it,
+ravaged the surrounding country, and got away with a successful haul of
+treasure; then he seized Santa Marta and Nombre de Dios, both of which
+were found nearly empty. The whole of New Spain was taking the
+alarm—_The Dragon's back again!_ Meanwhile a fleet of more than twice
+Drake's strength was coming out from Spain to attack him in the rear.
+Nor was this all, for Baskerville and his soldiers, who had landed at
+Nombre de Dios and started overland, were in full retreat along the
+road from Panama, having found an impregnable Spanish position on the
+way. It was a sad beginning for 1596, the centennial year of England's
+first connection with America.
+
+'Since our return from Panama he never carried mirth nor joy in his
+face,' wrote one of Baskerville's officers who was constantly near
+Drake. A council of war was called and Drake, making the best of it,
+asked which they would have, Truxillo, the port of Honduras, or the
+'golden towns' round about Lake Nicaragua. 'Both,' answered
+Baskerville, 'one after the other.' So the course was laid for San Juan
+on the Nicaragua coast. A head wind forced Drake to anchor under the
+island of Veragua, a hundred and twenty-five miles west of Nombre de
+Dios Bay and right in the deadliest part of that fever-stricken coast.
+The men began to sicken and die off. Drake complained at table that the
+place had changed for the worse. His earlier memories of New Spain were
+of a land like a 'pleasant and delicious arbour' very different from
+the 'vast and desert wilderness' he felt all round him now. The wind
+held foul. More and more men lay dead or dying. At last Drake himself,
+the man of iron constitution and steel nerves, fell ill and had to keep
+his cabin. Then reports were handed in to say the stores were running
+low and that there would soon be too few hands to man the ships. On
+this he gave the order to weigh and 'take the wind as God had sent it.'
+
+So they stood out from that pestilential Mosquito Gulf and came to
+anchor in the fine harbor of Puerto Bello, which the Spaniards had
+chosen to replace the one at Nombre de Dios, twenty miles east. Here,
+in the night of the 27th of January, Drake suddenly sprang out of his
+berth, dressed himself, and raved of battles, fleets, Armadas, Plymouth
+Hoe, and plots against his own command. The frenzy passed away. He fell
+exhausted, and was lifted back to bed again. Then 'like a Christian, he
+yielded up his spirit quietly.'
+
+His funeral rites befitted his renown. The great new Spanish fort of
+Puerto Bello was given to the flames, as were nearly all the Spanish
+prizes, and even two of his own English ships; for there were now no
+sailors left to man them. Thus, amid the thunder of the guns whose
+voice he knew so well, and surrounded by consuming pyres afloat and on
+the shore, his body was committed to the deep, while muffled drums
+rolled out their last salute and trumpets wailed his requiem.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX — NOTE ON TUDOR SHIPPING
+
+
+In the sixteenth century there was no hard-and-fast distinction between
+naval and all other craft. The sovereign had his own fighting vessels;
+and in the course of the seventeenth century these gradually evolved
+into a Royal Navy maintained entirely by the country as a whole and
+devoted solely to the national defence. But in earlier days this modern
+system was difficult everywhere and impossible in England. The English
+monarch, for all his power, had no means of keeping up a great army and
+navy without the help of Parliament and the general consent of the
+people. The Crown had great estates and revenues; but nothing like
+enough to make war on a national scale. Consequently king and people
+went into partnership, sometimes in peace as well as war. When fighting
+stopped, and no danger seemed to threaten, the king would use his
+men-of-war in trade himself, or even hire them out to merchants. The
+merchants, for their part, furnished vessels to the king in time of
+war. Except as supply ships, however, these auxiliaries were never a
+great success. The privateers built expressly for fighting were the
+only ships that could approach the men-of-war.
+
+Yet, strangely enough, King Henry's first modern men-of-war grew out of
+a merchant-ship model, and a foreign one at that. Throughout ancient
+and medieval times the 'long ship' was the man-of-war while the 'round
+ship' was the merchantman. But the long ship was always some sort of
+galley, which, as we have seen repeatedly, depended on its oars and
+used sails only occasionally, and then not in action, while the round
+ship was built to carry cargo and to go under sail. The Italian naval
+architects, then the most scientific in the world, were trying to
+evolve two types of vessel: one that could act as light cavalry on the
+wings of a galley fleet, the other that could carry big cargoes safely
+through the pirate-haunted seas. In both types sail power and fighting
+power were essential. Finally a compromise resulted and the galleasse
+appeared. The galleasse was a hybrid between the galley and the sailing
+vessel, between the 'long ship' that was several times as long as it
+was broad and the 'round ship' that was only two or three times as long
+as its beam. Then, as the oceanic routes gained on those of the inland
+seas, and as oceanic sea power gained in the same proportion, the
+galleon appeared. The galleon had no oars at all, as the hybrid
+galleasses had, and it gained more in sail power than it lost by
+dropping oars. It was, in fact, the direct progenitor of the old
+three-decker which some people still alive can well remember.
+
+At the time the Cabots and Columbus were discovering America the
+Venetians had evolved the merchant-galleasse for their trade with
+London: they called it, indeed, the _galleazza di Londra_. Then, by the
+time Henry VIII was building his new modern navy, the real galleon had
+been evolved (out of the Italian new war- and older
+merchant-galleasses) by England, France, and Scotland; but by England
+best of all. In original ideas of naval architecture England was
+generally behind, as she continued to be till well within living
+memory. Nelson's captains competed eagerly for the command of French
+prizes, which were better built and from superior designs. The American
+frigates of 1812 were incomparably better than the corresponding
+classes in the British service were; and so on in many other instances.
