tion of Spinola's fleet by English and Dutch cruisers--
Continuation of the siege of Ostend--Fearful hurricane and its
effects--The attack--Capture of external forts--Encounter between
Spinola and a Dutch squadron--Execution of prisoners by the
archduke--Philip Fleming and his diary--Continuation of operations
before Ostend--Spanish veterans still mutinous--Their capital
besieged by Van den Berg--Maurice marches to their relief--
Convention between the prince and the mutineers--Great commercial
progress of the Dutch--Opposition to international commerce--
Organization of the Universal East India Company.
It would be desirable to concentrate the chief events of the siege of
Ostend so that they might be presented to the reader's view in a single
mass. But this is impossible. The siege was essentially the war--as
already observed--and it was bidding fair to protract itself to such an
extent that a respect for chronology requires the attention to be
directed for a moment to other topics.
The invasion of Ireland under Aquila, so pompously heralded as almost to
suggest another grand armada, had sailed in the beginning of the winter,
and an army of six thousand men had been landed at Kinsale. Rarely had
there been a better opportunity for the Celt to strike for his
independence. Shane Mac Neil had an army on foot with which he felt
confident of exterminating the Saxon oppressor, even without the
assistance of his peninsular allies; while the queen's army, severely
drawn upon as it had been for the exigencies of Vere and the States,
might be supposed unable to cope with so formidable a combination. Yet
Montjoy made short work of Aquila and Tyrone. The invaders, shut up in
their meagre conquest, became the besieged instead of the assailants.
Tyrone made a feeble attempt to relieve his Spanish allies, but was soon
driven into his swamps, the peasants would not rise; in spite of
proclamations and golden mountains of promise, and Aquila was soon glad
enough to sign a capitulation by which he saved a portion of his army. He
then returned, in transports provided by the English general, a much
discomfited man, to Spain instead of converting Ireland into a province
of the universal empire. He had not rescued Hibernia, as he stoutly
proclaimed at the outset his intention of doing, from the jaws of the
evil demon.
The States, not much wiser after the experience of Nieuport, were again
desirous that Mauric
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