READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE HISTORY OF THE REFORMATION |
THE AGE OF ELIZABETHBOOK V.CONFLICT OF CATHOLICISM AND PROTESTANTISM,1576-86.
CHAPTER I.
STRUGGLE IN THE NETHERLANDS, 1576-83.
We must return from these peaceful progresses of
Elizabeth to the dangers which still surrounded her. In a sonnet she expresses
her feelings :
The doubt of future foes exiles my present joy,
And wit me warns to shun
such snares as threaten mine annoy.
There was still in England —
‘The Daughter of Debate that eke discord doth sow’.
So long as Mary of Scotland lived, Elizabeth could not
be free from fear.
The danger that next threatened her was from the side
of the Netherlands. Requesens did not long carry on
his policy of pacification, as he died early in 1576. Before a successor
arrived, the Spanish troops in the Netherlands mutinied to recover their
arrears of pay. Philip II was so impoverished by his many undertakings
that he could not supply the Netherland troops with money. They were
determined to take matters into their own hands. They organized themselves
under officers of their own appointment, and seized upon the wealthy city of
Antwerp. The ‘Spanish Fury’, as this attack was called, ruined the most
flourishing commercial city of Europe. Many of its citizens were massacred; its
wealth was carried off and its merchants dispersed. The indignation caused by
this butchery and pillage did much to bind together the Netherland States, of
which two only were Protestant, while fifteen remained Catholic. By the
Pacification of Ghent (November 8, 1576), all the seventeen States bound
themselves to expel the Spaniards, and agreed to sink religious differences for
that purpose.
Meanwhile the new governor of the Netherlands was
hastening thither to realize great plans for his own future. Don John of
Austria, the natural brother of Philip II, was now in his thirty-second year,
and was the most renowned general in Europe. His victory at Lepanto had filled his
mind with ambitious dreams. He had made his brother an offer of conquering the
Moors in Tunis, if he might be allowed to rule that country as king. The Pope
supported him in his request; but Philip, who was conscious of his own want of
military capacity or gifts to win popularity, was alarmed at the prospect of a
rival. He sent his brother to the Netherlands to keep him out of the way. But
Don John went there with a still more brilliant scheme, for which likewise he
had obtained the papal sanction. He was resolved to pacify the Netherlands
rapidly, and then with his Spanish troops cross over to England, put himself at
the head of the Catholics, liberate and marry Mary, and rule as king. This plan
did not long escape Philip’s vigilance. He was doubly alarmed, but could take
no open step against it. It was lucky for Elizabeth that Don John had not
arrived earlier. The Pacification of Ghent had already been formed, and gave
the Netherlands a solid basis of resistance which might withstand delusive
promises of redress.
Don John had with difficulty obtained Philip's consent
to his attack on England, on the condition that it was made with Spanish
soldiers only. His first object therefore was to quiet the Netherlands and draw
off the Spanish troops to England. Negotiations were at once begun; and the
Netherland Estates demanded the ratification of the Pacification of Ghent, the
maintenance of their old customs and charters, and the immediate withdrawal of
the Spanish troops. On this last point Don John labored to have a delay of
three months, and provision for their removal by sea. The States, however, were
obstinate in demanding their immediate withdrawal by land. It was in vain that
Don John urged every plea he could invent for the delay. The Netherlander had made
up their minds, and he was at last compelled to yield the point. He saw with
despair his hopes destroyed for the present. All unconsciously the Netherlander
had saved England from a great danger, and had freed Philip from anxious alarm.
Philip was rejoiced to see his brother’s ambitious schemes disappointed, and
was determined to let his haughty spirit wear itself out in the hopeless task
of reducing the Netherlands without an army.
The demands of the Netherlander were agreed to by the
Perpetual Edict, February 17, 1577. The Spanish troops were withdrawn, and Don
John was left to face the difficulties of his position. His restless mind could
not adapt itself to carry out a gentle and yielding policy. He was naturally
looked upon with suspicion by the people. He had neither patience nor
forbearance for the task imposed upon him. Moreover Philip was bent upon his
destruction. A plot was laid by Philip’s secretary of state, Antonio Perez, to
draw treasonable expressions from Don John. Feigning to be his friend, he wrote
to him, and showed all his answers to the king. Don John’s secretary, Escovedo, was sent to Madrid, where he was assassinated by
the orders of Perez with Philip’s connivance. Don John felt that he was
surrounded by an atmosphere of suspicion, and that he stood single-handed. He
knew that his great schemes were hopeless, that he would be refused the
necessary means for governing the Netherlands and would be kept there till he
had undone his previous reputation.