+But, in spite of being rather slow, conservative, and rule-of-thumb,
+the English were already beginning to develop a national sea-sense far
+beyond that of any other people. They could not, indeed, do otherwise
+and live. Henry's policy, England's position, the dawn of oceanic
+strategy, and the discovery of America, all combined to make her navy
+by far the most important single factor in England's problems with the
+world at large. As with the British Empire now, so with England then:
+the choice lay between her being either first or nowhere.
+
+Henry's reasoning and his people's instinct having led to the same
+resolve, everyone with any sea-sense, especially shipwrights like
+Fletcher of Rye, began working towards the best types then obtainable.
+There were mistakes in plenty. The theory of naval architecture in
+England was never both sound and strong enough to get its own way
+against all opposition. But with the issue of life and death always
+dependent on sea power, and with so many men of every class following
+the sea, there was at all events the biggest rough-and-tumble school of
+practical seamanship that any leading country ever had. The two
+essential steps were quickly taken: first, from oared galleys with very
+little sail power to the hybrid galleasse with much more sail and much
+less in the way of oars; secondly, from this to the purely sailing
+galleon.
+
+With the galleon we enter the age of sailing tactics which decided the
+fate of the oversea world. This momentous age began with Drake and the
+English galleon. It ended with Nelson and the first-rate, three-decker,
+ship-of-the-line. But it was one throughout; for its beginning differed
+from its end no more than a father differs from his son.
+
+One famous Tudor vessel deserves some special notice, not because of
+her excellence but because of her defects. The _Henry Grace à Dieu,_ or
+_Great Harry_ as she was generally called, launched in 1514, was
+Henry's own flagship on his way to the Field of the Cloth of Gold in
+1520. She had a gala suit of sails and pennants, all made of damasked
+cloth of gold. Her quarters, sides, and tops were emblazoned with
+heraldic targets. Court artists painted her to show His Majesty on
+board wearing cloth of gold, edged with the royal ermine; as well as
+bright crimson jacket, sleeves, and breeches, with a long white feather
+in his cap. Doubtless, too, His Majesty of France paid her all the
+proper compliments; while every man who was then what reporters are
+to-day talked her up to the top of his bent. No single vessel ever had
+greater publicity till the famous first _Dreadnought_ of our own day
+appeared in the British navy nearly four hundred years later.
+
+But the much advertised _Great Harry_ was not a mighty prototype of a
+world-wide-copied class of battleships like the modern _Dreadnought_.
+With her lavish decorations, her towering superstructures fore and aft,
+and her general aping of a floating castle, she was the wonder of all
+the landsmen in her own age, as she has been the delight of picturesque
+historians ever since. But she marked no advance in naval architecture,
+rather the reverse. She was the last great English ship of medieval
+times. Twenty-five years after the Field of the Cloth of Gold, Henry
+was commanding another English fleet, the first of modern times, and
+therefore one in which the out-of-date _Great Harry_ had no proper
+place at all. She was absurdly top-hampered and over-gunned. And, for
+all her thousand tons, she must have bucketed about in the chops of the
+Channel with the same sort of hobby-horse, see-sawing pitch that
+bothered Captain Concas in 1893 when sailing an exact reproduction of
+Columbus's flagship, the _Santa Maria_, across the North Atlantic to
+the great World's Fair at Chicago.
+
+In her own day the galleon was the 'great ship,' 'capital ship,'
+'ship-of-the-line-of-battle,' or 'battleship' on which the main fight
+turned. But just as our modern fleets require three principal kinds of
+vessels—battleships, cruisers, and 'mosquito' craft—so did the fleets
+of Henry and Elizabeth. The galleon did the same work as the old
+three-decker of Nelson's time or the battleship of to-day. The
+'pinnace' (quite different from more modern pinnaces) was the frigate
+or the cruiser. And, in Henry VIII's fleet of 1545, the 'row-barge' was
+the principal 'mosquito' craft, like the modern torpedo-boat,
+destroyer, or even submarine. Of course the correspondence is far from
+being complete in any class.
+
+The English galleon gradually developed more sail and gun power as well
+as handiness in action. Broadside fire began. When used against the
+Armada, it had grown very powerful indeed. At that time the best guns,
+some of which are still in existence, were nearly as good as those at
+Trafalgar or aboard the smart American frigates that did so well in
+'1812.' When galleon broadsides were fired from more than a single
+deck, the lower ones took enemy craft between wind and water very
+nicely. In the English navy the portholes had been cut so as to let the
+guns be pointed with considerable freedom, up or down, right or left.
+The huge top-hampering 'castles' and other soldier-engineering works on
+deck were modified or got rid of, while more canvas was used and to
+much better purpose.
