Hakluytus posthumus, or Purchas his pilgrimes : contayning a history of the world in sea voyages and lande travells by Englishmen and others . d and torne,and from them they threw out their baggage which theysaved in Boats, which argueth they were Ships of theEnemies, for that our men had no place to save them-selves, nor there were none of them arrived into Flanders,which was their place of returne. OUt of England was advise given, that on thethirteenth arrived fifteene of the Queenes Ships,and they said that the Galleon S. Martin, wherein myLord the Duke is (whom God preserve) had encountred
Hakluytus posthumus, or Purchas his pilgrimes : contayning a history of the world in sea voyages and lande travells by Englishmen and others . d and torne,and from them they threw out their baggage which theysaved in Boats, which argueth they were Ships of theEnemies, for that our men had no place to save them-selves, nor there were none of them arrived into Flanders,which was their place of returne. OUt of England was advise given, that on thethirteenth arrived fifteene of the Queenes Ships,and they said that the Galleon S. Martin, wherein myLord the Duke is (whom God preserve) had encountredwith Drake, and had grappled his Ship, and captived hisPerson, and other Noble Englishmen, and taken otherfifteene Ships, beside others that were distressed, and theDuke with his Fleet followed his way to Scotland, becausethe wind was not come about. With these newes his Majesty resteth very much con-tented, and caused them to be sent to the Empresse, bythe hands of Francisco Ydiaquez, his Secretary of Estate. Imprinted in Sevill, in the House of Cosmo de Lara,Printer of Bookes, by licence of the Counte of Orgaz,Assistant in Sevill. 5*5. PURCHAS HIS PILGRIMES 1589. Chap. XII. A Discourse of the Portugall Voyage, A. John Norris and Sir Francis DrakeGeneralls, written (as is thought) by ColonellAntonie Wingfield, imployed in the sameVoyage, formerly published by his friend towhom it was written ; and here abbreviated. Aving determinately purposed to put onthis habite of a Souldier, I grew doubtfullwhether to employ my time in the warresof the Low-countries, which are inauxiliarie manner maintained by herMajestie, or to follow the fortune ofthis voyage, which was an adventure ofmany honourable personages, in revenge ofunsupportable wrongs offered unto the estate of our[IV. x. Countrey by the Castilian King: in arguing whereof, l9IS-] I finde that by how much the Challenger is reputed beforethe Defendant, by so much is the journey to bee preferredbefore those defensiv
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