Selected quad for the lemma: state_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
state_n peace_n province_n unite_a 1,120 5 10.2827 5 false
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
A48418 The Life of Michael Adrian de Ruyter, Admiral of Holland 1677 (1677) Wing L2035; ESTC R6337 32,218 120

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

brave General Montague afterward Earl of Sandwich with fourty Men of Warr well mann'd and some Fire-ships who on the twenty seventh of April arrived in the Sound Shortly after came also De Ruyter with a strong Fleet from Holland whose presence relieved Copenhagen and Opdams Fleet For the Swedes not being able alone to come to a tryall the English refusing to fight until they were satisfied in some demands and the news of the alteration of Government in England Richard the Protector being turned out of power supervening at the same instant which called them home again relieved the Besieged and hindred a new rupture betwixt the English and the Dutch which in all probability must have immediately ensued The King of Denmark by this timely succour revived and the English Fleet returned to England and Opdam to Holland De Ruyter with the Dutch and Danish Fleet continued Master of the Seas ready for some Land-undertaking since the Swedes then too weak declined all engaging at Sea The Island of Funnen in the Baltick Sea of the ancient inheritance of the Danes but then in the possession of the Swedes being taken by them some years before offered a necessary occasion And for that purpose General Schaack with seven thousand men being put aboard of the Fleet at Kiel were by De Ruyter conducted and on the last of October landed at Kortemundor in the Island of Funnen The Swedes made brave resistance but De Ruyter diverting their Forces with alarming at the same time other parts of the Island and with a stout example he himself standing in the water encouraging the Souldiers to land whom in great numbers they poured ashoar The Swedes were overthrown with great losse and the Island regained to the Danes This brave action of De Ruyter gained him more reputation from his Countrey and honour from his masters then all which before that time he had atchieved and so endeared him to the favour and esteem of the King of Denmark that he honoured him with the highest Order of Knighthood of that Kingdom being that of the Elephant and presented him with a Chain and Meddal of Gold which afterward he wore and having remained there among the Swedes untill the Peace between the Danes and them in May. 1660. was ratified he with great applause returned with his Fleet home The War betwixt the Danes and Swedes ended and De Ruyter with his Fleet safely returned into Holland new losses from the Pirates of Argiers Tripoli and Tunis called afresh to the States for remedy The vigilant and successful De Ruyter was by the States designed for that charge whose good services on the like occasion even in the infancy of his Sea-command had been remarkable in those Seas and is therefore dispatcht with a Squadron of Ships into the Streights where he kept ranging with his Fleet pursuing and pressing those Gorsairs with so great care and success that the benefit of his constant pains and valour became sensible to all the Merchants who traded there whereby he confirmed to himself that fame and reputation which he had heretofore so justly merited until matters of greater concern called him thence upon the occasion following After the wonderfull and long-wished-for re-establishment of his Majesty the King of Great Brittain in the Throne of his Ancestors from which by the madness of his Subjects he had been long banished the States of the United Provinces overgrown with the wealth and prosperity of many years peace the ordinary promoters of ambition being conscious to themselves that their carriage towards their Neighbors especially the English however cloaked could not but breed such jealousies as must in time break forth into open enmity and perceiving his Majesty of Great Brittain already so dissatisfied with their disguised practises as could not but of necessty produce a War resolved to bring it to a tryall as soon as possibly they could by giving the first occasion of rupture under the pretext of being provok'd by injuries received upon the Coast of Guiny and elsewhere Hereupon they Ordered Admiral De Ruyter with a squardron of thirteen Men of War then at Gibraltor in Spain to make sail for the Coast of Guiny and to set upon the English there This he so effectually performed that in a short time he destroyed most of their Factories took Cormanteen Castle with other places severall Ships and goods belonging to the English That action so incensed his Majesty of Great Britain that war was thereupon in anno 1664. publickly proclaimed against the States General of the United Provinces impowering all his Majesties Subjects to use against them their subjects and people all acts of hostility but whilst this was doing at home De Ruyter diligent in the pursuance of his Commission abroad attempted the burning of the English Ships at Barbadoes but in vain and from thence sailing to New-found land took several Merchants Ships stript the men and left them without provisions an act unworthy the name of so brave a man Thus whilst Opdam Admirall of the Dutch Fleet in June 1665 having engaged his Royall Highness the Duke of York was in fire and smoak hurried out of this world and his Fleet beat home with great loss of Ships and men De Rayter remained at Sea annoying the Ships and Foreign Plantations of the English But Opdams death rendred his presence at home absolutely necessary his experience and success in War being so well known to all that the universal