570
THE CAMPAIGN OF THE SPANISH ARMADA.
[1588.
"This fight was very nobly continued[2] from morning until evening, the lord admiral being always [in] the hottest of the encounter; and it may well be said that for the time there was never seen a more terrible value of great shot, nor more hot fight than this was; for although the musketeers and harquebusiers of crock[3] were then infinite, yet could they not be discerned nor heard, for that the great ordnance came so thick that a man would have judged it to have been a hot skirmish of small shot, being all the fight long within half musket-shot of the enemy.
"This great fight being ended, the next day, being Wednesday, the 24th of July, 1588, there was little done, for that in the fights on Sunday and Tuesday much of our munition had been spent; and therefore the lord admiral sent direct barks and pinnaces unto the shore for a new supply of such provisions.
"This day the lord admiral divided his fleet[4] into four squadrons, whereof he appointed the first to attend himself; the second his lordship committed to the charge of Sir Francis Drake; the third to Sir John Hawkyns, and the fourth to Sir Martin Frobiser. This afternoon his lordship gave order that, in the night, six merchant ships out of every squadron should set upon the Spanish fleet in sundry places, at one instant in the night time, to keep the enemy waking; but all that night fell out to be so calm that nothing could be done."
Medina Sidonia's relation[5] of events of the two days is as follows: —
- ↑ With the exception of this vessel, which was a merchantman of Drake's squadron, all the relieving ships belonged to the Royal Navy.
- ↑ Vanegas, Calderon and Manrique agree in saying that Medina Sidonia's ship fired one hundred and fifty rounds. She had several shot-holes in her hull below water.
- ↑ Some of the arquebusses of the time were fired from a rest called a crock or crook.
- ↑ Miranda that day counted one hundred and twenty English sail. Duro, doc. 169, p. 268. See, too, Duro, doc. 168, p. 258.
- ↑ Duro, doc. 165.