+
+The pinnace showed the same sort of improvement during the same
+period—from Drake's birth under Henry VIII in 1545 to the zenith of his
+career as a sea-dog in 1588. This progenitor of the frigate and the
+cruiser was itself descended from the long-boat of the Norsemen and
+still used oars as occasion served. But the sea-dogs made it primarily
+a sailing vessel of anything up to a hundred tons and generally
+averaging over fifty. A smart pinnace, with its long, low, clean-run
+hull, if well handled under its Elizabethan fighting canvas of foresail
+and main topsail, could play round a Spanish galleasse or absurdly
+castled galleon like a lancer on a well-trained charger round a
+musketeer astraddle on a cart horse.[4] Henry's pinnaces still had
+lateen sails copied from Italian models. Elizabeth's had square sails
+prophetic of the frigate's. Henry's had one or a very few small guns.
+Elizabeth's had as many as sixteen, some of medium size, in a
+hundred-tonner.
+
+[4: Fuller in his _Worthies_ (1662) writes: 'Many were the wit-combats
+betwixt him [Shakespeare] and Ben Jonson, which two I beheld like a
+Spanish great galleon and an English man-of-war: Master Jonson (like
+the former) was built far higher in learning, solid but slow in his
+performances. Shakespeare, like the English man-of-war, lesser in bulk,
+but lighter in sailing, could turn with all tides, tack about, and take
+advantage of all winds by the quickness of his wit and invention.']
+
+
+The 'mosquito' fleet of Henry's time was represented by 'row-barges' of
+his own invention. Now that the pinnace was growing in size and sail
+power, while shedding half its oars, some new small rowing craft was
+wanted, during that period of groping transition, to act as a tender or
+to do 'mosquito' work in action. The mere fact that Henry VIII placed
+no dependence on oars except for this smallest type shows how far he
+had got on the road towards the broadside-sailing-ship fleet. On the
+16th of July, 1541, the Spanish Naval Attaché (as we should call him
+now) reported to Charles V that Henry had begun 'to have new oared
+vessels built after his own design.' Four years later these same
+'row-barges'—long, light, and very handy—hung round the sterns of the
+retreating Italian galleys in the French fleet to very good purpose,
+plying them with bow-chasers and the two broadside guns, till Strozzi,
+the Italian galley-admiral, turned back on them in fury, only to see
+them slip away in perfect order and with complete immunity.
+
+By the time of the Armada the mosquito fleet had outgrown these little
+rowing craft and had become more oceanic. But names, types, and the
+evolution of one type from another, with the application of the same
+name to changed and changing types, all tend to confusion unless the
+subject is followed in such detail as is impossible here.
+
+The fleets of Henry VIII and of Elizabeth did far more to improve both
+the theory and practice of naval gunnery than all the fleets in the
+world did from the death of Drake to the adoption of rifled ordnance
+within the memory of living men. Henry's textbook of artillery,
+republished in 1588, the year of the Armada, contains very practical
+diagrams for finding the range at sea by means of the gunner's half
+circle—yet we now think range-finding a very modern thing indeed. There
+are also full directions for making common and even something like
+shrapnel shells, 'star shells' to light up the enemy at night,
+armor-piercing arrows shot out of muskets, 'wild-fire' grenades, and
+many other ultra-modern devices.
+
+Henry established Woolwich Dockyard, second to none both then and now,
+as well as Trinity House, which presently began to undertake the duties
+it still discharges by supervising all aids to navigation round the
+British Isles. The use of quadrants, telescopes, and maps on Mercator's
+projection all began in the reign of Elizabeth, as did many other
+inventions, adaptations, handy wrinkles, and vital changes in strategy
+and tactics. Taken together, these improvements may well make us of the
+twentieth century wonder whether we are so very much superior to the
+comrades of Henry, Elizabeth, Shakespeare, Bacon, Raleigh, and Drake.
+
+
+
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+
+A complete bibliography concerned with the first century of
+Anglo-American affairs (1496-1596) would more than fill the present
+volume. But really informatory books about the sea-dogs proper are very
+few indeed, while good books of any kind are none too common.
+
+Taking this first century as a whole, the general reader cannot do
+better than look up the third volume of Justin Winsor's _Narrative and
+Critical History of America_ (1884) and the first volume of Avery's
+_History of the United States and its People_ (1904). Both give
+elaborate references to documents and books, but neither professes to
+be at all expert in naval or nautical matters, and a good deal has been
+written since.
+
+THE CABOTS. Cabot literature is full of conjecture and controversy.
+G.P. Winship's _Cabot Bibliography_ (1900) is a good guide to all but
+recent works. Nicholls' _Remarkable Life of Sebastian Cabot_ (1869)
+shows more zeal than discretion. Harrisse's _John Cabot and his son
+Sebastian_ (1896) arranges the documents in scholarly order but draws
+conclusions betraying a wonderful ignorance of the coast. On the whole,
+Dr. S.E. Dawson's very careful monographs in the _Transactions of the
+Royal Society of Canada_ (1894, 1896, 1897) are the happiest blend of
+scholarship and local knowledge. Neither the Cabots nor their crews
+appear to have written a word about their adventures and discoveries.
+Consequently the shifting threads of hearsay evidence soon became
+inextricably tangled. Biggar's _Precursors of Cartier_ is an able and
+accurate work.
+
+ELIZABETH. Turning to the patriot queen who had to steer England
+through so many storms and tortuous channels, we could find no better
+short guide to her political career than Beesley's volume about her in
+'Twelve English Statesmen.' But the best all-round biography is _Queen
+Elizabeth_ by Mandell Creighton, who also wrote an excellent epitome,
+called _The Age of Elizabeth_, for the 'Epochs of Modern History.'