voice of the people daily called his Name whom according to the interest and power they pretend to upon the Seas they adopted and intitled Son of Neptune Advice was therefore sent to him that he should with his Fleet hasten home with all expedition which he obeying slily slipt by the English Fleet wrapt in mist as men with their cloaks about their mouths shun the company of those whom they are not willing to meet And on the last of July 1665. safely arrived in the Emmes his arrival was congratulated by the States and he thereupon made Admiral but with authority not so absolute but that he was subordinate to the Triumvirate of De Witt Huygens and Bureel who according to a new Model had the superintendency of the Navall affairs He was no sooner installed in his new Command but August 13. with a Fleet of Ninety Sail of Men of War he was Ordered out from the Texel to secure and convoy home the East-India Fleet and many other rich Merchant-men which stopt at Bergen for fear of the English Fleet then at Sea under the Command of the Earl of Sandwich and who had been put in great alarm by the brave but fruitless attempt of Sir Thomas Tiddyman who was sent out to have seized them in their harbour In his going he met not with the English Fleet but in his return was discovered and attacqued by the Earl of Sandwich who finding himself too weak his charge great and the windes very high with a running Fight he made the best
the Countrey whilst he remained on these Coasts The Earl of Bath afterward presented him with such provisions and necessaries as the Countrey and season of the year afforded which he courteously received and in signe of gratitude fired several guns and so departed but notwithstanding the promises of indemnity given after his departure from Plymouth two of his Fleet advancing toward Foy for some time lay annoying and battering the harbour and shoar with great shot till having received dammage in their hulls and one of them having lost his main topmast they desisted and went off whether this was by the Generals Order or not is not known there having been no enquiry ever made in the action by reason of the peace that immediatly followed but it is believed that De Ruyter had no hand in it This long expected Peace concluded at Breda the 21 of June and at length the 14th of August 1667. ratified in England rather by the exigency and necessity of the times than the intire and full satisfaction of both parties as appeared within few years afterward gave respite to both Nations to breathe a little and recruit their mutual past losses by industrious prosecuting their traffick the hugg'd darling of both people and to consider in cold blood what had been done amisse by either side during the War that from so seasonable a peace they might pick the necessary means of future reparation And now De Ruyter having safely reconducted his Fleet into harbour was received by the States with thanks and honours suitable to his merit and with the universal acclamations and applause of the Countrey and was judged by all discreet men to have understood as well the measures of a General in that Common-wealth as any whosoever by his never giving way to the transports of vain-glory or rage in the heat of action but by timely retreat or advantagious fighting like the Roman Fabius Maximus Cunctando restituit rem The States having now no more need of so eminent a Commander at sea the great and dreadfull War being over but occasion still of a wise and practised Statesman at home admitted the Heer De Ruyter with no less expectation into their Councils of difficult affairs then they had formerly impowred him as General at sea wherein he so answered their hopes that during the four years peace or rather cessation of arms betwixt England and Holland he gave so signal proofs of his prudence that they were only fain to dispence with his being at home because they could not finde a Successour for him abroad which the businesse of the year 1672. urgently required The French King in anno 1671. with a considerable army came to Dunkirk in Flanders this progresse in a time of peace being accompanied with great preparations for War gave apprehensions to all his Neighbours but especially to the States of the United Provinces who suspecting that his approach so near them was to shew them the rod with which he intended to chastise the rudeness and insolency which the States were said to have used towards his Majesty began to arm and make ready for their own defence The King of Great Britain likewise seeing his potent and most dangerous competitors so busy and earnest at work the designe of which was not as yet made publick thought it time to look to the security of his subjects and to put his Kingdoms out of danger of a surprise and so at the same time as by an influence of destiny most States of Christendome seemed to prepare for war The French who pretended to teach civility and good manners to those who oftentimes are not willing to learn thought the Dutch stood in need of some documents and the partial and slow performances made by the States to the King of England and his subjects of the Articles of their last Peace and the quarrel of the Dutch fishing anciently in the English seas and more lately in their rivers being neither so well adjusted nor digested as might stand with the honour and security of publick interest the King herewith provoked and by reviling Pamphlets against his Royal Person joyned with the French King in a strict League of pursuing by arms their mutual pretentions against the Dutch And having first friendly demanded satisfaction of the past abuses by his Embassadour Sir George Downing his Majesty resolved to summon them to their duty by a more effectual Method On the thirteenth