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278 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

the burning of an Indian town on November 5th, '"the sixth day we<br />

" '<br />

sarvyd God, being Sunday,' surely the barefaced religion of the<br />

" present day<br />

is more tolerable than such sanctified iniquity."<br />

The truth is, as Davenport Adams tells us in his interesting book,<br />

England on the Sea, that piracy, as we should call it now, was not only<br />

recognized but utilized under the Tudors, for regular navy there was<br />

very little.<br />

During the reign of Edward VI. and Mary, at one time young<br />

Catholic, and at another young Protestant gentlemen, rebelling against<br />

the ecclesiastical status, went down to the sea in ships, for occupation and<br />

livelihood. They hung about the French harbours, and creeks, and bays<br />

of the Irish coast, with the rough, wild crews they had gathered together.<br />

When England was at war they were recognized as commissioned privateers<br />

; when at peace they were tolerated by the Government, from the<br />

certainty that at no distant time their services would be again required.<br />

During the Marian persecution, Canns, Killigrews, Tremaynes, Strangwayses,<br />

Throgmortons, Horseys, and Cobhams men belonging to the first families,<br />

became roving chiefs. On Elizabeth's accession they came back to the<br />

service of the Crown ;<br />

and thus, as the modern gentleman keeps his<br />

yacht, so Elizabeth's loyal burghers, esquires, or knights, whose inclination<br />

lay that way, kept their ambiguous cruisers, and levied war on their own<br />

account when the Government lagged behind its duty.<br />

Spain was at this time the dominant power, if not of the old world<br />

certainly of the new, and the increasing strength of their navy, necessary<br />

to secure their acquisitions across the Atlantic, seemed to Elizabeth and<br />

her wisest counsellors to threaten the liberty of this nation. That a rigidly<br />

as was<br />

defensive policy was not a safe policy they were also of opinion,<br />

specially evident to the great circumnavigator of the world, Francis Drake;<br />

and he, in conjunction with Sir Philip Sidney, laid before the Queen in<br />

council a plan for weakening the resources of Spain, by attacking her<br />

settlements in the West Indies and Spanish Main. As old Fuller quaintly<br />

"<br />

puts it It was resolved by the judicious of that age the way to humble<br />

:<br />

" Spanish greatness, was not by pinching and pricking him in the low<br />

"countries, which only emptied his veins of such blood as was quickly<br />

" refilled ;<br />

but the way to make it cripple for ever, was by cutting off the<br />

" Spanish sinews of war, his money, from the West Indies. In order<br />

" whereunto this Earl set forth a small fleet at his own cost, and adven-<br />

"tured his own person thereunto, being the best born Englishman that<br />

"ever hazarded himself in that kind." And that they were not ineffectual<br />

is evident from the angry protest addressed by the Spanish ambassador to<br />

Queen Elizabeth. "Your mariners rob my master's subjects on the seas,<br />

"and trade where they are forbidden to go; they attack our vessels in

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