[1] [2] On the same morning there were departed out of Abuile and S. Requier in Pontiew, the commons of Roan and Beauuais, with other that knew no|thing of the discomfiture the daie before. These met with the Englishmen, supposing they had beene Frenchmen, and being fiercelie assailed of them, af|ter sore fight, and great slaughter, the Frenchmen were discomfited and fled,Frenchmen slaine the day after the bat| [...]ll. of whome were slaine in the hedges & bushes, more than seuen thousand men. The archbishop of Roan, and the grand prior of France, ignorant also of the discomfiture the day be|fore, & supposing (as they were informed) the French should not haue foughten till that sundaie, were like|wise incountred (as they came thitherward) by the Englishmen, with whome they fought a sore battell, for they were a great number, but yet at length they were not able to susteine the puissant force of the Englishmen,The archb. of Rouen and the lord grand prior of France slaine and so the most part of them were slaine, with the said archbishop and grand prior, and few there were that escaped.