begun, one of those hideous and unaccountable panics
which sometimes break out like a moral pestilence to
destroy all the virtue of an army, and to sweep away
the best-considered schemes of a general, had spread
through Ernest’s entire force. So soon as
the demi-cannon had discharged their fourth volley,
Scots, Zeelanders, Walloons, pikemen, musketeers,
and troopers, possessed by the demon of cowardice,
were running like a herd of swine to throw themselves
into the sea. Had they even kept the line of
the downs in the direction of the fort many of them
might have saved their lives, although none could have
escaped disgrace. But the Scots, in an ecstasy
of fear, throwing away their arms as they fled, ran
through the waters behind the dyke, skimmed over the
sands at full speed, and never paused till such as
survived the sabre and musket of their swift pursuers
had literally drowned themselves in the ocean.
Almost every man of them was slain or drowned.
All the captains—Stuart, Barclay, Murray,
Kilpatrick, Michael, Nesbit—with the rest
of the company officers, doing their best to rally
the fugitives, were killed. The Zeelanders, more
cautious in the midst of their panic, or perhaps knowing
better the nature of the country, were more successful
in saving their necks. Not more than a hundred
and fifty of Van der Noot’s regiment were killed,
while such of the cavalry of Bruges and Piron as had
come to the neighbourhood of Fort Albert, not caring
to trust themselves to the shelter of that redoubt,
now fled as fast as their horses’ legs would
carry them, and never pulled bridle till they found
themselves in Ostend. And so beside themselves
with panic were these fugitives, and so virulent was
the contagion, that it was difficult to prevent the
men who had remained in the fort from joining in the
flight towards Ostend. Many of them indeed threw
themselves over the walls and were sabred by the enemy
when they might have been safe within the fortifications.
Had these cavalry companies of Bruges and Piron been
even tolerably self-possessed, had they concentrated
themselves in the fort instead of yielding to the
delirium which prompted them to participate in their
comrades’ flight, they would have had it entirely
in their power, by making an attack, or even the semblance
of an attack, by means of a sudden sally from the
fort, to have saved, not the battle indeed, but a
large number of lives. But the panic was hopeless
and universal, and countless fugitives scrambling
by the fort were shot in a leisurely manner by a comparative
few of the enemy as easily as the rabbits which swarmed
in those sands were often knocked down in multitudes
by half-a-dozen sportsmen.