of January two parties meeting and the Dutch refusing to strike there followed an engagement and this first blow being thus given the King of Great Brittain publisheth his Declaration against the States of the United Provinces to this effect That the dissatisfaction which his Majesty had from the carriage of the States General of the United Provinces towards him for some years past being such that he could no longer without diminution of his own honour dissemble the indignation raised in him by a treatment too unsuitable to the great obligations which he and his Predecessours had so liberally heaped upon them He was resolved to declare war against them forbidding all his Subjects to hold correspondence with them upon pain of death This Declaration being with the usuall solemnities proclaimed in London and Westminster was seconded by the French King with actions previous to a rupture with that Crown also he having laid great taxes and customes upon all Dutch goods in his kingdom and raised an imposition of fifty per cent upon salt and other merchandises of France exported by the Dutch and upon all herrings spices and other goods imported into his dominions by them prohibiting all his subjects to lade any brandy aboard of any Holland or Dutch Vessells and shortly after publickly and in good earnest declared war The States of Holland foreseeing the storm which now began to break upon them had so fortified themselves with the powerfull alliances of Spain Germany and Denmark that they seemed not unequally matched with their mighty enemies in so great a conjunction so that in the year 1672. the greatest part of the States of Christendome became involved in a bloody and expensive War which is not yet ended Matters thus advancing toward action the Dutch who were not behinde in their preparations but wanting a head resolved to gratifie both Kings in the choice of their General and so in a full Assembly of the States the Prince of Orange is unanimously elected Generallissimo of all their Forces both by Sea and Land for that years expedition with promise to renew his authority after expiration during life and Jan De Wit and the Rereward van Putten the two unfortunate brothers that were afterward barbarously murthered in a tumult of the incensed rabble at the Hague with some others appointed as Commissioners to assist him Under him De Ruyter was made Lieutenant-Admiral whose power notwithstanding of his many tried services such is the fear of that State of an absolute authority was stinted having the Rereward Van Putten placed
THE LIFE OF Michael Adrian De RVYTER ADMIRAL OF HOLLAND Licensed Octob. 1. Rog. L'Estrange LONDON Printed by J. B. for Dorman Newman at the Kings Arms in the Poultrey 1677. THE LIFE OF Admirall De Ruyter ARts in all ages have had their Chiefs and Grandecs who by inventing of new or improving of old devices have been esteemed whilst alive and renowned after death And as their attempts were no otherwise to be valued but as the prevailing genius of their times weighed the uses of them so several ages according to their predominating measures have placed or displaced their Artists in the Classis and Register of fame which ought indeed to be the Royal Standard of such Worthies praise though fond Posterity either over-affected with the advantages of their own or not throughly informed of the usefulness of elder-atchivements do for the most part unjustly rank the Illustrious of former times in that order that these have the precedency who seem most to favour the prerogative of the present applauded practices when antiquated contrivances being tryed by a true survey of their profitableness when they Flourished and the advances they gained beyond their respective Predecessors may appear to have made as high a rise above their antecedent hints as our Great Guns excell the Roman battering Rams or our roaring Trumpet-speaker old bauling Stentor who now with the great Heroes of distant ages are sent again to School Vt pueris placeant declamatio fiant The Masters of the Military Art as well as others being obnoxious to this severe and partiall Judgement the contemporaries of great men have in all ages laboured to vindicate the honour of their Heroes by bringing to a fair tryal of their Countrey the attainments and feats of such as they the only competent Judges thought worthy to be listed in the Roll of Fame and to crown them with such Verdant Bayes as nothing but a hotter season of newer attempts and more taking discoveries could ever blast or wither And as careful Navigators in coasting of new-found Lands or Ingenious Painters at the view of some rare and surprising beauty fail not to make some transient designes of the new objects that either misfortune might not altogether deprive the world of them or that the curiosity of others who should have better opportunities might be raised to finish and compleat their intended draughts So in all times some have been who have left to posterity the true and natural proportions and more discernable lineaments of the actions of famous men which others who lived nearer them might fill up and imbellish with the several colours and shaddows of smaller occurrences Now since our Age hath brought forth as many if not more Instances of this nature then any past and rewarded them with as suitable honours and titles as the most triumphant times whatsoever I thought it not amisse at this time when every little Ale and Coffee-house Virtuoso comes blustering upon us from the press to give the world a view of the Life and Death of the late Renowned Sea-General Michael Ad. de Ruyter Lieutenant-Admiral of the States of the United Netherlands whose rare Endowments and memorable Exploits have rendred him parallel to his most