[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] The said sir Iohn Arundell lost not onelie his life, but all his furniture and apparell for his bodie,The excesse and sumptu|ous apparell, of sir Iohn Arundell. which was verie sumptuous, so that it was thought to sur|mount the apparell of any king. For he had two and fiftie new sutes of apparell of cloth of gold or tissue, as was reported, all the which, togither with his hors|ses & geldings, amounting to the value of ten thou|sand marks, was lost at the sea. And besides this, there were lost at the same time fiue and twentie ships, with men, horsses, and other riches,There were drowned a|boue a thou|sand men in one place and other, as the additions to Ad. Merimuth doo testifie. which atten|ded him in that voiage. Yet sir Thomas Percie, and sir Hugh Caluerlie, with sir William Elmham, and certeine others escaped, but cruellie tormented with vnmercifull tempest: and before sir Thomas Per|cie could get to land, after the sea was quieted, he was assaulted by a Spaniard, against whome he so defended himselfe, that in the end he tooke the Spa|nish vessell, and brought hir, with all that he found aboord in hir, vnto the next shore, and sold the same for an hundred pounds, and without long delaie, tooke the sea, & passed ouer to Brest, of which fortresse he was capteine, iointlie with sir Hugh Caluerlie, and therefore doubting least some inconuenience might chance thereto now in both their absence, he made the more hast, not taking rest till he came thi|ther, notwithstanding his passed painefull trauels. Sir Hugh Caluerlie was neuer in his life in more danger of death, than at that time: for all that were in his ship (as Froissard writeth) were drowned, ex|cept [page 424] himselfe & s [...]auen mariners. We find, that there were drowned in one place & other, aboue a thousand Englishmen in that most vnluckie voiage. ¶ Some writers impute this calamitie to light on the said sir Iohn Arundell & his companie, for the lasciuious and filthie rule which they kept before their setting foorth, in places where they laie, till their prouision was rea|die;Outragious wickednesse iustlie puni|shed. who not content with that which they did before they tooke ship, in rauishing mens wiues, maids and daughters, they caried them aboord, that they might haue the vse of them whilest they were vpon the sea,
and yet when the tempest rose, like cruell and vn|mercifull persons they threw them into the sea, ei|ther for that they would not be troubled with their la|mentable noise and crieng, or for that they thought so long as they had such women aboord with them (whome they had abused so long) God would not ceasse the rage of the tempest. But it should appeare that this tempest was generall, for where the Spa|nish and French fléets were abroad at the same time, being assembled togither to annoie the coasts of this land, their ships were likewise tossed and turmoiled, so as no small number of them were lost, in so much that the damage which they susteined, was thought far to passe that which hapned to the English nauie.(Saeua libido furens, quid non mortalia cogisPectora? Quídue tuo non est violabile telo?)