+_Shakespeare's England_, published in 1916 by the Oxford University
+Press, is quite encyclopaedic in its range.
+
+LIFE AFLOAT. The general evolution of wooden sailing craft may be
+traced out in Part I of Sir George Holmes's convenient little treatise
+on _Ancient and Modern Ships_. There is no nautical dictionary devoted
+to Elizabethan times. But a good deal can be picked up from the two
+handy modern glossaries of Dana and Admiral Smyth, the first being an
+American author, the second a British one. Smyth's _Sailor's Word Book_
+has no alternative title. But Dana's _Seaman's Friend_ is known in
+England under the name of _The Seaman's Manual_. Technicalities change
+so much more slowly afloat than ashore that even the ultra-modern
+editions of Paasch's magnificent polyglot dictionary, _From Keel to
+Truck_, still contain many nautical terms which will help the reader
+out of some of his difficulties.
+
+The life of the sea-dogs, gentlemen-adventurers, and
+merchant-adventurers should be studied in Hakluyt's collection of
+_Principal Navigations, Voiages, Traffiques, and Discoveries_; though
+many of his original authors were landsmen while a few were civilians
+as well. This Elizabethan Odyssey, the great prose epic of the English
+race, was first published in a single solemn folio the year after the
+Armada—1589. In the nineteenth century the Hakluyt Society reprinted
+and edited these _Navigations_ and many similar works, though not
+without employing some editors who had no knowledge of the Navy or the
+sea. In 1893 E.J. Payne brought out a much handier edition of the
+_Voyages of the Elizabethan Seamen to America_ which gives the very
+parts of Hakluyt we want for our present purpose, and gives them with a
+running accompaniment of pithy introductions and apposite footnotes.
+Nearly all historians are both landsmen and civilians whose sins of
+omission and commission are generally at their worst in naval and
+nautical affairs. But James Anthony Froude, whatever his other faults
+may be, did know something of life afloat, and his _English Seamen in
+the Sixteenth Century_, despite its ultra-Protestant tone, is well
+worth reading.
+
+HAWKINS. _The Hawkins Voyages_, published by the Hakluyt Society, give
+the best collection of original accounts. They deal with three
+generations of this famous family and are prefaced by a good
+introduction. _A Sea-Dog of Devon_, by R.A.J. Walling (1907) is the
+best recent biography of Sir John Hawkins.
+
+DRAKE. Politics, policy, trade, and colonization were all dependent on
+sea power; and just as the English Navy was by far the most important
+factor in solving the momentous New-World problems of that awakening
+age, so Drake was by far the most important factor in the English Navy.
+_The Worlde Encompassed by Sir Francis Drake_ and _Sir Francis Drake
+his Voyage_, 1595, are two of the volumes edited by the Hakluyt
+Society. But these contemporary accounts of his famous fights and
+voyages do not bring out the supreme significance of his influence as
+an admiral, more especially in connection with the Spanish Armada. It
+must always be a matter of keen, though unavailing, regret that Admiral
+Mahan, the great American expositor of sea power, began with the
+seventeenth, not the sixteenth, century. But what Mahan left undone was
+afterwards done to admiration by Julian Corbett, Lecturer in History to
+the (British) Naval War College, whose _Drake and the Tudor Navy_
+(1912) is absolutely indispensable to any one who wishes to understand
+how England won her footing in America despite all that Spain could do
+to stop her. Corbett's _Drake_ (1890) in the 'English Men of Action'
+series is an excellent epitome. But the larger book is very much the
+better. Many illuminative documents on _The Defeat of the Spanish
+Armada_ were edited in 1894 by Corbett's predecessor, Sir John
+Laughton. The only other work that need be consulted is the first
+volume of _The Royal Navy: a History_, edited by Sir William Laird
+Clowes (1897). This is not so good an authority as Corbett; but it
+contains many details which help to round the story out, besides a
+wealth of illustration.
+
+RALEIGH. Gilbert, Cavendish, Raleigh, and the other
+gentlemen-adventurers, were soldiers, not sailors; and if they had gone
+afloat two centuries later they would have fought at the head of
+marines, not of blue-jackets; so their lives belong to a different kind
+of biography from that concerned with Hawkins, Frobisher. and Drake.
+Edwards's _Life of Sir Walter Raleigh_ (1868) contains all the most
+interesting letters and is a competent work of its own kind. Oldys'
+edition of Raleigh's _Works_ still holds the field though its eight
+volumes were published so long ago as 1829. Raleigh's _Discovery of
+Guiana_ is the favorite for reprinting. The Hakluyt Society has
+produced an elaborate edition (1847) while a very cheap and handy one
+has been published in Cassell's National Library. W.G. Gosling's _Life
+of Sir Humphry Gilbert_ (1911) is the best recent work of its kind.
