[The History of England from the Accession of James II. by Thomas Babington Macaulay]@TWC D-Link book
The History of England from the Accession of James II.

CHAPTER XIX
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Great preparations were made.

The allied fleet, having been speedily refitted at Portsmouth, stood out again to sea.

Rooke was sent to examine the soundings and the currents along the shore of Brittany.
[317] Transports were collected at Saint Helens.

Fourteen thousand troops were assembled on Portsdown under the command of Meinhart Schomberg, who had been rewarded for his father's services and his own with the highest rank in the Irish peerage, and was now Duke of Leinster.

Under him were Ruvigny, who, for his good service at Aghrim, had been created Earl of Galway, La Melloniere and Cambon with their gallant bands of refugees, and Argyle with the regiment which bore his name, and which, as it began to be rumoured, had last winter done something strange and horrible in a wild country of rocks and snow, never yet explored by any Englishman.
On the twenty-sixth of July the troops were all on board.


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