The combat lasted but a few minutes, the patriots were
soon routed, and fled precipitately back to their camp.
The panic spread with them, and the whole army was
soon in retreat. On retiring, they had, however,
set fire to the bridges, and thus secured an advantage
at the outset of the chase. The Spaniards were
no longer to be held. Vitelli obtained permission
to follow with 2000 additional troops. The fifteen
hundred who had already been engaged, charged furiously
upon their retreating foes. Some dashed across
the blazing bridges, with their garments and their
very beards on fire. Others sprang into the river.
Neither fire nor water could check the fierce pursuit.
The cavalry dismounting, drove their horses into the
stream, and clinging to their tails, pricked the horses
forward with their lances. Having thus been dragged
across, they joined their comrades in the mad chase
along the narrow dykes, and through the swampy and
almost impassable country where the rebels were seeking
shelter. The approach of night, too soon advancing,
at last put an end to the hunt. The Duke with
difficulty recalled his men, and compelled them to
restrain their eagerness until the morrow. Three
hundred of the patriots were left dead upon the field,
besides at least an equal number who perished in the
river and canals. The army of Louis was entirely
routed, and the Duke considered it virtually destroyed.
He wrote to the state council that he should pursue
them the next day, but doubted whether he should find
anybody to talk with him. In this the Governor-general
soon found himself delightfully disappointed.
Five days later, the Duke arrived at Reyden, on the
Ems. Owing to the unfavorable disposition of
the country people, who were willing to protect the
fugitives by false information to their pursuers, he
was still in doubt as to the position then occupied
by the enemy. He had been fearful that they would
be found at this very village of Reyden. It was
a fatal error on the part of Count Louis that they
were not. Had he made a stand at this point,
he might have held out a long time. The bridge
which here crossed the river would have afforded him
a retreat into Germany at any moment, and the place
was easily to be defended in front. Thus he might
have maintained himself against his fierce but wary
foe, while his brother Orange, who was at Strasburg
watching the progress of events, was executing his
own long-planned expedition into the heart of the
Netherlands. With Alva thus occupied in Friesland,
the results of such an invasion might have been prodigious.
It was, however, not on the cards for that campaign.
The mutinous disposition of the mercenaries under his
command had filled Louis with doubt and disgust.
Bold and sanguine, but always too fiery and impatient,
he saw not much possibility of paying his troops any
longer with promises. Perhaps he was not unwilling
to place them in a position where they would be obliged
to fight or to perish. At any rate, such was