| Jean Froissart - 1879 - 498 pagina’s
...They hooted a third time, advancing with their crossbows presented, and began to shoot. The English archers then advanced one step forward, and shot their...which pierced their arms, heads, and through their armor, some of them cut the strings of their crossbows, others flung them on the ground, and all turned... | |
| Jean Froissart - 1879 - 518 pagina’s
...They hooted a third time, advancing with their crossbows presented, and began to shoot. The English archers then advanced one step forward, and shot their...which pierced their arms, heads, and through their armor, some of them cut the strings of their crossbows, others flung them on the ground, and all turned... | |
| Blackie and son, ltd - 1880 - 240 pagina’s
...They hooted a third time, advancing with their cross-bows presented, and began to shoot. The English archers then advanced one step forward, and shot their...as if it snowed. When the Genoese felt these arrows they all turned about and retreated quite discomfited. The King of France seeing them thus fall back... | |
| Numismatic and Antiquarian Society of Philadelphia - 1891 - 424 pagina’s
...withdrew them uninjured. and, taking advantage of this, shot their arrows with such force and effect that it seemed as if it snowed. "When the Genoese felt these arrows, which pierced their arms, head, and even their armor, some of them cut the strings of their bows, while others flung them on... | |
| Thomas Bulfinch - 1895 - 436 pagina’s
...They hooted a third time, advancing with their crossbows presented, and began to shoot. The English archers then advanced one step forward, and shot their...which pierced their arms, heads, and through their armor, some of them cut the strings of their crossbows, others flung them on the ground, and all turned... | |
| Philip Gilbert Hamerton - 1897 - 516 pagina’s
...battle formation, and so fell into the utmost confusion, with the well-known results. Our archers " shot their arrows with such force and quickness that it seemed as if it snowed," piercing the Genoese and dismounting the horsemen ; upon which a body of 1000 Welsh foot with long... | |
| John Starkie Gardner - 1897 - 238 pagina’s
...battle formation, and so fell into the utmost confusion, with the well-known results. Our archers " shot their arrows with such force and quickness that it seemed as if it snowed," piercing the Genoese and dismounting the horsemen ; upon which a body of 1000 Welsh foot with long... | |
| Richard Garnett, Léon Vallée, Alois Brandl - 1899 - 454 pagina’s
...They hooted a third time, advancing with their crossbows presented, and began to shoot. The English archers then advanced one step forward, and shot their...which pierced their arms, heads, and through their armor, some of them cut the strings of their crossbows, others flung them on the ground, and all turned... | |
| Richard Garnett - 1899 - 432 pagina’s
...They hooted a third time, advancing with their crossbows presented, and began to shoot. The English archers then advanced one step forward, and shot their...which pierced their arms, heads, and through their armor, some of them cut the strings of their crossbows, others flung them on the ground, and all turned... | |
| 1898
...they hooted a third time, advancing with their cross-bows presented, and began to shoot. The English archers then advanced one step forward, and shot their...which pierced their arms, heads, and, through their armor, some of them cut the strings of their cross-bows, others flung them on the ground, and all turned... | |
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