famed Competitors and the high pitch to which he grew from so low a root more conspicuous then all wherein if every little period of the several vicissitudes and changes of his fortune be not so distinctly and punctually handled as might be expected from an exact Diary or Memoires which is not the intent of this Treatise yet the more observable Circumstances of his whole life partly from Relations of his own mouth and partly from the authentick Testimonies of Witnesses Records shall be faithfully collected to the satisfaction of every Reader DUring the Wars betwixt the Spaniards and Dutch in Flanders there served for some years the States of Holland in quality of a private Trooper a stranger by some judged a scottish man so little known by his family that his profession gave him his Sirname the happy Father of this brave man who being disbanded from or displeased with that course of life with his wife his only then childe Michael Ad. de Ruyter born to him at Flushing in Zealand the subject of this present Discourse and serving-maid being the whole of his Family retired himself to a Countrey-house at two miles distance from Bergen ap Zome and there to the quieter employment of a husbandmans life where by his industrous endeavours with two horses the greatest part of his substance in the usuall labour of that Countrey he supplied the wants of his family with care and pains but neither the lowness of the poor mans fortune which commonly begets either contempt or pity nor yet the priviledge of his person as having sometime served under the same Ensignes could secure him or his beasts from the violence of licentious Souldiers his two horses are taken from him by force and carried to the Dutch Camp in Flanders by some of the Troopers of that Army this loss was too considerable to be neglected by him who thereby saw himself and family utterly ruined He therefore hastens after them to the camp but finding his addresses for justice fruitless by the delays and neglect of the Officers and being well acquainted with the proceedings of loosly disciplined or ill-paid Armies where the Commanders either share in or connive at the rapine of the Souldiers he resolved on a speedier and more effectual way of reparation by stealing from robbers what they had unjustly forced from him And so having discovered where his horses were at grass watching his opportunity he secretly conveyed them away and left them in a place somewhat remote from his own house where he judged them farthest from danger foreseeing as indeed it happened that these new Masters would not fail to look after the strays The souldiers missing there booty and concluding that the owner had them returned in the night with a purpose to finde them at his house but being by his provident care disappointed in barbarous revenge they set on fire the poor single thatcht Cot-house about the ears of the helpless Inhabitants In the horrour of this sudden surprise whilst the father mother and servant save themselves by breaking through the merciless flames with that care of self-preservation which is common to all creatures and astonishment usual in such unexpected frights the poor harmless childe the future darling of Neptune lay at the mercy of devouring Vulcan fast asleep in an upper room swadled in his cradle but the flames of Parental love towards an only childe stronger than those of fire soon scorcht the mothers heart with so great apprehensions of the danger of her Son that aided by that providence which saved the Children in the fiery furnace with more than masculine courage she threw her self into the house again to save or die with that childe by whose life and death fortune had decreed her honour and having
in her petticoat through smoke and flames got into the upper Room first threw the childe out of the window into a sheet held by the father and maid to receive him and afterward jump't out her self saving from that little Troy her young Aeneas So cross and unlucky are many times the beginnings of virtuous Men and low the basis of Fames Pyramides misery being commonly the first step to happiness and a gloomy morning the portal of a fair day Having thus happily avoided the Fury of this cruel Element though stript of all naked as truth it self the disconsolate Father in this so great uncertainty finding no other hopes of relief but the Charity of the Merciful betook himself with his wretched Family to Bergen ap Zome the next Town of Note where arriving early in the morning he presented to his compassionate Countreymen a lamentable spectacle of his new disaster The commendable care of that Countrey in providing for the Necessities of the indigent either by maintaining of the infirm and impotent or by imploying the stronger and those that are able to work afforded means for the poor man to subsist and feed his family untill his young son being grown up to the state of a boy able to do somewhat for himself was placed in the rope-ground of the Heer Lampson in Flushing a considerable Merchant who had a Manufactory of Ropes there The poor childe complying with the condition which he could not alter with several other boys of his own rank and age dilligently followed his business in spinning of rope-yarn and other drudgeries of that vocation to the content of his Overseers until some time after the Heer Lampson himself coming into the rope-ground and eying the lad his fancy suggested to him observing the features and carriage of the boy the unsuitableness of that trade to the genius of the lad and finding upon examination the forwardness of his wit and confident readiness in his answers and his willingness to leave that course and to serve him in some other capacity he released him from that slavery and sent him to school