The peace which had been agreed upon did not long
continue. Misunderstandings arose between the Estates and Don John, and in
October 1577 war was again declared. But the political issues of the struggle
between Spain and the Netherlands had now broadened. The foremost man amongst
the Netherlander was the Prince of Orange. He had been the leading spirit in
the contest against Philip. As being a Protestant, however, he was disliked by
the Catholic nobles, who accordingly invited the Archduke Matthias of Austria
to put himself at their head. Matthias was the brother of the Emperor Rudolf;
but he brought neither wisdom nor money to aid a feeble cause. Moreover there
were hopes of help from France. The brother of King Henry III, the Duke of
Alençon, or Duke of Anjou as he became on his brother’s accession, put himself
at the head of the party of Politicians and advocated the old policy of
hostility against Spain. He occupied an almost independent position in France,
and many of the Netherland nobles looked to him for help. The prospect of this
roused Elizabeth to take more decided steps; that the Netherlands should become
French would be as dangerous to England as that they should
become Spanish. Elizabeth made a treaty of alliance with the
Netherlands, lending them money and supplying them with troops.
The Netherlanders, however, could do nothing in the
field against disciplined Spanish soldiers. In January 1578 they were defeated
with great loss by Don John at Gemblours. But it was
his last exploit. Worn out by despondency he fell a victim to a pestilence
raging in his army, and died on October 1, 1578, at the age of thirty-two,
leaving a last request that his body might be buried in the Escurial,
by the side of his imperial father.
Don John was succeeded in the Netherlands by Alexander
Farnese, Prince of Parma, son of Margaret, Duchess of Parma, who had been
regent when the troubles in the Netherlands first broke out. He soon proved
himself to be admirably fitted for the task he had undertaken. He was the first
commander in Europe, uniting bravery with coolness and decision. He could plan
a campaign as well as win a battle, and in the art of besieging cities he was
without a rival. Besides his military talents he had great powers of governing;
his manner was conciliatory, he was just and patient, and was resolutely fixed
on carrying out by every means the end he had set before himself. He was
moreover a keen politician, who delighted in spinning or unravelling with
cautious prudence the web of diplomatic intrigue. It was not long before the
results of his presence were felt in the Netherlands. He managed to take
advantage of the differences between the Catholic and Protestant states. The
Walloon provinces of the south, which were all Catholic, entered into a separate
union. William of Orange, by the Union of Utrecht, combined the seven provinces
of Gelderland, Oberyssel, Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht,
Groningen, and Friesland, to defend themselves against Spain and maintain their
religious liberties. This ‘Union of Utrecht’ was the foundation of the
Netherland Republic. These seven provinces held together under the guidance of
the Prince of Orange; the other ten provinces gradually fell back into the
hands of Spain, though on tolerably advantageous terms, as there were no
religious difficulties in the way.
In face of this state of things William of Orange and
the ‘nearer united provinces’, as they were called, found it necessary to take
decided steps for their own preservation. In the early part of the year
1580 the war languished in the Netherlands; for Philip’s attention was turned
to Portugal, the vacant crown of which he claimed through his mother, a
daughter of King Manuel. He was opposed by the Duke of Braganza, and also by a
natural son of the royal house, Don Antonio. But Philip’s power carried all
before it. Alva advanced into Portugal, and in fifty-eight days had expelled
Don Antonio and reduced the country under Philip. The conquest of Portugal was
finished before any of the other powers of Europe had time to interfere. This
accession to Philip’s power increased his determination to reduce the
Netherlands, and filled the Netherlander with dismay. But it also awoke the
jealousy of France and England, and made open resistance to Spain more
necessary. The European conflict, which for a few years had seemed to be
lulled, awoke with greater intensity than before.
Philip II and his advisers were convinced that the
Prince of Orange was the great obstacle to the reconquest of the Netherlands.