+
+The likeliest of all the Hakluyt Society's volumes, so far as its title
+is concerned, is one which has hardly any direct bearing on the subject
+of our book. Yet the reader who is disappointed by the text of _Divers
+Voyages to America_ because it is not devoted to Elizabethan sea-dogs
+will be richly rewarded by the notes on pages 116-141. These quaint
+bits of information and advice were intended for quite another purpose,
+But their transcriber's faith in their wider applicability is fully
+justified. Here is the exact original heading under which they first
+appeared: _Notes in Writing besides More Privie by Mouth that were
+given by a Gentleman, Anno 1580, to M. Arthure Pette and to M. Charles
+Jackman, sent by the Marchants of the Muscovie Companie for the
+discouerie of the northeast strayte, not all together vnfit for some
+other enterprises of discouerie hereafter to bee taken in hande._
+
+See also in _The Encyclopaedia Britannica_, 11th Ed. the articles on
+_Henry VIII_, _Elizabeth_, _Drake_, _Raleigh_, etc.
+
+Index
+
+
+Alva, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, 98 et seq.
+
+Amadas, in America (1584), 151, 210
+
+America; an obstacle to the circumnavigation of the world, 11;
+ —as a reputed source of gold and silver, 65
+
+_Angel_, The, ship, 86
+
+Anton, Señor Juan de, 133
+
+Antonio, Don, pretender to the throne of Portugal, 164; and the English
+at Lisbon, 194
+
+Antwerp, 98, 99, 100
+
+Armada, 145, 150, 153, 156, 164, 165, 172, 191, 214
+
+Aviles, Don Pedro Menendez de, 86
+
+Azores, 150, 169, 194
+
+Baber, Sultan in the Moluccas, 141
+
+Bacon, Francis, Lord, 62, 210
+
+Balboa crosses Isthmus of Panama (1513), 19
+
+Barlow, in America (1584), 151, 210
+
+Baskerville, Sir Thomas, 224, 227 et seq.
+
+Bazan, Don Alonzo de, 197, 200
+
+Bible, authorized version of, 49, 216
+
+'Bond of Association,' 152 Brazil, voyage of Hawkins to, 33-4
+
+Bristol, Cabot settles in, 3
+
+Burleigh, Lord, 87, 119, 144, 156, 162, 167, 206
+
+Cabot, John, transfers allegiance from Genoa to Venice (1476), 1;
+ —Cabottággio, 2;
+ —reaches Cape Breton (1497), 7;
+ —returns to Bristol, 7;
+ —receives a present of £10 from Henry VII, 8;
+ —disappears at sea (1498),8-9, 14;
+ —believes America the eastern limit of the Old World, 11;
+ —bibliography, 241
+
+Cabot, Sebastian, second son of John, 9;
+ —takes command of expedition to America, 9;
+ —leaves men to explore Newfoundland, 9;
+ —coasts Greenland, 12;
+ —explores Atlantic Coast, 12;
+ —enters service of Ferdinand of Spain as Captain of the Sea,' 15;
+ —Charles V makes him 'Chief Pilot and Examiner of Pilots,' 15;
+ —determines longitude of Moluccas, 15;
+ —voyage to South America, 15;
+ —makes a map of the world, 15;
+ —leaves Spain for England(1548), 16;
+ —receives pension from Edward VI, 16;
+ —feasts at Gravesend with the _Serchthrift_, 16-17;
+ —Governor of Muscovy Company, 16, 31;
+ —sailing of the _Serchthrift_, 32;
+ —bibliography, 241
+
+Cadiz, 165 et seq.
+
+California, 137, 138, 212
+
+Canaries, 157, 226
+
+Cape Breton, Cabot reaches (1497), 7
+
+Cape of Good Hope, Vasco da Gama sails around, 18
+
+Cape St. Vincent, Drake plans to capture, 167
+
+Caribs, 80, 158
+
+Carleill, 154, 156, 157, 160
+
+Cartagena, 88, 108 et seq., 156, 159
+
+Cartier, Jacques, second voyage (1535), 12;
+ —discovers St. Lawrence, 71
+
+Cathay, Sebastian Cabot searches for passage to, 11;
+ —Sir Hugh Willoughby tries to find Northeast passage to, 30
+
+Cavendish, Thomas, 212
+
+Cecil, Sir Robert, 206
+
+Charles V of Spain, maritime rival of Henry VIII, 22-25;
+ —his dominions, 23;
+ —feud with France, 23-24;
+ —hostile to England, 29;
+ —Spanish dominion, 71;
+ —father of Don John of Austria, 117
+
+Chesapeake Bay, 220
+
+Cockeram, Martin, 34
+
+Coligny, Admiral, 207
+
+Columbus, Christopher, citizen of Genoa, 1-2;
+ —visit to Iceland, 3;
+ —fame eclipses that of the Cabots, 13;
+ —reasons for his significance, 13;
+ —400th anniversary of his discovery, 14;
+ —replica of the _Santa Maria_, 235
+
+_Complaynt of Scotland_, The, 42
+
+_Cordial Advice_, 40
+
+Corunna, 178, 192
+
+Cosa, Juan de la, makes first dated (1500) map of America, 14
+
+Croatoan Island, 213 et seq.