where in a short time he gave such pregnant proofs of his parts and industry that his Master finding his proficiency ripe for employment prudently at first intrusted him with the charge of keeping of the accounts of his family-expences that so he might the better have a tryal of the youths abilities and prevent the errours into which higher advancement and distance of place often misleads unexperienced beginners imitating herein the example of Falconers who use first to call their hawks to their fists with a guard before they venture them at large to the lure In this office he carried himself with so great fidelity and discretion and thereby gained so great esteem from his Master that he advanced him to be his book-keeper and to the management of his Merchant-affairs wherein being likewise much satisfied with his skill and diligence he pitched upon him as a person every way qualified for a Factor in his trade in Ireland which consisted in butter herrings tallow and hides and accordingly sent him to Dublin There he lived seven years under the inspection of Mr Cremor Mr Vanhorn Mr Wiborn and some others of his Masters Correspondents during which space besides his attaining of the English Tongue very necessary to him who was afterward to treat so often with the English in their own Language he gave so great proofs of his dexterity in the conduct of affairs of Trading and of his faithfulness to his trust and thereby so much content to his Master and Correspondents that by them he was sent into the Streights to negotiate as Supercargo of their Concerns there And whilst in his several Voyages from Port to Port in those parts he successfully improved his traffick to the profit both of his Master and himself being a natural enemy to idleness and an Unactive life and totally averse from the lazy and bruitish revellings of the most part of Seamen he had leisure to rub up those few impressions and hints of the Mathematicks and particularly Navigation which he had learned when a boy wherein by the ripeness of his wit his constant pains and study and the assistance of some Artists in a short time he made such laudable progress that he not only became able to conduct any Ship himself but obtained a great Name amongst Navigators And having afterward made several Voyages into the Streights and Barbary upon the account of the Heer Lampson his Master and Benefactor with constant good fortune and applause he married a Widow and setled himself in Flushing in Zealand The many good services which he had performed to his Master and the reputation gained in his Sea-expeditions began to plain the way to his preferment In the year 1650. the dayly dammages received from the Corsairs of Argiers the enemies of the Hollanders being so sensible that thereby the Mediterranean Trade of great advantage to that Nation was much obstructed the States for the security of their Merchants resolved to send Convoys with their Ships the Heer Lampson laying hold of this opportunity to serve his Countrey and at the same time to show his love and gratitude to his friend by the cheapest and yet most noble way of reward so effectually recommended Mr De Ruyter to the States General that he obtained for him a Commission to be Captain of a Man of War appointed by them as a Convoy for their Merchant-men in the Streights those fatal Narrow Seas the Hercules-pillars of his life and honour where he began and ended his Sea-preferment and gave the first and last proofs of his Conduct and Valour In this expedition he had the Occasion to lay the foundation of his future greatness first by rendring himself remarkable in his Command and next in his Estate the two usual handmaids of rising fortunes for as by his Valour and Conduct in many successful Engagements with these Pirates he procured the one so by his lawful and honest endeavours he missed not of the other Insomuch that his Name being grown publick in Holland by the dayly characters of those who had been obliged by his care and good offices the States began to think him worthy of some higher rank The Occasion was not long wanting to his more prosperous fortune For in anno 1652. the equal success of the two Neighbouring Common-wealths of England then too unhappily established and the States of the Vnited Netherlands more deeply rooted began to advance to the incompatible heighth of Superiority which was as much as Supremacy their pretensions on the Seas And although their claims were as different as that of an old possessor from a new intruder yet the younger Rival the Hollanders thinking their power not inferiour to the other the English who upon the account of long and uninterrupted possession demanded of them the usual submissions resolved to dispute the right by force of Arms and so broke forth a War which for the
sharp conflict with Spragg and Ossory The day began to close before the shot on either side betwixt the Prince and De Ruyter began to do execution but at length the English must confess that to their great wonder they first learned here that the Dutch powder was stronger and the guns longer than their own So Prince Rupert having shifted himself from the Royal Charles into the Old Soverain and Sir Edward Spragg rejoyned the Fleet they fought at distance most part of the night and by break of day both Fleets being out of sight of each other the Prince with the loss of many men and disabled ships made for the Thames and De Ruyter with little loss having had the advantage of the winde and a distant fight stood back for his old station on the Coast of Zeland De Ruyter in this action gave evident proof that he knew when it was time to pursue as well as retreat and that he never turned his back but with intent to shew his face It was now the twentieth