Selected quad for the lemma: enemy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
enemy_n army_n battle_n fight_v 3,956 5 7.3572 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A51707 Brittains glory: or, The history of the life and death of K. Arthur, and the adventures of the knights of the Round Table : giving a relation of their heroick exploits and victories in many lands ... pleasant and delightful, altogether worthy the perusal of the ingenious reader. Malory, Thomas, Sir, 15th cent.; J. S. 1684 (1684) Wing M339; ESTC R43418 18,774 26

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

slaughter THe King having been absent from his own Dominions for the space of six months began to cast his eye homeward when having remitted Burnamissa the charges he was at and only gave order his Subjects loss should be repaired he with his fair Queen whom the King loaded with rich presents took leave of the Danish Court and imbarquing with the whole Army and divers of the Danish Nobility who from their King had order to attend the Queen having a fair gale on the ninth of October landed where they first imbarqued and were received with vniversal joy whereupon the King coming to a Castle of his near Cardniff feasted the Danish Nobility in a most splendid manner But whilst he remained there he had notice That Magor King of Ireland who by his Ambassadors had courted the fair Genura and been refused was to revenge it on his arrival landed with a great Power in South-Wales whereupon the King comforting his Queen who was greatly grieved that through her cause such sudden troubles should arise passed on with his victorious Army and gave him Battel near Merionoth and utterly discomfited him so that flying with his broken Army and being every where assailed by the Country Pesants who had laid the way for him he scarcely escaped to his Ships with five Thousand out of thirty Thousand so that King Arthur speedy as Caesar in his victories returned to his fair Queen with the Trophies of his conquored Enemies long before he was expected to have fought the Battel when sending four Thousand men under the leading of Sir Lancelot and divers other good Knights they landed on the Isle of Angle-Sea and drove thence the French that had for some time past during the troubles of this Kingdom setled themselves there CHAP. IX How the King having recovered the Isle of Angle-Sea from the French sailed with a great Power into France to revenge the injury done to his Subjects and overthrowing their Army made them dearly purchase Peace THe Kings victories daily increasing the terrour of his name spread wide and made the most re-doubted Monarch tremble yet durst France then powerfull at Sea invade our Coast and with fire and sword spoiled many Sea-Towns carrying away great booty as also the people the men they made row in their Gally and the women to satiate their prodigious Lust When as the crys of his suffering subjects reaching his ear where he was delighting himself with his Queen he resolved once more to forsake the Camp of Venus and her soft delights to court Fame and Glory in the Camp of Mars whereupon having sent to Lotharius for Restitution and receiving rather scorns than a satisfactory answer from that imperious King he made great preparations for the War and had at that time twelve Saile of Ships sent to his aid by his Brother of Danemark when being in a readiness with an Army of 34000 he coasted the Country and putting into the Bay of Marselies with his shot of Arrows that flew like Haile drove the defendants from the shore on which himself with his own Standard first leaped and stood like an inraged Lyon though a thousand shafts flew round his Head and many rebounded from his glittering shield but long it was not e're the valiant Knights of the Order imitating their Soveraign thrust their ships on Land and putting their Souldiers in Battel-aray charged furiously upon the formost Battailian of the Enemy lead by the Duke De Vallois so that being over-set they retreated in great disorder and finding no place to be received broke the Ranks of their friends when as the Duke De Nevers advanced with the right wing of Horse to their succour but was so gau●ed with the shot of Arrows that the Horses mischiefed more the Riders than did the Brittains In this confusion the King drawing out 6000 of his choice men charged upon the disordered Enemy with such courage that he pierced their main Battel making lanes of death wherever he came cutting off Arms Heads and Legs insomuch that the Danish General Gironeus imitating him the French Souldiers routed in all parts left their Commanders and fled insomuch that the slaughter of the Nobility was great a fate ever incident to that Kingdom nor would they trust to the weak wall of Marselies but flying to Lyons and Paris left that part of the Country naked to be possessed of the Brittains The terror of this overthrow alaruming the French Court and finding that brought home to 'em which they had used to others abroad the people with Tears besought their King to appease the Conquorer in time and thereby prevent worse desolation who considering his tottering Kingdom was at stake sent four of his prime Lords to beg a weeks Cessation or Truce to which King Arthur whose aim was more at Glory and Renown than Advantage accorded during which time the King having raised a Million of crowns sent them in divers Waggons with other rich Presents to purchase his Peace and the departure of his new-come Guest yet prevailed they not e're he had made his acknowledgment for the indignity put upon the Kings Ambassadors and deliver the Town and Port of Marselies to be possessed as a pledge of future Peace by the Brittains for the space of 20 years to come and upon pain of forfeiting it for ever no Hostilitys to be used by Land nor depradations by Sea These Articles accorded the King hastened to his own Country with the greatest part of his Army leaving only 2000 Souldiers in Marselies and having amply rewarded the Danes dismissed them CHAP. X. How Queen Geneura was delivered of a Son and of the Presents and Vows made by the Saxon Kings As also a full description of the Knights of the Round Table UPon King Arthur's return he found to his unspeakable joy his fair Queen delivered of a lovely boy who by the advice of Merlyn he named Constantius whose Uictories and great Exploits that Prophet fore-told which after his Fathers death he succeeding him in his Throne exactly came to pass And now the joy being great throughout the Brittish Dominions all the Saxon Kings came to King Arthur's Court then removed to the then flourishing City of Hereford and made their Homage complementing him highly on his Marriage and the birth of his Son presenting the Queen and Royal Infant with great Presents as Iewels Gold and fragrant Spice of Arabia promising for them and their Heirs to be obedient to the Brittish Scepter though before and after the Death of King Arthur they brake their vows though to their great disadvantage For the young Prince almost as successful in War as his Father grasped the Kingdomes of the Mercians and East-Angles with so hard a hand that during his Life they could not wrest them from him but to our purpose King Arthur being the chief Favourite of Fortune and the eldest Son of Fame began to inlarge the splendor of his Court and increase the number of the Knights of the Round Table