+
+Crowndale, Drake's birthplace, 95
+
+Cumberland, Earl of, 197
+
+Cuttyhunk Island, 216
+
+Dare, Virginia, 215
+
+_Delight_, The, ship, 209
+
+De Soto, 19, 81
+
+Doughty, Thomas, 116, 120, 123 et seq., 127
+
+_Dragon_, The, ship, 101
+
+Drake, Sir Francis, born the same year as modern sea-power (1545), 28;
+ —on the _Minion_, 92;
+ —Son of Edmund Drake, 95;
+ —boyhood, 96 et seq.;
+ —as lieutenant, on escort to wool-fleet, 100;
+ —marries Mary Newman, 100;
+ —sails on Nombre de Dios expedition, 101 et seq.;
+ —Drake and Nombre de Dios, 104;
+ —sees the Pacific, 110;
+ —attacks a Spanish treasure train, 111 et seq.;
+ —returns to England (1573), 114;
+ —goes to Ireland, 115;
+ —recalled for consultation, 118;
+ —audience with the Queen, 119;
+ —plans to raid the Pacific, 119;
+ —sails ostensibly for Egypt, 120;
+ —his _Famous Voyage_ (1577), 121;
+ —has trouble with Doughty, 124;
+ —whom he puts to death, 125;
+ —winters in Patagonia, 125;
+ —overcomes disaffection of his men, 126;
+ —sails through Straits of Magellan, 128;
+ —enters Pacific, 128;
+ —takes the _Grand Captain of the South_, 129;
+ —scours the Pacific taking prizes, 130;
+ —at Lima, 130;
+ —pursues Spanish treasure ship, 131;
+ —captures Don Juan de Anton, 133;
+ —sails north, 137;
+ —considered a god by the Indians, 138 et seq.;
+ —arrives at Moluccas, 141;
+ —lays foundation of English diplomacy in Eastern seas, 142;
+ —_Golden Hind_ aground, 142;
+ —uncertainty at home as to his fate, 144;
+ —arrives at Plymouth, 145;
+ —knighted by Elizabeth, 148;
+ —plans a raid on New Spain, 151;
+ —prepares for Indies voyage of 1585, 153;
+ —calls at Vigo, 155;
+ —plans a
+ —raid on New Spain, 156;
+ —captures Santiago and San Domingo, 157;
+ —takes Cartagena, 159;
+ —calls at Roanoke, 162;
+ —arrives at Plymouth, (1580), 162;
+ —expedition to Cadiz, 165;
+ —arrests Borough, 167;
+ —conquers Sagres Castle, 167;
+ —takes Spanish treasure ship, 169;
+ —defeats the Armada, 172-191;
+ —undertakes Lisbon expedition (1589), 192;
+ —his achievement, 201;
+ —in disfavor, 223;
+ —in unhappy combination with Hawkins, 224;
+ —West Indies voyage, 225;
+ —seizes La Hacha, Santa Marta, and Nombre de Dios, 227;
+ —his last days, 228;
+ —his death, 229;
+ —bibliography, 243-4
+
+Drake, Edmund, 95
+
+Drake, Jack, 121, 132
+
+Drake's Bay, 138
+
+East India Company, 63, 171, 215
+
+Edward VI, 29, 50
+
+Elizabeth, the England of, 48 et seq.;
+ —early life, 50;
+ —and Mary, 51;
+ —and Anne of Cleves, 51;
+ —ascends the throne, 52;
+ —difficulty of her position, 53;
+ —and finance, 55;
+ —her court, 68;
+ —her love of luxury, 68-69;
+ —commandeers Spanish gold, 99;
+ —deposed by Pope, 100;
+ —tortuous Spanish policy, 117;
+ —consults Drake, 119;
+ —receives Drake on his return, 146;
+ —banquets on the _Golden Hind_, 148;
+ —knights Drake, 148;
+ —Babington Plot again, 163;
+ —beheads Mary Queen of Scots, 165;
+ —the Armada, 176 et seq.;
+ —the Lisbon expedition, 192;
+ —dies, 216;
+ —bibliography, 242
+
+_Elizabeth_, The, ship, 121
+
+Essex, Earl of, 116, 118
+
+Field of the Cloth of Gold, 234
+
+Fleming, Captain, 179, 190
+
+Fletcher, Chaplain, 125, 128, 143
+
+Fletcher of Rye, discovers the art of tacking, 26;
+ —as a shipwright, 233
+
+Florida, 81, 82, 162
+
+Francis I, of France, maritime rival of Henry VIII, 22, 24, 71
+
+Frobisher, Martin, 120, 154, 160, 220
+
+Fuller, Thomas, author of _The Worthies of England_, 101, 237
+
+Gamboa, Don Pedro Sarmiento de, 135
+
+Genoa, the home of Cabot and Columbus, 2
+
+_George Noble_, The, ship, 198
+
+Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, 208-210
+
+Gilbert, Raleigh, 219
+
+_God Save the King!_ 95
+
+_Golden Hind_, The, ship, 121, 127, 129, 132 et seq., 136, 141, 142,
+144, 145, 147, 154, 179
+
+Gorges, Sir Ferdinando, 217
+
+Gosnold, Bartholomew, 216
+
+_Grand Captain of the South_, The, ship, 129
+
+Gravelines, battle at, 32, 190
+
+_Great Harry_, The, ship, 234
+
+Grenville, Sir Richard, 195 et seq., 220
+
+Gresham, Sir Thomas, 60
+
+_Hakluyt's Voyages_, 33
+
+Hakluyt Society, 242 et seq.
