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Rose
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Foul Play
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Pharaoh Nanjulian Again
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Schemes and Stratagems
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We Escape the Spaniards
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An Unknown Land
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An Adventure of Some Importance
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The Black Shadows
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Captive
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More Cruel than Wild Beasts
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The Auto-Da-Fe
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On Board the Galley
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Nunez in a New Guise
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The Flag of England
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Francis Drake
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The Fate of Nunez and Frey Bartolomeo
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Home with Drake
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Beechcot Once More
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How They Ran the Bells at Beechcot Church
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Front Matter
Introduction
I
N the whole history of the English people there is no
period so absolutely heroic, so full of enthralling
interest, as that in which the might of England made
itself apparent by land and sea—the period which saw
good Queen Bess mistress of English hearts and
Englishmen and sovereign of the great beginnings which
have come to such a magnificent fruition under
Victoria. That was indeed a golden time—an age of great
venture and enterprise—a period wherein men's hearts
were set on personal valor and bravery—the day of great
deeds and of courage most marvelous. To write down a
catalogue of all the names that then were glorious, to
make a list of all the daring deeds that then were
done—this were an impossible task for the most
painstaking of statisticians, the most
conscientious of historians and chroniclers. For there
were men in those days who achieved world-wide fame,
such as Drake, Frobisher, Hawkins, Raleigh, Grenville,
and Gilbert—but there were also other men, the rough
"sea-dogs" of that time, whose names have never been
remembered, or even recorded, and who were yet heroes
of a quality not inferior to their commanders and
leaders. All men of that age whose calling led them to
adventure and enterprise could scarcely fail to find
opportunity for heroism, self-denial, and sacrifice,
and thus the Elizabethan Englishman of whatever station
stands out to us of these later days as a great
figure—the type and emblem of the England that was to
be. It is this fact that makes the Elizabethan period
so fascinating and so full of romance and glamour.
Whenever we call it up before our mind's eye it is
surrounded for us with all those qualities which go
toward making a great picture.
There is the awful feud 'twixt England, the modern
spirit making toward progress and civilization, and
Spain, the well-nigh worn-out retrogressive force that
would dam the river of human thought. There is the
spectacle of the Armada, baffled and beaten, and of the
English war-ships under men like Drake and Frobisher,
dropping like avenging angels upon some Spanish port
and working havoc on the Spanish treasure galleons.
There, too, are the figures of men like Grenville and
Raleigh, born adventurers, leaders of men, who knew how
to die as bravely and fearlessly as they had lived. And
beyond all the glory and adventure there looms in the
background of the picture the black cruelties of Spain,
practiced in the dark corners of the earth, against
which the English spirit of that day never ceased from
protesting with speech and sword. It was well for the
world that in that fierce contest England triumphed.
Had Spain
succeeded in perpetuating its hellish system, how
different would life in east and west have been! But it
was God's will that not Spain but England should
win—and so today we find the English-speaking peoples
of the world in Great Britain and America, in Australia
and Africa, free, enlightened, full of great purpose
and noble aims, working out in very truth their own
salvation. It is when one comes to think of this, that
one first realizes the immeasurable thanks due to the
heroes, known and unknown, of the Elizabethan age.
Whether they stand high on the scroll of fame or lie
forgotten in some quiet graveyard or in the vast oceans
which they crossed, it was they, and they only, who
laid the great foundations of the England and the
United States of to-day.
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