[History of the English People, Volume III (of 8) by John Richard Green]@TWC D-Link bookHistory of the English People, Volume III (of 8) CHAPTER V 46/52
But at the first sign of movement Henry had halted his line, and fixing in the ground the sharpened stakes with which each man was furnished his archers poured their fatal arrow-flights into the hostile ranks.
The carnage was terrible, for though the desperate charges of the French knighthood at last drove the English archers to the neighbouring woods, from the skirt of these woods they were still able to pour their shot into the enemy's flanks, while Henry with the men-at-arms around him flung himself on the French line.
In the terrible struggle which followed the king bore off the palm of bravery: he was felled once by a blow from a French mace and the crown of his helmet was cleft by the sword of the Duke of Alencon; but the enemy was at last broken, and the defeat of the main body of the French was followed by the rout of their reserve.
The triumph was more complete, as the odds were even greater, than at Crecy.
Eleven thousand Frenchmen lay dead on the field, and more than a hundred princes and great lords were among the fallen. [Sidenote: Conquest of Normandy] The immediate result of the battle of Agincourt was small, for the English army was too exhausted for pursuit, and it made its way to Calais only to return to England.
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