+
+Harriot, Thomas, 212
+
+Harrison's description of England, 69-70
+
+Hatton, Sir Christopher, 127, 146
+
+Hawkins, Sir John, son of William Hawkins, 34;
+ —enters slave trade with New Spain (1562), 74;
+ —takes 300 slaves at Sierra
+ —Leona, 75;
+ —second expedition (1564), 75;
+ —issues sailing orders, 76;
+ —John Sparke's account, 77;
+ —at Teneriffe, 77;
+ —meets Peter de Ponte, 78;
+ —Arbol Santo tree, 78;
+ —takes many Sapies, 79;
+ —at Sambula, 79;
+ —island of the Cannibals, 80;
+ —makes for Florida, 80;
+ —finds French settlement, 82 et seq.;
+ —sells the _Tiger_, 85;
+ —sails north to Newfoundland, 85;
+ —arrives at Padstow, Cornwall (1565), 85;
+ —a favorite at court, 85;
+ —watched by Spain, 86;
+ —sets out on third voyage (1567), 86;
+ —begins the sea-dog fighting with Spain, 86;
+ —Drake joins the expedition, 86;
+ —disasters, 87;
+ —crosses from Africa to West Indies, 88;
+ —clashes with Spaniards at Rio de la Hacha, 88;
+ —at Cartagena, 89;
+ —at St. John de Ulua, 89;
+ —fight with the Spaniards, 90 et seq.;
+ —parted from Drake in a storm, 93;
+ —leaves part of his men ashore, 93;
+ —voyage ends in disaster, 94;
+ —strikes another blow at Spain (1595), 223;
+ —unhappily combined with Drake, 224;
+ —sails for New Spain 226;
+ —dies, 226;
+ —bibliography, 243
+
+Hawkins, Sir Richard, grandson of William Hawkins, 35
+
+Hawkins, William, story of, in Hakluyt _Voyages_, 33 et seq.;
+ —father of Sir John Hawkins, 34;
+ —grandfather of Sir Richard Hawkins, 35,
+ —and of the second William Hawkins, 35
+
+Hawkins, William, the Second, grandson of William Hawkins, 35
+
+Henry IV of France, 223
+
+Henry VII, Cabot enters service of, 3;
+ —refuses to patronize Columbus, 4;
+ —gives patent to the Cabots, 4-6
+
+Henry VIII, the monarch of the sea, 20;
+ —establishes a modern fleet and the office of the Admiralty, 21;
+ —a patron of sailors, 22;
+ —menaced by Scotland, France, and Spain, 25;
+ —defies the Pope, 25;
+ —defies Francis I, 26;
+ —birth of modern sea-power (1545), 28;
+ —and the voyage of Hawkins, 33-34;
+ —as a patron of the Navy, 232 et seq.
+
+_Henry Grace à Dieu_, The, ship, 234
+
+Honduras, 156, 228
+
+Hore, his voyage to America, 33 et seq.
+
+Hortop, Job, 94
+
+Howard of Effingham, Lord, 31, 176, 189, 197
+
+Hudson Strait, Sebastian Cabot misses, 12
+
+India, Sebastian Cabot searches for passage to, 11
+
+Ingram, David, 94
+
+Inquisition, Spanish, 29, 73
+
+Ireland, 147, 191
+
+Jackman, 122
+
+James I of England, 216, 218
+
+Jefferys, Thomas, 66
+
+_Jesus_, The, ship, see _Jesus of Lubeck_
+
+_Jesus of Lubeck_, The, ship, 75, 76, 86, 89, 91 et seq.
+
+_Judith_, The, ship, 86, 92 et seq., 98
+
+Knollys, 154
+
+_La Dragontea_, by Lope de Vega, 157
+
+La Hacha, 156, 227
+
+Lane, Ralph, 162, 196, 212
+
+La Rochelle, 100
+
+Laudonnière, René de, 82 et seq.
+
+Leicester, Earl, of, 146, 164, 176
+
+Lepanto, 117, 185
+
+Lima, 130, 135, 144
+
+Lines of Torres Vedras, 194
+
+Lisbon, 144, 168, 192, 223 et seq.
+
+Lloyd's, 59-61
+
+London merchants, 144, 140, 171, 218
+
+Lope de Vega, 157
+
+Madrid, 86, 172
+
+Magellan, Strait of, 120, 127, 128
+
+Manoa, 221, 222
+
+Map, Juan de la Cosa's earliest
+ —dated (1500) map of America,
+ —14; of world by Sebastian
+ —Cabot (1544), 15; of America
+ —by Thomas Jefferys, 66
+
+Marigold, The, ship, 121, 126, 128, 129
+
+Martin, Don, 134, 153
+
+Mary, Queen of Scots, 31, 50
+ —et seq., 117, 121, 149, 152,
+ —163, 164, 216
+
+_Matthew_, The, ship, 7
+
+Medina Sidonia, Duke of, 175
+
+Mendoza, 119
+
+Menendez, 115, 150
+
+Middleton, Captain, 197
+
+_Minion_, The, ship, 86, 91 et seq.
+
+Monopoly, 58, 66
+
+Moone, Tom, 129, 154, 161
+
+Mosquito, Lopez de, 141
+
+Mountains of Bright Stones, 86, 221, 222
+
+Muscovy Company, 16, 31
+
+Navigation, encouraged by Henry
+ —VIII, 21, 25, 27; art of tacking
+ —discovered, 26; birth of modern
+ —sea-power, 28; sea-songs, 37
+ —et seq.; nautical terms, 42 et seq.;
+ —Pette and Jackman's
+ —advice to traders, 122-123
+ —ftn.; Francisco de Zarate's
+ —account of Drake's _Golden
+ —Hind_, 136-137; appendix; note
+ —on Tudor shipping, 231-239;
+ —bibliography, 242
+
+New Albion, 136, 140
+
+Newfoundland fisheries, Bacon on, 62
+
+New France, 72, 205
+
+Nombre de Dios, 101 et seq., 12O, 135, 156, 227
+
+Norreys, Sir John, 176, 193
+
+Northwest Passage, 120, 137
+
+Oxenham, John, 105, 109, 116, 144
+
+Pacific Ocean, taken possession
+ —of by Balboa (1513), 18;
+ —Drake enters, 128 et seq.
