[1] The lord protector and the councell sitting in con|sultation, the capteines and officers prouiding their b [...]nds, store of vittels, and furniture of weapons, for furtherance whereof our vessels of munition and vittels were here alreadie come to the shore. The Scots continued their brauerie on the hill, the which the Englishmen not being so well able to beare, made out a band of light horssemen, and a troope of demilances to backe them: the Englishmen and strangers that serued among them, got vp aloft on the hill, and thereby of euen ground with the enimie rode streight toward them with good spéed and order, whom at the first the Scots did boldlie countenance and abide: but after, when they perceiued that our men would néeds come forward, they began to pricke, and would faine haue béene gone, yer they had told their errand.The Scots [...]ssemen discomfited and put to flight But the Englishmen hasted so spéedilie after, that euen streight they were at their elbowes, and did so stoutlie then bestirre them, that what in the onset at the first, and after in the chase, which lasted a thrée miles welnie to as far as the fur|thest of their campe on the south side, they had killed of the Scots within a thrée houres, aboue the num|ber of thirtéene hundred,Scots slaine. Prisoners taken. and taken the maister of Hume, the lords Humes sonne and heire, two priests and six gentlemen, whereof one by sir Iaques Gra|nado, and all vpon the highest and welaéere nighest of the hill toward the Scots, within the full sight of their whole campe.