In March 1580 Philip a published a solemn ban, in which he recounted all
the crimes of William of Orange, and exposed him ‘as an enemy of the human
race’. Anyone who delivered him up, alive or dead, was to receive twenty-five
thousand crowns of gold, and to be ennobled for his valor. To this
William replied in a famous ‘Apology’, in which he denounced unsparingly
the misdeeds of Philip, and in the noblest tones asserted the lawfulness of his
own patriotic endeavors. But it was necessary for him to prepare for a long conflict,
and to strengthen the Netherlands by foreign help. At the earnest request of
the Estates of Holland and Zeeland he accepted, on July 5, 1581, the
sovereignty over those two provinces as long as the war should last. At the end
of the same month all the provinces which had not yet made terms with Parma
abjured by a solemn act the sovereignty of Philip. He had not fulfilled his
duties as their protector; he had destroyed their ancient liberties and treated
them as slaves; he was not their prince but their tyrant,—as such they lawfully
and reasonably claimed to depose him.
The Netherlanders prepared themselves for open
fight. They could not hope to cope with Philip single-handed; but by
abjuring his sovereignty they could put themselves under the protection
of the powers opposed to Spain. The Archduke Matthias of Austria had been
useless to them. He was dismissed with thanks, and the Duke of Anjou was
elected sovereign by all the States except Holland and Zeeland, who would have
no head but William of Orange. They hoped that the old hostility between France
and Spain might be revived, and that as Henry II had defended the oppressed
Germans against Charles V, so Henry III might maintain their cause against
Philip. Moreover there was a project of marriage between Elizabeth and the Duke
of Anjou. If this had been brought about, a union would have been formed
between England and France in opposition to Spain; political motives would have
once more prevailed over religious dissensions and the old system of European
politics would have been re-established as it had been before the Reformation.
The wooing of the Duke of Anjou is ludicrous enough in
the accounts which have come down to us. It is difficult to believe that
Elizabeth, at the mature age of 48, could have any deep affection for her
ill-favored suitor, who was 20 years younger than herself. Francis of Anjou was
small and badly made; his face was marked with small-pox, his skin was covered
with blotches, and his nose was swollen to double its size. His voice was harsh
and grating; Elizabeth used to call him her “Frog”. No doubt Elizabeth was
ready to marry him, and was nearer to marriage with him than with any of her
previous suitors, because she thought that through him her political position
might be securely established. Yet she was resolved to be quite sure on this
point before committing herself. Meanwhile she behaved with all the coyness of
a bashful girl; she allowed her subjects to think that her mind was made up,
and waited to see the result. A pamphlet appeared, by a young lawyer of the
name of Stubbs, called “The Discovery of a Gaping Gulf, wherein England is like
to be swallowed up by another French Marriage, if the Lord forbid not the banns
by letting her see the sin and punishment thereof”. The book was suppressed by
royal proclamation, and Stubbs was sentenced to the amputation of his right
hand. After the execution of his sentence Stubbs waved his hat with his left
hand and cried “God save the queen”. But Elizabeth learned from the feeling
then displayed that the English Protestants looked with disfavor on a French
marriage.
Meanwhile, in the summer of 1581 the Duke of Anjou
advanced into the Netherlands, compelled the Prince of Parma to relinquish the
siege of Cambray, and garrisoned the town. Then disbanding
his army he crossed over to England to pursue his wooing. The articles of the
marriage treaty were concluded; but still Elizabeth wavered. When it came to
the point, she doubted if France would really hold to the offensive and
defensive alliance which she demanded; she doubted how her marriage would
affect her own position and power. Anjou was received with every sign of
affection. After a splendid festival the queen, in the presence of her court,
drew a ring from her finger and placed it upon his. But after three months’
wooing, during which time Elizabeth showed him all possible regard, her mind
was still not made up. Anjou departed, for he could be no longer absent from
the Netherlands. Elizabeth herself accompanied him to Canterbury, and took leave
of him with tears. A splendid retinue of English nobles was sent to accompany
him, and Elizabeth wrote to the Estates General of the Netherlands requesting
them to honor him as if he were her second self. Perhaps she wished to see how
Anjou would succeed in the Netherlands before committing herself to him. She
wished still to have it in her power to resume negotiations for marriage, if
she were convinced that it would be advantageous to her.
