an enemy. The Hollanders and Zeelanders, with
one hundred and forty cruisers, had shut him up in
all directions. He could neither get out from
Antwerp nor from Sluys. There were large English
ships, too, cruising in the channel, and they were
getting ready in the Netherlands and in England “most
furiously.” The delays had been so great,
that their secret had been poorly kept, and the enemy
was on his guard. If Santa Cruz had come, Alexander
declared that he should have already been in England.
When he did come he should still be prepared to make
the passage; but to talk of such an attempt without
the Armada was senseless, and he denounced the madness
of that proposition to his Majesty in vehement and
unmeasured terms. His army, by sickness and other
causes, had been reduced to one-half the number considered
necessary for the invasion, and the rebels had established
regular squadrons in the Scheldt, in the very teeth
of the forts, at Lillo, Liefkenshoek, Saftingen, and
other points close to Antwerp. There were so
many of these war-vessels, and all in such excellent
order, that they were a most notable embarrassment
to him, he observed, and his own flotilla would run
great risk of being utterly destroyed. Alexander
had been personally superintending matters at Sluys,
Ghent, and Antwerp, and had strengthened with artillery
the canal which he had constructed between Sas and
Sluys. Meantime his fresh troops had been slowly
arriving, but much sickness prevailed among them.
The Italians were dying fast, almost all the Spaniards
were in hospital, and the others were so crippled
and worn out that it was most pitiable to behold them;
yet it was absolutely necessary that those who were
in health should accompany him to England, since otherwise
his Spanish force would be altogether too weak to
do the service expected. He had got together a
good number of transports. Not counting his Antwerp
fleet—which could not stir from port, as
he bitterly complained, nor be of any use, on account
of the rebel blockade—he had between Dunkerk
and Newport seventy-four vessels of various kinds
fit for sea-service, one hundred and fifty flat-bottoms
(pleytas), and seventy riverhoys, all which were to
be assembled at Sluys, whence they would—so
soon as Santa Cruz should make his appearance—set
forth for England. This force of transports he
pronounced sufficient, when properly protected by
the Spanish Armada, to carry himself and his troops
across the channel. If, therefore, the matter
did not become publicly known, and if the weather
proved favourable, it was probable that his Majesty’s
desire would soon be fulfilled according to the plan
proposed. The companies of light horse and of
arquebusmen, with which he meant to make his entrance
into London, had been clothed, armed, and mounted,
he said, in a manner delightful to contemplate, and
those soldiers at least might be trusted—if
they could only effect their passage—to
do good service, and make matters quite secure.