+
+Panama, 19, 103, 108, 120, 132, 135, 156, 227
+
+Parma, 172 et seq., 189
+
+_Pascha_, The, ship, 101, 106, 109, 114
+
+Pedro de Valdes, Don, 188
+
+_Pelican_, The, ship, 121, 127
+
+Philip of Spain, marries Queen
+ —Mary, 31; protests against
+ —Drake's actions, 87; plans to
+ —seize Scilly Isles, 115; soldiers
+ —sack Antwerp, 116; seizes
+ —Portugal, 144; prepares a
+ —fleet, 150; Paris plot with
+ —Mary, 150; seizes English
+ —merchant fleet, 152; duped
+ —by Hawkins, 153; his credit
+ —low, 163; resumes mobilization,
+ —172; prepares the Armada,
+ —174 et seq.
+
+Philippines, Vasco da Gama reaches, 19;
+ —Drake sails to, 141
+
+Pines, Isle of, 103
+
+Plymouth, 96, 98, 114, 145, 162, 178-180, 217, 225
+
+Plymouth Company, 218
+
+Pole of _Plimmouth_, The, ship, 33
+
+Ponte, Peter de, 78
+
+Popham, George, 219
+
+Porto Rico, 225, 226
+
+Potosi, 28, 73, 95, 130
+
+_Primrose_, The, ship, 152
+
+Pring, Martin, 217
+
+Puerto Bello. 229
+
+Purchas, Samuel, 203
+
+Ralegh, City of, in Virginia, 213
+
+_Raleigh_, The, ship, 209
+
+Raleigh, Sir Walter, 195, 205-222;
+ —bibliography, 244-245
+
+Ranse, 103, 108
+
+_Revenge_, The, ship, 188, 192-204
+
+Ribaut, Jean, 82
+
+Roanoke Island, 162, 210 et seq.
+
+Sagres Castle, 167
+
+St. Augustine, 86, 162
+
+San Domingo, 156, 157, 161
+
+_San Felipe_, The, ship, 197 et seq.
+
+San Francisco, 137, 138
+
+San Juan de Ulua, 89, 98, 99, 153
+
+_Santa Anna_, The, ship, 212
+
+Santa Cruz, 150, 172 et seq.
+
+Santa Marta, 156, 227
+
+Scilly Isles, 114, 115, 153
+
+_Serchthrift_, The, ship, 16-17, 32
+
+Shipping, note on Tudor, 231-239
+
+Sidney, Sir Philip, 155, 164, 195
+
+Slave Trade, 74 et seq.
+
+_Solomon_, The, ship, 76
+
+Somerset, 29-30, 53, 96
+
+Southampton, Earl of, 217
+
+Spain, rights of discovery, 6;
+ —Spanish Inquisition, 29, 73;
+ —breach with England, 72;
+ —Spanish gold in London, 73;
+ —Spaniards in Florida, 81-82;
+ —the 'Spanish Fury' of 1576, 116;
+ —Drake clips the wings of Spain, 149-171;
+ —Drake and the Spanish Armada, 172-191;
+ —Lisbon expedition, 192 et seq.;
+ —the last fight of the _Revenge_, 197 et seq.
+
+Sparke, John, his account of Sir John Hawkins's Voyage to Florida, 77
+et seq.
+
+_Spitfire_, The, ship, 132
+
+_Squirrel_, The, ship, 210
+
+_Swallow_, The, ship, 86
+
+_Swan_, The, ship, 101, 106, 109, 121, 129
+
+Teneriffe, 77-78
+
+Ternate, Island of, 141, 142
+
+Têtu, Capt., 112 et seq.
+
+Throgmorton, Elizabeth, 220
+
+_Tiger_, The, ship, 60, 85, 154
+
+Torres Vedras, Lines of, 194
+
+Vasco da Gama finds sea route to India (1498), 18
+
+Venice, importance in trade, 2;
+ —Cabot becomes a citizen of, 2
+
+Venta Cruz, 111
+
+Vera Cruz, 89
+
+Verrazano, 71
+
+Virginia, 62, 151. 196, 205, 210, 219
+
+Walsingham, Sir Francis, 118, 146
+
+West Indies, 84, 157, 201, 208, 219, 225 et seq.
+
+_Westward Ho!_ Kingsley's, 105
+
+Weymouth, George, 218
+
+White, John, 212 et seq.
+
+_William and John_, The, ship, 86
+
+William of Orange, 152, 207.
+
+Willoughby, Sir Hugh, tries to find Northwest Passage, 30;
+ —dies in Lapland, 30
+
+Woolwich, 153, 238
+
+_Worthies of England_, The, by Thomas Fuller, 101, 237
+
+Zarate, Don Francisco de, 136
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12855 ***