In February 1582 Anjou was installed in Antwerp as
Count of Brabant, and soon afterwards was accepted by the other united
provinces, except Holland and Zeeland, as their prince. In every case he
received the old constitutional sovereignty, and was bound to maintain the old
liberties. He soon chafed at the restraints by which he found himself
surrounded. He complained that the real power was in the hands of the Estates
General, and that he was prince only in name. A plan was accordingly formed
among his French officers of seizing on the most important cities, and making
Anjou supreme by force. Anjou himself planned the surprise of Antwerp. On
January 17, 1583, the French troops suddenly dashed through the streets of
Antwerp, crying out, “Vive la messe! vive le duc d'Anjou!”. The citizens
were at first surprised, and the French dispersed to plunder. But the burghers
soon recovered themselves and threw up barricades in the streets. The French
were driven out with great slaughter, and Anjou, who was eagerly awaiting the
result outside the gates, had to retire baffled.
This act of deliberate treachery awoke the deepest
resentment among the Netherlanders; but William of Orange was anxious to
avoid any rupture with France. The year was spent in futile negotiations with
Anjou, who at last retired to Paris, where he died in June 1584. He was a man
entirely destitute of any principles; his sole motive was a vainglorious desire
for his own advancement. His appearance is ludicrous in the history of England,
and contemptible in the history of the Netherlands. If he had won a battle
against the Spanish forces in the Netherlands, the result might have been most
important. French help might have been openly given against Spain; he might
have married Elizabeth, and England and France might have united in a great
effort against Spain on the battlefield of the Netherlands. As it was, he
strengthened the hands of the Duke of Parma; for his presence at Cambray gave a reason to the provinces which favored Parma
for admitting Spanish troops; if they had not done so, Parma’s hands would have
been tied. Lastly, Anjou’s treacherous attempt against Antwerp spread distrust
and confusion among the united provinces.
CHAPTER II
THE JESUITS AND THE CATHOLIC REACTION.
We must turn our attention from these political
struggles to consider the shape which the antagonism between Catholicism and
Protestantism had assumed, and the means by which Catholicism was aiming at its
re-establishment.
The most powerful weapon for effecting the Catholic
restoration was the Order of the Jesuits. This Order owed its origin to a young
Spanish knight, Don Inigo Lopez de Recalde, known as
Ignatius Loyola. As a young man his mind was filled with the aspirations of
Spanish chivalry, which still bore a strong crusading color from the recent
wars against the Moors. At the siege of Pampeluna, in
1521, Ignatius was wounded in both legs. After a long and tedious illness he
recovered, but was lamed for life. During the weeks spent in bed his chivalrous
fancies had received a religious tinge, which went on deepening afterwards. His
mind gradually passed from the idea of worldly to that of spiritual warfare,
and he transferred to his new quest the visions and feelings which had moved
him in his first pursuit of arms. His imaginative mind was filled with fancies
and apparitions, and the fervor of his enthusiasm kindled the minds of others.
He found in Paris, where he went to study, two men of remarkable powers of mind
who shared his own mystic beliefs, Peter Faber, a Savoyard, and a Spaniard,
Francesco Xavier. They formed themselves into a little band, bound by the vows
of chastity and poverty; they swore to devote themselves to the spread of
Christianity and to go where the Pope bade them. In 1537 they went to Rome, and
called themselves by the military name of Jesuits,—the Company of Jesus. They
added to their previous vows the vow of absolute obedience to their general,
whom they elected for life; and they placed themselves entirely at the disposal
of the Pope. While the papacy was being shattered by defection on every side,
this new society arose, bound by a vow of the most absolute devotion to the
papal commands.
This new Order was formed for active work, not for the
cultivation of contemplative virtues. Its members wore no monastic habit, and
accepted no clerical office. They devoted themselves to practical pursuits,—to
preaching, to hearing confessions, and to the education of the young. The Order
at once became powerful and rapidly spread; it appealed to the chivalrous
feeling which the struggle against Protestantism had awakened in the minds of
those who clung to the old faith. Its internal organization was most rigid; the
principle of obedience was used to separate the Jesuit from every tie which
binds the ordinary man to his fellows. The Jesuit gave away all his possessions,
cut himself off from his relations, laid aside all right of individual
judgment, and obeyed his superiors without enquiring the reason or object of
their orders.
