towards the gate; the besieged delved deeper, and
intersected it with a transverse excavation, and the
contending forces met daily, in deadly encounter, within
these sepulchral gangways. Many stratagems were,
mutually employed. The citizens secretly constructed
a dam across the Spanish mine, and then deluged their
foe with hogsheads of boiling water. Hundreds
were thus scalded to death. They heaped branches
and light fagots in the hostile mine, set fire to
the pile, and blew thick volumes of smoke along the
passage with organ-bellows brought from the churches
for the purpose. Many were thus suffocated.
The discomfited besiegers abandoned the mine where
they had met with such able countermining, and sunk
another shaft, at midnight, in secret, at a long distance
from the Tongres gate. Still towards that point,
however, they burrowed in the darkness; guiding themselves
to their destination with magnet, plumbline and level,
as the mariner crosses the trackless ocean with compass
and chart. They worked their way, unobstructed,
till they arrived at their subterranean port, directly
beneath the doomed ravelin. Here they constructed
a spacious chamber, supporting it with columns, and
making all their architectural arrangements with as
much precision and elegance as if their object had
been purely esthetic. Coffers full of powder,
to an enormous amount, were then placed in every direction
across the floor, the train was laid, and Parma informed
that all was ready. Alexander, having already
arrayed the troops destined for the assault, then
proceeded in person to the mouth of the shaft, and
gave orders to spring the mine. The explosion
was prodigious; a part of the tower fell with the concussion,
and the moat was choked with heaps of rubbish.
The assailants sprang across the passage thus afforded,
and mastered the ruined portion of the fort.
They were met in the breach, however, by the unflinching
defenders of the city, and, after a fierce combat
of some hours, were obliged to retire; remaining masters,
however, of the moat, and of the ruined portion of
the ravelin. This was upon the 3rd of April.
Five days afterwards, a general assault was ordered.
A new mine having been already constructed towards
the Tongres ravelin, and a faithful cannonade having
been kept up for a fortnight against the Bois-le-Duc
gate, it was thought advisable to attack at both points
at once. On the 8th of April, accordingly, after
uniting in prayer, and listening to a speech from
Alexander Farnese, the great mass of the Spanish army
advanced to the breach. The moat had been rendered
practicable in many places by the heaps of rubbish
with which it had been encumbered, and by the fagots
and earth with which it had been filled by the besiegers.
The action at the Bois-le-Duc gate was exceedingly
warm. The tried veterans of Spain, Italy, and
Burgundy, were met face to face by the burghers of
Maestricht, together with their wives and children.