[1] [2] Whilest the king of England wan thus in Nor|mandie, his nauie lost nothing on the sea, but so scow|red the streames, that neither Frenchmen nor Bri|tons durst once appeare; howbeit, on a daie there a|rose such a storme and hideous tempest, that if the earles of March and Huntington had not taken the hauen of Southhampton, the whole nauie had peri|shed; & yet the safegard was strange,A sore [...]. for in the same hauen, two balingers, and two great carickes, la|den with merchandize were drowned, and the broken mast of another caricke was blowen ouer the wall of the towne.A violent tempest of wind. When the furie of this outragious wind and weather was asswaged, and the sea waxed calme, the earles of March and Huntington passed o|uer with all their companie, and landing in Norman|die, they marched through the countrie, destroieng the French villages, and taking preies on each hand, till they came to the king where he then was.