
Francis
Drake's Story! :-
Chapter
I: Escape
From the Inquisition!
. . . It
was early on Monday morning. Brrr! It was very early on Monday morning;
cold and dark! We were still
dreadfully
sleepy. But the
cottage was restless and stirring. Prince, whining and fretful, energetically
nuzzled our faces to wake
us. In our bemused semi-quiescent state we imagined we could hear disturbing bangs and terrible screams in the distance.
I
remember it was Monday because the
previous day the family had attended Sunday Service in Papa's Protestant meeting
rooms in Tavistock. Afterwards, instead of the usual pleasant chat about local
events and the visiting fair at Tavistock, there was much talk of fear and disquiet about a
threatening
Spanish-led Catholic Prayer
Book Rebellion.
Anyway, early
one Monday
morning Prince, our house-dog, urgently whimpered and nudged Francis to wake him. Papa then rushed into our
room and told us to dress quickly and come immediately out to the wagon. I recall there was a bitter
smell of burning in the air. The sky was lit up over the other side of the
estate, an ominous flickering backdrop to a cacophony of far-off bloodcurdling
inhuman cries. We hastily
clambered into the
wagon and, pulled by Bess our farm pony, hurried along the track round Tavistock and up into
the wilds of Dartmoor . . .
However let's start at the beginning
. . .
During
this story we are
entering the rough, tough, bold buccaneering days of:-
-
The sailor
against the unknown in the Age of Discovery - when men set out in tiny wooden
vessels into vast uncharted waters, guided by maps plotted by guesswork; and
-
A handful of Englishmen
standing against the
mighty forces of Philip II: lord of Spain, the New World, the Netherlands,
and Portugal with Brazil and the Indies.
I
had been
with the Drake family since Francis was a small boy. He lived with his mother,
Mary Mylwaye (I think her name was Mary) and Edmund Drake his father, (who we all addressed as Mama and
Papa) and a rapidly growing family of
male siblings. Edmund (Papa) was once a sailor, but
when he married he settled down in the family business and became a skilled craftsman and yeoman
farmer. In addition he was a passionate Martin Luther supporter, and was
appointed our local Protestant preacher.
These were difficult and dangerous times, and I remember Mama and Papa
making lots of 'ship's
biscuits' and packing the
cart with all sorts of food and essentials during the previous few days. They also
assiduously 'greased' its wheels, axles and other moving parts with tallow, and fed us and our pony Bess with extra rations. It now became
clear why: speed and silence were now our two watchwords.
Suddenly
there was a desperate need to
flee the estate before the vengeful Cornish Catholic lynch mob arrived to burn our
house and murder
us Protestants. One had only to see the
decimated ruins of the beautiful Benedictine Abbey in Tavistock, reduced to
rubble by the late King Henry, in order to understand something of their wrath. It was now
obvious that this was
no idle threat, they had already started attacking our friends on the other side of
the estate and in Tavistock. We
therefore acted with alacrity, discretion and determination and hastened quietly away to
try to escape with our lives.
We
avoided the main trade routes, keeping to animal tracks around Tavistock and
into Dartmoor. Prince and Francis knew this area intimately and were able to
guide
Bess
through treacherous terrain
which included dangerous bogs that could trap the unwary and hazardous open
seemingly-bottomless water-filled ancient
redundant mineral mines, using only the
intermittent light of the quarter-moon and stars. Keeping very quiet and avoiding habitation we made our way east into the moor.
Papa
pondered
on taking us to London. Or alternatively to Calais where he thought we would be safe to make a new
life in the heavily
fortified last surviving English stronghold on the European continent. Calais,
recently strengthened by King Henry, was
considered to be impregnable, and therefore seemed the safer of the two at the time.
These
then were Papa's alternative objectives. How to achieve either was still very doubtful. For the
moment we were relieved to be alive.
As we
cautiously headed deeper into the moor we could hear the distant howling of the local wolf-pack
echoing across the hills and woods. Their hunting calls served to heighten the problem of how we could get away from the murderous
Catholic mob and reach either of
our desired destinations safely? This and a thousand other questions (like the
fatuous: WHY? Why? why?) pounded furiously in our heads . . .
Click the galleon's
mizzen-mast pennant (green) to continue the exciting Francis
Drake's Story! . . . with:-
Chapter
II: The
Refuge!