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1587

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Compare 1577 edition: 1 2 For the Scots, albeit they shewed themselues in plumps, waiting some aduantage, they durst not yet approch to the maine battell of the Englishmen, so that in all this iournie there went but few Eng|lishmen lost. When the lords perceiued that the Scots ment not to make anie inuasion into England this yeare, they tooke order for the fortifieng of the fron|tiers, and so returned. It was thought that the cardi|nall perceiuing in what fauour sir William Comp|ton was with the king, Polydor. and doubting least the same might diminish his authoritie, deuised to send him thus into the warres against the Scots. For the said sir William could not well brooke the cardinals pre|sumption, in taking vpon him so highlie, to the dero|gation of the kings supreme gouernement, and ther|fore the cardinall in his absence thought to woorke him out of fauour: but it would not be. For shortlie after was sir William Compton called home to the court againe,

Compare 1577 edition: 1 The Frenchmen burned a ship fraught with stone in the hauen of Calis,The French|men meaning to destroy Ca|lis hauen are disapproued by missing the chanell. vpon hope to haue destroied the hauen; but they missed the chanell in bringing in the ship, and so after that the ship was consumed with fire, the stones were recouered out of the water, and brought into Calis, which serued the Englishmen to good vse. Diuerse enterprises were atchiued be|twixt them of the garrisons French and English in those marches. In Iulie the lord Sands treasuror of Calis, with other capteins & souldiors, to the number of twelue hundred, entered into the confines of their enimies, and came before Bullongne, where they had a great skirmish, & put their enimies to the woorse:A rode [...] into the [...] ground. and after marching into the countrie, tooke diuerse chur|ches and other places which the Frenchmen had for|tified, as the church of Odersall, the steeple of Oding|ham, and the castell of Hardingham, and so after they had beene within the enimies countrie almost two nights and two daies, they came backe to Calis, ha|uing not lost past a dozen of their men.

Compare 1577 edition: 1 The king of England being aduertised that the EEBO page image 879 duke of Albanie would returne shortlie into Scot|land by sea, and bring with him a power of French|men, prepared a fléet of tall and strong ships méet to encounter with the same duke and his power, and ap|pointed for admerall, sir William Fitz Williams, & with him sir Francis Brian, sir Anthonie Poines, sargeant Rot, Iohn Hopton, William Ganston, Anthonie Kneuet, Thomas West, and other, which vsed great diligence to haue met with the said duke of Albanie. And as they laie on the French coast, the foure and twentith of August being sundaie, at sea|uen of the clocke in the morning, they landed in the hauen of Treiport, [...] and assaulted the Frenchmen that were in certeine bulworks on the shore, and did what they could to impeach the Englishmens lan|ding.

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