of July before the English and French were in condition again to visit the Dutch Coasts and then having discovered De Ruyter with his Fleet eight leagues off of the Coast of Zealand and in posture of Fighting the Royall Navy expected an Engagement but wise De Ruyter who always fought after his own manner knew well the importance of so great a triall and that the affairs of his Countrey so embarrassed on all hands did not require the hazarding of the interest and honour of his Masters or of himself without some probable hopes of saving of both stood in nearer the shoar and bore away along the Coast declining all engagement untill the one and twentieth of August following On the twentieth of August Prince Rupert being informed that the Dutch Fleet were about Goree made thither and towards the evening discovered them but being then late thought best not to attacque them that night In the mean time De Ruyter according to his ordinary conduct improving the benefit of the darkness stood in close to the shoar and bearing up before next morning gained the winde of the English and by seven of the Clock bore down upon them freshly The Prince upon this changing his course stood away S. W. and the French who had the Van engaged Banckert the Prince in the middle De Ruyter and Sir Edward Spragg in the rear after the old manner Van Trump This Fight was so managed between the English and Dutch as if both parties being by some secret instinct acquainted that this was to be the last resolved to prove their utmost and last effects of fortitude and conduct among the French Capt. Martel behaved himself bravely Banckert sent off a few ships to wait the French motion and with the rest of his squadron came in to the assistance of De Ruyter against the Prince who for some time valiantly exchanged their broadsides and behaved themselves with equal courage and success Sir Edward Spragg and Van Trump the two declared Competitiours and Rivals for honour with their squadrons in the mean time persisted in action with such determinate resolution that the Dutch avow the like never to have been seen their own two ships having without touching of a sail strangely endured the fury of three full hours uncessant battery But Sir Edward Spraggs Ship the Prince having lost her masts and being so fearfully torn as to be unfit for more service with his flag displayed in his boat he shifted aboard off the St. George and finding her likewise disabled as he was leaving of her to get into the Royall Charles a cruel shot funk his boat and left him helpless in the Ocean whose power being greater then that of Van Trump by his death chill'd that heat of courage which Trump could never have cooled above water His death was by all even the Dutch themselves bewailed who acknowledged him to have been a brave man and valiant Souldier His Ship couragiously defended by the stout Earl of Ossory notwithstanding all the attempts that Van Trump made to be Master of her was safely towed off by the Hampshire Fregat The Prince and de Ruyter at this time finding themselves at too great distance from the squadrons so hotly engaged who stood both in need of assistance as by mutual consent tacked both and in friendly manner without firing stood towards their respective friends but de Ruyter having joyned Van Trump who was still engaged with the blew before the Prince could could come in fell upon the blew with renewed fury intending to have totally out off that squadron from the rest of the English Fleet but at length the Prince coming in time broke in amongst the Dutch with unanswerable force and Captain Legg with his fireships put them in great disorder and confusion It was believed by all that if the French had made their best use of that winde de Ruyter and his Fleet could not so fairly as they did by the favour of the night have taken their leave of this and all other publick action with the English during this War The losses in this last Fight were great on both sides many brave Commanders and Vast number of men killed and wounded but both so positively pretending to victory it is hard to determine who had the better yet the Dutch by Sir Edward Spraggs death thinking their title good made the whole Countrey so merry with the ringing noise of Victory that the States changed the following day of Humiliation into thanksgiving and in stead of fasting drunk and sung Psalms The singular prudence and conduct of Admiral de Ruyter in the several passages of this War rendred him so useful to his Countrey of whose tottering and decaying state he seemed the Atlas and guardian and so considerable to his enemies who by experience found it not easy to triumph-over him that notwithstanding the powerful efforts made for that end the success of affairs remained so little inclined to either side that the one had no reason to despair nor the other to scorn the prossers of accommodation made way for a Treaty of peace with England and the States of Holland catching their opportunity when the vigorous intercession of the Crown and Ministers of Spain concurred so pat with the publick good offices of their friends in England they so effectually pursued the necessary and advantagious concern of peace with that kingdom that by the frequent sollicitations and busy importunities of one and other the King of Great Britain did at length condescend to a peace with the Dutch which was concluded at Westminster the Ninth of February 1674. to the unspeakable joy of the States and perpetual renown of de Ruyter in such a pinching nick of time that the Dutch had good reason to be thankfull for so seasonable an accomodation Janus Temple being thus half shut and the States General having now but one way to look resolved to bend all their forces against the