the cavalry in one mass should then make a concentrated
charge in front. It seemed certain that the effect
of this movement would be to hurl the whole of the
enemy’s advance, horse and foot, back upon his
battalia, and thus to break up his army in irretrievable
rout. The plan was a sensible one, but it was
not ingeniously executed. Before the handful
of cavalry had time to make the proposed feint the
cannoneers, being unduly excited, and by express command
of Sir Francis Vere, fired a volley into the advancing
columns of the archduke. This precipitated the
action; almost in an instant changed its whole character,
and defeated the original plan of the republican leader.
The enemy’s cavalry broke at the first discharge
from the battery, and wheeled in considerable disorder,
but without panic, quite into and across the downs.
The whole army of the archduke, which had already
been veering in the same direction, as it advanced,
both because the tide was so steadily devouring the
even surface of the sands, and because the position
of a large portion of the States’ forces among
the hillocks exposed him to an attack in flank, was
now rapidly transferred to the downs. It was
necessary for that portion of Maurice’s army
which still stood on what remained of the beach to
follow this movement. A rapid change of front
was then undertaken, and—thanks to the careful
system of wheeling, marching, and counter-marching
in which the army had been educated by William Lewis
and Maurice—was executed with less confusion
than might have been expected.
But very few companies of infantry now remained on
the strip of beach still bare of the waves, and in
the immediate vicinity of the artillery planted high
and dry beyond their reach.
The scene was transformed as if by magic, and the
battle was now to be fought out in those shifting,
uneven hills and hollows, where every soldier stood
mid-leg deep in the dry and burning sand. Fortunately
for the States’ army, the wind was in its back,
blowing both sand and smoke into the faces of its
antagonists, while the already weltering sun glared
fiercely in their eyes. Maurice had skilfully
made use of the great advantage which accident had
given him that day, and his very refusal to advance
and to bring on a premature struggle thus stood him
in stead in a variety of ways Lewis Gunther was now
ordered, with Marcellus Bax and six squadrons of horse,
to take position within the belt of pasture land on
the right of the downs. When he arrived there
the van of the archduke’s infantry had already
charged the States’ advance under Vere, while
just behind and on the side of the musketeers and
pikemen a large portion of the enemy’s cavalry
was standing stock still on the green. Without
waiting for instructions Lewis ordered a charge.
It was brilliantly successful. Unheeding a warm
salutation in flank from the musketeers as they rode
by them, and notwithstanding that they were obliged
to take several ditches as they charged, they routed