his Nobility feasting them after a sumptuous manner as they imagined but he had no sooner re-conveyed them thence but looking back they saw all vanish in Thunder Lightning and a prodigious Earthquake to their great amazement yet knowing before it was but delusion they rested somewhat more satisfied yet could not but think of what had passed The day being spent in viewing this Piece of Recreation and the King ruminateing many things in his mind at last laying him down upon his Couch he fell into a slumber and then dreamed that he was carried into a spacious Hall in which stood a Table of great circumference out of the middle of which grew an Oak and a Laurel with Crows Scepters Swords and Ensigns hanging on them and that they were guarded by many valiant Knights high in prowess and terrible to the whole World which made him desirous to become their Associate nor did he sooner demand it but they joyfully received him and placeing him in a Chair of Ivory and Gold made him their Chief and gave him a Banner with a Lyon rampant portruyed thereon and this Motto written viz. EVER VICTORIOUS upon which the sound of Trumpets noise of Drums clattering of Arms shouts and cries saluted his Ears And he supposed he beheld Armies in rout and slaughter scattered through the whole World and that the Conquorers laid the Trophies at his feet and with an vniversal shout saluted him Great Monarch of the Western World At what time awakeing he found it but a Dream yet revolving in his mind the strangeness of the fancy the next morning he related to his Nobles who assured him of happy presages and advised him to make inquiry into the interpretation thereof whereupon sending for his Necromantick Counsellor he related it to him who promised within a day to give him the signification of his Dream which he did as followeth viz. That by the Table was signified his Kingdom by the Knights the Pillars and Strength thereof by Oak and Laurel strength victory and durance the Crowns Scepters Swords and Ensigns the spoiles of the Nation he should be possess'd of and the Schene of War the representations of the many dreadful Battels he should fight wherein he should ever remain victorious and the making him Chief giving him the Standard and placeing him in a Chair of Ivory and Gold denoted him deep in his Subjects love and that no Treason should prosper against him This interpretation highly pleased the King and raised his towring imaginations to such a pitch that he resolved to spread the terrour of his Arms throughout the world wherefore he made great preparation for all manner of Warlike provision but above all of hardy and couragious Knights inviteing them from all parts to his Court and for their better incouragement caused a spacious Hall 300 Foot in length and Twenty in breadth to be built with Glass Turrets on the top ceiled with Fret-work and Gold wainscoted with Cedar and paved with Marble in the midst of which he placed a Round Table at which 400 Knights might sit and caused it daily to be furnished with great store of choice p●ovision for the entertainment of such men of UUar as would resort thither and shortly after constituted the Order of the Round Table allowing a Yearly Pension of 100 Mark to such as were truly valiant and would inrole themselves to attend his service when occasion required making himself the Head or Soveraign of the Order so that by this means the valiant men of the neighbouring Nations tendered their service to him and were admitted into the noble Order but not before they had been proved in some great Exploit CHAP. III. How King Arthur warred with the Kings of Mercia and the East Angles who invaded his Dominions slew a monstrous Gyant and put their Armies to the rout c. THe King being established in his Throne and having thus far proceeded caused a place to be made for justing where once every week his Knights exercised in Martial Order and justed with each other and to him that did best the King would frequently send one rich present or other himself being still a Spectator of those Exercises and at all great Feasts present amongst them at Dinner having a Chair like a Throne placed on that part of the Table that was towards the upper end of the Hall but no Musick suffer'd except the Martial sounds of Drums Trumpets and Clarions in which most of all our Heroick Prince delighted And now being furnished with mighty men that might compare to Davids worthies if not exceed them in dreadful Feats of Arms he passionately desired to have an honourable occasion to try his and their valours which was not long wanting For the Mercian King of the Saxons and the King of the East Angles presuming upon their strength broke into Cornwall part of King Arthurs Dominions and committed divers outrages burning plundering ravishing and slaughtering in such a dreadful manner that the people with such substance as they could convey fled every where before them the News of which rouzed our Lyon-like Prince who taking with him his Guard of 400 Knights and 8000 common Souldiers the flower of his Dominions by swift Marches passed on to give UUar the meeting whose approach the Enemy being treble the number little regarded not doubting to give him the overthrow trusting greatly to the force of one Cingeterox a monstrous Gyant nine cubits high six in circumference and armed with a huge Battel-Axe and Coat of Mael but the undaunted Prince whom fear could not dismay having animated his Souldiers and set them in Battel-Array attended by his Knights broke through the Ramparts killing such as guarded the Camp and setting upon the Infidels for so at that time they were and cutting through the thickest of them made such slaughter that all the way he passed was strewed with dead bodies yet on he pressed through ●anes of death his Heroick Champions following as animated by the Martial deeds of their Renowned Leader nor did they less annoy the Enemy who by this time taking the Alarum in all parts came running to oppose them and began to make some slaughter of his men especially where the Gyant fought which the King perceiving by the cry that arose caused his Stander with the great Lyon to advance that way beating down all before him till he came to the place where he found Cingeterox and Ethwaldus the Mercian King bathing their Axes in the blood of his men of which they had slain 300 when as King Arthur with a loud voice cried Turn this way Infidels spare the weak and bend your force against the strong upon which the Gyant stairing on him with a dreadful voice replied Who art thou that comes to seek thy Death I am a Souldier said the King and one that am come to fetch thy Head by way of reprizal for the mischiefs thou hast done in my Country But you must get it first said the Gyant That shall