The power of the Jesuits over society in general was
founded chiefly on their efforts to promote education and their development of
the system of the confessional. They worked together with order and
arrangement. They were good and careful teachers and got into their hands the
instruction of the young, as they took no money for their teaching. They also
formed minute rules for the direction of men’s consciences, in an age when
men’s consciences were singularly awakened. We cannot wonder that such a society
spread rapidly in the Catholic countries, and that its organization gave great
strength to the Catholic reaction. A new spirit of zeal and earnestness was
infused into the old ecclesiastical system, which had seemed to be crumbling
away before the onslaughts of Luther and Calvin.
Under this new impulse Catholicism exchanged its
attitude of repression for one of aggression. The papacy again became a power
which had forces at its command. In the Netherlands the influence of the
Jesuits in the Walloon provinces, which remained devoutly Catholic, had been
greatly instrumental in bringing them back to Spain.
The growing strength of the papacy also encouraged it
to attack England more boldly. We have seen how the excommunication of
Elizabeth by Pius V failed to move the English Catholics as a body from their
loyalty. His successor, Pope Gregory XIII, saw that it was necessary to secure
foreign help against England; his hopes were first fixed upon Don John of
Austria, and we have seen how they were doomed to disappointment. The next hope
of the Pope was to strike a blow through Ireland, where the people still
remained Catholic and refused to accept the English Prayer Book. It does not
seem that any vigorous attempts were made to enforce its use; but the Irish were
represented to the Pope as groaning under religious oppression. Gregory XIII
believed that the Irish would rise at once in behalf of Catholicism, if only
they received any small encouragement. An English exile, Thomas Stukely, received money from the Pope for the conquest of
Ireland; he was, however, diverted to an enterprise against the Moors, where he
met his death. But his confederate, James Fitzmaurice, brother of the Earl of
Desmond, was resolved to try his fortunes alone. In June 1579 he landed
with a few Spanish troops in Ireland, and took possession of the fort of Smerwick, near Kerry. The Irish, however, did not join him
as he expected, and in a skirmish Fitzmaurice was killed. His brother, the Earl
of Desmond, openly revolted, and, as the rising seemed to be gathering in
force, a reinforcement of Spanish and Italian soldiers was sent to Smerwick in 1580. But the new deputy of Ireland, Lord Grey
de Wilton, directed a vigorous siege against the fort, which was compelled to
yield unconditionally. The English were embarrassed by the number of their
prisoners, which equaled that of their own force. They were, moreover, savagely
determined to give a lesson against foreign intervention. Already a fierce
hatred of the Spaniards as Catholic oppressors had begun to rouse the hearts of
Englishmen. The garrison of Smerwick was disarmed,
and then butchered. The Earl of Desmond had no further hopes after this. The
rebellion was crushed and severely punished. The papal attempt on Ireland had
resulted only in failure.
At the same time also a Catholic attempt of a more
insidious kind was made upon Scotland. Esme Stewart, lord of Aubigny came from France to Scotland. He was a nephew of
the late Earl of Lennox, and so cousin to the young king James VI, with whom he
rapidly became a great favorite. D’Aubigny had been a
member of the Guise party in France. The Scots saw with dismay his influence
over James, who created him first Earl, then Duke of Lennox. The favorite put
himself at the head of the faction opposed to the Regent Morton, who had made
many enemies. In 1581 Morton was accused of having been a confederate in the
murder of Darnley, and was beheaded in spite of Elizabeth’s attempts to
interfere in his favor. Lennox now seemed supreme in Scotland and it was
suspected that he would again unite the Catholic parties in Scotland and France
against Elizabeth. The Protestant feeling of the country was alarmed, and the
hatred of favorites on the part of the old nobles again found its expression in
a bond. The Earl of Gowrie invited the young king to a hunt at his castle of
Ruthven, where James found himself a prisoner in the hands of his nobles
(August 1582). Lennox was banished from the kingdom, and died next year in
France. The fear of Catholic influence in Scotland was for a time dispelled.
Meanwhile an attempt had been made to establish the
influence of Catholicism in England itself. The zeal of the Jesuits had been
contagious, and amongst other institutions to which it had given rise was the
English seminary at Douay. This was a college for the training of the young
English Catholics who went to study abroad. It was founded in 1568, but, owing
to the troubles in the Netherlands, was transferred from Douay to Rheims. In
1579 Pope Gregory XIII founded an English college at Rome. Its members were
pledged to return to England and preach the faith which they believed. We
cannot wonder that the Jesuit enthusiasm seized these young Englishmen, and
that they were determined to do and suffer anything, provided they might further
their great object.
