[1] [2] And suerlie when the Englishmen at the lowe water entered the foord to passe ouer, there was a sharpe bickering, for diuerse of the Frenchmen in|countred the Englishmen on horssebacke in the wa|ter, and the Genowaies did them much hurt, and troubled them sore with their crosbowes: but on the other side,The English men wan the passage ouer the water of Some. the English archers shot so wholie togither, that the Frenchmen were faine to giue place to the Englishmen, so that they got the passage and came ouer, assembling themselues in the field, and then the Frenchmen fled, some to Abuile, some to saint Ri|quier. They that were on foot could not escape so well as those on horssebacke, insomuch that a great num|ber of them of Abuile, Mutterell, Arras, and S. Ri|quier were slaine and taken, for the chase indured more than a great league. Caxton. The number slaine. F [...]o [...]sard. There were slaine in all to the number of two thousand. When the K. of Eng|land had thus passed the riuer, he acquitted Gobin Agace, and all his companie of their ransomes, and gaue to the same Gobin an hundred nobles, and a good horsse, and so the king road foorth as he did before. His marshals road to Crotaie by the sea side,Crotay burnt and burnt the towne, and tooke all such wines and goods as were in the ships and barks which laie there in the hauen.