In 1580 the first of these Jesuit missionaries,
Parsons and Campion, set foot in England. Their success was at once very great.
The English Catholics, who up to this time had given a kind of passive
conformity to the new services, plucked up fresh courage. Numbers flocked to
the secret services of these bold priests, who in different disguises, and
under changing names, travelled from place to place throughout the land.
Persecution lent a zest to their preaching, and the words of men who spoke at
the peril of their lives were then, as always, powerful. A printing press was
also set up, from which proceeded books in defence of
Catholicism, written by trained controversialists among the Jesuits. The
Catholics awoke from their torpor and became conscious of their wrongs. They no
longer could consent to attend the reformed services, or to recognize the
validity of Elizabeth’s ecclesiastical laws. If this organization had been
carried out before the rising of 1570, it is impossible to say what might have
been the result.
The government was thoroughly alarmed, and acts
of parliament were passed, subjecting these missionaries to the penalties of
high treason and increasing the punishments for recusancy. Anyone being
absent from church was liable to a fine of twenty pounds a month. The Catholics
were subjected to severe persecution, and their houses were ransacked in search
of concealed priests. Campion and other Jesuits were taken prisoners and
condemned to death on the charge of conspiring against Elizabeth. It was
believed in England that secret plots were on foot against the queen’s life.
The Catholic countries of the Continent rang with stories of the martyrs’
deaths and of the cruelty of the English queen.
The fears of England were soon increased by the death
of the Prince of Orange. The reward offered by
Philip and the fanaticism inspired by the Jesuits
combined to afford two powerful motives for his removal. In 1582, immediately
after the installation of the Duke of Anjou, a Biscayan, Joureguy,
had fired at the prince, and wounded him in the neck. The assassin had amongst
his papers a written vow to offer to the Virgin of Bayonne a robe, a crown, and
a lamp, to the Lord Jesus a rich curtain, if his attempt succeeded. For awhile Orange’s life was despaired of; but he gradually
recovered, ft was not long, however, before a more successful attempt was
made. A Burgundian, Balthasar Gerard, found admittance to the prince, and shot
him as he was descending the staircase of his house at Delft (July 1584).
The death of Orange was a severe blow to the cause of
Netherlandish freedom. He had given himself up heart and soul to the struggle
against Philip, without any thought of his own aggrandizement, with entire
devotion to the cause he had undertaken. Cautious and prudent, he yet shrank
from no risks. On his own side he had to contend with the jealousy of the other
Netherland nobles, who could not endure a chief. He was matched against the
most skilful warriors and the ablest politicians of
Europe. Yet William, ‘the Silent’ as he was called, moved cautiously among the
dangers of his position, intent only on keeping the provinces united and
determined in spite of reverses to persevere in their resistance against Spain.
When he died his presence was particularly needed, as Alexander of Parma had
been gaining over the cities of Brabant; Ypres, Bruges, and Ghent had all
fallen into his hands, and he had laid siege to Antwerp, which was anxiously
looking to the Prince of Orange for succors.
About the same time also another conspiracy was
discovered in England against Elizabeth. Its principal agent was Francis
Throgmorton, whose plan was to remove Elizabeth by assassination, and set Mary
on the English throne by the aid of Spain and the French Catholics. Throgmorton
was executed, and as his papers inculpated the Spanish ambassador, Don
Bernardino de Mendoza, he was called to account before the council; on refusing
to answer he was ordered to leave the country. It was an open defiance to
Philip; but Philip was too busy with other schemes to take any notice of it at
the time.
These constant plots against Elizabeth, and the deep
impression of horror caused by the death of William of Orange, made
loyal Englishmen combine in defence of their
queen. A voluntary association was formed, the members of which solemnly
undertook to prosecute to the death all who should make an attempt against the
queen, and all in whose behalf such an attempt should be made. This was a
threat against the imprisoned Mary, a warning to her party that her death would
follow on the success of any plot against Elizabeth. The Catholic
assassinations were met in England by a stern threat of vengeance. The two
parties stood in undisguised hostility the one to the other.
BOOK VI.THE LEAGUE AND THE ARMADA. |